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Thursday, July 31, 2008

Why "do you use social media?" is the wrong question for marketers to ask

Have you noticed there are a bunch of polls and research reports that ask people questions such as "Do you read blogs?" or "Do you use social media?" or "Do you go to video sharing sites?" Often the resulting data show rather small use compared to those who, say, use search engines or email.

From the perspective of the value of social media in an organization's overall marketing and PR efforts, this data is misleading and dangerous. Why? Because the data is used by social-media-resistant executives to justify sticking exclusively to the methods that worked decades ago like image advertising, direct mail, and the yellow pages. I frequently hear CEOs, CFOs, and VPs of marketing say things like: "See, social media is not important, so we won't do it here. It is a waste of time." Other people say: "I don't read blogs, so how important are they?"

This data misses two tremendously important points for marketing and PR people to understand:

1) When asked "do you read blogs?" or "do you use social media?" many people answer "no". However, practically everyone uses Google and other search engines regularly and the search results frequently include blog posts or YouTube videos or other social media content high in the search results. So even though people may report "no" when asked if they use social media, nearly everyone has been to a blog or other social media content through search.

IMPORTANT: Many people who reach blogs via search don't even know they are on a blog!

2) When people who are not regular users of social media ask their network for advice, they often do it via email. Frequently the answer that comes back includes URLs to companies and products. And those links from friends, colleagues of family members often include blog posts. Frequently people ask their friends questions like: "What’s the best baby stroller to buy?" The answer may include a link to a blog post or a site with an embedded video. Again, the person asking for advice probably didn't even know they were on a blog or used a video-sharing site.

Use social media data with caution. Don't let your bosses diminish the hidden value of social media as search engine fodder and as a valuable type of information that people share with their network.

Courtesy – David Meerman Scott, Web Ink Now

David Meerman Scott (born March 25, 1961) is a self-described online thought leadership and viral marketing strategist and the author of three books on marketing like best sellers Tuned In and The New Rules of Marketing and PR. Based in Boston, he is a speaker at conferences and corporate events and runs seminars about marketing around the world.

I highly recommends his book Tuned In and The New Rules of Marketing and PR. It is an essential reading for new age marketers.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Change Your Channels

Convert Your Knowledge Base to Customer Value

The ancient marketing adage proffers, "The easiest sale is to an existing customer." Yet, are you making every possible sale to your existing customer base? Chances are, over the years, your enterprise has developed and nurtured products, processes, improvements and customer relationships. Your customer database is priceless, but it may be divided across the enterprise in many repositories, based on the information's original use.

The original "big three" communications channels—contact centers, direct mail and in-person contact—are now a fraction of today's enterprise communications picture. In some business segments, companies use over 30 different communications methods to present new offerings to prospects and customers. In addition, many enterprises store data from each of the three legacy channels in separate information repositories—choking your cross-marketing potential. By using valuable customer data in limited scenarios, you may also be overlooking the increased value and sales potential available through support and service channels, including call centers.

Creating the 360-degree customer profile
How do you coordinate all of these support and service channels? Begin by putting your best assets—your customer relationship information—in the hands of those best able to reach your customers. Many enterprises are purchasing or subscribing to Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software but only implement it in isolated areas within the enterprise. By unifying access to this information, business managers can create cross-selling and up-selling scenarios relevant to your customers today. This unification of information is also crucial in providing exceptional service and support.

When employees can combine and share customer information from multiple repositories, a much more effective customer profile emerges including these customer views:

  • Customer purchase history
  • All customer communications with your company
  • Billing and transactional information
  • Channel or product preferences
  • Responsiveness to sales and marketing efforts

For example, during a support call, your call center representative accesses the customer's complete profile, determines the customer's service contract expires in 45 days and notifies the customer of your updated service and support offerings. Your company adds the support revenue to this month's bookings; your customer receives exceptional support. By unifying information for your customers and making it available in real time across your enterprise, your opportunities expand across all channels.

Refocusing the message
Successful business propositions today integrate customer needs within a customer-oriented, context-sensitive message. This means that instead of touting your product's features and values across all outbound channels, the successful message speaks to the specific needs of your customer, describing how the product meets those needs.

Moreover, you deliver the message in the customer's preferred delivery method, made available by accessing transaction history. This way of doing business is not about you, it's about your customer. If customer profiles reveal zero percent response to direct mail, it's easy to remove customers from the direct-mail channel, approaching them in the way they're most likely to respond.

Back to basics: the right channel, the right message, the right customer
Successful customer retention includes exceptional service, during every contact. Customers who experience high satisfaction are profitable and loyal customers. By reviewing each segment of your customer's transactions, a "true view" of the customer emerges.

Make sales and marketing initiatives relevant within this true view to each customer. For example, marketing messages for cell phones must be shorter than similar messages intended for delivery to a personal computer. Because you know your customer, you know best how to reach them.

Each outbound message should also have the appropriate return channel; don't just add "call your salesperson or our 800 number" to your tailored, targeted message. The best communications are two-way communications. If you understand your customer's preference, you also know the most effective way to solicit communications from your customers.

By developing this personalized selling environment, you can offer the right message to the right customer, using the right channel. If you know customer X has a high first-offer purchase rate, target that person for value-added services. If a customer's preferred communication method is the mobile phone, deliver your message appropriately.

Using channel rules for maximum impact and efficiency
As you extend messaging according to your customer profiles, you must also develop appropriate business rules. These rules not only put the right message in front of the right customer, they also help define, automate and deliver effective and cost-efficient cross-channel messaging.

Develop and continuously update these rules using expertise gained from reviewing each part of the customer profile. Enable channel communications to flow easily inbound and outbound. Incorporating the latest intelligence from the customer is a critical component for success. Connecting your knowledge base, business rules and intelligence from channel communications helps keep each customer experiencing a one-on-one relationship with your company.

Extending the call center
With cross-channel marketing occurring consistently via outbound sales and marketing, extend this capability to the call center to further enhance the customer experience. When the call center has access to the complete picture of the customer, every call center communication becomes a marketing opportunity. When call center agents have access to customer preferences, likes and dislikes, they have an increased opportunity to respond with excellence—further promoting the product and enhancing the product image. This means equipping call center reps with the ability to access customer history, profile, preference and any collateral material that may help the customer receive exceptional service and support.

Transaction history is also an integral component of the well-connected call center. By accessing customer transaction histories, agents are aware immediately of customer-specific configurations. Previous troubleshooting sessions often illuminate a reoccurring issue, which you can address proactively.

Agents that can determine customer configurations before receiving a call transfer are in a superior support position, and this customer awareness translates to a better customer experience. In this way, call center agents evangelize as well as support.

Becoming your customer's one-stop shop
Acquiring essential customer data is often the biggest problem when developing personalized products and services. The payoff is that many customers are eager to consolidate services with one provider, given a high level of service, support and relationship management.

After unifying your internal data sources and making them available to all channels, what's the next step?

Convince customers to provide additional information about themselves.

When customers offer additional information because they perceive it to be in their best interest, they're rewarded with more personalized products and services, and you gain additional business from an existing customer. You have the opportunity with each customer contact—sales inquiry, call center contact or warranty service—to create the appropriate customer inquiry based on the communication context. When customers feel like they receive superior products, services and support from you, doing more business with you is cost-effective as well as more rewarding.

Multiple channels, multiple rewards
The science of customer relationship management is becoming more defined with each customer transaction, marketing communication and call center contact. Providing business channels with real-time, consistent, relevant customer information is the mission. Your knowledge base isn't a giant data warehouse that requires business processes to conform to information access. It's a collection of customer profiles that enable multiple channel access. Having this access makes your business more effective, your customers more loyal and confident and helps you realize your goals.

Courtesy -  Jay McKeever, Expert Access

About Expert Access

Expert Access is a business e-zine for senior-level corporate executives, IT and operations managers and technology buyer committees.

Each issue comprises about 16 articles, the most popular of which are the feature articles (on a variety of topics) and the 'Ask the Expert' section where readers' questions are answered by an expert in the particular subject area.

Because Expert Access spans a range of job titles and industries, it must deliver value by presenting the business benefits of the latest technology advances to corporate and operations managers while at the same time getting under the covers of the latest business and production applications for the IT managers and users.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Fetch this: new web tool challenges Google

Pitched as the world's latest, largest and swiftest search engine, Cuil was launched Monday with 120 billion pages or 'thrice' the volume of the Google index.

Described as a 'super-stealth search project', it has been founded and developed by the highly respected husband-wife duo of Stanford professor Tom Costello and former Google search architect Anna Patterson.

Originally Cuill, pronounced as cool, Irish for knowledge, has now been named 'Cuil'. A report on the web quoting the founders claimed that it is "bigger, faster and better than Google's flagship search engine in pretty much every way".

