Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

Tom Cuthbert

Tom Cuthbert

Founder & former CEO of Click Forensics (now Adometry). Interests include travel, wine, family & business. Today I help people who run companies become much more effective while working fewer hours & improving their personal life.

Six Strategies for Partnering with Big Brands

BY , Entrepreneur Magazine

Tom Szaky didn't even try to get his product--a worm excrement fertilizer packed in a recycled bottle--into small retailers when he started TerraCycle six years ago. Instead, he reached as high as he could: Wal-Mart. "If I want to be big and do it quickly, the best way … is to work with the world's biggest companies," he says. "They can accelerate your cycle much more quickly than any other company can."

The Trenton, N.J.-based conpany's first big partnership with Wal-Mart in Canada was just the start of what has become a $14 million business. TerraCycle now gathers unrecyclable trash and converts it into products and packaging for such big brands as Kraft, Pepsi and Mars. Last year, corporate partners spent $45 million on TerraCycle-related marketing--far more than Szaky could have ever done alone.

But breaking in with big companies is no easy feat. For Szaky, it took lots of research, persistence and trial and error. "The biggest mistake small companies make is they don't do enough homework," says Brant Slade, co-author of Think BIG!: An Entrepreneur's Guide to Partnering With Large Companies (Course Technology PTR, 2009). "They think … more from the small business point of view as opposed to thinking from the large business point of view."Here's a checklist to help your business prepare to partner with big brands:

1. Be unique. Make sure your business pitch is carefully thought out and offers value to your potential partner. After Robin Thurston co-founded MapMyFITNESS.com, an Austin, Texas-based fitness social network that offers online routes, training and group activities, he and his partner realized they had developed a geo-location technology that bigger companies wanting online fitness tools and access to a social network could use. With their first corporate partner, Cadbury's Accelorade sports drink, they collaborated on a web interface enabling users on their site to map and share workouts. "You have to have something that is clearly valuable to that big brand that they might not want to spend the time investing in or doing," Thurston says. Now, the company also builds web platforms and mobile phone apps for brands like NBC Sports, Humana and Skechers, whose customers can opt into the MapMyFITNESS social network.

2. Remain persistent. Although Szaky had the worm-excrement-in-a-recycled-bottle market cornered, getting that first deal with Wal-Mart in 2005 still required persistence. After scouring LinkedIn and alumni networks to find the right contact, Szaky called Wal-Mart 10 times a day, every day for three weeks until he finally got through and set up a meeting. Big companies field lots of requests, so persistence is a must. "There are some brands we are working with today that literally were five-year conversations," Thurston says.

Robin Thurston of MapMyFITNESS.com
MapMyFITNESS co-founders Robin Thurston and Kevin Callahan, Photo credit, Target Brands Inc.

3. Think big. You have to think like a big brand to partner with one. For MapMyFITNESS, that means developing large-scale projects. "A big brand doesn't want to talk about a $10,000 project," Thurston says. "They want to talk in seven figures and really big user numbers." For example, Thurston and his partner proposed that big companies give away their product with subscriptions to the MapMyFITNESS website. The size of their user base--nearly seven million today--was large enough to interest brands like Procter & Gamble's Febreze.

4. Plan for fast growth. If you're growing too quickly to keep up with demand, you'll lose money--and probably your partner. Szaky learned that lesson through experience. "The more we grew, the more we lost," he says. While TerraCycle's sales reached $6.6 million in 2008, it had a net loss of $4.5 million. The next year, Szaky began developing agreements with companies to handle production for him. Today, 40 companies make and sell TerraCycle products for major retailers and TerraCycle turned a profit of $100,000 in the last year.

Polka Dog Bakery, a Boston-based dog treat maker slated to expand into 1,763 Target stores this May, let the retailer oversee production and distribution in order to make the partnership feasible. "It would have been too much for us to expand at that capacity," says cofounder Robert Van Sickle of his 11-person company.

5. Prepare for scrutiny. Make sure your financial and legal affairs are in order. Since TerraCycle works with multinational companies, the company gets audited every two months. After failing the first few audits in his early partnerships, Szaky realized he needed to focus more on developing proper procedures. "If you are going to go down the path of working in big businesses, having your house in order is critical," he says. "You are going to get the growth but you are also going to get a lot more scrutiny."

