tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10337502024-03-23T11:10:05.693-07:00Ted SheltonChief Customer Officer of Catalytic - an AI and Automation company providing Fortune 500 companies with the ability to rapidly reduce the cost of every day business activities while simultaneously increasing quality, employee satisfaction, and customer loyalty.Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.comBlogger552125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-25067578191117102622018-09-02T08:43:00.002-07:002018-09-02T08:43:47.568-07:00Why are you spending 75% of your automation budget on services?<div style="background: 0px 0px rgb(255, 255, 255); border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.75); font-family: "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 20px; line-height: 3.2rem; margin-bottom: 3.2rem; margin-top: 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
2018 is the year for workplace automation -- it has become the number one agenda item for the C-Suite of the Global 2000 and is driving real transformation across the enterprise. McKinsey in their report <a href="https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/digital-mckinsey/our-insights/four-fundamentals-of-workplace-automation" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Four fundamentals of workplace automation</a> wrote that</div>
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"...as many as 45 percent of the activities individuals are paid to perform can be automated by adapting currently demonstrated technologies. In the United States, these activities represent about $2 trillion in annual wages."</blockquote>
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C-Suite excitement about the potential for using these technologies to improve business outcomes (oh, and there is that cost savings...) has made this the fastest growing enterprise software segment ever (the report is here: ...<a href="https://www.horsesforsources.com/RPAglobal2000_031118" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">53% of the Global 2000</a>...). One category, Robotic Process Automation (RPA), now has three "unicorn" startups -- Automation Anywhere, Blue Prism, and most recently UIPath which announced a $153 million <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2018/03/06/uipath-confirms-153m-at-1-1b-valuation-from-accel-capitalg-and-kp-for-its-software-robots/" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Series "B" investment</a>.</div>
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But despite claims by these companies that automation is fast and easy to implement and deploy, customers seeking to benefit from this new technology are finding that they need a LOT of services from external consultants -- in fact one analyst reports that spending on external services makes up 75% of automation budgets (here is that report: <a href="https://www.horsesforsources.com/RPA-marketsize-HfS_061017" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Robotic Process Automation Market</a>). One large global consulting firm I sat down with showed me their sales pipeline for automation projects and it totaled over $1 billion. And that doesn't include what companies are spending internally to support these initiatives so the total cost to implement automation is much higher.</div>
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While business processes should be owned by business people, the problem with automation technologies today is the heavy IT involvement required to design, develop, deploy, and operate automations. During the past few years I managed consulting teams implementing automation for companies around the world. The development and deployment in every case required a team of technologists supported by people who understood the business process being automated. Sure - many of the automation vendors claim to be able to "record" a process, limiting the need for software development. But in practice I never saw a process that had a single "happy path" allowing it to be automated with such a recorder. Software developers have to get involved once you start to define process variations, exceptions, human coordination in the process, or simply additional connections to ingest data or deliver output.</div>
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While the expenses incurred as a result of the programming skills required to implement automation are a significant hurdle, companies run an even bigger risk by reducing the flexibility of their business to adapt processes to changing requirements. Once a process has been "locked up" in a software program, making a change requires that the programmers come back again (and again...). This should be sounding off alarms in every C-Suite even more than the initial cost of automation. It's one thing to have your IT department manage the resting place for business critical data -- but do you want them to also control every aspect of how the business processes that create that data are conducted?</div>
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A regulatory change, a difference in how you do business in one region or division vs. another, or just a good idea about how to improve a process now becomes an IT "change request" and part of a backlog of other such requests leading to a terrifying rigidity in the business as more and more of our front and back office processes "benefit" from automation.</div>
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But there is a solution - one that we have been pursuing as business people since the first person carried a personal computer with <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotus_1-2-3" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Lotus 1-2-3</a> through the back door of their corporate office building: buy tools that let users develop and control their own automations.</div>
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<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Benioff" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Marc Benioff</a> in 1999 created the "Software as a Service" industry with the insight that business users wanted to control their own sales information. Now that same concept of self service that Salesforce pioneered is coming to the automation category -- companies like mine (<a href="http://www.catalytic.com/" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #665ed0; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">Catalytic.com</a>) are putting the power back into the hands of the business people. I just spent an incredible two days in a workshop with one of our customers where business people had a "hackathon" building dozens of automations of their own business processes with tools as easy to use as Microsoft Excel and now they have the tools to go back to their jobs on Monday morning and continue to bring automation into their business processes.</div>
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Allowing the business process owner to design, build, and deploy automations has immense benefits over the technology-centric approach:</div>
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<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Cost for implementing automation is reduced and automations are built and deployed more rapidly -- this significantly expands the number of use cases where automation can be used</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Companies can embrace an "iterative" approach to automation and easily manage multiple variations on processes to meet regional or divisional requirements</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Continuous process improvement can now be a part of a company's automation journey -- increasingly business process improvement or business process re-engineering teams can have automation tools that they use side by side with process analysis</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">A SaaS based approach provides transparency across an enterprise for all of the automations being built, supporting larger digital transformation initiatives by showing where benefits can come from connecting processes upstream and downstream and also identifying best practices amongst a set of similar processes</li>
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Finally, empowering your business people with automation tools can help us to evolve how we think about automation -- it shouldn't be solely about cost reduction. Our companies will be more successful when we can embrace automation as a tool to augment and enhance human potential. Having business process owners building automations themselves will provide us with the opportunity to automate in a way that eliminates repetitive and mindless work while making the role of people in those processes more about what people do well -- human skills such as creativity, critical thinking, and social perceptiveness. The future of workplace automation should be about eliminating drudgery not people.</div>
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-7898704935789873342017-12-02T09:33:00.002-08:002017-12-02T09:33:28.219-08:00Automate or be Obliterated!<div style="background: 0px 0px rgb(255, 255, 255); border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.7); font-family: "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 21px; line-height: 32px; margin-bottom: 3.2rem; margin-top: 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
In 1990 MIT computer science professor Michael Hammer started a revolution in management thinking with his HBR article "Reengineering Work: Don't Automate, Obliterate." The basic premise of his article, which put the business process re-engineering movement into high speed, was that organizations were wasting time and money putting technology into organizations to automate existing processes that created little or no value and that instead companies should first try to fix, improve, or even eliminate these processes.</div>
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Almost thirty years later most large enterprises continue to have some flavor of business process re-engineering as a part of their ongoing efforts to reduce costs, improve efficiency, increase customer satisfaction, and a myriad of related objectives. In particular the role of business process analysis and improvement has become a cornerstone of the outsourcing industry where it is critical to accurately map and often substantially improve processes before they can be relocated to remote teams.</div>
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In 2003 Dr. Hammer published "The Agenda: What Every Business Must Do To Dominate The Decade" and posthumously with co-author Lisa Hershman "Faster, Cheaper, Better." Both books continued to focus on the challenge that organizations face as a result of having inefficient processes that are mis-aligned to a company's objectives. Tragically Dr. Hammer passed away in 2008 at the age of 60 and thus did not live to see the advances in artificial intelligence and robotic process automation that have begun to sweep through the business landscape ten years later.</div>
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If Hammer were alive today, I wonder whether he would issue a new challenge in the spirit of his Agenda call --- "What Every Business Must Do To Dominate The Decade." If I can be so presumptuous to channel what he might have said, I would suggest that he would urgently tell companies:</div>
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<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Artificial Intelligence and Automation have the potential to radically and quickly transform the way businesses are managed -- specifically by re-engineering all existing business processes and reducing costs, increasing speed, improving quality, and even changing the way companies deliver their products and services</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Most companies are woefully behind in improving business productivity against the speedy transformation of technology (a good analysis can be found in <a href="https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/global/Documents/HumanCapital/hc-2017-global-human-capital-trends-gx.pdf" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background: 0px 0px transparent; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #827be9; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration-line: none; touch-action: manipulation; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">this report</a>from Deloitte University Press) and an urgent focus must be put on learning to manage a workforce and processes that combine people, bots, and AI</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">The worst mistake businesses are making today on this journey is to adopt technology solutions that are so dependent upon technical experts (data scientists, artificial intelligence experts, IT professionals) that they become disconnected from the company's business objectives and the business leaders who can truly understand the connection of processes to those business objectives.</li>
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So the imperative statement, the answer to "what every business must do to dominate THIS decade," is clear to me: <span style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; font-weight: 700; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Automate or you will be obliterated</span> -- but be sure to go on this journey to use AI and automation in your business with technology solutions that <em style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; font-family: Georgia, "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 0.975em; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">empower the business to transform itself</em>.</div>
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Maintain maximum agility -- put the power of AI and automation into the hands of the people who understand your business objectives and beware solutions that lock your business processes into inflexible technologies that require a host of experts to develop, deploy manage and improve.</div>
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The next decade will be one of immense and rapid change and transformation. To succeed in this time of change requires that you deploy simultaneously capabilities to exponentially reduce costs while maintaining maximum adaptability. Don't get caught in the trap of cost reduction that locks you into only one way of doing business in a world where your markets, customer expectations, product or service capabilities, and business models may turn upside down overnight.</div>
Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-33615848824318235962017-10-12T11:23:00.003-07:002017-10-12T11:23:34.641-07:00The Automation Solution<div style="background: 0px 0px rgb(255, 255, 255); border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.7); font-family: "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 21px; line-height: 32px; margin-bottom: 3.2rem; margin-top: 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
I have joined the amazing team at <a href="http://www.catalytic.com/">Catalytic</a>, Inc. as Chief Customer Officer. Forgive me the brief "advertorial" -- but I hope to have a chance to work with every one in my network as we scale this product and business...</div>
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After 10 years in consulting I am returning to what I have done for most of my career joining a small innovative team building an amazing new technology that I hope will make an enormous impact for our customers, their employees, and eventually the world.</div>
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As an AI native company, everything about how the Catalytic team approaches software is infused with making machine intelligence a part of how people will become more productive, more successful, and more satisfied at doing their jobs.</div>
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As a SaaS company we have found a way to deliver this technology quickly and inexpensively so that our customers can achieve an immediate cost savings. And our ease of use -- eliminating the software developer from automation -- addresses the typical barriers that companies face: lack of internal talent, lack of understanding, no time for IT to implement, not sure where to start...</div>
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Our Intelligent Automation platform is designed to make it easy to use AI in business processes -- both providing easy access to capabilities that we have built and a marketplace of capabilities that we are packaging from hundreds of other innovative companies. The web based process builder allows business people to select from these "actions" and automate tasks to improve operations quality, data accuracy, compliance, overcome bottlenecks, and generate actionable insights.</div>
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Why do I call this the "automation <span style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; font-weight: 700; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;"><em style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; font-family: Georgia, "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 0.975em; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">solution</em></span>?"</div>
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In working with clients over the past few years I have seen four big challenges to enterprise adoption of AI and automation, despite the enormous potential benefits to quality, cycle time, cost, etc.</div>