The Internet has grown by leaps and bounds over the past 15 years, speedily outpacing search engines. But Cuil is expected to search more web pages than Google and 10 times as many as the search engine of Microsoft.

Where Cuil scores over rivals is the way it indexes the web and handle queries by users. Both are costly operations, but Cuil claims to have found a way to slash those costs.

A search for dogs, for example, will return category results for "water dogs," "crossbreed", "cocker spaniel" and so on. Some of these related terms do not include the term "dog".

Similarly by clicking on New York, one would get tabbed results for recommended refinements like New York Times, New York City, New York Yankees and so on.

A search for "Harry" would throw up different tabs for "Harry Potter" and "Prince Harry of Wales". Further, the Harry Potter tab will provide more sub-links devoted to actors, Gryffindor dorm-mates and others associated with the series.

That would permit Cuil's founders to operate the search engine much more cheaply, even at Google-scale should it ever reach that point. Google incurs an expenditure of a billion dollars every year on running the infrastructure of its search business.

Cuil also works to understand how words are related. Say France - cheese - wine, to get more relevant results. This is a semantic search approach very different from Powerset's natural language approach.

Powerset uses artificial intelligence to try to grasp what sentences on a website actually mean. Cuil, by comparison, simply tries to categorise and file a web page, even if the category name doesn't appear on the site.

However, Rafe Needleman, writing on the Cuil homepage, cautioned that "it's one thing to have a nice interface and show users good results, but the size of the web index that the engine has access to matters a lot as well".

"Compared with Google's globe-spanning network of data centres, some literally set up near dams so they can tap hydro power more efficiently, Cuil's two puny data centres hosting less than 2,000 PCs total will have to run pretty fast to outpace Google's crawlers.

"As a business proposition, Cuil is obviously a big bet ... No other search engine has come close to entering the public consciousness like this. Of course, Cuil doesn't have to trounce Google on day one. It took Google quite some time to surpass Alta Vista and Yahoo in the search wars."

Courtesy - IBN

Monday, July 28, 2008

A Tangled Web of Many Dimensions

As intelligent as the human, as responsive and as understanding. Web 3.0 is likely to be something most of us have not even imagined. And yet, it is going to be something we are all going to create!

Thanks to Web 2.0, we are all leading successful virtual lives – building communities, sharing knowledge and even searching information on the future and from the annals long lost. Web 2.0 has been more of a revolution than the dotcom boom, and has proven its success like nothing else has. It has gotten almost everyone hooked to the internet with localized communities as well as very popular communities like orkut and Facebook.

This version of the web, created by xxxx, is being followed by different versions, the immediate being Web 3.0. Yes, it is simply a version, but it is likely to change the way we use the internet in the same way that Web 2.0 did. Web 3.0 is being discussed, debated and fabricated to further replace this interactive version of the world wide web. Semantic technology, autonomics and autopoeisis are some very confusing terms being used to describe what Web 3.0 could possibly be like.

We’ll go on a tangent and try to describe what Web 3.0 is in layman’s terms and what it means to the end-user, who is eventually going to make up the intelligence of this greater phenomenon.

Where Web 2.0 gave us the interactivity to share information in real time, to create communities and to make transfer of data oh so simple, Web 3.0 is going to be a drastically more intelligent version. It will be a smarter assistant that will understand our needs, requirements and if everything goes well, even our psychology. It will make the internet available everywhere – on mobiles, TV, even bathroom mirrors if you please. Artificial intelligence will take on a whole new meaning as the web understands internet pages as well as we do. It will be clever enough to relate media to media instead of depending on words, commands and strings.

You will need no keywords. Search engines of the future will be able to fathom what you need, maybe as soon as you log on or maybe as soon as it understands your needs. This is why it is being referred to as the Semantic Web, a term coined by inventor of the first world wide web Tim Berners-Lee. So the web will be smart enough to understand what you are looking for and to understand your needs at various points in time. It will be able to guide you on what meetings you need to prioritize, what movies you need to see and what goodies you need to purchase. You will even be able to visit the supermarket next door or the brand store in another part of the world, courtesy of Web 3.0.

It will almost be a virtual world, where you can socialize, entertain and even travel with the web, while sitting in the suitable realms of your room. It will take our lives beyond day-to-day to create a 3-D experience that is able to provide us with an alternate reality where we can collaborate and connect with a whole new set of people. What’s more, you will be able to develop and change the web according to your needs and imagination. People will be able to change the way this world works. And we will not have to depend on the expertise of a programmer to do this.

Web 3.0 will also be a more advanced form of the current searches. So search engines of the future will be able to look for music on the basis of the music that you provide. It will be able to search pictures according to ones that you provide. You needn’t try different keywords, all meaning the same thing, and toss around words to find what you need. It will be able to understand what you mean, without your having to rack your brains over words, strings and keywords. Yes, SEO might very soon become a thing of the past!

This simply means that we will be able to enjoy the internet more than ever. We will be able to intermingle with the internet the way we interact with the outside world today. We will be able to share thoughts with the internet and possibly get a response from it. The web won’t simply be a canvas where we can find our answers and solutions, but one that can understand our needs and provide us information and solutions that we have been looking for.

According to Mills Davis, founder and managing director of research consultancy Project10X, "The problem is that existing knowledge on the web is fragmented and difficult to connect. It is locked in data silos and operating-system file system formats … Web 3.0 changes this." So we will have access to large amounts of data – easily. Different applications will come together to provide a more enhanced experience to the user.

The end-user will therefore not be simply a consumer but become a "prosumer." It will be a kinship of internet users with the world wide web. We will be able to evolve the web according to our needs, and the web will be able to provide intelligent solutions, as it learns your requirements while you interact with it. It will know when you want to do what task and execute it for you. If you want to make a presentation, for instance, an intelligent user interface like Web 3.0 will know how you would want to present it and set it for you in the desired format.

Essentially, it will be an interactive web that will evolve with the user over a period of time to understand the user’s psychology, needs, habits, methods and requirements. The web will develop with its users to recognize habits of communities across the globe, across ages and even across aptitudes. Furthermore, you and I will be able to develop what the internet should be like and what it should offer.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

How to Manage Your Team in a Downturn (and Come Out on Top)

Layoffs have truncated staff; cost-cutting measures are threatening projects, and morale is in the toilet. From the manager’s perspective, getting the most out of employees in this kind of environment can seem like a Sisyphean task. In fact, it’s a perfect opportunity to rejigger processes and fix what’s broken — and managers are uniquely positioned to do just that. Here’s how being candid with your employees, rewarding them in creative ways, and enlisting them to help make hard decisions can not only keep your team motivated but pull your company out of its slump.

Things you will need:
  • Any additional cash that can be set aside to reward the top-performing members on your team.
  • Constant attention. It’s your sole task right now to improve the mood in the office so that everyone can get back to work.
  • Informal Meetings: Give employees frequent opportunities to openly discuss — and ask questions about — the business situation the company is facing.
  • Employee Buy-In: Now is the time to leverage the expertise of your team. Motivate and engage employees by including them in the problem-solving process.
  • Transparency: The middle manager plays a crucial role in communicating messages from senior leadership. Maintain loyalty from direct reports by giving them what they deserve: honest explanations for what went wrong and how the company plans to move forward.

Set the Tone

Goal: Lower the anxiety level in the office by being candid about the challenges — and opportunities — ahead.

It’s easy to blame the economy for all the reasons a company is suffering: Customers are cutting back on their expenses, advertisers are trimming their budgets, and stock prices are sliding. These problems may, in fact, be attributable in part to the downturn, but going with the “It’s the economy, stupid” defense sends a subtle but potentially dangerous message to employees: It implies that the situation is totally out of the company's hands and left in large part to fate. This is exactly the kind of attitude that raises anxiety levels in the office and disrupts employees’ focus on the problem at hand: turning business around.

“Have the confidence to not completely blame the economy,” says Stanford business professor Bob Sutton. “If employees believe that leadership can break things, they’ll believe that leadership can fix things, too.”

Don’t just rely on the CEO’s message. An e-mail from the top explaining why the company is in the red can’t tell employees much, which means mid-level managers need to be the interpreters. Speak to employees in small groups and be as candid as possible about where the company stands. This is also a good time to suss out any rumors. “Organize quick events to ask what people have heard and to answer any questions they have,” says Dave Logan, a senior partner at Los Angeles-based consulting firm Culture Sync.