6. Build on existing partnerships. Don't rush to find the next partner once you successfully link up with a big company. MapMyFITNESS gets a lot of new business from expanding existing partnerships, Thurston says. Companies are often more willing to consider developing a licensing partnership, for example, if they're already buying advertising on your website. "Too many entrepreneurs chase after the next client instead of recognizing the current client could mean a lot more revenue for them if they simply explore other revenue channels," Thurston says. Partnerships now account for a third of his company's total revenue.

Why We Dare To Be Average

Jim Collins offers his perspective in the opening line of his second book by stating, “Good is the enemy of great.”  He explains that we don’t have great government or great schools because we have good government and good schools.  Somehow good enough is good enough, I guess.  In researching and writing about peer advisory groups, I’ve talked to countless members who extol the virtues of their culture of accountability – implying that left to our own devices, most of us dare to be average and we are perfectly content in doing so.  Sadly, they’re right.  I’m sure you’re bristling at the mere suggestion, but ask yourself if you’re doing everything you can do to be at the top of your game every day.  If you’re like most people, the answer is a resounding “no.”

Joe Henderson who writes about running, tells us, and I’m paraphrasing, that it isn’t about doing anything super human; it’s about people doing the things anyone can do, but they just don’t.  Think about how powerful that is.  I spent some time meeting withChris Brogan last week, who I regard as an amazing example of someone who combines his talent with a relentless work ethic and an unwavering commitment to excellence.   He dares for something much more.  Chris is dedicated to his work in a manner most of us are not, which is among the reasons he’s successful, and why we’ll be hearing much more from him for years to come.

But what really prompted this post for me was seeing Cirque Du Soleil perform Ka` at the MGM Grand a few nights ago.  I didn’t know a great deal about the show until reading about it after the performance.  The LA Times review confirmed my belief that it “may be the most lavish production in the history of western theater.”   Of all the amazing live performances I’ve ever attended, I’ve never witnessed such a profound example of excellence.  I thought about how this amazing ensemble comes to work and performs this show twice a day, five days a week.   Then I considered the $220 million investment in the theater and the production and all the people who make it happen at such a high level each and every night.  The vision, creativity, teamwork, and flawless execution is in part a result of superb talent, but I would suggest it’s also largely because of people doing what anyone can do, except they actually do it!  Imagine a country where our government, our schools, and our businesses performed at this level.

Contrast Collins’ explanation of good being the enemy of great with the concept of perfectionism and the familiar quote from Voltaire translated literally as “The best is the enemy of good”  or more commonly expressed as ‘The perfect is the enemy of the good.”  The quote references the paralyzing effect of the pursuit of perfection. It’s where the hope to implement the perfect solution can result in no solution at all. So is good the enemy of great? Or is the pursuit of perfection the enemy of good?  Seems to me, they are two sides of the same coin.  Neither is an excuse for daring to be average.

So how will you dare to be more than average?  Start with a single act.  (This is what I’ll try to do).  Bring your A game to writing your next proposal or presentation and, when you think it’s finished, ask yourself how you can take it to the next level.  Do something simple, yet extraordinary for one of your customers.   Inspire an employee to improve upon his/her greatest talent, rather than address an irrelevant weaknesses.   There are a million things you can try.  See how it feels, enjoy the results, and just keep at it – each and every day.

Tell us how you will pursue what we’ll call the practice of Ka`?

The Power of “The Pause”

By 

powerofpauseCulturally, we are in a hurry, particularly in business. There is a huge driving force for results, for achievements, for action. Often just being busy looks like success. It’s gotten to the point that, as researcher Brene Brown says, “exhaustion has become a status symbol.”

The problem is new research is emerging and it looks like all this multi-tasking, fragmented attention and “busy, busy, busy” isn’t actually healthy or the recipe for success. Being in a constant state of reacting to “incoming” and jumping to respond to everything that comes your way is not leadership and constantly driving people and yourself relentlessly forward is not necessarily great leadership either.

We want to remind you of “the power of the pause.” This is a step that can be made anytime, anywhere and requires no special tools or equipment. Being able to stop yourself, gather your energy and breathe is actually an incredibly powerful and masterful leadership move that is deceptively simple.

We aren’t talking about shutting down, withdrawing, hiding or freezing. We are talking about returning to your center and a place of balance. We are talking about allowing yourself to exhale fully, (since at the pace most of us go we are halfway holding our breath), and just being thoughtful and reflective for a minute or two.

