Posts Tagged ‘Business advice’
Tuesday, August 30th, 2011
By Tom Salonek
is based on my own experiences founding and running my company, a computer training and consulting firm, over the past 20 years. We’ve grown steadily over the past 20 years and I’ve learned a lot about leadership, management and staying sane as a small business owner in a very dynamic industry.
Although there are many, many lessons learned a handful have been critical to our success. The following five “takeaways” are the ones I believe have been the real keys to a decade of sustained, manageable growth.
Takeaway 26 – Make time to set your strategy
Ever notice that some things on your “to do” list never seem to get done, at least not until someone in the organization calls a meeting to get the task on your prioritized short list? It’s the old adage of the squeaky wheel getting all the grease. To make something happen, we have to decide it’s important enough to set aside time to actually do it.
The reality of a startup is the tyranny of the urgent…. the most recent or loudest email, customer call or crisis gets our attention. Yet this won’t grow a firm in the long run. Early in the days of Intertech, I felt it was crucial to set aside time to think about the future and our goals.
We continue an evolved version of this today. Leaders participate in an annual retreat away from the company to set our strategy for the coming year, with the objective of establishing the top three goals for each of our divisions. While getting away is a crucial aspect of this work, a great deal of the work happens before we ever leave town. Retreat participants all complete an exhaustive survey in advance, while employees not participating in the retreat take part in a half-day working session where they share ideas and provide feedback.
Takeaway 34 – Recruiting
I’m often asked what I like best about my job. The answer is that I like all of it because I have great people. They’re competent in their roles and committed to the firm. Put these two together—commitment and competence—and great stuff gets done.
There are tons of books on recruiting but I’ve got some pretty simple advice. In a nutshell, BE PICKY. In the software world, the difference between a top performer and a bottom performer is a factor of eight to 10. I’m guessing it’s similar in your business as well. We’re all nothing without great talent.
Takeaway 38 – Execution makes all the difference
When asked to name the main reason for the success of their organizations, 75 percent of the CEOs leading Inc. Magazine’s top 500 companies said it was due to “superior execution in a mundane business.”
I’m not suggesting execution without thinking and I’m also not suggesting planning everything in such great detail that you never get anything done. Think then do… don’t wait for perfection. It doesn’t exist. If you’re not happy with the way you did something don’t spend time blaming or figuring out why it happened. Make a commitment to do it better next time. That’s how you become good at execution.
Takeaway 50 – I think, therefore I am
The legendary personal development pioneer Earl Nightingale said “We become what we think about.” In my mind, this means having a positive attitude, believing in what’s possible and anticipating the future before it happens.
I see many new leaders who panic during a crisis. It’s easy to do, I know. Want to create a REAL crisis in your organization? When faced with adversity be scared, don’t think through the solution and/or bury your head in the sand. Others will certainly follow you right to the brink of disaster.
Takeaway 70 – Relax with the process
If you feel like you don’t have time for retreats, creating strong recruiting processes, strategizing and all the non-urgent yet critical things I’ve outlined above, remember this.
I’ve never had more employees, clients, or vendors than I have right now. Our business has grown steadily and exponentially during some of the toughest economic conditions this country has ever faced. And yet I’ve never had a more manageable life than the one I have today. Good systems and programs save—not take—time.
Finally, take a look at some of the business templates and tools we’ve created as downloads on our site. They’re free – just enter code 978.
Tom Salonek is the founder and CEO of Intertech, a successful technology and training company in the upper midwest. Intertech twice has been awarded a place on the Inc 500 list of fastest growing companies in the nation and is a seven-time “Best Places to Work” winner in Minnesota. Building a Winning Business 70 Takeways is Tom’s first book. He also blogs at www.tomsalonek.com
Editor’s note: Salonek’s blog is well worth checking out. It’s actionable info.
Tags: best pracftices, book, Business advice, execution, lessons for tech startups, process, recruiting, strategy, Tom Salonek Posted in best practices, Business advice, Viewpoint | Comments Off
Friday, August 19th, 2011
By Kevin Joyce, VP of Marketing Services, The Pedowitz Group
 Kevin Joyce
Let’s say you already use Omniture, WebTrends or Google Analytics and you want to know if the web analytics function that comes with a marketing automation system can offer you anything new. Do you really need both? It can and you do. Is there an optimal way to set up landing pages and forms in the marketing automation system to make analytics tracking in the traditional tools easier? There is.