Open the books. Giving employees the numbers behind company performance clarifies where the business needs to change and how their jobs connect to the bigger picture. But be warned: “If you’re going to be transparent, take the necessary time to teach employees about how the business works,” says Rich Armstrong, general manager of the Great Game of Business, a coaching firm that teaches open-book management. He advises managers to start with what employees probably already understand, like operational numbers, and then connect the dots with how those numbers increase gross margin and generate cash flow. Above all, keep finance jargon to a minimum.

Focus on the future. There’s no need to sugarcoat it: Pulling the company through the downturn isn’t going to be easy, but emphasizing the challenge can have its benefits. “It’s a great time for [your employees] to realize that they can play a role in discovering opportunities for the company,” says Vince Thompson, a former manager at AOL and author of the book Ignited.

Hot Tip

The You in Team

If a company is going to stay resilient, the staff’s collective commitment and collaboration are essential. In this environment, simply making an effort to be more visible and available to employees can spark productivity and bring the team together.

For example, if you normally work within the confines of a walled office while your team toils away in the cube farm, grab your laptop and set up shop in a cubicle near them — even if it’s only a couple of times a week. Start showing up to the smaller meetings that you usually skip, or rearrange your travel schedule to cut down how much time you spend out of the office. In short, don’t wait for employees to take advantage of an open-door policy. Go to them first, and ask how their work is going. This isn’t about micromanaging — it’s about knowing firsthand what they need.

Enlist the Team to Fix What’s Broken

Goal: Motivate employees and find out how and where the business needs to change.

Traditionally, the top execs decide the strategy and let it trickle down. The problem with this tactic is that it rarely makes the emotional case needed to mobilize employees around a common goal, says Paul Bromfield, a principal at Katzenbach Partners, which has advised companies like Aetna, Credit Suisse, and Pfizer. “This is about problem-solving and discipline, and that’s where employees come in,” he says. “Companies should be harnessing employees in the effort to identify where to cut costs and how.”

Not only will utilizing workers’ expertise make them more invested in the company’s success, it also gives management a more honest look at what’s not working. Senior leadership tends to focus on just one area of cost-cutting, Bromfield says, like products, headcount, or moving operations off-shore. Employees, on the other hand, can use their collective wisdom to eliminate clumsy (and costly) procedures across divisions.

Here are four guidelines for involving staff in the process:

1. Identify key influencers. “If you’re really going to mobilize people, you can’t do it from the top,” Bromfield says. Find the key employees who hold sway in their departments and get them to embrace and spread the change effort. These are the people who know how things really work (not just the way they’re supposed to work) and have a way of bringing together the right people to get things done.

2. Let teams do the problem solving. Form groups around the influencers and motivate (rather than mandate) employees to identify what’s slowing down business. Often the best place to start is to look for processes and bureaucracies that annoy the team. Set a basic timeframe to achieve cost savings, but let each group work at its own pace.

3. Make it a conversation. Schedule brown-bag lunches or other informal venues to talk to employees about their findings and where they might be hitting roadblocks. In the early 1990s, Bromfield’s former client Texas Commerce Bank held focus groups with thousands of its employees to find out what procedures most frustrated bankers and customers. Using the feedback, the company nearly doubled its $50 million cost-savings goal.

4. Follow through. Many cost-savings programs fail because management implements the initiative only halfway or lets inefficiencies creep back after meeting short-term goals, which won’t sit well with employees. Adopt the changes wholesale or not at all.

Big Idea

Keep Top Performers Moving

In an ideal world, the upside of a downturn is that recruiting qualified employees becomes easier. With more candidates in the job market, now could be the time to find new talent if your company has the resources to continue hiring. But managers shouldn’t forget about the top performers already on staff, say Monster executives Steve Pogorzelski, Dr. Jesse Harriott, and Doug Hardy, authors of a recent paper on how companies should invest in employees when business slows down.

When the economy’s bad, it’s easy to think that employees are grateful to have jobs at all. But layoffs and budget cuts may cause good workers to look for better opportunities. Give them a reason to stay by making room for them to keep advancing their careers. “Keep critical talent moving — not necessarily up, but growing in experience, responsibility, money, or other tangible and intangible ways,” say the authors of the study. If promotions or raises aren’t possible, give good workers the chance to make a lateral move or to take on a struggling department.

Get Back to the Work That Matters

Goal: Make sure your team is tuned in to growth opportunities.

The problem with a downturn is that while cost cutting is absolutely necessary, it can make everyone gun-shy about pursuing new initiatives and opportunities for investment. However, if your department, and in turn the company, is going to emerge from the slump in a competitive position, there are a few key investments you can’t afford not to fight for now:

Customers

Learn about the customers of your weakest competitors, writes Michael Roberto, a blogger for Harvard Business Publishing and management professor at Bryant University. While competitors are busy shoring up their relationships with large, established clients, it could be the perfect time to swoop in and court their smaller customers.

Research and Development

Take a cue from Apple’s Steve Jobs. When asked by Fortune magazine recently about Apple’s strategy for the downturn, Jobs pointed to how the company survived the 2001 tech bust by upping its R&D budget. “It worked, and that’s exactly what we’ll do this time,” he told the magazine.

Separate the value-added activities from the wheel-spinning exercises, Thompson suggests in Ignited. Instead of giving up on new projects in a downturn, shift focus so that the team is investing time in identifying and prioritizing the projects that will generate the most benefit for the company. Even if the final product will have to wait until more resources are available, doing the legwork now means the product will go to market faster when the time is right — and employees will stay engaged in the meantime.

Vendors/Partners

“There are two ways to run a business,” says Fred Mossler, senior vice president of merchandising for online shoe retailer Zappos, “adversarily or as a partnership.” Considering that the company relies on about 1,500 partners to provide its customers with a diverse selection of shoes, Zappos has chosen the latter option. To that end, the company built an extranet, so that every partner can see how its brand is performing. “They get to see everything our buyers see,” Mossler says. “This way we have about 1,500 other sets of eyes looking at our business and helping to improve it.”

Case Study

How Zappos Survived the Tech Bust

The idea for Zappos was born in 1999, when the economy was booming. But the shoe retailer still was unprofitable and struggling to grow revenue two years later, when the recession hit. “It was impossible for us to get any additional funding,” Mossler says. To make matters worse, the company was learning that its original business plan, which made Zappos a middleman, wasn’t working as planned: Vendors didn’t always have every shoe in stock, and customers — who sometimes had to wait weeks for their orders to arrive — often ended up with the wrong orders.

Though the times might have called for belt-tightening, the company had to make a couple of very expensive decisions, both of which put long-term strategy before short-term cost cutting. First, management realized that it needed total control over the merchandise in order to give the best customer service — a decision that meant sacrificing 25 percent of company revenue. Second, to make sure customers knew exactly what they were getting, the company hired photographers to take pictures of every pair of shoes it stocked. The site now has photos of its more than 3 million items, mostly shoes, from up to eight different angles. “Most companies look at customer service as an expense, but we look at it as a long-term investment,” says Mossler. The moves paid off: Less than 10 years after its founding, Zappos is on track to bring in more than $1 billion in sales this year.

Acknowledge and Reward Deserving Employees

Goal: Recognize achievement, even if resources are scarce.

Employee bonuses and raises are among some of the first expenses that upper management cuts during a downturn. But even if extra compensation isn’t in the budget, that doesn’t excuse managers from rewarding employees. “Lack of recognition — both financially and verbally — is one of the things that does the most damage,” says David Sirota, founder of the management-consulting firm Sirota Survey Intelligence. “I worked with an investment bank some years back where bankers were earning bonuses from $100,000 to $1 million a year,” he says. “You know what they complained about? They didn’t know if the chairman thought they were actually doing a good job, because he never spoke to them about it.”

BNET Video: Giving Effective Praise.

One easy, no-cost way of recognizing valuable employees is to improve their quality of life. “The best reward you can give people is autonomy over how they spend their time,” says Jody Thompson, a former Best Buy human resources manager who, along with Cali Ressler, helped create the company’s Results-Only Work Environment program. That means giving employees your trust and the flexibility to work at home (or wherever suits them) whenever they want to — without any judgments. This gives workers more control over their time, and sometimes even a little extra cash. Sun Microsystems has found that employees who worked an average of 2.5 days at home each week saved $1,700 a year in gas and vehicle wear-and-tear.

Danger! Danger! Danger!

Save Rewards for the Worthy

Keeping your employees engaged doesn’t mean rewarding them just for doing their jobs. The most effective rewards are significant but well deserved. Libby Sartain became head of Yahoo’s human resources department in 2001, just as the company received a hard knock from the dot-com bust. She decided that instead of quietly giving large bonuses to overachievers, which wasn’t providing much bang for the buck, Yahoo needed to regularly single out the top 15 to 20 stellar individuals and teams — not only to reward them, but to help the rest of the company understand what made these employees outstanding.