If you doubt the power of this consider the recent interview Oprah Winfrey did with Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook. (Click here to view.) Apparently she has a policy at her company for twice per day mandatory meditation time. As she says in the interview, many people are overwhelmed by the idea of meditation so she asks that they at least unplug, and take quiet time for reflection. Whether or not you are an Oprah fan or consumer of her programs and magazines is not really important here. She is one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the US and has been so for many years. It is of note that someone who has built such an empire puts so much value on reflection and quiet time that she has made it a mandatory workplace policy.

We know of one coaching client that was so overwhelmed at the idea of any stillness, quiet or reflection that he wanted to flee the building just considering it. He finally agreed to set the alarm on his watch for 1 minute each hour to stop, breathe and just slow down. After committing to this practice he absolutely loved it and was able to create specific segments of time to gather his energy and pause.

So we ask you to consider incorporating “the pause” into your repertoire. Even just a couple of minutes per day has value. You might be surprised how changing your pace creates new avenues for creativity, intelligence and other positives to emerge.

They Know You're Reading This

via @ Forbes by Dave Pell, Contributor

I was recently complaining to a teller at my bank that another bank down the street had given my 3-year-old daughter a stuffed horse for nothing more than walking past the front door. I jokingly asked her what gifts my own bank would be willing to offer to compete for the affections of my daughter. Then I said, “Oh, you probably don’t like it when I mention the competition when I’m in here, eh?”

She surprised me with her answer. She said that she had her checking and savings accounts at that competing bank and that she’s always found its service to be great. I was surprised. Why would a teller at one bank do her own personal banking at another bank down the street?

She told me that most of the tellers she works with have their accounts elsewhere because they don’t want friends and colleagues at their own bank to have access to their private information.

The exchange was a clear reminder that privacy issues are everywhere. Anytime you share any information with anyone or any institution, you should expect it to be shared in ways you never expected.

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This week, the top story in the Internet world was that the mobile social network Path had been uploading users’ email contact lists to its servers. The purpose of the upload was to make it more likely that users would find friends and colleagues who were also on Path. The problem was that Path was uploading the email data to its servers without users knowing it. A firestorm of criticism erupted. And within a day or so, Path responded by putting a stop to the offending practice and deleting every email address they had collected.

Path deserves credit for the swift and appropriate response to the criticism it faced. But the whole incident was one more reminder that almost everything you do on the Internet puts a dent in your personal privacy, whether you’re aware of it or not.

When I first heard about Path’s plan to delete all the email addresses it had collected, I wondered if Facebook would respond by agreeing to delete those embarrassing photos from 2006 that you already manually deleted 6 times in the past. As it is now, the photos you delete from Facebook never really get deleted. They’re still accessible via direct link (and of course, by anyone at Facebook who has access to the data). Once you put something on the Internet, you should assume it will be somewhere out there forever.

Maybe that’s no big deal when were talking about a few collegiate kegstand photos that you’d rather forget. But it is a big deal when you consider that almost everything you do or share on the Internet is being tracked by someone.

The Path story got big because it’s exceptional in two ways. First, thanks to one guy who wrote a blog post, we all were made aware that Path had a policy of borrowing your email contacts without your consent (and that iPhone apps easily allow for such a transgression). And second, when confronted with valid complants, Path acted swiftly to change its policy and right its former wrongs.

There’s nothing all that exceptional about the notion that your data is being collected and saved, and that just about every click you make and every piece of data you share is being tracked by Internet companies and the marketers who pay their bills. Companies like Facebook are so valuable precisely because of the effectiveness with which they transgress your privacy and piece together a portait of you that can be sold to advertisers.

Pennsylvania professor Joseph Turow explains how you’re tracked in the modern world.

Websites, advertisers, and a panoply of other companies are continuously assessing the activities, intentions, and backgrounds of virtually everyone online; even our social relationships and comments are being carefully and continuously analyzed. In broader and broader ways, computer-generated conclusions about who we are affect the media content — the streams of commercial messages, discount offers, information, news, and entertainment — each of us confronts. Over the next few decades the business logic that drives these tailored activities will transform the ways we see ourselves, those around us, and the world at large. Governments too may be able to use marketers’ technology and data to influence what we see and hear.

They are watching. And they know you’re reading this right now.