The traditional web analytics tools like Google and Omniture do a great job of tracking and reporting on overall traffic largely from the perspective of the assets. I.e. most of the data is about:
- Which pages received how many visits, bounces, exits, visit duration etc?
- What paths through the pages did visitors take, especially paths to some ultimate goal?
- Where did the visitors come from and what browsers did they use etc?
In general, the traditional web analytics reporting treats visitors as an anonymous collection, and reports are geared towards telling us how the assets are performing – an asset may be a specific URL for instance.
The marketing automation systems largely offer tracking and reporting from the perspective of the individual. I.e. most of the data is about:
- What pages did that person visit?
- How many times have they visited the website in the past month?
- Which pages do people with “CIO” in their title visit most often?
Notwithstanding the fact that most marketing automation systems also save individual anonymous visitor web history in the hopes of identifying the person later, most of the data and reporting is around what identified individuals are doing on the website.
- Traditional web analytics is great for understanding the performance of your assets
- Web analytics is great for understanding the digital behavior of your prospects and customers
And just as traditional web analytics offers some information about individuals such as their browser and monitor size, perhaps their IP address and location, so too the marketing automation web analytics offers the aggregate information about page visits, unique visitors, and duration on site. The overlap stops there. The traditional web analytics tools are simply not designed to save and report on results by named individual, and the analytics are not designed to give in depth reporting on website asset performance. You will benefit from having both.
Here are some examples of the web analytics reports you can run in a typical system:
- What percentage of my traffic is from CXO vs other levels?
- What are the job roles of people who download my technical whitepapers?
- What pages do people look at right before they purchase my B2B product from the sales rep (not an eCommerce purchase– that’s easy to report on)?
- Is there a difference in which pages people from SMB firms visit vs enterprise visitors?
- Is there a strong correlation between website behavior and purchase intent for B2B?
- What pages do people look at based on where they are in the purchase cycle?
Another nice feature in the marketing automation analytics is that the digital behavior being recorded can be reflected in the prospects’ “lead scores” which can trigger alerts to sales reps. If your company had a big opportunity in proposal stage with a client, and the CFO from the client visited the website, wouldn’t the rep want to be notified immediately? I.e. the marketing automation system workflow engine can send alerts based on context that includes the behavior, the account, the individual, and sales opportunity data.
A final wrinkle in this story is the fact that most marketing automation products can also publish their own pages: landing pages and microsites. Naturally they can track the traffic on these pages perfectly, but how well will your traditional web analytics do in tracking this behavior? Most often the landing pages served up by the marketing automation products are in a sub-domain dedicated to the marketing automation system, usually something innocuous like resources.mycompanydomain.com. There are several important items to consider when you set this up:
- Ensure that the sub-domain is listed in your traditional web analytics so that visits to sub-domain pages from the primary domain do not show up as site exits.
- Insist that the marketing automation team follow standards for setting up the URLs for landing pages and forms so reports can be generated by filtering for URL stems. For instance, perhaps all white paper offer landing pages have –LP- in the URL, and webinar registration forms have –webinar- in the URL.
- Often we want to continue to use the goal tracking in the traditional web analytics, and it may involve forms hosted by the marketing automation system. Ensure that the “thank you” pages that the marketing automation system sends the prospect to, after form completion, are unique to that form and offer, but perhaps have a common stem to facilitate reporting by offer or asset.
- If you are using Google adwords, don’t forget to add the adwords tracking code to your “thank you” pages served up by the marketing automation system so that the credit for the lead can go back to the right ad.
Kevin brings 29 years of experience working with a variety of high tech companies to The Pedowitz Group. He specializes in helping clients create effective demand generation strategies that focus on delivering both marketing efficiencies and revenue results. Kevin joins The Pedowitz Group as the agency’s vice president of marketing services. The Pedowitz Group www.pedowitzgroup.com
Tags: Business advice, google analytics, Kevin Joyce, marketing automation systems, Omniture, The Pedowitz Group, web analytics, WebTrends Posted in best practices, Business advice, Internet/New Media, IT, Viewpoint | 1 Comment »
Thursday, July 28th, 2011
By Martha Ciske
Everyone said that you and your business needed to be on Facebook, Linked-In, Twitter, and every other new social media site or service that has made its debut since then. You linked your webpage and your blog and made sure you had the right apps on your mobile devices to post on the go. You have profiles and pages on multiple services and…. now what?