The following year, the company gave its first Superstar Awards. Candidates were nominated by their peers for significant achievements and awarded cash prizes ranging from $5,000 to $50,000. The Yahoo Superstar Awards program is now in its seventh year and has honored employees for contributions like creating the Panama advertising system, inventing a way to advertise on instant messages, and fixing a troublesome accounting problem. “This isn’t egalitarian, this is a meritocracy,” Sartain says, acknowledging that some managers resisted the idea at first. “When people saw the winners, they understood why they won, and it took hold and became part of the culture.”

Courtesy - Lindsay Blakely, BNET

Saturday, July 26, 2008

LinkedIn: The Useful -- and Profitable -- Social Network

Microsoft monetized desktops, Google monetized eyeballs, LinkedIn monetizes the social network.

One way to create a great fortune is to ride the next wave, and my money’s on LinkedIn. Bain Capital, Greylock, Sequoia, and Bessemer Ventures -- four very savvy venture firms -- recently invested $53 million dollars in the company at a billion dollar valuation – which means they think it is worth at least ten. Unlike Facebook, Linked-In is already profitable, and they took capital to grow faster.

Who cares? Well everyone should because they sell access to professionals. I have personally found it useful for recruiting, business development, and research. How much do you need to pay to get access to over 25,000,000 professionals? Does $7,000/month sound reasonable? That’s what you can buy from LinkedIn. Peter Merholz recently blogged on this site about use of LinkedIn in recruiting. My question to all of you is: Are you using LinkedIn? If so, how? Let’s share some stories about it. If not, why not?

Not everybody is paying attention to how fast Linked-In is growing; it took Linked-In over 400 days to recruit its first million participants, and only 19 days to gather its 20th million. Today, rumor has it they are over 25 million participants and growing. Their goal is to be the globe’s largest professional network, and that clarity of purpose helps avoid many of the issues that Paul Michelman experienced in his attempt to mix business with pleasure in his recent Facebook presence. Going to LinkedIn is like going to a convention – you may find some fun, but you know people are there for commerce.

They make money by selling access to people -- not just eyeballs. Personally, I have found it useful to find old business colleagues and start discussions that are turning into business for my firm. My colleague Chris Curran used the Linked- “InMail” product, which charges you to send email to people you don’t already know, to reach 200 LinkedIn participating CIOs. This feature -- selling email access within Linked-In to other members of the network -- is a core revenue generator for the firm. Chris received more useful responses from the 200 CIOs he found in LinkedIn than he did from a mass mailing to thousands.

Chris is not alone. I find friends use LinkedIn as a way to access experts, and the company is on its way to creating the world’s largest network of participating experts, which I think will swamp firms like Gerson Lehrman, which sell access to deep expertise. Nielsen should watch out too because LinkedIn will have millions of consumers -- especially business consumers -- to question, and thereby provide world’s largest, and most dynamic consumer panel.

Not only that, but the Kellogg School at Northwestern University recently announced that they are using Linked-In as the engine of their alumni network. As a graduate of Harvard Business School, I tried to get my alma mater to join the wave, but so far, our alumni network is still closed – which I think is a mistake. Harvard, like all organizations, should participate in this growing network, while still creating their own group as a distinct, but connected space. Like with the Internet, the largest, and most capable network will win.

How are you using Linked-In?

John Sviokla, Harvard Business

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Tuned In: Essential Reading for any Marketer

Tunedinbookcover_2Why some new products fail and others define entirely new industries is a fascinating topic to write about. Craig Stull, Phil Myers, and David Meerman Scott go after this perspective and strategies companies who are "tuned in" to how market and needs are changing, and how entirely new markets are created as a result. Tuned In tackles this challenge and defines a six step Tuned In Process that forms the foundation of this book.

What’s refreshing about this book is the balance of positive and negative examples used to build out the Tuned In Process. Instead of being preachy or arrogant the authors present how companies get "tuned out" from unmet market needs in emerging markets by getting complacent and assuming too much about what is happening outside the four walls of their companies. This book is a definite wake-up call for any company struggling to stay relevant to new markets and overly reliant on existing customers or market segments.

What also makes this book a good read is the depth the authors go to so these concepts are practical and usable.

Additional key take-aways from this book include the following:

  • When companies see their market expertise and insight as superior to the hard work of finding resonating new concepts, complacency begins to set in and companies tend to get tuned out.
  • Being purely customer, revenue or innovation-driven actually is the riskiest of strategies any company can take on as it blinds companies from creating resonators in both products and services.
  • Resonators are rarely if ever found in a company’s customer base.
  • Any business must be a problem solver to survive, using resonators as the catalyst of future growth.
  • The authors base the books’ structure on the Tuned In Process that includes the following. Step one is finding unresolved problems and unmet needs within new customer segments. Step two is understanding buyer personas who will buy. This step is worth reading the book for. Step three is quantifying the impact of a potential impact of the resonator product or service. Step four is creating breakthrough experiences. Step five is articulating powerful ideas that connect resonators with buyers who need the solutions it offers. Step six is establishing authentic connections with buyers.

Now I am not involved with this book in any way, yet in reading it you find yourself stopping and saying "so that’s why that worked" or vice versa. It makes you confront your own judgment about marketing, and any book that does that is worth checking out.

Louise Columbus, Perfect CEM

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Use a Fishbone Diagram to attack complex problems

One technique for analyzing complex problems that appear to have many interrelated causes is called a “cause and effect” diagram or a Fishbone Diagram. Here are examples of how this problem-solving technique works.

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Problems arise on many projects. A proactive project manager should have a set of problem resolution techniques that can be applied in different instances. One technique for analyzing complex problems that appear to have many interrelated causes is called a “cause and effect” diagram. Because of its shape, this technique is also called a Fishbone Diagram. (Another name you might hear for this technique is an Ishikawa Diagram. This is named for Professor Kaoru Ishikawa, a Japanese professor who pioneered the diagram in 1943.) Some benefits of a Fishbone Diagram include:

  • It allows various categories of causes to be explored.
  • It encourages creativity through a brainstorming process.
  • It provides a visual image of the problem and potential categories of causes.

The following description and examples show how the problem-solving technique works.

First, describe the problem on the far right side of the diagram. This may be the actual problem or it may be a symptom — at this point you’re not exactly sure.

Draw a long horizontal arrow pointing to the box. This arrow will serve as the backbone from which further major and minor causes will be categorized and related. (See Figure A.)

Figure A

Figure A

Identify potential causes and group them into major categories along the “bones” of the Fishbone Diagram. You should brainstorm to identify the major categories; at this point, you shouldn’t be concerned if there’s disagreement about whether a category holds the potential cause — just put them all up. Make sure to leave enough space between the major categories on the diagram so that you can add minor detailed causes in later. (See Figure B.)

Figure B

Figure B

Continue to brainstorm the causes by looking at more detailed explanations for each of the major cause categories identified above. The team should ask whether each category is a cause, or if it is a symptom. If it’s a symptom, try to identify the more detailed causes on slanted lines that hook up to the appropriate major category lines. (See Figure C.)

Figure C

Figure C

Sometimes, the detailed causes will have other, more granular causes coming off of them. If so, connect additional lines to the detailed lines. Three levels of detail is usually the practical limit for this diagram.

When you finish brainstorming major causes/symptoms and more detailed causes and symptoms, the team can begin analyzing the information. Evaluate each major cause and the potential detailed causes associated with it. Remember that the original list was compiled by brainstorming where all ideas are included. Now, you must determine which items seem more likely to be the cause (or one of the causes). Circle the items that are most likely and need to be investigated further.

If there’s not an obvious consensus on the top areas to investigate, use some sort of voting system to formally narrow down the top choices with the biggest chance of success. For each item circled, discuss how the item impacts the problem.

Once you circle the causes that appear to be the most likely, you should create an action plan for attaching these causes. This will most likely involve some high-level actions and assigning the cause to a team member to be analyzed outside of the meeting.

Remember that this technique is used for complex problems with multiple causes and allows you to identify potential causes for the problem and determine which ones are most likely to be resolved.

Courtesy – Tom Mochal, TechRepulic

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Mobile Monday Bangalore – July Event

July Event: Delivering rich media the Internet, Enterprise services

When: 28th July 2008, 6:30 PM to 9 PM

Topic: Challenges of delivering rich media and applications over the Internet

Speaker: Bruno Goveas, Head – Marketing & Product Management (India) Akamai Technologies, Inc.

Brief:
Has the Internet infrastructure kept pace? As the Internet is rapidly evolving as an important channel to sell, inform, entertain, and conduct the business online, traffic loads and performance requirements have increased dramatically. Bruno will discuss the evolution of the Internet, key challenges faced and implications for businesses. As end-user consumption of content on mobile devices reaches critical mass, he will also share the current state of the Mobile Internet .