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<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">The economics of RPA are uncertain, initial costs are high -- ROI promises are too far in the future, maintenance and management expense is uncertain, and business continuity planning can easily swamp benefit cases;</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Many AI initiatives are inherently experiments since much of this work is being done for the first time ever -- tools are complex and require experts in technology who may not be experts in the business making it difficult to define path to benefit;</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Supply of experienced staff for implementation is limited -- both for process analysis and especially for automation development -- making it difficult to staff and scale automation initiatives;</li>
<li style="background: 0px 0px; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; margin: 2.4rem 0px 2.4rem 3.2rem; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">The approach to design and implementation is typically "top down" -- taking existing business processes and focusing solely on the release of headcount to achieve cost savings which makes employees and even managers uneasy about the technology thus delaying or even derailing initiatives.</li>
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Catalytic delivers a much-needed solution to this set of problems -- fast to implement, less expensive to maintain, and focused on enhancing how people and AI work together. We have a lot of work to do to achieve all of the promise of our new platform, but we are already at work with some amazing large companies in manufacturing, insurance, banking, real estate, and retail.</div>
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Catalytic. Work done better.</div>
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Hope to hear from you about how we can work together!</div>
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-66392395346230119862017-10-05T10:12:00.002-07:002017-10-05T10:12:25.966-07:00The Automation Dilemma<div style="background-color: white; background-position: 0px 0px; background-repeat: initial initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.701961); font-family: "Source Serif Pro", serif; font-size: 21px; font-variant-ligatures: normal; line-height: 32px; margin-bottom: 3.2rem; margin-top: 3.2rem; orphans: 2; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 2;">
Over the next decade a steady stream of new companies and products will use AI and automation to change the way work gets done across the economy. One of the books that I found time to read this summer was <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Economic-Singularity-Artificial-intelligence-capitalism/dp/099321164X" rel="nofollow noopener" style="background-color: transparent; background-position: 0px 0px; background-repeat: initial initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: inherit; color: #827be9; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline; word-wrap: break-word;" target="_blank">The Economic Singularity</a> by Calum Chace. Calum provides a terrific summary of the debate about the impact that AI will have on individuals and society as the pace of change increases.</div>
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I am definitely on one side of this debate -- I believe that we are going to have a very bumpy time ahead of us as one set of human activity is ceded to the machines. Even if we are simultaneously creating new jobs as the old jobs are eliminated, I believe we will have a "lost generation" of workers who will find it difficult to develop the skills required for those new jobs.</div>
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So on the one hand automation will improve our lives -- cost reduction, quality improvement, etc -- but on the other hand automation has the potential to disrupt our lives by making it impossible for some members of our society to produce goods or provide services in a way the economy values. The Automation Dilemma.</div>
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I believe that those of us involved in the creation or deployment of these new AI and automation tools have a moral responsibility to go beyond the simple objective of "cost reduction" and do things with these technologies that make people's lives better. While reducing costs is not going away as an objective, we should be simultaneously asking how these technologies help us create growth -- both for our companies and for our employees.</div>
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Corporate automation initiatives today are typically very top down -- process re-engineering teams and software development teams work together to automate work, largely keeping the process the same but focused on removing people from any tasks that are repetitive, proscribed, and time consuming.</div>
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But what if we could approach automation bottoms up? Give automation tools to the employees themselves and ask them to automate the tasks which they know are repetitive, but also identify opportunities to change the way the work gets done by substituting the eliminated time for activities that can create more value for the business. Could companies become better faster if we trusted employees to own the task of improving?</div>
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We must find ways to use AI and automation to enhance human potential, increase the time we spend doing things that are uniquely human and find those places where a person plus a machine is greater than either one alone. We humans are curious, creative, problem solvers, relationship builders, empathetic and compassionate. These are qualities we want in ourselves and our society -- let's get our machines to help us be better at using these positive qualities to improve all of our lives.</div>
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-80580882118405004332015-11-01T14:42:00.002-08:002015-11-01T14:42:36.288-08:00Five Years May Be Too Long<div class="article-content" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-size: 16px; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
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If you were an architect designing a brand new commercial building in downtown Los Angeles, the city building code would require that you include in your plans one parking place for every 250 s.f. of floor space. An exception might allow you to reduce this to 1 parking place for every 400 s.f. of floor space (it depends on how the space will be used). </div>
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So how much thought should you give to the design of the parking floors? Its just parking, right? </div>
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But a building may last 100 years. Will we still own or drive cars in even 20 years? If I were an architect, I'd be thinking about how to design parking floors that could easily be converted into more commercial space if (I think when) autonomous vehicles radically transform our ideas about the need for parking.</div>
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But what about your own company and the plans you are making right now for the future? Are you making investments in new manufacturing capabilities that will be overtaken by automated or accretive manufacturing processes? Are you configuring office or retail space for the way people worked or shopped in the twentieth century instead of the twenty-first? Are you entering into partnerships and vendor relationships that are going to tie your hands if market trends or technologies disrupt your current business model? Are you defining a five year plan that will be invalid the first time something happens in your market that you didn't anticipate?</div>
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The problem with a traditional strategic planning approach in 2015 is that the we are living in a moment where our behaviors and expectations as customers and employees are rapidly changing, putting increasing pressure on companies to change. Business models, operating models, product and service definition, partner ecosystems -- we can expect all of these to change for every company.</div>
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As customers and employees we will quickly adapt to these changing markets and find the companies that we want to do business with because they are meeting our new needs. The decision for us as business people is whether we will be reactive to these new market demands or whether we will steer our companies into paths where we can be proactive -- anticipating disruption and being ready to take advantage as a first mover and not a follower. </div>
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The imperative is clear. In market after market companies that take the lead as a disruptor have had an enormous impact on slower moving competitors. Amazon has substantially disrupted retail and is now beginning to disrupt enterprise software. Uber has disrupted transportation and may begin to disrupt package delivery. AirBnB is disrupting hospitality. You've heard all of these stories before but you think, "not in my business..."</div>
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But think about this a little bit differently. If you are doing something of value to your customers (a reasonable premise if you are running a for-profit busines), and there is an opportunity to do what you do better -- faster, cheaper, higher quality -- the way markets work today makes it easy for the innovator to intervene in your market with their new product or service and put pressure on your existing business.</div>
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So don't look at the businesses that have already been disrupted as the model for how yours will be disrupted. Look at your own business and ask, what could possible happen to change the circumstances of my market and create that opportunity for someone to disrupt the way we do business today? I call this anticipating disruption and I believe that there is a process that you can manage in your business to help you anticipate disruption.</div>
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First of all, you need to establish that innovation is a crucial part of the way you run your business -- fund innovation, staff innovation with thought leaders, make sure that company leadership is rewarded for embracing innovation...</div>
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Second -- undestand that managing innovation is about managing process, not managing outcomes. Do not set out on a journey that says "we are going to make a widget that costs 50% less to produce" or any other specific goal. And do not decide that innovation has succeeded or failed because of the achievement of that specific goal. The only innovation methodology that matters is the one that is continous and routinely questions all aspects of the business looking for those opportunities to transform.</div>
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Third -- staff innovation with curious employees and partners (important to include partners!). Make sure that they have the right tools and expertise to cast a broad net across all aspects of your business and look at what the market, societal, technology, and competitive trends are that can suggest where change is likely to emerge and flourish.</div>
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Fourth -- be a scientist and experiment. Develop hypotheses, define experiments, run the test and learn from the successes and the failures in order to define the path forward.</div>
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The companies that will grow and prosper are the ones that embrace innovation and manage it as a core process -- continuous and incremental innovation that is constantly experimenting with and evolving the business. Not setting five year planning goals and trying to manage the outcomes. So what are you doing today to make sure this is true at your company?</div>
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-39413549304681768502015-10-25T20:05:00.002-07:002015-10-25T20:05:46.705-07:00Turning the good ship Twitter<div style="background-position: initial initial; background-repeat: initial initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #232629; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: 18px; font-stretch: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin-bottom: 32px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline; widows: 1;">
Much has been written on the fate of Twitter over the last few weeks as Jack Dorsey (@jack) has retaken the helm and promised to put the company back on course. And a lot of what has been written is sensible and constructive but mostly either misses the core problem or speaks about it without calling it out directly. And that core problem is the product.</div>
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Honestly its been the core problem all along. I was first introduced to Twitter back in 2007 (@tshelton) and back then it was, well, a lot like it is today. Back then we could post 140 characters to a group of people who had decided to follow us, and along with other people they had followed they'd get our posts in the same chronological order in which they were sent.</div>
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Today -- sure there are photos and videos and advertisements... but its basically the same universal message bus that it was back in 2007. As infrastructure it was very cool back then. Having a universal message bus excited all sorts of people, thinking about how messages could be sent by anyone and anything and received by anyone and anything. High speed, hugely scalable, global reach...</div>
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But after 8 years so many new things have emerged that have carved out pieces of what Twitter could have been -- what Twitter should have served as an infrastructure to power.</div>
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But I do not believe it is too late for Twitter. I've compiled ten specific things Jack should be working on in four specific categories to make Twitter relevant again. Some have been tried, some have been mentioned by others, and some (hopefully) Twitter is really working on. But I've gathered together these ten things because I think that collectively they would offer a complete shift in product strategy and from there a renewed meaning and importance for Twitter:</div>
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1. New content types -- Twitter needs to go way beyond media types and think more about the wide range of possible content types that could be in a message envelope. Each tweet is a data element. Give these data elements a range of self-indentifying types that serve different purposes. For example: A tweet-object could be an iCal event and your calendar could subscribe to a particular feed and receive a stream of updates. Think about message types that might flow between people, from people to machines, and from machines to machines.</div>
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2. New ways to submit content -- In 2007 (remember pre-iPhone?) having 140 characters and being able to send a tweet via SMS seemed fantastic. But now I have lots of technology that should be able to send messages including a lot of it without my having to do anything. For example, why not have an app on my phone that uses Twitter to automatically check in to an event with the organizer? </div>
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3. Curation of content (channels) -- Twitter could be a fantastic source for news and information, but there is too much and Twitter just delivers it at a steady stream, one chronological post after another. Channels could be created by interested users or entities to curate the best content. And the content wouldn't simply be chronological, but would be organized through a deliberate ordering process. The Washington Post would maintain a channel that simply matched the organization of their website news sections while an individual tech reporter might pull the best from several news outlets and decide what was the most important. Automated algorithms could be applied by users to their own selected sources, allowing me for example to achieve a Facebook style feed of my friend's posts based on who I seemed most interested in at any given time. Importantly users who invested the time to create channels should have a payback model, earning through the number of subscribers in order to encourage quality and engagement.</div>
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<strong style="background-position: initial initial; background-repeat: initial initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Improve how we consume content</strong></div>
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4. Those curated channels I mentioned -- this will require a big change in the user interface, allowing me to easily flip from channel to channel rather than viewing the whole stream. Perhaps even entirely new reading experiences need to be developed.</div>
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5. TV style programming for video content -- I want to simply play @kingbach one after another endlessly and not click on each link. Twitter could be an amazing way to organize and provide instructions to all types of playback devices for online video channels</div>
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6. Machine readers not just human readers -- many applications on my desktop and devices in my home could be recipients of Tweets and have new functionality as a result. Use twitter as the message bus for digital picture frames, lawn watering schedules...</div>
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<strong style="background-position: initial initial; background-repeat: initial initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Help companies do a better job</strong></div>
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7. Companies need easier integration into CRM -- if Twitter is going to be used as a way for consumers to connect to customer service or sales organizations, make it super easy for a company to connect with that customer, know who they are, and provide timely responses to their inquiries.</div>