Losing track of where you and your company are online, over-engaging, under-engaging, and inaccessible content can hurt your ability to reach your audience. Hurdle past these issues and get back on track with your social media strategy by taking the time to assess where you are, and form a plan for moving forward.
Issue: Profile Overload. There are scores of online services and sites where you can potentially place your professional or business profile page. As sites develop, you may feel like you are always chasing the next greatest place to create a profile for you or your business. All of those sites may not be neccessary to make an impact with your customers and clients. Worse than not knowing all of where your accounts are is not knowing what your login information is. Without it you wont be able to act, respond, or correct any mis-information
Solution: Take inventory of where your profiles and pages are and know what those sites are for. Are they equivalent to a phonebook listing or do they require maintenance and interaction? Can you post status messages, photos, or videos? Are they professional or social networking sites? Can they be linked to a networked posting service?
Also make sure you are always in control of your login information. Knowing what each site or service can do for you will help you determine which ones to keep, and which ones to delete. It is far better to have a few well-maintained profiles and services than to stretch your energies across a multitude of poorly created or inactive profile pages.
Issue: Multi-Media Frenzy. Pictures (and videos) might be worth a thousand words, but they might not always be the best vehicle for your business’ message. Let’s take a moment to think about your audience. If your audience is the 9-5 working professional and you want them to be able access your information while they are at work, put your message into text.
Many office environments do not allow streaming internet media. Some outright prohibit content from major video hosting sites like YouTube or Vimeo. Other professionals may not feel comfortable watching your video in the workplace due to noise concerns or the perception of not working when accessing media online.
Solution: Make sure your audience can still access your content even if they can’t push play. Consider making content summaries of your video presentations available. Also vary your postings to include both text and multimedia content
Issue: Social Media Silence. Several high profile celebrities have gone social media silent in support of various charitable causes, but for the average business or professional seeking to maintain and build their network, silence can spell disaster. Many new social media users go from gung-ho when they begin their online presence to burned-out.
You may have intended to keep posting several times a day, seven days a week but the reality is that without help, you just can’t keep up with that kind of effort. It’s exhausting. However, that two month period where you haven’t posted at all is telling potential customers that you don’t care, that the business isn’t doing well enough to pay attention to your online presence, or that you lack the digital finesse to “get it.”
Solution: Networked posting services to the rescue! Services like HootSuite and Tweetdeck can help you organize your content and schedule out your activity. Have a plan to post general content about you and your business on a regular basis, then supplement with the more spontaneous or timely content you create later.
Issue: Over-posting is Overwhelming. Your posting is out of control. You’ve posted three inspiring business quotes since breakfast and you are just about to re-tweet an article you saw on a newsfeed, then a photo of your newest product, then a video about how your stock is doing and….. Stop! Don’t. Push. The Button. Where are you going with all of that activity?
Is it emphasizing your core message? Are you educating and engaging, or just plain annoying your contacts with all of your chatter? Are you revealing more personal information to your business peers than is really appropriate?
Solution: Post what matters when it matters. Strategic and planned posting services can help over-posters too. If you are over-posting because several people have access to your accounts and are posting independently, reel it back in and take control. Establish a review process to make sure you are posting for your business or professional persona.
That includes putting your personal posts on a personal social media account not your company or professional profile. It’s ok to re-post content from other reliable and respected sources, especially pertinent news or industry happenings, but make sure your own message is not lost in all the activity.
Even if you haven’t fallen into any of the above issue categories entirely, avoid reaching social media meltdown by taking the time to assess your social media strategy now before you lose patience, control, or sight of your goals. Don’t worry if you haven’t stayed strictly on task with your social media strategy. The great thing about social media is that it is constantly evolving so you can still get your strategy going and be successful.
Martha Ciske is a legal information technologist and social media consultant in Orlando, Florida. She has worked with professionals, businesses, and non-profit organizations to build their online presence and develop social media strategies. Her interests lie in anything geeky and cool. She can be reached at Martha@marthaciske.com.