Demo: MyDunia Enterprise Services By Mr Sachin, Assistant Vice President Marketing, MyDuniya

Where: Akamai Technologies, #77, Salarpuria Ascent, Jyoti Nivas College Road, Near Bhima Jewellers, Koramangala, Bangalore - 560095

Cost: Free, but registration is required.

Register: here

Sponsor:
Forum Nokia

Monday, July 21, 2008

Eight Guiding Principles for Creating Marketplace Conversations

  1. Don't Pay It Forward

    When trying to establish or create marketplace conversations always start with the end in mind and work backwards. Ask these questions:

    What do we want prospects to think about you 12 months from now?

    Where would like to be?

    When you can envision and answer those questions create an Integrated Marketplace Conversation plan that will help you get where you want to go.

    The Integrated Marketplace Conversion

    Conversations require content and everyone at your organization needs to collaborate on new content strategies ... news, video, audio, web, blogs, documents, Twitter tweets, Facebook channels, etc. ... each designed to keep prospects engaged with you and move them into awareness and from there into interactive relationships that lead to qualified leads and pipeline activity.

  2. Each Marketplace Conversation is focused on brand awareness to raise your visibility, using multi-step, multi-media campaigns that integrate:
    • News (multi-media news releases and feature article placements)
    • Opt-in emailed newsletter articles and promotions
    • Direct communications to generate awareness with targeted individuals
    • Direct promotional communications to create qualified sales leads
    • Content creation, distribution and monitoring social media, particularly blogs, podcasts, and video
    • Participation and monitoring of social networks
  3. Each Marketplace Conversation to focus on people issues and how they relate to your products.
  4. Each Marketplace Conversation is chosen to implant the selected conversations in the minds or your various target audiences.
  5. Each Marketplace Conversation is an extended dialogue, with multiple prongs and enhancements to keep it going across an extended time frame.
  6. The distribution media will be selected around the target audience for each topic, some will be broad in distribution and others will be slivered around specific prospect segments.
  7. Each Marketplace Conversation needs to have attention-getting qualities—human drama, entertainment, controversy, humor or other attention getter so you do not get lost in the clutter.
  8. Each Marketplace Conversation to provide validation to support the stories.

Courtesy - Dale Wolf, Perfect Customer Experience Blog

Sunday, July 20, 2008

The Competitive Imperative of Learning

The Idea in Brief

Most managers believe that relentless execution--the efficient, timely production and delivery of offerings--is vital to corporate performance. Execution-as-efficiency is important. But focusing too narrowly on it can prevent your company from adapting effectively to change.

Consider General Motors: Managers' confidence in GM's famously efficient control systems blinded them to big shifts in the market, including customers' preferences for fuel-efficient cars. GM posted a $38.7 billion loss in 2007.

Edmondson recommends widening your lens to include execution-as-learning. Companies that use this approach focus not just on carrying out key processes more efficiently than rivals--but also on learning faster. To foster execution-as-learning, make it safe for employees to ask questions and fail. Then:

  • Provide process guidelines, using the best available knowledge.
  • Encourage collaborative decision-making.
  • Collect process data describing how work unfolds.
  • Use the data to identify process-improvement opportunities.

Through execution-as-learning, General Electric continually reinvents itself in multiple fields. Its 2007 profit? $22.5 billion.

The Idea in Practice

Edmondson provides these ideas for cultivating execution-as-learning in your firm:

Make It Safe. In psychologically safe environments, people offer ideas, questions, and concerns. They're willing to fail--and when they do, they learn. To create a safe environment:

  • Model openness, humility, and curiosity.
  • Explicitly acknowledge the lack of answers to the tough problems facing your group.
  • Ask questions showing that you genuinely want people's input.
  • Reward learning.

Pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly's chief science officer introduced "failure parties" to honor intelligent experiments that failed.

Provide Process Guidelines. Even if you can't fully standardize knowledge work, you can provide process guidelines informed by best practices. Develop flexible guidelines, understanding that today's best practices won't be tomorrow's and won't work in every situation.

Intermountain Healthcare assembled teams of experts on different diseases to develop detailed guidelines for treating patients with those conditions. Derived from analysis and debate among diverse professionals, the guidelines reflected the current best practices in the medical literature.

Encourage Collaborative Decision Making. Knowledge work requires people to make decisions together in response to unforeseen, novel, or complex problems. Provide tools enabling them to collaborate in real time.

The Cleveland Clinic developed state-of-the-art IT systems that help dispersed caregivers who are participating in a patient's care to work together virtually. For instance, through an automated alert function, physicians learn of drugs others have prescribed. Medication decisions with interdependent consequences are thus made safely.

Collect Process Data. Gather data describing how work unfolds. Use it to determine what's going right and what's going wrong.

Intermountain Healthcare allows doctors to deviate from the process guidelines anytime they judge that good patient care requires it. But doctors who deviate must help the organization learn--by documenting what they did differently and why.

Identify Process-Improvement Opportunities. Analyze process data to improve the way activities are performed.

At the Cleveland Clinic, seven teams of physicians focusing on specific conditions (heart failure, stroke, diabetes) study process data to identify areas for improvement throughout the organization's many sites. For instance, data showed that stroke patients treated at various sites had not always received a blood thinner within the three-hour window that research had identified as the standard of care. Analysis of patient outcomes helped make blood-thinner treatment the new standard of stroke care for all Cleveland Clinic hospitals. Consequently, hospitals doubled their use of blood thinner and reduced complications from stroke by 50%.

Copyright 2008 Harvard Business School Publishing Corporation. All rights reserved.

Further Reading

Articles

Building a Learning Organization

Harvard Business Review

July 1993

by David A. Garvin

In this classic article on organizational learning, Garvin identifies the five practices characterizing organizations that excel at learning: 1) Solving problems systematically by generating hypotheses, gathering data to test them, and using statistical tools to draw inferences. 2) Using small experiments to produce incremental gains in knowledge. 3) Learning from past experience by reviewing successes and failures, identifying lessons learned, and recording those lessons in accessible forms. 4) Learning from others by looking outside the immediate environment (for example, to customers and to other companies) to gain new perspectives. 5) Transferring knowledge by moving experts to different parts of

the company so they can share the wealth.

Is Yours a Learning Organization?

Harvard Business Review

March 2008

by David A. Garvin, Amy C. Edmondson, and Francesca Gino

The authors provide a tool for assessing your company's performance on the three building blocks of organizational learning: 1) A supportive learning environment where employees feel safe disagreeing with others, asking naive questions, owning up to mistakes, and presenting minority viewpoints. In such an environment, people see the value of opposing ideas, take risks, and explore the unknown. 2) Concrete learning processes for generating, collecting, interpreting, and disseminating information; for experimenting with new offerings; for gathering intelligence on competitors, customers, and technological trends; and for developing employees' skills. 3) Leaders who reinforce learning by demonstrating willingness to entertain alternative viewpoints, signaling the importance of spending time on problem identification, knowledge transfer, and reflection; and engaging in active questioning and listening.

Speeding Up Team Learning

Harvard Business Review

October 2001

by Amy C. Edmondson, Richard Bohmer, and Gary P. Pisano

This article focuses on the collaborative decision making so crucial to execution-as-learning, using cardiac surgery as an example. In cardiac surgery, team leaders must not simply execute existing processes efficiently; they have to implement new processes as quickly as possible. The authors explain how surgical teams at 16 major medical centers implemented a difficult new procedure for performing cardiac surgery. The most successful teams had leaders who actively managed the groups' learning efforts. Teams that most successfully implemented the new technology shared three essential characteristics: 1) They were designed for learning. 2) Their leaders framed the challenge so that team members were highly motivated to learn. 3) An environment of psychological safety fostered communication and innovation.

About the Authors

Amy C. Edmondson is the Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at Harvard Business School in Boston. Her most recent previous HBR contribution was the March 2008 article "Is Yours a Learning Organization?" coauthored with David A. Garvin and Francesca Gino.

Courtesy – BNET

Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Indian profit cycle

Indian companies have learnt their lessons from the gut-wrenching boom and bust cycle of the mid-1990s

Indian companies have usually done better than the overall economy in the past 10 years. Will they continue to do so in the future as well?

The answer to this question matters a lot in these times of rising inflation and slowing growth. And it could also offer useful clues to equity investors who have been battered and bruised in the crash of 2008.

The record so far seems impressive: Every year since 1998, on average, the largest listed Indian companies have managed to increase their net profits around 11 percentage points faster than the nominal economic growth, which is measured as the gross domestic product, or GDP, at current prices. This result is based on profit data from 359 of the companies that comprise the BSE 500 stock index and for whom data going back to 1998-1999 is readily available.