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8. Consulting to help with best practices -- don't just throw the message bus out into the world hoping that companies will figure out how to use it -- provide hands on assistance to help them. This could be an important new revenue stream as well as improving company behavior on Twitter which improves user's experiences.</div>
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9. Enable special experiences — When I arrive at Disneyland, Twitter could connect me to the magic kindom in a magical way. Combining messaging, location, and the connection between people and companies could enable a whole new range of customer experiences. This could be much more powerful as an "advertising" vehicle for the company.</div>
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10. Twitter should have a big analytics team tracking public policy issues, investigating questions that companies have, enabling inquiries into trends... Many third parties try to offer these services but Twitter has all of the core data. Why not be the authoritative source? And there is significant money to be made by offering these insights to companies and other organizations.</div>
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I've enjoyed using Twitter over the past 8 years but like many others I do find my attention shifting elsewhere. There are too many ways to communicate and too many ways to stay informed. Many of them have pushed into the areas I mention above and are providing the kinds of new experiences that I want in my mobile-centric life. But I don't think it is too late for Twitter to turn the ship. And I for one am hoping Jack will succeed.</div>
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-65086593372007353502015-10-11T13:40:00.002-07:002015-10-11T13:40:30.454-07:00Sustainable Competitive Advantage<blockquote style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.85098); font-family: Georgia; font-size: 24px; font-stretch: normal; font-style: italic; line-height: 38px; margin: 50px 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px 80px; position: relative; quotes: none; text-align: center; vertical-align: baseline;">
My contention is that the true object of strategy is to sustain value creation, which demands a capacity to relentlessly create and capture new value. The difficulty with setting a given market position or competitive advantage as your strategy’s goal is that its direction-giving guidance is effectively dead upon your arrival. It fails to reveal what’s next.</blockquote>
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Todd Zenger - <a href="https://hbr.org/2015/04/trial-and-error-is-no-way-to-make-strategy" rel="nofollow" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #8c68cb; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;" target="_blank">Trial and Error is No Way to Make a Strategy</a></div>
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Sustainable competitive advantage is typically defined as "<em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">a long-term competitive advantage that is not easily duplicable or surpassable by the competitors.</em>" <a href="http://www.aei.org/publication/fortune-500-firms-in-1955-vs-2014-89-are-gone-and-were-all-better-off-because-of-that-dynamic-creative-destruction/" rel="nofollow" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #8c68cb; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;" target="_blank">The American Enterprise Institute reports</a> that the length of time that a company is in the Fortune 500 has declined from 75 years in the 1950s to just 15 years today. Why does is seem to be getting more difficult for companies to create long-term competitive advantage?</div>
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One answer, according to author and consultant Richard Foster, is that "creative destruction" <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/view/519226/technology-is-wiping-out-companies-faster-than-ever/" rel="nofollow" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #8c68cb; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;" target="_blank">is wiping out companies faster than ever</a>. His observation is that big companies are very bad at out-innovating the market and a conclusion one could take from his research would be that big companies are going to continuously be disrupted and displaced by smaller competitors. </div>
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In my opinion this would be the wrong conclusion. I believe that companies CAN get better at strategy and innovation and can participate in the same forces of creative destruction that threaten them. But most do not and here are three primary reasons and some things you can do about these challenges in your company:</div>
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<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">People will behave in ways that relate to their rewards. Companies have reward systems that reinforce old patterns and discourage change.</li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Innovation in 2015 has a lot to do with technology and business leaders do not sufficiently understand technology trends to anticipate how those trends will create disruption. </li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Companies have not operationalized innovation as a core process in their businesses nor invested enough in innovation.</li>
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<strong style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Behavior and Rewards</strong></div>
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<em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">"Hey, our company has an award that the CEO gives out each year for innovation - what do you mean we reinforce old patterns?"</em></div>
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While companies may tinker at the edges with encouraging innovation, the reality is that running a successful business requires most people to focus most of their time on the way things are <span class="underline" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: underline; vertical-align: baseline;">now</span> and not on the way things might be in the future. Successful companies are successful because they have defined an operating model which allows them to efficiently accomplish a particular thing very well (at least at the moment).</div>
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Think of this as a smoothly oiled machine -- for example, a successful hotel chain needs to be good at setting up franchisee hotel owners, filling rooms with guests, monitoring and maintaining quality... and they need the majority of their staff to stay focused on continuing to do those tasks well and NOT be distracted by some disruptive idea like Airbnb.</div>
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Can anyone in your company come up with a good idea? Sure they can! Should you have a system in place in your company to let people suggest ideas? Definitely! But the reality of continuing to run the machine is that most people, most of the time, need to stay focused on keeping the machine running as it is and not thinking up how it might be in the future. You have to have sales goals and you need to reward people for achieving them. A successful business has a "business as usual" way of reaching those sales goals and doesn't need all the sales people running around testing new ideas for achieving those goals, many of which would be unsuccessful.</div>
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To be clear -- do not get confused about the difference between continuous improvement and innovation -- when you are running business as usual everyone should always be looking at how processes can be improved. But improvement is a fundamentally different activity from innovation. When we innovate we look for a way to do something entirely differently. Airbnb, for example, makes every home owner into a kind of franchisee hotel owner and each makes each hotel the size of one room (or house) -- you can't have your franchisee operations team off experimenting with an Airbnb model when they need to continue opening 100 room hotels. </div>
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It may be a hard pill to swallow, but most people should not be innovating -- that is, should not be breaking the machine -- at least in their primary job. And the incentive models that encourage not-innovating are fine for the most part.</div>
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The problem most big companies get into, however, is that the people running "business as usual" have too much power over the <em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">future</em> of the organization as opposed to the <em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">present</em>. And companies don't have adequate incentive models for that portion of the company which should be exploring and inventing that future -- especially in cases where the future threatens the business as it is today.</div>
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Companies need to create the right incentives for all business leaders to embrace disruptive change that destroys business as usual <em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">when it has been shown to be successful</em>. And a portion of the company must be given the explicit job of coming up with those ideas that will destroy business as usual and be given the resources to test and prove those ideas.</div>
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<strong style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Technology and Business Leaders</strong></div>
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For too long leaders in business roles -- sales, marketing, operations, service, finance -- have looked at information technology (IT) as a cost center. IT is a necessary evil and the CIO's job to manage cost down. But in an age of constant disruption from new technologies, companies need to develop what Gartner calls<a href="http://www.gartner.com/it-glossary/bimodal" rel="nofollow" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; color: #8c68cb; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;" target="_blank">bi-modal IT</a>. Gartner defines this as</div>
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<em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">"...the practice of managing two separate, coherent modes of IT delivery, one focused on stability and the other on agility. Mode 1 is traditional and sequential, emphasizing safety and accuracy. Mode 2 is exploratory and nonlinear, emphasizing agility and speed."</em></div>
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Business leaders and IT leaders need to be close partners around mode 2 -- recognizing that technology will be a primary source of competive advantage. Manage cost on mode 1 IT -- in fact outsource or send to SaaS as much of that category of IT as possible. But mode 2 will require a different operating model and a different level of investment. This is where your next product, business model, staffing method, or partnering strategy is going to come from. </div>
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<strong style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Operationalizing Innovation</strong></div>
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Strategy and innovation, as Todd Zenger in the previously mentioned HBR article points out, will not reliably come through trial and error. Companies can not depend upon an ad hoc process for innovation. Any company which seeks to maintain a dominant position in its market must commit to a program of<strong style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;"><em style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">continuous innovation</em></strong> just as successful companies commit to continuous improvement.</div>
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The amount of investment required will certainly vary from industry to industry and the strategy for these investments will entail different activities. Some mix of the following are certainly required for any large company:</div>
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<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Venture investing both to participate in and learn from disruptive start-ups</li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Mergers, acquisitions and disposal of unproductive assets</li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Continuous examination of market conditions and trends </li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">A scientific approach to the development and testing of hypotheses</li>
<li style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; font-family: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 32px; margin: 0px 0px 15px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">Investment to engage in these activities at a sufficient scale</li>
</ul>
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The right organizational structure for taking on these activities will include disciplines as widely ranging as business strategy, IT solution architects, experience designers, and data scientists. And these professionals will need to work hand-in-hand with the very business leaders whose "business as usual" operations will be threatened by this innovation.</div>
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Companies that succeed in developing long-term competitive advantage will be those that follow these three principles -- creating and investing in a strategy and innovation team and process, making sure that strategy and innovation is developed through close collaboration between business and IT, and fixing incentive models so that business leaders will embrace the creative destruction and benefit from the transition of their existing business as usual to new models.</div>
Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-38490789726888928832015-09-26T13:24:00.003-07:002015-09-26T13:24:50.637-07:00Media Spend: Traditional vs DigitalAt least once a week I get asked a question by a client like this one I recently received, from one of the world's largest CPG companies:
<blockquote>How do we spend our Digital Marketing budget more rationally?</blockquote>
Often the question is more focused on the transformation underway as companies move from the "traditional" spending categories (print, broadcast, outdoor...) to digital categories (web, mobile, social), like this one from a computer hardware manufacturer:
<blockquote>What percentage of our marketing budget should be spent on digital?</blockquote>
Full disclosure: My qualifications in marketing (other than having worked in marketing for over two decades) are a bit suspect. While my first marketing job was in a direct mail marketing company in the 1980s, the vast majority of my direct expertise has been in leading marketing organizations for digital brands -- an Internet company, a software company, a mobile operating system...
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So if you are a traditional marketer, selling soap (or whatever physical good), you might look at my advice and say something like "sure, that would work if my product was entirely online... but my products are made up of atoms, not bits..."
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And I sympathize with you, I really do. The past 100 years have taught marketers to believe that there are two measurable things about advertising: reach and recall. How many people did you reach, and do they recall your brand. After all, the important question for marketers has been whether the consumer will reach for your bar of soap or someone else's when standing in the grocery store aisle.
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And the medium that we have had available to us (largely broadcast in dollars spent) has lent itself to a logic about advertising that tells the marketer to focus on repetition of a simple and short brand message. Repetition because seeing something over and over again helps the human brain with that recall problem. Simple and short both because our attention span for advertising is short and also because the cost for each advertisement is high (and higher for longer ads).
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But two things are happening that should cause every marketer to pause and re-examine everything they believe about marketing and begin asking a different set of questions. First, our purchase patterns are changing -- we are no longer buying something because the packaging stands out from a store shelf. In fact, we are going into physical retail less and less and this trend will continue to accelerate for most product categories. Second, people are moving from a diet high in traditional media to one high in digital media which is changing how we engage with brands and what we expect from them.
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A starting point would be to reconsider what Marshall McLuhan had to say about hot and cool media. McLuhan argued that "hot" media were those that provided little stimulus and thus required an engaged and participatory consumption. Whereas "cool" media were those that offered substantial stimulus and where consumption required very little involvement. From his vantage point at the beginning of the development of 20th century media, McLuhan might have assigned "cool" or "hot" differently than we would today, but the basic model of differentiating levels of engagement is applicable as we think about marketing through traditional or digital means.
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Traditional marketing fits McLuhan's "cool" media categorization, as epitomized by the goal of repetitive simple and short brand messages. The expectation by the marketer is that the recipient of such advertising will not expend effort in engaging, but must receive the message over and over again in order to get it to stick.