And it’s not like you can just go offline and avoid the tracking. If you get a postcard advertising a lung cancer screening from your local hospital, it’s not by coincidence. Everything about the offline you is being shared across corporations as well. In the age of data mining, it just takes a few clicks to piece together enough information about your age, address, income, and insurance status to figure out if you’re a likely smoker and therefore a good target for a lung screening pitch.

I have a friend who used to fill out nearly every online and offline form with a different title (Mr, Mrs, Dr, prince, king…). Then over time, he tracked the mailings that came to him with those various titles attached. Over time, he could easily track who sold what information to whom.

Today, it wouldn’t even make sense to try to keep up. We share our data with everyone and everyone is sharing our data with everyone else.

It’s worth putting this Path story into this broader perspective and reminding ourselves that we are only at the tip of personal data mining iceberg. By the time my 3 year-old daughter is my age, she might walk into her bank and have the teller ask: “Hey, didn’t we give you a stuffed horse back in 2012?”

Dave Pell writes the NextDraft newsletter, a quick, entertaining look at the day’s most fascinating news.

3 Numbers All Entrepreneurs Should Know

In the early days of a startup, it can be tough to find good data to help with decision-making. Put a priority on these three numbers, and you'll be fine.
By Don Rainey

Math_pano_13794

Peer Advisory Groups Bring Out the Best in People

by  

Vice President Biden tells a story of when he first entered the U.S. Senate, shortly after his 30th birthday. Upon his arrival, he tended only to see the differences between himself and many of his 

Republican colleagues and quickly developed contentious relationships with those with whom he disagreed.  Montana Senator and Majority Leader at the time, Mike Mansfield, took Biden under his wing and explained that in the Senate, “We have to work together despite our differences.”  He told Biden that every Senator was elected by his constituents because those constituents saw something inherently good in that member. He challenged Biden to do the same – to find the good in each of his Senate colleagues, no matter how vehemently he may disagree with them.  Biden followed that advice and rather than focus on partisan differences, he looked for common ground.  By doing so, he discovered the good in each of his colleagues.  Over time, despite a rough start, they discovered the good in him as well.

First impressions can be fraught with judgments about differences and unfair speculation about what motivates those differences.  Too often, people don’t move past that stage, at least not very quickly or easily.  Peer advisory groups are hard-wired for helping us seek out the good in others because it’s why we are there in the first place.  We’re looking for the value our peers bring to the room.  By listening, learning, and opening our minds to new ways of thinking, we see our peer group members for their pluses, rather than their minuses. Covey’s Habit #5, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood” could not be more apropos.  As peer advisory group members, we don’t look at others for what makes them different; we look at our peers with an eye for what makes them special.  It’s a big reason peer advisory groups accomplish so much.  And best of all, it influences the way we look at everyone in all aspects of our lives.

On Friday, I participated in a peer advisory group session with my marketing colleagues at Vistage.  Everyone at that table is so special in his or her own right.  They have so much to contribute, both to the individuals in the group and toward our common purpose as a leadership community.  I learn so much every time I’m around them.  It’s one thing to hear Joe Biden’s story and understand the lesson.  It’s quite another to stick your hands in the clay, so to speak, as a peer advisory group member and experience it for yourself.  It’s just one more reason this brand of interaction is so meaningful.

Imagine if we had a few Mike Mansfields coaching legislators on both sides of the aisle on Capitol Hill.   If that happened, Congress might actually accomplish as much in 2012 as our group did on Friday.

Facebook's IPO: More Yahoo than Google?

Facebook comes out at $100B valuation (27X revenue, 100x earnings!) with only $3.7B in revenue, 12% of that comes from Zynga (ie Farmville).  Google has a current valuation of $150B on $28B in revenue... not a bet I would take :)


Facebook's IPO: More Yahoo than Google?

By
Erik Sherman




 

(MoneyWatch)  

COMMENTARY There is so much hype around Facebook that it can be hard to put the numbers, and company, into perspective. But for all the new age talk of connecting people, it's still a business -- one that largely makes its revenue from advertising. Now Facebook filed for its IPO and there are some figures to look through.

But even then, to understand Facebook, you have to see how it compares to other companies as Google (GOOG), Yahoo (YHOO), and AOL that are in the same business of using the Internet to attract users and then sell ads. When you do, you see that Facebook is really more Yahoo than Google, at least for now. That's particularly true in that the company needs a different way to make money than it has used. Without a significant change in strategy, it will likely top out in the near future.