Averages suggest profit growth has decoupled from economic growth since 1998. The reality is more complicated

What does this tell us?

To use a more contemporary word to describe the situation, it seems that companies have decoupled from the overall economy in the past decade or so. They managed to run ahead of the rest of the pack. But this is a mildly misleading conclusion, as I shall try to show later in this column, because the averages hide more than they reveal.

The stellar show by Indian companies in itself is not surprising. Indian companies have learnt their lessons from the gut-wrenching boom and bust cycle of the mid-1990s. The investment surge in the middle of the last decade of the 20th century led many companies to make expensive mistakes that were exposed when the global economy fell into trouble in 1998. New projects were launched based on overly optimistic demand forecasts, were funded with heavy doses of borrowing and were backed at a time when India was still a heavily protected economy. The subsequent pain was severe.

Since then, Indian companies have focused on getting the most of what they already have — through tighter working capital cycles, productivity drives on the shop floor and cutting debt from their balance sheets. Investments in new projects picked up again only around two years ago. This discipline paid off. So, even as sales went up and down, profit growth continued to be healthy.

That sort of explains the apparent decoupling of profits from the rest of the economy.

Going by the average difference between net profit growth and nominal GDP growth — of around 11 percentage points — it would seem that Indian companies are well placed to weather the coming slowdown. Here’s a quick back-of-the-envelope calculation. The Indian economy could grow at around 15% in nominal terms this year, with real GDP growth at 7.5% and inflation at 7.5%. If companies can outgrow this rate by the average 11 percentage points, then net profits of the largest listed companies could grow at around 26%. That would make the stock market — which trades at a forward price-earnings multiple of 13 — seem completely undervalued.

But the picture is actually far more complicated than the raw averages suggest. In fact, there is only a weak correlation (a correlation coefficient of 0.54, in case you are interested in such stuff) between net profit growth and nominal GDP growth since 1998-99. What’s more, the difference between the two fluctuates wildly. The standard deviation of the data is a hefty 11.23.

There have been years when company profits have grown several times more than nominal GDP growth; there have been years when the two have more or less marched in step with each other; and there has been one year when companies could not increase their net profits faster than the overall economy.

Here are a few random examples. In 2003-04, net profits of the 359 sample companies grew by 43.32%, while the economy grew at 12.5% at current prices. In 2002-03, profit growth of 10.62% was slightly more than nominal economic growth of 7.9%. And in 1999-2000, profits grew 1 percentage point slower than the underlying economy. What will happen over the next few years?

It is too early to say for sure. But I think that the days when companies could collectively increase their profits far faster than the growth in the economy in which they operate are over. There should usually be a far higher correlation between corporate performance and economic performance. We may even see a few years of underperformance very soon — which is not unusual — as the excesses of a boom are revealed.

There will be individual cases of exceptional companies that will beat the slowdown. But equity investors would be foolish to believe that Indian companies can keep increasing their profits at a rate that is far in excess of the country’s nominal GDP growth rate.

The past, as we all know, is not a perfect predictor of the future. The past 10 years have shown Indian companies at their productive best. But the next few years may be less impressive.

Courtesy - Niranjan Rajadhyaksha, LiveMint

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Five Keys to Sustainable Self-Motivation

Whether you are salesperson of the year or a rookie just starting out, you’ve probably experienced those low points: the sinking feeling when you lose a hard fought competitive battle, the discouragement of hearing a string of customer "No’s," the struggle not to take a turndown personally. When these low moments hit, some salespeople, despite considerable talent and potential, find it difficult to pick themselves up and jump back in the game. They seem to lack the elusive quality of motivation—the ability to soar above these temporary obstacles and keep moving forward. Instead they lose momentum, avoid making calls, and spend more and more time in the safe havens of their offices or automobiles.

On the other hand, there are salespeople who appear to have a natural ability to generate the motivation and resilience to make every customer call as enthusiastically as if it were the first. These individuals have such a desire to succeed that they are able to leverage even "ordinary" skills and abilities to achieve extraordinary results.

For the majority of us who fall somewhere in the middle of this motivational spectrum, there is a wide-open opportunity to increase "motivational intelligence" by keeping in mind a few simple principles. These are a handful of emotional "critical success factors"—keys to sustainable motivation—that seem to be almost instinctive for highly successful sales professionals.

1. Motivation is completely and entirely an inside job.

No one, no matter how inspirational, has the power to motivate others. The fact is that motivation—the movement to action—is a decision that can only be made by the individual. Many things can cause a lack of motivation, but the most common are fear and lack of confidence. The solution—courageous action. Obstacles and pitfalls are sometimes more apparent to us than the positive forces that can help us succeed. Consistently summoning the courage to move forward in the face of fear is unquestionably the single most important difference between highly motivated achievers and those who give up easily when confronted by a challenging situation.

2. Motivation requires a meaningful "motive."

For many Olympic athletes a medal is their clear, meaningful motive. For some, however, the opportunity just to participate in the games is enough to keep them dedicated to years of disciplined, rigorous training. What is meaningful varies with individuals and their circumstances. This personal sense of "why" we act often gets confused with the "what" we need to do—often defined in terms of external goals such as making a quota, or closing a particular sale.

Getting truly motivated begins with willingness to get to the truth of what we want for our lives and careers. It’s important to ask what has meaning and long-term value for you. Is it growing and developing your skills and knowledge? Do you find meaning in building long-term consulting relationships with your customers? Is it meaningful to know you can genuinely help your customers solve problems? Whatever it is, the real power of personal motive comes from a deep connection to your values and who you are as a unique individual, not from short-term external incentives.

3. Motivation is propelled more powerfully by faith than by fear.

We talked about actions driven by the fear of negative consequences. Fear can be a powerful motivator and is a highly appropriate response to threatening circumstances. But waking up fearful every morning is debilitating, highly stressful and, ultimately, soul-destroying.

Faith, on the other hand, is the belief that what you aspire to is attainable. Moving forward in faith, however, again takes courage. The size of our highest aspirations is usually matched by the size of the obstacles to be overcome. As always, we are left with a choice: between being motivated by fear that stifles imagination and leads to stagnation, or motivated by faith – in ourselves and our abilities -- that frees us from limitations and leads to great expectations and the highest level of achievement.

4. Motivation is influenced by expectations.

In those low moments we referred to earlier, the idea of having great expectations might seem naïve or unrealistic. Yet research bears out what most of us know intuitively—that we tend to live up to what is expected of us. When parents, teachers—or sales managers—set high standards and expect the best possible performance, they are far more likely to get it than if expectations are low.

The highest level of motivation, however, comes from the expectations we set for ourselves. There is great power in setting challenging personal and professional goals and being committed to do what it takes to attain them. When you set expectations that stretch you and expand your knowledge and skills and then hit your mark, there’s nothing more satisfying—and motivating—than that inner sense of accomplishment. On the other hand, expecting little is a great motivation killer, and becomes both an excuse and a cause of lower standards, lower levels of performance, and shrinking results.

5. Motivation is inspired by a larger purpose:

It’s normal to respond positively to incentives such as a bonus, a big commission, or the reward of a trip to Hawaii after a great year. As gratifying as these external "motivators" may be, they are short-lived and provide precious little fuel to the motivation engine when you’ve just lost a big sale. One of the secrets of sustaining self-motivation and drive—through good times and bad—is to have a larger purpose that defines the contribution you want to make. Combined with high expectations and a sense of what is truly meaningful for you, your sense of purpose can be a constant source of renewed commitment to act and to perform at your best.

Steve Jobs once said "I want to put a ding in the universe." Your purpose need not be stated quite so loftily—but it needs to be something that truly inspires you, and represents the absolute best part of who you are.

A purpose provides a "cause" for our lives—it calls us to action. The most powerful motivator in the world is such a cause.  Knowing your purpose answers questions most of us leave unspoken: "What is my legacy?" "How will my efforts make a difference—to those around me as well as in the larger world?" If you have answers to those questions, they provide the most compelling, satisfying, and inspiring reason for getting up in the morning—the intent to create and contribute something of value.

These five keys to sustainable self-motivation are a starting point, not the end, of creating a "motivational system" that will carry you forward to achieve immediate results and long-term life and career success. They require consistent thought and renewal. It’s especially useful to revisit these ideas when you hit one of those low points.

Here are five questions to ask yourself—especially when you feel your motivation slipping and your enthusiasm waning:

  1. Am I tapping into my own inner resources?  Is there a courageous action I should take right now to overcome an obstacle?
  2. What’s my "meaningful motive?" Am I focused on what has meaning for me?
  3. What’s driving my thinking right now? Is it fear? Or is it faith in myself?
  4. Am I setting high expectations for myself? Am I challenging myself to reach my personal best?
  5. Is my Purpose clear? Do I have a clear image of how I want to contribute and to whom?