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Digital marketing is more complex because many of the techniques of traditional marketing were seemingly transplated into online spaces but the medium itself is "hot" -- we are engaged with the computer or mobile device, clicking and directing our experience and not just passively absorbing whatever might come next. Even with online advertising (the seemingly transpanted traditional marketing approach) success is measured by the click-through -- did the viewer engage!
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For digital the marketing equation has been turned upside down. Instead of repeating short and simple brand messages and measuring reach and recall, marketers should be building vehicles that engage people more deeply and then measuring the degree of engagement achieved. And in digital we have an entirely new capability through this engagement: building our knowledge of people (both individually and as groups) through their interactions with our brands. Finally, digital can allow us to connect what we know about a person throughout their entire experience with our brand -- consideration, selection, transaction, receipt, consumption, satisfaction, return... recognizing when and where we have converted a prospect to a sale, or a purchaser into a loyal fan.
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Given my self-admitted bias toward digital marketing, it would seem simple to say that companies should be prepared to move ALL of their media spend to digital over the next decade. But in working with hundreds of companies over the last 20 years as digital has continued to mature, I have come to a different conclusion:
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Companies should be prepared to move a substantial amount of their total media spend into digital and away from traditional media. This will require a new set of competencies and even a new organizational structure in most marketing organizations. It is crucial to get to a sufficient amount of digital activities to develop true data-driven insights. Without achieving critical mass, evidence for how digital is impacting sales and customer satisfaction will remain anecdotal. For the largest advertisers I have worked with, the threshold was at about 25% of total spend. Smaller companies will likely need to spend a larger proportion on digital.
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Digital media should not be limited to "advertising" but should include all experiential engagement with a customer - websites, mobile applications, social media, even customer service interactions -- anything where you can impact customer experience, measure engagement, and increase your knowledge of your prospects and customers. If you aren't already familiar with the concept of "earned, owned, and paid" media, make it a point to read up on these ideas (<a href="http://blogs.forrester.com/interactive_marketing/2009/12/defining-earned-owned-and-paid-media.html">click for a good article from Forrester to get you started</a>).
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As you move to digital and start generating data-driven insights, the transition of spending from traditional to digital will accelerate. I believe that most companies will stabilize at more than 2/3 of their total budget on digital. But traditional marketing will develop to have a new role - the reinforcement of digital marketing activities. One way is to use traditional ads as traffic drivers to digital destinations. Another is to build positive reinforcement cycles for themes that can appear in both digital and traditional mediums. In any case, traditional will often provide the most value when it drives more digital engagement.
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In 2015 the thing I am most surprised at is that we are still having this conversation -- that companies are still blindly spending their marketing dollars in the same way they were spent in the last century. Each company certainly still needs to answer for itself, based on the specific industry, buyers, and products, the kinds of questions I mentioned at the start of this article -- how do we spend our digital marketing budget more rationally, and what is the right percentage of spend to move to digital. But answers to those questions won't lead to greater success until we embrace the new role of marketing, that the marketer is now responsible for engagement and customer knowledge -- not reach and recall.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-295987525040419282015-09-20T11:59:00.002-07:002015-09-20T12:00:30.954-07:00Tech Bubbles and Escape VelocityIn 1997 I was one of many exuberant entrepreneurs working for a company in this new domain, "the Internet." In telling our stories to investors we all predicted future valuation based on the belief that someday everyone would have high speed connections to the Internet. Its hard to recall today that in December of 1997 only 70 million people had such connections.
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By the time we had sold our company in August of 1998 many of these early Internet pioneers, including me, had started to say that we were in a period of gross overvaluation. And when Stephan Paternot and Todd Krizelman took their company, TheGlobe.com, public in November of 1998 and reached a valuation of almost $1 Billion the first day, our fears of a "tech bubble" were confirmed.
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But of course, the party continued for quite awhile after that.
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An interesting conversation circulates today amongst those of us that knew each other during the so-called dot-com bubble as we watch the current crop of "unicorn" and "decacorn" companies (and the worsening traffic and accelerating rise in the cost of living in the Bay Area). It feels like we've all seen this before and know how it ends -- but we can't decide, is this 1997 or 1998 or 1999? In other words, how much longer will this particular tech bubble last?
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But I've begun to think that we are asking the wrong question. Looking back on the crazy predictions that we made that someday we'd go from a mere 70 million people connected to the Internet to "everyone" connected -- we were right. And we were probably even right about the timing. And this is where tech bubbles are fundamentally different from other kinds of speculative asset bubbles -- there is an underlying economic dynamic that actually is in a state of transformation.
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Take a step back and examine what economists mean when they describe something as a bubble. The most basic formulation is when assets are valued in a way that becomes disconnected with the intrinsic value of those assets. One way this happens is when supply and demand fall out of balance for what would otherwise be a stable commodity. Everyone wanting a particular toy as a Christmas present might cause speculators to buy up those presents and put them on eBay at a higher price, creating a kind of toy bubble which would ultimately be resolved either by the company increasing production or another toy coming into favor which would decrease demand.
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But tech bubbles are different because we are looking at companies extracting value from a transformation of markets rather than from an unbalanced market. When we made our Excel charts of 70 million Internet users growing to billions of Internet users to convince investors of our future value, we were describing a transformation in the way everything would function on our planet. A transformation that has come to pass and is continuing to accelerate today.
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The current set of maturing technologies founded on the infrastructure of the Internet -- social, mobile, analytics, and cloud -- are well on their way to reformulate the way our markets operate. How we select, purchase, receive, and consume products and services is being transformed.
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Thus the target opportunity for the tech industry is virtually the entire $18 trillion US economy of which technology only represents 7.1% today. And the $80 trillion global economy of which technology is an even smaller component. Shifting cash flows (and thus valuations) by only a few percentage points would move trillions of dollars out of the old economy and into the hands of technology entrepreneurs and investors, thereby justifying the valuations we are seeing today. Why should Uber ($60 Billion) be worth more than General Motors ($50 Billion)? Because Uber has a plan to shift cash flows from old industries to themselves while GM is still making and selling cars (fewer and fewer as well - down to 3 million cars last year from over 5 million back in the dot-com bubble).
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So what actually happened during the dot-com bubble? Why did it burst? Will the current tech boom also turn out to have been a bubble and will it burst as well?
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Certainly one element of the valuation of assets outpacing their intrinsic value came through the uninteded consequences of tax policy changes (here is a good and brief overview). But capital could have flowed into many different financial vehicles. The reason that Internet companies attracted the most attention was that the underlying trends really did appear to be correct (and in hindsight they were correct). The Internet really was going to shift old economy cash flows into the hands of technology entrepreneurs and investors. But investor enthusiasm outpaced the speed at which this shift could happen. As a result, too much supply was created too fast -- too many companies selling pet food on the Internet. Business models and valuations diverged too far from intrinsic value and investors blinked.
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Which brings me to the question that I think we should be asking right now about the current tech boom. The question is NOT "when will the bubble burst" but instead something a bit more subtle. The question is -- this time around can technology transform markets at a fast enough pace to keep up with growing valuations. I think of this as an escape velocity problem -- gravity in this case being investor expectations. Can the current crop of tech boom companies grow fast enough, deliver results fast enough, to outpace the come back to earth force of investor expectations?
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Every old economy company on the planet should be frightened by now of the logic behind this process -- shift cash flow away from every other industry to the tech industry. Technology companies are serving as intermediary entities in which the retail (Amazon), entertainment (Apple or Netflix), or transportation (Uber) revenues go first to the tech company and, only after margin has been removed, back to the old economy creator or owner of those assets (often bypassing prior intermediary models). That isn't what technology used to be about. Tech companies used to create new products (personal computers) that created new markets. But increasingly the new products that tech companies create are disrupting old markets instead.
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And this time around the tech industry is moving faster and has many more tools at its disposal to capture the $80 trillion global GDP. It may be the case that tech again fails to achieve escape velocity and that this boom also comes to an end. But over time, tech will win. In the future as the less mature technologies of accretive manufacturing, robotics, and artificial intelligence further accelerate market transformation, the tech industry will have an ever increasing array of tools to capture a larger and larger portion of global GDP.
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Eventually we won't even talk about a "tech industry" because ALL companies will be tech companies -- that is, all companies will be dependent upon continuous technology innovation to achieve and maintain competitive advantage in their markets.
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So next time someone asks you when you think the current tech bubble will burst, ask them instead when do they think tech companies will slow down in transferring wealth from other industries to the tech industry.
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My answer: not until they have all of it.Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-82633645757750246712014-11-12T12:48:00.002-08:002014-11-12T12:48:26.755-08:00Zero-Minute CrisesOn November 3rd, 2014 at about noon EST, Bank of America experienced an online banking outage impacting its 31 million online banking customers and 16 million mobile banking users. The outage lasted almost three hours during which the company issued a single statement via <a href="https://twitter.com/BofA_News/status/529344609756143617">twitter, almost two hours into the event</a>:
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<blockquote>Some customers may be experiencing issues accessing online & mobile banking. We’re working quickly to resolve. Thanks for your patience.</blockquote>
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Customers turned to social media for answers as attempts to connect directly to BofA failed. Having long ago forwarded local branch phones to a national exchange, customers found it impossible to get someone live from BofA during the outage since the national phone lines appeared to be completely overwhelmed. For hours a bank's customers could not access their money or get any information about when the system would be restored. One week later, Bank of America has yet to issue any statement to customers on why the system went down.
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While this one event is unlikely to cause any long term damage to Bank of America, it is an example of a new kind of challenge that companies are facing, one which they are remarkably unprepared to deal with.
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Computer security experts describe a zero-day (or zero-hour) attack as one that exploits a previously unknown flaw and thus developers have no time to address and patch before damage is being done. In the same way, companies are increasingly facing emergent communications crises for which they have no time to formulate and communicate a response.
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<b>CHANGING CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS</b>
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Social media and ubiquitous mobile connectivity are forever changing the expectations that customers have of the timely responsiveness to their questions. In a 2012 study by Nielsen, <a href="https://hbr.org/2012/12/turn-customer-care-into-social/">twitter users were found to expect a response from companies in less than 2 hours</a>. As companies in some industries meet or beat this goal, expectations will continue to rise (or shorten).
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Companies have no alternative but to engage with customers, where those customers already are -- today perhaps twitter and facebook but in the future other places and sometimes dependent upon the company, industry, or community that needs to be reached. By comparison to the core marketing budget, the cost of actually communicating with customers on social media is negligible. And customers now expect companies to communicate (they'd much rather get an answer than an ad).
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<b>WHAT'S A COMPANY TO DO?</b>
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First - you'll need a social media listening <i>and analytics</i> platform scaled to the size of your organization and customer outreach. One client recently described the objective of such a system as "never be surprised again."
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Second - develop a team that monitors and responds to customers and also the processes to connect that team with other core customer facing parts of your company -- sales, marketing, customer service...
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Third - prepare to be changed by these customer interactions -- expect to gain insights and to make sure those insights get embedded into new ways of operating or into your product/service innovation processes.
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<b>REALLY? YOU ARE WRITING THIS AT THE END OF 2014?</b>
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I know, it seems like this should all be second nature by now. And yes I have been writing and speaking on this topic for years. But events like the recent Bank of America outage show that our companies are still not understanding the imperative. Do we have to wait for the HBR case study on how a lack of communication with customers has a measurable financial impact on a company to finally make the investments needed here?