Tags: avoid social media meltdown, Business advice, facebook, Hootsuite, LinkedIn, Martha Ciske, take control of your social media, TweetDeck, twitter Posted in Business advice, Facebook, Google, Internet/New Media, social media, Twitter, Viewpoint | 1 Comment »
Monday, July 18th, 2011
 Frank Rumbauskas
Google AdWords is the dominating pay-per-click search engine on the internet today. However, according to ROI Advisors, Inc., a Certified Google Partner Company, an advertiser who pays more doesn’t necessarily have an advantage over others. Many factors come into play to level the playing field, the largest of which is click-through rate, or the percentage of people who see your ad versus those who click on it.
“An advertiser with a low click-through rate will be punished with higher costs per click, and lower ad positions, than a competitor with a high click-through rate,” says New York Times best-selling author Frank Rumbauskas (http://www.theroiteam.com), founder of ROI Advisors, who holds Google’s professional certifications in both AdWords and Analytics. “Unlike other pay-per-click engines where bid price is the sole factor in determining ad position, AdWords includes many factors that really give a small business a chance against bigger players.”
But, how to get that elusive high click-through rate? Rumbauskas provides these tips on how a new advertiser can quickly gain an advantage over competitors:
1. Use Keyword Macros. This feature in AdWords allows you to craft your ads so that the end user’s actual search phrase appears as your ad headline. The format is as follows: {KeyWord:Backup Headline Here}, where the backup headline is entered in the event that the end user’s search phrase exceeds AdWords’s 25-character headline limit.
The use of keyword macros makes your ads appear much more relevant to an end user, resulting in a dramatically higher click-through rate. Rumbauskas warns that this frequently results in a lower sales conversion rate because of the false appearance of high relevancy: “If you use this tactic and find that you have a low conversion rate, use it only temporarily to build a high click-through rate, because that click-through rate history will stay with your account for the long-term.”
2. Use Small Ad Groups. Using small ad groups with keywords that are highly relevant to each other – and to ad copy – results in higher click-through rates. “You want your keyword lists to have tightly common themes, and you also want to include the main keywords of that theme into your ad body, and also the headline, or backup headline in the case of keyword macros, if possible,” explains Rumbauskas.
3. Immediately disable poorly performing ads. “You ideally want to test many ad variations, but if you activate one and see that it’s not delivering a high-click through rate, pause it immediately before it throws your entire campaign off.”
Frank Rumbauskas is president of ROI Advisors, Inc., a Certified Google Partner Company. Download a free 36-page PDF guide to using AdWords
Tags: 3 tips to improve Google adwords traffic, best practices, Business advice, Frank Rumbauskas, ROI Advisors Posted in Business advice, Google, Internet/New Media, Marketing | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, July 13th, 2011
Independent app developers looking to stayafloat in the increasingly competitive app marketplace are competing on price point before the user has a chance to experience their apps, according to Dale Carr, CEO & founder of mobile advertising firm Leadbolt. Carr suggests app developers should follow these guidelines:
- “With a rising force of competition in tow, either your paid app is affordable or it isn’t – and the way things are going, anything priced above free will be like charging for semi-fresh oxygen. Because independent developers do not have the clout that trusted studios do, they struggle to compete with current monopolies that can name their prices. LeadBolt offers an alternative to monetizing apps without relying solely on the ‘paid app’ business model.”
- “Mobile advertising proves to be a stable and efficient way for developers to supplement their business model. It eliminates the many barriers of engagement and is much more adaptable to users’ needs. This is good news for app developers because these mobile advertisers would like to pay you handsomely to put their ad copy in your app.”
- “Developers should experiment with multiple advertising methods to best reach their target audience and try all advertising solutions available so that it can provide various types of formats to best compare the rates they are receiving, based on CPM, CPC, and CPA.”
- “The Leadbolt team encourages app developers to take advantage of banners, hover/interstitials, and content unlocking technologies provided by the company’s network in order for them to get a solid idea of what type of format the developer’s audience is most receptive towards. This helps the developers learn more about their consumers and optimize their revenue at the same time.”