Facebook in a nutshell

There has been extensive speculation and leaks about how Facebook has been doing. But now it's time for guessing to move to the side. In 2011, the company had revenue of $3.71 billion. That compares with the previous few years as follows: 2010, $1.97 billion and $777 million in 2009. That was 154 percent growth between 2009 and 2010, with 88 percent growth between 2010 and 2011.

Of course, as such companies as Groupon (GRPN) and Pandora (P) have shown, revenue can mean little without at least a move toward profitability. Facebook actually made a profit in all three of its reported years. In 2008, net income was 29.5 percent of revenue. In 2009, it was 30.7 percent. It dropped to 26.9 percent last year. The company ran at a net loss in both 2007 and 2008. Clearly, though, this is a business model that works far better than Groupon, Pandora, and some other Internet companies that recently went public.

Another way to look at the company is revenue per user. If you take Facebook's own claims of 800 million active users and look at the last six months of revenue, to match up with more recent revenue, you get $1.7 billion for 800 million users over six months. Project that to a full year and it's $3.4 billion for 845 million users, or $4.02 per user per year -- and that includes both ads and other revenue, which, according to Facebook, really means the company's cut of what Zynga makes.

The competitive landscape

How does Facebook's financial performance compare with other companies that depend on online ads for revenue? Start with Google. Last year, the search giant came in with $37.9 billion in revenue. Of that, $36.5 billion was ad revenue. According to the company's quarterly earnings announcements, traffic acquisition costs (TAC), which is the amount of revenue that Google's partners get, ran around 24 percent. Take out all costs of revenue and you still have $24.7 billion, or 65 percent gross margins. Given Google's approximately 1 billion users, that Google's is $36.5 in ad revenue per user. The company's market cap is about $189 billion.

Yahoo had roughly $5 billion in revenue last year. Granted, that amount has been falling -- it was down about 21 percent from 2010. Revenue without TAC was $4.4 billion. Gross profit was about $3.5 billion for gross margins of 70 percent. Yahoo's market cap is $19.2 billion. It's the mid-tier player that is about a tenth the size of Google. Yahoo still quotes 2004 numbers that it has 274 million unique users. That would translate to $16.06 per user per year.

AOL had a total of $2.2 billion in revenue, of which $1.3 billion was advertising. Overall gross margin was just under 28.1 percent. AOL has a $1.6 billion market cap, making it a little under a tenth the size of Yahoo, or two orders of magnitude smaller than Google.

Another Yahoo?

Facebook is growing quickly. In that sense, it leaves Yahoo far behind. The company is also comfortably profitable, which will drive up the IPO price. But given the comparative sizes of their revenues, Facebook's growth is disappointing compared to the nearly 30 percent revenue growth -- virtually all ads -- that Google saw between 2010 and 2011.

Facebook may also be reaching the end of the growth it can expect from its current strategies. The company claims more than 800 million active users. Some evidence suggests that thenumber of users is flattening and that it is reaching a maximum of what it can expect.

In the middle of last year Facebook missed internal revenue projections by $500 million, or about 25 percent, and that was with its old growth in users. Even if the company does grow larger than Yahoo, unless things change significantly, it may only become a company that falls far short of what Google has obtained.

 

 

The Yin and the Yang of Corporate Innovation

 

NYT by 

 

In the hunt for innovation, that elusive path to economic growth and corporate prosperity, try a little jazz as an inspirational metaphor.

Minh Uong/The New York Times

 

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

In business as in jazz, the tension between training and improvisation can result in great new works, says John Kao, the innovation adviser (and pianist).

That’s the message that John Kao, an innovation adviser to corporations and governments — who is also a jazz pianist — was to deliver in a performance and talk on Saturday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Jazz, Mr. Kao says, demonstrates some of the tensions in innovation, between training and discipline on one side and improvised creativity on the other.

In business, as in jazz, the interaction of those two sides, the yin and the yang of innovation, fuels new ideas and products. The mixture varies by company.

Mr. Kao points to the very different models of innovation represented by Google and Apple, two powerhouses of Silicon Valley, the world’s epicenter of corporate creativity.

The Google model relies on rapid experimentation and data. The company constantly refines its search, advertising marketplace, e-mail and other services, depending on how people use its online offerings. It takes a bottom-up approach: customers are participants, essentially becoming partners in product design.

The Apple model is more edited, intuitive and top-down. When asked what market research went into the company’s elegant product designs, Steve Jobs had a standard answer: none. “It’s not the consumers’ job to know what they want,” he would add.