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-64680663729310162222014-07-30T09:14:00.000-07:002014-11-02T09:15:38.872-08:00Social is the Key to Customer ExperienceThis article first appeared on July 30th, 2014 on Social Media Today -- <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/social-key-customer-experience">Social is the Key to Customer Experience</a>
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Recently my colleague David Cushman published an article titled <a href="http://fasterfuture.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/the-strategic-role-of-content-in.html">The Strategic Role of Content in Proving Brand Promise</a> -- which I highly recommend. David offers a terrific analysis and infographic on how to think about content marketing. But for me the core message was in the scalpel that David applied to the question of why marketers often struggle to succeed with social technologies. I have often railed against the common attitude that social is a "channel" alongside print, broadcast, outdoor, etc for the marketer to consider when planning a campaign. But David puts it very precisely in the first paragraph of his article:
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Social Media has confused many marketers for many years. Mostly because it isn’t a media. It’s an exercise in relationship building.
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Right. It's an exercise in relationship building. Or, taking the "exercise" metaphor a bit further, its the connective tissue for customer experience (you know, muscles, exercise...). Marketers are now in the relationship building business, not just the communications business. And that joins them to their colleagues in sales and service who have always been relationship builders. As a customer talking with a company I expect that marketing, sales, and service will all be engaged, or each engaged at the right time in my journey. And social can provide that connection to the company through the different phases of consideration, purchase, and consumption.
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As I've written about in previous articles, companies in every industry are engaged in digital transformation -- reforming their business to adapt to the changing customer expectations and new opportunities afforded by technology. A focus on customer experience can help align your organization in that transformation process to understand the role of social and how it creates the need for a very different kind of cross-functional behavior across your business. In order to address customer experience holistically (across the complete customer journey) your company will need to develop four distinct types of systems and related operational competencies which will then be utilized across marketing, sales, and service functions.
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Systems of Record -- Where your transactional information is stored - critical to empowering your employees to know what is happened in the past with your customer in order to track performance, define additional sales opportunities, and provide service.
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Systems of Insight -- The extended data on your customers and prospects which provides the analytical base for insights, both about customer segments and about individual customers.
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Systems of Engagement -- How you engage with the customer and manage those interactions
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Systems of Co-ordination -- The platform for supporting interactions between employees and with business partners
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These four systems together, used consistently across the organization, provide the framework for supporting customer experience. Social is key - providing both a way to link together the touchpoints of customer interaction but also to provide the means by which coordination can occur across the functional teams engaged in that interaction. Social can be a part of deriving insights, can be a part of how interactions are managed, and is core to the collaboration that has to occur in this new interconnected operating model.
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So start exercising - you'll need strong social muscles to work through your digital transformation.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-17354109071151728982014-06-28T09:31:00.000-07:002014-11-02T09:31:42.597-08:00From Advertising to EngagementThis article first appeared on June 28th, 2014 in Social Media Today: <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/advertising-engagement">From Advertising to Engagement</a>
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How many of you have looked at the advertisements on the right hand side of the pages here on Social Media Today? Why is it that even here on a website dedicated to social, advertisers think that the way to achieve their objectives is some generic ad copy with a photo of someone smiling? Who clicks on these things anyway?
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I'm not saying that advertising is going to go away anytime soon. But the savvy marketers have all realized one of the most important implications of digital transformation and the connected enterprise -- that they have to create meaningful engagement platforms that build relationships with customers and potential customers. And money spent on advertising must deliver people to those engagement platforms.
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For the past several columns in this connected enterprise series I have been talking about the use of social in changing the way a company's own employees work together, changing how companies work with different kinds of partners, and even how digital transformation is impacting a particular industry (IME). In turning to what may seem like the most common way to use social -- engaging with customers -- I want to bring focus to what makes the best engagement strategies work and why they are critical for every company to master.
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But let's start with advertising - the old way for a company to achieve its core objective: sales. For 100 years we have been perfecting mass marketing techniques. Buy the attention of a market and some number of people within that market will buy your product. Get the focus on the market, the dollars paid to reach each person, and the conversion rate just right and you make money. A lot of what happens in that process is mysterious (and the more mysterious the better for those Mad Men advertising agencies). But there is a basic formula to the possible ways in which you can get someone to pay attention to you in the interstitial world of broadcast media:
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1) Interrupt: first break into whatever else your customer is doing, preferably in a way that makes them wait for you to be done telling them what you want them to hear before they are capable of going back to what they want to be doing
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2) Entertain: then give them a little bit of entertainment value to tickle their brain cells into paying attention long enough for your message to sink in (although don't be surprised if you have to repeat an average of 6 times)
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3) Inform: fill them up with your message goodness - buy now!
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Whether the advertising is for a good product or a bad one and from a reputable company or a shady one, the formula is always about the same. And it worked for years - for a whole bunch of reasons that are no longer valid. Remember those bad old days where you couldn't research a product online? Where there wasn't even an online? Advertising was a content element in the media stream, a way that we actually learned what was going on in the world (at least the world of commercial products and services).
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Companies now need to do a whole lot more to create the experience that we want as buyers of their products. Increasingly consumers have no patience for having their attention bought -- and this started happening BEFORE the Internet. The proliferation of cable channels starting in the 1980s combined with the advent of the remote control was an early way that consumers could avoid advertising by channel surfing. One client I worked with (a family style restaurant chain) did a study of the decline in television advertising effectiveness and traced the beginning of the end back to the launch of CNN.
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But the Internet and social technologies have accelerated this decline in advertising effectiveness while simultaneously giving marketers an alternative -- a chance to transform their approach from advertising to engagement. Each of those steps in the old advertising formula have been replaced with an engagement step...
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From Interrupting to Connecting -- the new marketing style starts with the curation of communities
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From Entertaining to Collaborating -- your customers have things they want to do and when you connect to them instead of interrupting them you have a chance to work with them on what they what to do
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From Informing to Supporting -- finally, the goal of the engagement must ultimately be the creation of value for your customers -- supporting them not just giving them the message you want to give them.
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In the next three posts I will explore these three key transitions in depth and how marketers, salespeople, and service organizations must all work together to create valued engagement with markets.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-4579401524230245922014-06-25T09:21:00.000-07:002014-11-02T09:21:24.667-08:00BPM and the Employee Code HaloThis article first appeared on June 25th, 2014 on Social Media Today -- <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/bpm-and-employee-code-halo">BPM and the Employee Code Halo</a>
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Every employee in your company has a Code Halo - a set of information and activities that can be managed through your company's information systems. Building a set of social collaboration systems for your employees to work with one another establishes a system where this Code Halo is stored, how it is exposed to other employees, and how it can be used to improve coordination between employees. This information is used in the workflows and business processes that employees engage in every day to get their jobs done. And in the digitally transformed company, the tools used to manage those workflows are a primary source for improved business performance.
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In my last post I emphasized the importance of what I called the "engaged employee" and the need for culture change in companies engaged in digital transformation (Culture Change and Engaged Employees). This post was part of a series that have been appearing here in Social Media Today on the broader topic of how social technologies play a crucial role in how companies will need to reinvent themselves to address the challenges of shifting customer expectations (Enterprise Transformation and the Role of Social).
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Having outlined how social is impacting the way employees work, the way companies interact with partners, and new models for customer engagement, I had started to outline the people, processes, and technologies needed in the transformation process. And in doing so, I utilized Cognizant's concept of Code Halos which I had written about at the beginning of this year (2014: Year of the Code Halo).
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The first article in this section addressed how companies should be using technology to improve customer interactions and the overall customer experience. Customer Relationship Management (or CRM) software provides the core "system of engagement" for companies to manage across the customer lifecycle -- marketing, sales, and customer service should all share one unified view of the customer, a view that includes social profiles and activity (CRM and the Customer Code Halo). In this article I will explore a second key technology -- business process management (BPM).
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I suppose many reading this article are asking, why is it that I should care about BPM? Sure I've heard of the concept, you might be thinking, but then you think, "it doesn't apply to me or to my company." To address this thought and hopefully increase your interest in BPM, instead of using the technical name, I'll begin by breaking this down to the building blocks in order to explain why BPM does apply to you and to your company and is crucial to the use of social and the transformation of your business.
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Everything we do in business has a set of written or unwritten rules about how and when it should be done. And rules about who should be doing the work and with whom they should collaborate. Workflow, approval processes, standard operating procedures, protocols... these are all words we use to describe these rules. As social systems for coordinating our activities become more sophisticated, the expression of these rules will become more explicit.
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Consider an HR process that would benefit from social interaction -- for example hiring a new employee. In a typical company recruiting process, at least 4 people will likely need to interact with a candidate and will need to talk with one another as well. Each will express their opinions and perhaps yet another person will actually make the hiring decision. This is the kind of complex coordination problem that social tools can improve.
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Whether the company has explicitly written down the process or not, there is a workflow and a series of approvals that have to happen during a hiring process. When these rules are expressed in social systems, they improve and streamline the way work with one another and companies realize the greatest benefit from those collaboration investments.
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A simple process outline might include
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<ul>
<li>routing the candidate to interviewers in a particular order,</li>
<li>providing a copy of the interview notes and tracking whether they have been reviewed,</li>
<li>recording the rating given by each interviewer,</li>
<li>notifying approvers of the need to review the candidate,</li>
<li>flagging interviewers to answer questions raised by approvers, and</li>
<li>recording the hiring decision and generating an offer letter.</li>
</ul>
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Business Process Management (BPM) can streamline this process, reducing the need for a person to manage each step, track progress, and make sure that participants are engaged. The goal of BPM should be to fully automate as many processes and process management activities as possible and to facilitate those that cannot be fully automated, reducing the rote work of coordination to a minimum.
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Two primary models are emerging for the use of BPM in social collaboration activities between employees.
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In some complex business processes where dedicated BPM solutions have been implemented, there can be specific stages of a process where social collaboration is needed. In these cases, the BPM system should trigger an event within the social system and track engagement or resolution so that the next stage in a process can begin.
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An emerging alternative is to define workflows and approval processes directly in the collaboration platform without the use of an external BPM product. At the present the sophistication of such systems is relatively low by comparison to dedicated BPM products and so the workflows that can be implemented are simple. But this will be one of the areas of significant growth in coming years, as social collaboration software is increasingly used to facilitate employee collaboration.
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Just as mastering CRM technology will be essential to your company's use of social in managing customer interactions, mastery of BPM will be essential to the use of social in managing employee interactions. These are just two of the core building block competencies needed on the journey to digital transformation. In the next article I will address how the organizational model will change to allow companies to effectively embrace these competencies and change from functionally independent activities to integrated and coordinated activities.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-65718639456179627952014-04-30T09:23:00.000-07:002014-11-02T09:24:48.081-08:00CRM and the Customer Code HaloThis post first appeared on Social Media Today on April 30, 2014 -- <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/crm-and-customer-code-halo">CRM and the Customer Code Halo</a>
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<blockquote>"An extinction event (also known as a mass extinction or biotic crisis) is a widespread and rapid decrease in the amount of life on earth." -- Wikipedia</blockquote>
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There is another extinction event going on right now -- related to our business ecosystem rather than our biological ecosystem. In certain industries we are seeing a widespread and rapid decrease in the number of companies that serve certain types of business and consumer needs. Information, Media and Entertainment is one such segment (as I outlined in my article The Ur Industry of Digital Transformation. A second industry going through profound changes is retail -- first moving (since the 1980s) to "big box" format and then more recently moving to online.