If you can answer these questions clearly and with conviction, you have the tools for gaining and sustaining the motivational engine to drive success in your life and career.


About the Author:

David McNally, an internationally acclaimed speaker and recipient of the prestigious Speaker Hall of Fame Award of Excellence by the National Speakers Association, leverages his knowledge of what motivates and inspires people to provide them with the knowledge, skills and inspiration to perform at their best. David McNally is the author of two best selling books, "Even Eagles Need a Push—Learning to Soar in a Changing World" and "The Eagle's Secret—Success Strategies for Thriving at Work and in Life." His latest co-authored book, "Be Your OWN Brand," is bringing new meaning to the concept of the brand promise. Companies such as Abbott Laboratories, Ameriprise Financial, Inc., Gartner, Merrill Lynch, Northwest Airlines, Inc., Pulte Homes, and Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, are but a few of the many distinguished organizations that have embraced David’s work as a key component of preparing their employees for an ever increasing competitive and complex future.

Courtesy – Expert Access

Monday, July 14, 2008

What Makes Social Media Tick - Seven Secrets of Social Media

I’ve used the term “social media” as a handle for the types of publishing that everyday people are using to be influential publishers in Content Nation. What really is social media and how does it work? Let’s take a look at what makes social media “tick” and what has really changed when people use today’s technologies to change the dynamics of how people create and find value through influential publishing.

Read the Secrets and full story here!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

How to Use a Strategic Alliance to Get Ahead

In 1999, Starbucks joined forces with humanitarian agency CARE International and eventually contributed more than $20 million to programs that provide emergency relief and community support in developing countries. What did Starbucks get out of the deal? CARE recognized the company’s humanitarian contributions and the move gave Starbucks good reason to call its brew, the “Coffee that Cares.” Strategic alliances are much more than just a gesture of mutual goodwill – they have become a necessary tool, whether it’s to strengthen social responsibility credentials, pursue complex R&D projects, or simply grow in ways that one company can’t manage alone. But getting the most out of an alliance is a more difficult task than it might seem. To help, we’ve pulled together this package of articles that illustrate the finer points of making strategic partnerships work.

The Three Stages of Strategic Alliances

Source: Harvard Knowledgebase

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Not every alliance is created equal. Harvard business professor James Austin studied five cross-sector alliances and discovered the three stages of how a partnership evolves. Here are his findings on how companies like Timberland, Starbucks, and Bayer pursued strategic relationships with complementary partners.

How Alliances Fit into Corporate Strategy

Source: The Boston Consulting Group

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This guide breaks down the process of forming a smart partnership, from choosing the right partner and negotiating the deal, to making sure both parties stay goal-oriented. Turn to the handy 10-point CEO checklist if you’re too pressed for time to read the entire white paper.

Getting Everyone Together: A Road Map for Action

Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View Now

When two organizations decide to partner up, the focus tends toward the financial and contractual aspects of the deal. But if an alliance is going to succeed, authors Jennifer Kemeny and Joel Yanowitz argue that companies must also focus on the “human factors” – the ways that each company’s staff will think and interact. In this article, learn how to effectively align two different cultures and their expectations.

Seven Strategies for Maintaining Good Relations

Source: Gruner + Jahr USA Publishing

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According to a Vantage Partners study of 130 companies, somewhere between 55 and 70 percent of business coalitions either fail or don’t meet their original goals. Why? Alliance managers cite poor working relationships as the root cause. The founding partners of Vantage share seven tricks to initiating – and maintaining – a lasting partnership.

Manage and Measure a Partnership’s Success

Source: Penton Media

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Forming the right alliance is the first hurdle. The next challenge is measuring how much value it’s generating for both partners. Find the right metrics to make sure your company is getting out what it’s putting into the partnership.

Courtesy - bnet

Tags: Strategic Alliance, Alliance, Partnership, Business Structures, Strategy, Finance, Management, BNET Editorial, Strategic Alliances, Collaboration, Metrics, Starbucks Corp., Timberland Co.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

In a Social Networking, You Are What You Give

I’m amazed at the number of sources there are for defining just what a social networking strategy should and should not have for companies considering implementing one.

Mainstream publications at times revert to a structured model of social networking strategies, no doubt to make the concepts quickly interpreted and used by their readers. Others, including bloggers and the leading Twitter contributors, have infused social networking strategies with an immediacy and urgency that is lost in mainstream media due to production timeframes. This is not a knock on either, just an observation.

What does emerge from watching this growing dichotomy are the following take-aways:

· It’s not about the company it’s about you and your passion for what you are doing. I can think of nothing more boring that having a blog that is faceless, nameless, and devoid of passion, even if it is one for a company. No wonder Forrester reports this week that B2B blogs have been seen as the new kings of dull. They need people writing who are passionate about what they do and this needs to infuse their writing and perspective. Waking up a boring B2B blog needs to start with a more passionate voice from people willing to sign their names, not just sign a corporate byline.

· Unleash people passionate about sharing information and writing, letting them do cannonballs into the social networking pool. The top-down methodologies that some mainstream media advocate miss this point. Let’s break it down (and I do not mean to sound patronizing here) but companies are just groups of individuals – if a social networking strategy is going to work find the most passionate person in the group and unleash them on the blog and Twitter. Not to self-promote or spam about your company but to deliver valuable information, which leads to the next point.

· Realize that “joining the conversation” is a cliché, giving more than you get is all. Twitter this week has had some great posts, including a blog reference from Jeremiah Owyang of Forrester and his great Why Some Don’t Need to Join the Conversation . Be sure to read it and the comments. It really gets one thinking about what social networking from a company strategy standpoint is all about.

· Before attempting to create a social networking strategy get a Twitter account and watch the traffic for a few weeks. I found this fascinating and highly addictive personally. Doing this shows you that you that offering up and serving others with useful information and insights is what makes this all work.

Bottom line: Social networking’s value is in giving more than you give. Find a passionate person and turn them loose, give them the authority to freely share information – on the good and bad – and refuse to be the king of dull by infusing passion into B2B blogs by writing about what your customers and you really care about.

Courtesy - Louis Columbus, Perfect CEM

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Marketers, get ready for the social networks?

Marketers are continually hopping onto social media marketing as a perfectly productive means of reaching out to more and more people. Even if they are not able to measure the numbers yet, they are keen on using this tool as an effective means of creating the right buzz about themselves.

In an innovative big to promote itself, Aquafina created a contest on video networking website MySpace for users to create a winning video. The reward was a trip to none-other-than the Sundance Film Festival. The brand has profiled itself on MySpace since 2006, filling in with podcasts and film festival updates. This was one of their most innovative and effective ways to reach out to the film community. The influence that social media marketing of this kind provides cannot be met with a single line ad.

Closer home, a recent instance is the promotion of Bollywood [s1] film Tashan on Facebook, YouTube and Orkut. Promoters of the film have created a community specific to the film. On Facebook, it runs with the tagline, “Don’t worry about who you are, just carry your Tashan in your heart.” The film got popular even before it was released and the reader profile perfectly complimented the audience the film required.

Social media marketing can be a tricky game. If your existence on the web is simply a platform for your company, you might want to get involved with B2B media marketing that allows you to access the communities you specifically want to target. You can access this on networks like ITtoolbox or LinkedIn.

On the other hand, you can involve more publicly by hosting podcasts, webcasts and blogs for your brand on the numerous social networking websites with their readership of anything like a million. Since people are talking about you anyway, you might as well don the discussion hat and play along. It will only benefit your brand. Cincom Systems, an IT organization has made available a series of online educational & promotional videos, podcasts and screencasts, on the social media sites YouTube, Ning and Facebook. The famous bollywood actor Amitab Bachan, Aamir Khan and other are now hooked to blogging. Marketing experts like Dale Wolf runs the perfect customer experience management (www.perfectcem.com) blog, Steve Kayser’s Expert Access newsletter has managed to achieve a phenomenal global subscription base of nearly 141,000 subscribers. These examples truly accentuate the importance of these next generation tools for marketers.

For those who have still not recognized the perfectly simple and productive marketing tool that social media provides, it is time to wake up and smell the coffee. There is no challenging the tremendous traffic that a good posting can attract. These will be people who can add to your business and a lot of them will be ones who will keep coming back to your website.

Thanks to Web 2.0 you can use this master of a marketer to attract more links to your website or the company. The idea is to create a posting or an advertisement that connects to the user on the website you are choosing to harness. Added to this is the low cost advantage that all of us are eventually happy to employ. Search engines also pick up websites that receive natural links from known domain names. These are some first hand advantages of social media marketing that many of us are meaning to ignore so very far into its development.