The Google-Apple comparison, Mr. Kao says, highlights the “archetypical tension in the creative process.”

Google speaks to the power of data-driven decision-making, and of online experimentation and networked communication. The same Internet-era tools enable crowd-sourced collaboration as well as the rapid testing of product ideas — the essence of the lean start-up method so popular in Silicon Valley and elsewhere.

“These are business and management innovations lubricated by technology,” says Thomas R. Eisenmann, a professor at the Harvard Business School.

The benefits, experts say, are most apparent in markets like Internet software, online commerce and mobile applications for smartphones and tablets. “The cost of creation, distribution and failure is low, so it takes relatively little time, money and effort to float trial balloons,” says Randy Komisar, a partner in Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the venture capital firm, and a lecturer on entrepreneurship at Stanford.

That style of innovation is being applied well beyond Google’s products and Internet start-ups. The National Science Foundation, for example, is embracing the formula to try to increase commercialization of the university research it finances. Last fall, the foundation announced the first of a series of grants for what it calls the N.S.F. Innovation Corps. The 21 three-member teams received a crash course at Stanford in lean start-up techniques, and have been given $50,000 each and six months to test whether their inventions are marketable.

The lean formula, with its emphasis on constantly testing ideas and products with customers, amounts to applying “the scientific method to market-opportunity identification,” says Errol B. Arkilic, program director at the foundation.

Yet while networked communications and marketplace experiments add useful information, breakthrough ideas still come from individuals, not committees. “There is nothing democratic about innovation,” says Paul Saffo, a veteran technology forecaster in Silicon Valley. “It is always an elite activity, whether by a recognized or unrecognized elite.”

Successful innovation, Mr. Saffo observes, requires “an odd blend of certainty and openness to new information.” In other words, it is a blend of top-down and bottom-up discovery.

OPEN innovation isn’t a new idea. It flourished, in its way, even in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, notes Tom Nicholas, a historian at the Harvard Business School. In fields like electricity, pharmaceuticals and communications, big corporations including General Electric and Dow Chemical routinely monitored the research beyond their walls, and bought or licensed promising work, especially the inventions of university scientists. The result, Mr. Nicholas says, was a thriving “ecosystem of private and corporate innovation.”

A century later, the corporate labs at G.E. are trying to quicken the pace of innovation — but this is long-cycle innovation, since G.E.’s power generators, jet engines and medical-imaging equipment last for decades. The company is opening a software center in Northern California to make its machines more intelligent with data-gathering sensors, wireless communications and predictive algorithms. The goal is to develop machines, such as jet engines or power turbines, that can alert their human minders when they need repairs, before equipment failures occur. Such smarter machines, the company says, are early arrivals in what it calls the Industrial Internet.

To tap outsider ideas, G.E.’s research arm has made investments with venture capital funds in clean-energy technology and health care, and it works with corporations, government labs and universities on hundreds of collaborative projects. “We’re much more externally focused and connected to the outside world than we were several years ago,” says Michael Idelchik, G.E.’s vice president of advanced technologies.

Apple’s smartphones, tablets and computers typically have life spans measured in a few years instead of decades, with new models introduced regularly. But like G.E., Apple is in the hardware business, where innovation cycles are beholden to the limits of materials science and manufacturing.

Apple’s physical world is far different from Google’s realm of Internet software, where writing a few lines of new code can change a product instantly. The careful melding of hardware with software in Apple’s popular products is a challenge in multidisciplinary systems design that must be orchestrated by a guiding hand — though it will no longer be the hand of Mr. Jobs, who died last October.

Yet Apple has also repeatedly displayed its openness to new ideas and influences, as exemplified by the visit that Mr. Jobs made to the Palo Alto research center of Xerox in 1979. He saw an experimental computer with a point-and-click mouse and graphical on-screen icons, which he adopted at Apple. It later became the standard for the personal computer industry.

In 2010, Apple bought Siri, a personal assistant application for smartphones. At the time, it was a small start-up in Silicon Valley that originated as a program funded by theDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Pentagon. Last year, Siri became the talking question-answering application on iPhones.

Apple product designs may not be determined by traditional market research, focus groups or online experiments. But its top leaders, recruited by Mr. Jobs, are tireless seekers in an information-gathering network on subjects ranging from microchip technology to popular culture. “It’s a lot of data crunched in a nonlinear way in the right brain,” saysErik Brynjolfsson, director of the M.I.T. Center for Digital Business.