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As I have been outlining in my series on Enterprise Transformation and the Role of Social, there are substantial changes coming to every industry - how work is done, who does the work, and how value is derived from the work by all of the stakeholders - employees, companies, and their customers.
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In the last few articles, on the transformation of our customer communications From Advertising to Engagement, I have highlighted the changes in the behavior of companies toward their customers and in particular how marketing organizations will need to change themselves -- how the think about their role in customer communications and what they do with their customers to Connect, Collaborate, and Support...
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But all of this assumes a substantial investment of time and money -- an investment which companies are not used to making. But not making this investment is one of the sure ways to become a part of the mass of companies that will become extinct, instead of thriving in the new digital ecosystem that is developing.
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The investment that has to be made is in something we call Code Halos -- the ability to "see" the real-time, ever-present data and analytics that surround every one of your employees, customers, products, and the places you interact with those employees and customers. And the systems that help you use those Code Halos to derive insights, make decisions, and drive employee and customer behaviors.
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What this means for your company is a massive investment in information technology and in the people who will be able to operate and derive value from this investment. I will start with teh Customer Code Halo and work over the next few articles through organizations, products, and finally employees.
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CRM is The Core System of Engagement and Where you Manage Customer Code Halos
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One of the things I am frequently asked by clients is how to measure the ROI of social. Nevermind that they never had a good way to measure the ROI for most of the things they did as a company. When considering doing something entirely new, there has to be a well grounded justification. But the problem with the question is that you can never get good at measuring ROI until you actually manage the information you are trying to measure. The starting place for organizations with respect to customer information is CRM - or "customer relationship management" systems.
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Most companies have one or more CRM systems -- often more than one as a separate CRM initiative may have been pursued for sales vs. service or even for multiple different sales and service channels (even when serving the same customer). So a starting point is CRM consolidation -- getting all of a company's information in one place, so there is a single version of the truth for a company shared by marketing, sales, and service organizations.
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The next step is to go beyond a company's own transaction and service records, and incorporate external data into the customer Code Halo as well -- social data, 3rd party data from vendors or partners, real world interaction data... anything that helps build a complete picture of the customer. The goal is to get a rich multi-dimensional understanding of your customer, and to have that information available to all of the parts of your company that engage with customers.
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Having this complete Code Halo enables a new set of activities -- generating insight, personalizing experience, driving "next best action" and also tracking how your various engagement initiatives relate to the key measurements of that engagement: influencing purchase decisions, loyalty, and brand or product advocacy.
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Customer Service
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The new omni-channel customer service world is one in which customers will expect to be able to engage in a service request starting in one channel and continuing in another one seamlessly. I bought the product online but want to return it at a store. I tweet a complaint but want to get an email from the company in response. I call with a complaint but get a letter in the mail with an apology. How will your company make sure that your customer's have a seamless interaction with your company from channel to channel? By making sure all of the information about the interactions with those customers are stored in a single system of engagement, one Code Halo in a CRM system that every employee who interacts with your customer can see the complete record of interaction.
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Sales
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Improvement of every aspect of the sales process can be achieved through Code Halos - optimizing who your sales force is calling on, what products and product bundles are being offered, even closing the sale. And similarly to the customer service challenge, your customers will have an expectation of being able to interact through every channel seamlessly - start a purchase process online but pick up the product in a store. Mobile application ordering is one of the fastest "online" mechanisms but some vendors even support using mobile applications in stores. A few companies are even taking orders through social media.
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Marketing
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Increasingly the marketing organization has to own the entire customer experience - not just the first part of the journey - demand generation and consideration. Marketing needs the aggregate customer insights that come from seeing all of the customer Code Halos, and also the individual insights about what the personalized experience should be at any given moment. It is both reflective and real time, dynamically segmented and all about the individual. Ultimately marketing also owns the ROI question and must track engagement through to transaction and advocacy to establish which marketing investments should be scaled down and which ones should be scaled up. As a result the CRM system of engagement has to support an analysis of the interactions with customers as much as holding the raw data itself
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In every industry, for every company, there is a pressing challenge to transform -- seize the new digital tools and engage with customers in new ways -- more immersive, persistent, and across the customer life cycle. CRM is one building block but companies will also need to master business process management (BPM) and master data management (MDM) capabilities as well -- more on these competencies in the next article.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-5438764663074612772014-02-11T09:27:00.000-08:002014-11-02T09:27:52.524-08:00The UR Industry of Digital TransformationThis article first appeared on February 11th, 2014 on Social Media Today: <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/ur-industry-digital-transformation-ime">The UR Industry of Digital Transformation</a>
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Regardless of how and when you think that your company and industry will be swept into the torrential flow of change that we call "digital transformation," I think you'll agree that the very first industry to have felt the pain of creative destruction from social, mobile, analytics and cloud (SMAC) was information, media, and entertainment (IME). And the pain is continuing to be felt today -- the means of production, distribution, business models, and the very core building blocks of how these companies operate are all being transformed by digital technologies.
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It makes sense that this would be the first industry to be transformed given that the substance of the products that these companies sell are just information. Not that the publishing industry thought so -- they thought they sold papers and magazines and books. Or the music industry -- they thought they sold records and tapes and CDs. Or the film industry which thought they sold (or rented) VHS or Betamax cassettes. Or the game industry which thought they sold game console cartridges and PC diskettes...
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And when they sold their information products wrapped in a physical distribution format they needed newstands and bookstores and record stores. A huge part of their businesses were devoted to how products were manufactured, distributed, and marketed in these physical venues. Thousands of people dedicated their careers to learning the skills needed to be successful in these markets.
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And then everything changed. But those thousands of people and their companies have had trouble keeping up with this change. So we have seen the bookstores, the video stores, and the record stores close. We've seen newspapers and magazines go out of business. And after all of this change I still visit companies in the IME industry who are steadfastly clinging to the old ways of doing business, perhaps not even knowing (and certainly not acknowledging) that they are on the edge of disaster.
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Ernest Hemingway is credited with coining the saying about change (he was talking about bankruptcy) that it happens:
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<blockquote>"Slowly at first, and then all at once."</blockquote>
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I heard this quote for the first time while attending a talk by Andrew McAfee, a professor at MIT with a new must-read book entitled "The Second Machine Age." In this book Andrew and his co-author Erik Brynjolfsson outline in detail how the world is rapidly being transformed by digital technologies. If you weren't convinced already, and even if you are, this is an excellent book to read to get details and pragmatic implications clear.
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The basic premise of slowly at first and then all at once explains in part why companies and industries are not more clear on the change that is occurring and what they should be doing about it. In your company have you looked carefully at the fundamental changes that are occurring which will, slowly at first and then all at once, invalidate your current business and operating models?
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For IME companies the changes can be summarized by three really important transformations having to do with production, distribution, and business models. There are also implications that these three things have on marketing, sales, and service -- all of the core interaction points that companies have with markets.
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An interesting facet of the transformation that is occuring is that SMAC rewards the smallest producers AND the largest while invalidating the business models of those in the middle, at least those in the middle that continue to operate independently rather than forming new kinds of business ecosystems. In IME what this has meant is a growing movement across all categories of information products where individual producers have taken control of their own future and are self-publishing. Books, music, games, and even movies can now be produced by an individual or a small team. Distribution can be through social networks or can be accomplished by leveraging cheap or free digital infrastructure provided by an industry that is adjacent to the IME industry -- Internet companies like Google and computer companies like Apple.
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But before we simply assume that all media companies will perish at the hands of small producers, its important to recognize that something else is happening as well -- companies that understand how to leverage at massive scale all of the information available about what people are reading, listening to, playing and viewing are also positioned well to succeed because they will become smarter and faster than their competition about what it is we want, what we will pay for, and how to curate our social communities around content in order to excel at the new digital distribution channels.
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Big media companies need to recognize the change in the three areas of their business that drive a transformation in how they do business:
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1) Digital distribution of content means that an entirely new set of capabilities are needed inside the company -- no more managing printing presses or boxes of books going on to bookstore tables. Instead companies need to understand how to correctly position content into the digital flows of their customer's lives. Its not just about knowing how to generate a Kindle formatted book. Its about how to engage in curating the social communities of interest around the book's topic so that the pull engine is created around each media element. That requires a rethinking of product packaging -- how can a book, song, game, or movie be deconstructed into hundreds of information elements that contribute ultimately to driving demand for the full product? How will these individual parts be distributed into all of the social and mobile distribution channels that exist and how will the be targeted to the right communities of interest? And how can the publisher partner with and empower the creators to collaborate in supercharging this distribution?
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2) A direct result of the first point is that marketing and sales has to be radically transformed into an organization that is building communities -- if you are a book publisher, do you have a community of people who like science fiction mysteries with a romantic twist? There is a market and if you have built a community around this niche you can be of enormous value to the authors of such works, thus remaining in the middleman "publisher" role instead of being disintermediated by cheap or free digital distribution. What is the business of publishers anyway whether books, movies, games or music? It has always been to provide access to markets and social communities are the new markets. It will be a lot more valuable for media companies to look at community curation as a core capability than as something distributed down to the individual media property level as community knowledge and curation capabilities can be leveraged at scale.
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3) And that means in order to succeed in this second area of transforming marketing and sales, companies need to start taking data and analytics a lot more seriously. This is where scale will continue to have an advantage. Why is it that Google still has better search results than any other search engine? It is because they see every search and know what we have clicked on, so they can do a better job than anyone else in learning what a good result for a given search is, based on our actual behavior. Apply this to every information type -- what can you learn about what people are reading, viewing, playing, or listening to and how much more valuable will your insights be if they are at a massive scale? Your media company can know exactly what the next hit will be if you have enough data to usefully apply predictive algorithms.
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How many media companies have taken on these three challenges? Build digital distribution competencies, transform marketing and sales into community development, and invest in big data and predictive analytics... and make these core assets leveraged across the business, not isolated and independent efforts by different brand and product managers. How about your company and your industry? Are there lessons here for you as well? Every industry will be caught up in this torrential change. Are you ready for digital transformation?
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-2585362809635819922014-01-10T09:05:00.000-08:002014-11-02T09:21:41.597-08:002014: Year of the Code HaloThis article first appeared on Social Media Today on January 10th, 2014 - <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/2014-year-code-halo">2014: Year of the Code Halo</a>
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Is your social data a “digital exhaust,” a “data shadow,” or part of a “Code Halo?”
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Pundits are enthusiastically predicting that 2014 will be the Year of the Internet of Things or the Year of the Connected Home or even just the most interesting year in technology for a long time. Yet, the one thing overlooked is how organizations can make meaning from data generated by all of our personal activities, as well as all the code that surrounds all of the people and organizations we interact with. In fact, making meaning from what we call Code Halos has passed an important maturation point and is now creating a whole new ecosystem of interconnected technology enablers and business opportunities for enterprises that see Code Halos as the essence of their competitive advantage.