It’s easy to assume that most of the traffic generated thus will not be productive. But a trend that has been noticed is that while initially you might see a spurt of visitors, the numbers will stabilize soon after. And this will be the number to reckon with. It could be clients, customers, partners, potential partners,. All of whom need to be on your list. It is also not presumptuous to say that a lot of the secondary traffic that visits your website could be people interested in what you provide.

Simply advertising on Web 2.0 is an efficient means of attracting traffic to your website. Because the number of users is so high on this case, it adds to the traffic you will eventually attract. Again, the only trick is to make it available to your target audience because the click, as we all know, is only a flick of a second.

While the profits of such marketing do not add up immediately or even evidently, it will generate a linkage on the web that will support your business through mentions, connects and recommendations. Social media marketing perfectly compliments your other forms of marketing. It can even be a support system for you as this is one means of communication that has no time span or recurring costs involved.

Another term touted with as much ease as social media marketing these days is ‘social media optimization’. With this, brands aim to alter their website such that it makes it easily searchable and receives more mention on blogs and podcasts etc. Adding a blog to your own website is a greater way of going about it. If your website is static, it will get more dynamic with regular updates and with several links connecting to anything that you post.

Social media marketing can therefore be a great means to promote your site through social media networks as well as within 3D worlds like Second Life and There.com.

Instead of randomly rushing through this sea of information, marketers prefer to build on a specific idea for brand awareness and then encourage brand attention and feedback with increased albeit more casual visibility. What cautions them is the user feedback that can also be negative. But one cannot forget that users in this case also become contributors and when the product is good, gladly act as ambassadors. As more threads are attached to your name, viral marketing picks up at an unprecedented pace. And this is where the crux of the game lies.

Marketers are therefore now busy fine tuning themselves to the new needs of this growing media that cannot be ignored. Social media marketing is far removed from traditional concepts of marketing. This makes it a more challenging medium but one that can be most effective in the medium to long run.

Intellectuals are still pondering over measurements that most correctly define the reach of this new media. There are four broad measures identified so far—audience, content tracking, online media analysis and online market research. Whatever the measurements and whatever its reach, opinion is unanimous for social media marketing. There seems to be nothing like it in the near future.


[s1]The Indian Film Industry like Hollywood

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Speedsourcing

Accelerating the sourcing process using an interactive and collaborative approach is not only desired, but also appropriate for many organizations today

Speed is an indispensable element in enhancing business competitiveness. If what need to done can be done faster, then it better be done that way is the mantra. So, if sectors like food and airlines, and functions like supply chains and product development can go the ‘fast’ way, why not sourcing? Global sourcing experts are in the process of developing the concept of accelerated sourcing. Though there is no mass following or universal agreement about this yet, the practice is gaining ground in real-life global sourcing situations.

“Accelerated Sourcing (sometimes referred to as ‘Fast Track Sourcing’) typically refers to a methodology where the process and timeframe to get to contract is compressed. The traditional sourcing method takes between 14 to 18 weeks. The process is compressed by simplifying and fast-tracking the various aspects — statement of work, service-level agreements, pricing, and terms and conditions — of a commercial outsourcing agreement,” explained Thomas Young, Partner and Managing Director, TPI.

Different Approach
The proponents see accelerated sourcing as a response to the market dynamics. “We are reacting to the market need. The current trend is such that the customers don’t have the time, and if we keep pushing them to follow the traditional sourcing process, fewer and fewer buyers would want to outsource,” said Doug Plotkin, Sourcing Leader, PA Consulting.   

How does one cut the slack out of the traditional sourcing process? This is where the perspectives and approaches differ. According to TPI, “The approach an organization takes in accelerated sourcing is not different from the standard sourcing approach. The key is for organizations to have a good understanding of their environment and what areas need most attention and which ones need to be simplified. For example, if the service levels are well understood and tracked, and the organization has a lot of historical data in this area, then much less time needs to be spent on developing and agreeing to service level approaches, calculations and baseline establishment,” explained Young. This also means that accelerated sourcing makes more sense for firms that have been outsourcing services for a while and have the basic understanding of the outsourcing process.

The reason why traditional method works well for the beginners is that it eradicates most of the possible risks. However, this doesn’t mean that accelerated sourcing tends to increase your risks;  it creates more filters at the initial stages such that only the suitable providers reach to the final stages. “The traditional method is very structured and only one step can be taken at a time. Thus the process takes from six weeks to many many months,” added Plotkin.

The Right Candidate
What kind of companies or engagements are more suitable for accelerated sourcing? There are varying opinions on this.

The first school of thought subscribes to the belief that the companies that have been outsourcing for a while are more comfortable with the process of accelerated sourcing. “Within the Fortune 2000, virtually every company has some experience in sourcing services. Many companies have extensive experience. As such, the sourcing approaches by these firms tend to be more sophisticated and, more importantly, built on the organization’s prior experiences. So it is easier for them to adopt the fast path,” said Young of TPI. “And the firms who are looking to initiate outsourcing should go through a more deliberative process so that they understand all aspects of the potential deal.”

The other school of thought opines that maturity in outsourcing is neither necessary nor sufficient. Said Karoor of neoIT, “This is not entirely true. Definitely the companies with better understanding of the sourcing process tend to opt for it more. But the acceptability rate has been almost 70 to 75 percent even by the new entrants to the trend.”

At times, the companies that have been outsourcing for long might find it difficult to imbibe a new process. First-time outsourcers will go for it as it comes with a cost and time advantage. However, the limiting factors for accelerated sourcing are:

  • Solution gets developed at a later stage in the lifecycle
  • Requires higher degree of coordination/project oversight
  • The process is resource intensive.

So the organizations that have the availability of resources tend to go for accelerated sourcing process, irrespective of experience or no experience.

The Readiness for Adoption
Timelines play a key role. If the deal needs to be closed by the end of the quarter, accelerated sourcing is the suggested form. But this doesn’t mean that the details can be deferred to at a later stage because leaving substantive details after the deal is “signed” leaves organizations with little leverage to negotiate from a favorable position. The keys benefits offered by accelerated sourcing process, as noticed by a market-leading reverse auction provider, are:

  • Reduced negotiation time by up to 70 percent
  • Enabled fast and simple bidder negotiations
  • Eliminated multiple face-to-face meetings, travel, and geographical barriers.

“In cases where organizations are re-bidding the existing work and have well understood statements of work, SLAs, and pricing, there accelerated sourcing works well,” said Young.

The concept is still in its development stages, but it is evident that accelerating the sourcing process via an interactive and collaborative approach is not only desired, but also appropriate for many firms today. The benefits attached with this form of sourcing are not dependant on whether there are multiple or a single provider; whether you are a beginner or pro. Even if there is only one potential provider, then too you still require a rigorous approach including the detailed preparation of requirements and final contract, etc. Thus, once you are done strategizing the process, realize the key benefits and then utilize them wisely.

Case Study: Accelerated Sourcing

One of world’s leading manufacturers of hi-tech equipment wanted to outsource part of its IT operations. Its objectives were:

  • Realize 35 percent total cost of ownership reduction and fix baseline fee for five years
  • Create a nimble and flexible IT organization to better support business cyclicality and
    transactions
  • Consolidate service providers and establish long-term win-win partnership with two service providers
  • Continuously improve service levels over the period of the agreement.

Scope of the Process: Application support, (ERP package) development and support, IT infra.

Geography Targeted: North America to start with, extended to include most other locations across
the globe.

The Challenges:

  • Consolidate over 20 service providers across all IT to only two
  • Two ‘Measurement System Analysis’ and five ‘Statement of Works’ to be signed in 10 weeks
  • Consolidate into common service desk platform, adjust to Managed Services model from staff
    augmentation
  • Rapid consolidation of production support for hundreds of global applications, network, service desk and data centers from 20+ service providers to two service providers 
  • Critical target of TCO reduction.

The Solution:

  • Facilitated collaboration between client and selected service providers
  • Conducted two collaborative workshops to define scope and service delivery structure
  • Used leading practices and negotiation framework to create MSA and SOWs quickly
  • Used industry benchmarks to negotiate terms and conditions, service levels and pricing.

The Results:

  • Quickly realized savings through consolidation
    l Long-term hedge for inflation
  • Unit based pricing with flexibility to scale/shrink requirements
  • Model that delivers continuous improvement of service levels
  • Framework for consumption-based chargeback
    to users
  • Strong, win-win, long-term partnerships with
    executive commitment
  • Platform for global rollout.

Courtesy - Namita Goel, Global Services Media