Apple and Google pursue very different paths to innovation, but the gap between their two models may be closing a bit. In the months after Larry Page, the Google co-founder, took over as chief executive last April, the company eliminated a diverse collection of more than two dozen projects, a nudge toward top-down leadership. And Timothy D. Cook, Apple’s C.E.O., will almost surely be a more bottom-up leader than Mr. Jobs.

“What we’re likely to see,” Mr. Kao says, “is Google and Apple each borrowing from the playbook of the other.”

 

 

Peer Advisory Groups Will Throw You For A Loop

by 

A reinforcing loop that is.  One of the most powerful dynamics of the peer advisory group is the momentum created when peers engage in a cycle of learning, sharing, applying, and achieving.  Whether they 

are executives with different skills sets from the same organization or CEOs collaborating with fellow CEOs from entirely different industries and backgrounds, they participate in a process that by its nature fuels continuous improvement.  For larger companies, even those with robust formal training programs, internal peer advisory groups can play a major role in maximizing a company’s Return On Development.  For small businesses, it’s often a brilliantly effective stand-alone solution for developing people and growing the enterprise.

The prevailing model in many large companies today is what I’ve described in earlier posts as Trickle-Down Leadernomics:Traditional episodic training designed to stimulate positive behavioral changes, aimed to build better leaders who inspire commitment rather than mere compliance, in an effort to create a healthier culture, a more productive workplace, and happier employees whom you hope will one day perform like a well-oiled machine and drive double-digit growth and profitability for years to come. (Notice the amount of “trickle-down” it takes to achieve the desired result).

The two big problems with Trickle-Down Leadernomics are 1)  If you believe the axiom that “practice makes perfect,” then you would probably agree that what you learn in training, while inviting and practical, is not likely to find its way into your daily routine unless you have the discipline and support system to assure its application.  And even then, short term behavioral changes tend to give way to old habits.  2) Since most companies don’t have a formal mechanism for helping individuals share and apply what they’ve learned, the organization by definition gets shortchanged.   It’s a bit like planting a garden and not giving it water or sunlight.

Believe it or not, I’m a HUGE fan of formal executive development, which is the reason I can’t stand to see so much of it go to waste.  That’s why I believe the reinforcing loop inherent in a highly functioning peer advisory group is worth some thoughtful consideration:

Learning – It’s the first stage of the process and, for too many organizations, it’s often the last.  In Peter Senge’sbook, The Fifth Discipline: The Art & Practice of the Learning Organization, he describes learning organizations this way: “…where people continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, are where people are learning how to learn together.”  Senge goes on to say that we wouldn’t suggest we learned how to ride a bicycle if we only actually rode the bike once.  It’s about demonstrating the capacity to produce quality results repeatedly.  It’s the difference between riding a bike and being a bicycle rider. Peer advisory groups create bicycle riders by fostering deep learning.

Sharing – Whether it’s knowledge gained from reading a book or attending an offsite training program, sharing delivers value to our peers and colleagues and, in our role as teacher or conveyor, helps us embed what we’ve learned.  Peer groups not only engage in rich dialogue about cutting-edge concepts, but the group members tend to ask hard questions and challenge each other to tackle complex issues using their newfound knowledge.  Peers reinforce and essentially give each other permission to try new ways of working.  As I wrote last week, peer to peer influence is incredibly powerful.

Applying – It’s hard to stress the importance of applying what you’ve learned.  Can you imagine a football team showing up for a game without having practiced?  It’s unconscionable.   The best of the best don’t rely on talent alone to excel or win championships.  They take what they learn and apply it until it becomes second nature.   Peer groups hold us accountable for practicing our craft and fine-tuning news ways of working.

Achieving – Good behaviors will replace bad ones, but only over time and after repeated success.  Achieving inspires believing.  And once you believe in yourself and grow to trust a newfound way of working, it fuels the hunger to learn more and the cycle continues.  Achieving also inspires others to emulate your behavior.  Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner call it modeling the way!  As a CEO you can model the way for your peers and your employees and, as leaders in larger companies, you can do the same.   It’s about walking the talk and others following your lead.  There’s nothing more powerful.

If you don’t mind getting thrown for a loop, then you’re an excellent candidate for either joining an external peer advisory group or starting one in your organization.   If you’re planting the garden anyway, why not help it grow?