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All of these exciting new trends have their roots in the data that surrounds each of us, the physical objects we use, the places we use them, the organizations we interact with, and the “collisions” between them — but it is in the tools we add to understand this data that the real value emerges.
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Code Halos is the term that we at Cognizant have coined to describe this new capacity for meaning making. And I am willing to predict that you will want to know a lot more about Code Halos during the course of 2014. They are going to reshape the way we develop company strategy, product development plans, define how we engage with partners and customers, and even how companies organize and manage employees.
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I think the first time I heard someone referring to the data that accompanies our activities online as a thing in itself it was around 1999 — it was Ann Winblad who, in reviewing a company I was proposing as an investment to her, talked about how we might capture the value of the data left behind the use of our service as opposed to making money on the use of the service itself. More recently some have taken up using the term data shadows to describe the stream of information we each leave behind us as we interact digitally.
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While the existence of the accumulating data itself has been understood for over a decade, we haven’t always thought clearly about how to make meaning from the evolution of this data it, nor have we considered and its importance to our businesses. Yes everyone has “big data” on their radar screen and some have even recognized the importance of little data. But what, you may ask, is new about a “Code Halo” and why should we be taking stock of this concept today?
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The crucial difference between the way that we have been thinking about data and the way we need to begin thinking about Code Halos is in our understanding of the relationship between the data and the things, places or people that generate the data, and in what happens when they interact (or “collide”). You can unlock a whole new way of thinking about your company, your products, and your customers when you make this simple switch:
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Rather than thinking of data as something we “leave behind” instead conceptualize it as something that “we carry with us.”
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There is a progression here in thinking about “exhaust,” to thinking about a “shadow,” to thinking about a Code Halo. The richness of Code Halo as a metaphor is that it evokes something that is ethereal but at the same time surrounds and enriches the person, organization, place or thing. A shadow is a mere two-2-dimensional representation of who we are. But a Halo is a part of us and even makes us more than we are just on the physical plane.
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At this point you might be saying, “so what, why are the words so important -- why do I care about the difference between exhaust or a shadow or a halo?” In my experience, how we use language is a crucial part of how we formulate our perceptions and creatively interact with one another. If I tell you that I have a phone, you might think that I am going to be able to make a call. If I tell you that I have a smart phone, you’ll know that I can also access the Internet.
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If you imagine that that your business has access to all this “exhaust” from social interactions you might, as Ann Winblad did in 1999, imagine how that exhaust can be processed into “digital oil” and reused in aggregate to generate insights or “fuel” other value-creation engines. Knowing in the case of my long ago company how certain advertising worked online with certain kinds of content might, for example, improves the way advertisers plan their ad campaigns (yes, someone else beat me in building that idea into a company…)
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If you instead look at your customers as having “digital shadows” you might look at their social interactions as being pale representations of each of them, perhaps informing you to some degree on how you can improve your sales pitch or increase a customer’s satisfaction.
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But stop for a moment and imagine the data as a Code Halo around your customer — the rich and living combination of transaction data, social data, data held by third parties and a set of analytics that brings a layer of meaning about how we are interacting with other people, organizations, places, and things. And then recognize that each of those organizations, places, and things also has a rich and living halo around them — or could have one if we were smart enough to be able to create, share and derive meaning from them.
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If you could see all of these halos, and even enable them in your own products and services, how would you change what your company delivers to your market, how you do sales and provide service, and even how your employees work?
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If you could see these Code Halos and understand what happens when they intersect with one another, what new opportunities could you imagine?<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-68624484266625593442013-12-10T09:08:00.000-08:002014-11-02T09:10:25.787-08:00Enterprise Transformation and the Role of SocialThis article first appeared on December 10th, 2013 in Social Media Today: <a href="http://www.socialmediatoday.com/content/enterprise-transformation-and-role-social">Enterprise Transformation and the Role of Social</a>
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Social is sending a shockwave through the enterprise and challenging organizations to rethink the way they are organized and how all of their processes work -- both internal and external. This is part of a bigger trend, often referred to as "digital transformation." In short digital transformation is the process by which organizations are rethinking all of their activities in light of the increasing capabilities of information technology, eliminating the non-digital elements of those processes, implementing new social, mobile, and cloud enablers, and retraining their employees.
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But digital transformation is frightening because in rethinking our organizations and the way we work, all of the dysfunctional elements of our current organizations are surfaced. For the first time we are asking, why aren't the CMO and CIO on speaking terms? Why do we manage our service centers as costs to the business that need to be driven down as opposed to recognizing that they are marketing and sales channels to create a more positive brand image and upsell our customers? Why can't marketing and sales agree on the definition of a "lead" and have a consistent process for managing them? Why doesn't R&D ever speak to sales about what customers are saying about our products?
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These and hundreds of other similar questions surface when we begin to use technologies like enterprise social networks to connect our employees to one another across organizational boundaries. The repercussions go all the way up to the C-Suite and require a thoughtful strategic answer from leadership to this question -- should our company work and be organized differently in a post-digital world? Not just a veneer of process changes but deep and fundamental changes that make us think differently about how value is created for our customers, how our products or services are created and delivered, what the motivations are for our employees to be engaged in and passionate about the company's mission? Should we be inventing a new organization and implementing a new set of measurements at the same time that we are implementing "digital" technologies?
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The best companies have embraced this challenge and will look very different five and ten years from now than the way they have looked throughout the previous decades. The M-Form corporation has served its purpose and we now have the opportunity to create a new form - the connected enterprise. This challenge must be led by the c-suite to be successful because it will change the fundamental power structures in organizations -- how budgets are allocated, how people work with one another, and perhaps most importantly - how companies engage with their customers.
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The future belongs to companies that are able to think Outside In -- understanding how their customers see them and organizing their business processes to suit customer needs and expectations instead of the "efficiency" of their own businesses. Every function within a company has a role to play and is a part of the network that creates value for customers. Every function will have to think through that role though the Outside In lens.
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The role for social in this process is three fold:
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1) Connect your employees - invite them to start working together to understand the connected enterprise future
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2) Connect to your partners - they also have a critical role to play in supporting the future of the connect enterprise
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3) Connect to your customers - listening and talking with (and not to) your customers is the key to knowing whether you are really understanding their needs and expectations, and are forming a realistic Outside In perspective.
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Social media, public social networks, enterprise social networks, customer communities -- these all have a role to play in your journey toward becoming a connected enterprise. In my next article I will outline an incremental approach to success in transformation.
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-84841445903314857182013-10-09T16:50:00.000-07:002013-10-09T16:50:56.969-07:00Paying for the HyperloopBy this time you have certainly heard about <a href="http://www.teslamotors.com">Tesla</a> founder Elon Musk's proposal for the <a href="http://www.teslamotors.com/blog/hyperloop">Hyperloop</a> -- "...a new mode of transport – a fifth mode after planes, trains, cars and boat..." and you might be wondering, as I am, when the darn thing is going to be built already! Are we really worried about the investment? Can't smart state political and economic players come together to make this happen?
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After all, it is quite hard to argue with the basic point that Musk raises -- that a high speed train between LA and SF does little to change the state's economy since it is not faster than flying (though it certainly has better environmental qualities) while the Hyperloop value proposition, reducing travel time between these two cities to 30 minutes, would fundamentally alter the state's economics.
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First of all because a fast link between these two metropolitan areas will radically increase human interaction - tightly connecting the center of global technology innovation and the center of global entertainment and increasing and accelerating interaction between them. This will generate new businesses, cause new ideas to be developed, make it easier to integrate technology and entertainment and sell the results to a global market. Hyperloop will be a substantial competitive advantage for California.
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Second because whichever company first perfects the Hyperloop will have an immediate global market to deliver these systems to other "high traffic city pairs that are less than about 1500 km or 900 miles apart." This too will bring an economic boom to the state of California if we can build them here first and then sell our know-how to the world.
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But these are long term economic benefits and are difficult to quantify. While they (like the benefits derived from many infrastructure projects) would justify the needed investment in developing and building the Hyperloop, it is difficult to form public policy on these general economic benefits. Thus Musk has reasonably built into his analysis how much of the ticket cost would be needed, over 20 years, to recoup the development cost (about $20 per trip). But I believe there is another path to paying for the Hyperloop, one that we can easily execute on with visionary State political leadership and aspirational business leaders.
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In Elon Musk's proposal he envisions a system that connects San Francisco and Los Angeles and perhaps in the future Sacramento, San Diego, Fresno, and Las Vegas. But the specific location in those cities is not considered. It stands to reason though that Hyperloop stations will be exceedingly valuable real estate -- living and working directly over a Hyperloop station eliminates the time and trouble of getting from somewhere else in that metropolitan area to the Hyperloop in order to start the journey to another city. Ending your journey at the business you want to visit eliminates the trip out of the Hyperloop station to wherever you needed to get to.
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So imagine for a moment the incredible opportunity that the state has to play property developer -- what is the value of a mega-complex with shopping, offices, and homes situated directly over and around each Hyperloop station and thus connected to mega-complex locations in each of the other cities?
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As a benchmark, the developer Larry Silverstein is obligated to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Silverstein">pay $102 million per year in base rent</a> to the NY Port Authority for the space which holds the World Trade Center. The actual lease value of the Hyperloop stations might be significantly more than that, but a construction bond sold today against a 50-year lease for two stations with combined annual income of $200 million per year in today's dollars (with increases for inflation) would generate more than enough money to build the Hyperloop. In Musk's plan he estimates construction costs at $6 billion for one tube with 40 cars. At just the World Trade Center lease value, the station real estate is worth $10 billion over 50 years.
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Realistically the footprint for a Hyperloop mega-complex should be much larger than just the World Trade Center -- something more like all of downtown Manhattan at many multiples of the WTC lease value. Developers would be eager to create these new cities within the cities. In the Bay Area the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Air_Station_Alameda">old navy airbase in Alameda</a> is available. Near Los Angeles it might be the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles_Air_Force_Base">Los Angeles Air Force Base</a> although many other sites exist and are in public hands already, avoiding the need to use unpopular <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eminent_domain">eminent domain</a> laws (although this might also be needed).
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What are we waiting for?
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-48762820136984334822013-09-17T14:18:00.001-07:002013-09-17T14:18:14.758-07:00The Customer Agenda is the C-Suite AgendaIf growth is the CEO's key agenda than the CEO should be asking the company's management team, "what are we doing to address the Customer Agenda?" And should be developing a dashboard of key initiatives that support three imperatives and measure the impact on the business -- (1) OUTSIDE IN, (2) INSIDE OUT, and (3) DIGITIZATION.
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1) Who is looking <strong>OUTSIDE IN</strong> and understanding how our customers see us and what they want from us? Are we developing a rich customer experience strategy? Have we implemented customer journey management? Do we have a guiding consistent brand narrative?
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2) Are we turning our company <strong>INSIDE OUT</strong> and breaking down the silos between the different teams that are customer facing? How are we doing on collecting information, developing insights, and improving our ability to experiment? Do we know what the new business models will be that we need to organize our company's processes and people to serve?
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3) Have we started enabling our products/services and delivery experiences through <strong>DIGITIZATION</strong>? Are we embedding sensors, instrumenting services, providing controls and integrating rich information? What partners are we connecting with in a stronger ecosystem? How will we develop the discipline to continuously innovate?
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Does it make sense for every company to have a "<a href="http://blogs.hbr.org/2011/04/the-rise-of-the-chief-customer/">Chief Customer Officer</a>?" Not necessarily. But every company should have someone in that ROLE even if the title isn't needed. As Paul Hagen wrote for HBR:
<blockquote>...these individuals serve as top executives with the mandate and power to design, orchestrate, and improve customer experiences across the ever-more-complex range of customer interactions.</blockquote>
Customers now expect to be able to interact with our companies through any channel at any time to achieve any objective and have us know who they are, treat them consistently, and serve their needs fairly, efficiently, and ideally in a manner that surprises and delights.
Meeting that expectation will require integrated customer experience connecting all of the functions in the enterprise that touch the customer: marketing, sales, service and even R&D and operations.
Getting all of those separate teams and leaders to work together toward this goal has to be the CEO's agenda.
Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-72049645975098504622013-09-14T17:06:00.000-07:002013-09-14T17:11:05.186-07:00Three ImperativesEvery company in every industry faces an imminent and urgent challenge to address three imperatives and respond to a once in a lifetime transition -- from an industrial economy to a computation economy. I don't mean to say that this is a change that will be apparent in one year or three years, but if organizations hesitate to embrace the change that is upon them they risk falling behind over the coming decade of digital transformation. These three imperatives are related to:
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(1) Customer expectations are changing and with them the underlying operations of markets will transform.
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(2) The definition of competition (and of competitive products and services) is changing and with it -- who competes with whom, where they compete, when they compete, and the business business models that govern that competition.
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(3) How real value is created is changing and challenging all of our assumptions about how our organizations function in the process of innovating, producing and delivering products and services.
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Many have recited the list of businesses that have fallen from leading positions to irrelevance. The leaders of those businesses failed to anticipate the macroeconomic changes that would engulf their industries. But we need not blame those leaders for their failure -- not while we ourselves are also failing to anticipate the impact on our own businesses.
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It is easy to underestimate the transformation underway or to believe that it can happen to someone else but not to our own industry or company. While it might be that one industry (media, technology, retail...) is impacted why should we believe that another (automotive, industrial products, business services...) would be? We are simply not equipped to recognize the larger structures -- the macro trends that are remaking the very foundations of our civilization.
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There is a precedent for this -- In 1776 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Smith">Adam Smith</a> published <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wealth_of_Nations">An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations</a> a work which was itself derivative of a set of thoughtful contemporary economists. Together these early thinkers explained a transformation that was largely a product of mechanization. This process began perhaps as early as 1725 with Basile Bouchon's first improvements of the draw loom or even earlier with the first demonstrations of a commercial use of steam engines by Thomas Savery in 1698.
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Today we can with 20/20 hindsight look back on these thinkers and see that if the leaders of that time, say George the III (King of England), had understood the macro trends of his day that he would have implemented a different course of evolution for his organization. Giving proportional representation to the American colonies in Parliament, for example, could have averted the American Revolution. But he didn't believe that these new ideas might fundamentally change the importance of the monarchy and so instead his "business" found that the "market" had moved on and his monarchy became irrelevant...
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200 years later a new transformation began, the result of computation. We are now well into the new macro trends (think mainframe, minicomputer, personal computer, Internet, mobile computing...) and yet like George the III many business leaders are ignoring the implications of the new economy or think that somehow it won't apply to them.
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But it will apply -- these trends will remake every industry and every company.
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In order to navigate the transformation underway, leaders must make the right decisions to guide their organizations through the three imperatives or risk joining the ranks of those that have lost their footing and eventually fallen from success to irrelevance.
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First - Customer Expectations - Leveling the playing field
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The computation economy gives individuals information and connectivity that transforms the role they are capable of playing in the marketplace. Where the industrial economy was dominated by producers, the computation economy levels the playing field and gives individuals more power in the marketplace interaction. As a result there is a fundamental rethinking of what marketing is and the role it plays in an organization -- integrated and collaborative with sales and service in creating an overall integrated customer experience.
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Second - Digitization of Products and Services -- Integrating information into everything
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Every product, every service, and the ways in which those products and services are delivered and consumed by customers will be transformed by computation. Bring external information into a product. Collect information from the use of the product. Instrument the delivery and service experience... technology gives both customer and company new ways to enhance the usefulness and value of the product or service, connecting customer and company throughout that delivery and consumption experience. What new controls or insights can the customer have? Or the company?
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Third - Operational Transformation -- Remaking how we work and who we work with
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Organizations must develop a new set of competencies and disciplines and break down organizational barrier -- both internally within functional groups and also externally with vendors and partners. There is a new operating model, a networked organization that is agile and operates at a faster speed...
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Over the next few posts I will detail the work that organizations must do to address these imperatives. Every company is somewhere on the journey toward a new condition, a new state of being. Accelerating progress toward that new state will be the measure of difference in success for organizations over the next decade. Maybe I'll even make T-shirts:
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"Don't Be George III"
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<a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/08/building-customer-solutions-practice.html">Building a Customer Solutions Practice</a>
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1. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/08/features-vs-benefits.html">Features vs. Benefits</a>
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2. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/09/three-imperatives.html">Three Imperatives</a>
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3. ...
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-47735580953003541172013-08-27T11:41:00.002-07:002013-09-14T17:10:15.392-07:00Features vs. BenefitsMarketing professionals often struggle with the "feature vs. benefit" dilemma when developing a plan to promote their products and services. But the problem can be followed back one more step to the developers of products and services. Rory Sutherland in his 2009 Ted Talk "<a href="http://www.ted.com/talks/rory_sutherland_life_lessons_from_an_ad_man.html">Life lessons from an ad man</a>" provides a great example of this, comparing two different approaches to the length of the Eurostar train journey from London to Paris. The approach of the engineering mindset is to shorten the journey by improving the track quality to allow the trains to run more quickly. Rory offers an alternative scenario that gets at the underlying customer experience question. The "feature" may be length of journey, but the value is in the quality of the experience, so Rory proposes an alternative service improvement that creates a "benefit" for travelers without changing the trip time (watch the video to hear his suggestion).
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Building a consulting practice presents a similar challenge. It is quite easy as a consultant to focus on the thing to be done for a client, for example "install a new CRM system." This is the feature, not the benefit. Sometimes consulting takes on an appearance of benefits by breaking down the task into other tasks that appear more focused -- "gather business requirements, CRM Strategy, vendor selection process..." but really these are just more features. The key to defining a set of services for a consulting practice is to identify the underlying business issues and how real value will be delivered. For example a company wanting to replace its CRM system might be evaluating how to improve sales efficiency, which could include a lot more than just a software package. Delivering the benefit (or shall we just say, the RESULTS) in this case is about reducing sales cycles, improving close rates, increasing customer satisfaction... and that might be accomplished through new collaboration models, compensation changes, sales training, connecting sales to other functional areas, changing the channel strategy...
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So developing a "feature" service that offered a client a "CRM Implementation" would miss the real opportunity to serve that client through a focus on real results. Having a "home run" for a consulting business is about understanding your clients and what their real challenges are so that service offerings can be focused on delivering results.
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<a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/08/building-customer-solutions-practice.html">Building a Customer Solutions Practice</a>
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1. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/08/features-vs-benefits.html">Features vs. Benefits</a>
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2. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/09/three-imperatives.html">Three Imperatives</a>
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3. ...
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Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-54689422038195140452013-08-21T17:40:00.001-07:002013-09-14T17:08:53.699-07:00Building a Customer Solutions PracticeOne of the people I have been very influenced by about marketing and the role of marketers is Yum Brands CEO and chairman David Novak. His thinking is applicable across brands and industries well beyond Yum's restaurant niche. Here in <a href="http://www.qsrmagazine.com/executive-interviews/why-customer-so-important-david-novak">QSR magazine</a> he gives one of his thought provoking statements:
<blockquote>My marketing mantra for the organization is, “What consumer perception, habit, or belief do you have to either change, build, or reinforce in order to grow the business?” I think that when you truly listen to the voice of the customer and answer that question, you’ll have a home run.
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Unpacking this is a handful. Each word is worth savoring -- when was the last time you thought about your customer's "perception, habit, or belief" and how have you connected this to a set of customer experience competencies in your business that can "either change, build, or reinforce" them?
To my mind this is central to the CEO-imperative of a customer-centric business. A business where all of the functional organizations that touch the customer are connected and working together -- leveraging shared capabilities toward a common purpose: grow the business.
And I love the plain spoken colloquial advice that when you do this, "you'll have a home run."
Follow along over the next few weeks as I think out loud about how to develop a home run for the Customer Solutions Practice at Cognizant...
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1. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/08/features-vs-benefits.html">Features vs. Benefits</a>
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2. <a href="http://tedshelton.blogspot.com/2013/09/three-imperatives.html">Three Imperatives</a>
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3. ...
<p></p>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-62213570726496234942013-08-19T13:34:00.001-07:002013-08-19T13:34:07.414-07:00Vice President, Consulting - Customer Solutions Practice at Cognizant Technology SolutionsToday I begin a new adventure.
I have the privilege to have been asked to join one of the fastest growing large companies in the world, Cognizant Technology Solutions, as the head of the Customer Solutions management consulting practice.
For those of you who would like to contact me directly at my new work address you can do so here:
ted.shelton (a) cognizant.com
As this is my first day I am in listening mode and getting to know the terrific team of people here at Cognizant.
Stay tuned for development!Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-33332683696758883242013-08-12T10:52:00.001-07:002013-08-12T10:52:25.841-07:00Moving on from PwCAfter almost two years with Pricewaterhouse Coopers I have decided to start something new. My last official day of employment with PwC was this past Friday, August 9th. I am taking a little bit of time off and will post information about my new position once I get started there.
In the meantime, I wanted to thank all of the tremendous people at PwC for having given me the opportunity to work with them. I truly was honored to be a part of this great organization and it was a very difficult decision for me to leave. While I have quit jobs that I hated with no remorse, this is the first time that I have quit a job that I loved -- and I know I will miss many of the people I met and worked with over the past two years.
PwC does a great job hiring people who are smart, hard working, care about one another, and care about delivering very high quality services to their clients. I learned a lot being a part of PwC and I wish the best for everyone who remains.
Now for me it is on to a brief rest and then a new adventure which I look forward to telling all of you about very soon!
Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1033750.post-47798171160859286032011-07-23T16:37:00.000-07:002011-09-14T15:56:48.775-07:00Social Media Maturity ModelWe have been working closely with PRTM (now a part of PwC) to analyze our experience in working with clients on Social Media implementations and combining them with the results of a survey we recently completed on global enterprise adoption of a wide array of social technologies. Attached is a presentation providing a quick overview of our results:<br /><br /><div style="width:425px" id="__ss_8677213"> <strong style="display:block;margin:12px 0 4px"><a href="http://www.slideshare.net/tshelton/social-media-maturity-model-8677213" title="Social Media Maturity Model" target="_blank">Social Media Maturity Model</a></strong> <iframe src="http://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/embed_code/8677213" width="425" height="355" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no"></iframe> <div style="padding:5px 0 12px"> View more <a href="http://www.slideshare.net/" target="_blank">presentations</a> from <a href="http://www.slideshare.net/tshelton" target="_blank">Ted Shelton</a> </div> </div>Ted Sheltonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09651155562346606560noreply@blogger.com0