Tags: advice for independent app developers, Business advice, Dale Carr, guidelines for independent app developers, Leadbolt, Viewpoint Posted in Business advice, Internet/New Media, IT, Viewpoint | Comments Off
Monday, June 13th, 2011
 Michael Feuer, CEO, co-founder, OfficeMax
Be your own boss. It’s a version of the American Dream that most people have fantasized about. Unfortunately, to many would-be entrepreneurs, getting past the dreaming phase and into the doing phase seems insurmountable—especially in a shaky economy where quitting your day job seems foolhardy and funding seems scarcer than, well, pay raises and affordable health insurance.
But according to Michael Feuer, cofounder and former CEO of OfficeMax, the iron is not just hot; it’s smoking. And if you don’t strike now, someone else just might beat you to it.
“The perfect time to make your move is when everyone else is afraid to,” says Feuer, author of the new book The Benevolent Dictator: Empower Your Employees, Build Your Business, and Outwit the Competition (Wiley, 2011, ISBN: 978-1-118-00391-6, $24.95, www.benevolentdictator.biz). “It’s a lot like investing in the stock market—once everyone else starts jumping on the bandwagon, you’ve missed the window.”
Not rocket science
The truth is, says Feuer (pronounced “Foyer”), entrepreneurial success isn’t rocket science. It requires a great idea, the chutzpah to pull the trigger, and the determination and discipline to create and stack the building blocks needed to get from point A to point B—and from point B all the way to Z.
If anyone knows what it takes to be a successful entrepreneur, it’s Feuer. He started OfficeMax with almost no money and built a $5 billion company in a relatively short period of time. Now he’s working to build that same success as founder and CEO of his new venture, Max-Wellness, a health and wellness retail chain.
Once you’ve made the decision to take your stalled start-up idea off the shelf, blow away the dust, and move it into the marketplace, you’ll need to know what to do (and, just as important, what not to do). Feuer’s book can help. But in the meantime, here are nine of his tested & true tips and insights for getting the job done right:
You’ll need to rule your startup like a benevolent dictator. It’s not as scary as it sounds, Feuer assures readers. The “benevolent” part means always putting the entity, the employees, and, most importantly, the customer, first. In other words, you’re focused foremost on doing the right thing for the right reasons, for all stakeholders.
The “dictator” piece simply means that somebody in a new venture (i.e., you) has to recognize when debate, conversation, and analysis can’t take you any farther. At that time you have to decide, “We’re taking this fork in the road, for better or worse, and it’s on my head.”
“With both OfficeMax and Max-Wellness, being the benevolent dictator provided the critical leadership necessary to take an idea and transform it into reality as fast as possible,” says Feuer. “Remember, beating the competition is never easy. Someone has to be willing to make the important decisions when it counts.”
If you don’t ask, you won’t get. Whether you’re asking an employee to go the extra mile, asking a vendor for a discounted price, or pitching a business concept to an investor, you have to be willing to put yourself out there. Though most entrepreneurs don’t like asking others for help, they must learn to live with the process, because it’s a stark reality of growing a company.
“Asking is certainly much more difficult than getting; however, it becomes much easier if you can learn how to make a strong presentation and tell your story,” notes Feuer. “Attention, interest, desire, and action are the key elements of selling—you can ask for or tell just about anything as long as you do so honestly and spell out the good, the bad, and the ugly.”
“No” means “maybe.” The word “no” is just a synonym for “maybe.” Feuer writes that this realization led him to train his teams to comprehend that the “no” you receive the first nine times is merely a disguised “maybe”—because the other guy is looking for a reason why not to proceed, or doesn’t understand what you’re asking. It’s only after the tenth time—when the other person hangs up on you or walks out of the room and slams the door—that “no” really means “no.”
“I’ve seen it over and over: Hearing ‘no’ simply means that you haven’t effectively or passionately explained what you need—or adequately expressed how your success will translate to their success,” says Feuer. “Obviously, you’ll have to be tactful. You certainly don’t want to alienate potential investors, customers, or employees by harassing them for a more favorable answer. But you don’t have to take ‘no’ for an answer either.”
Always look at a new idea through your customers’ eyes. Today customers have the power—and they know it. No longer do they have to accept inferior products and dismal service. In our world of almost instant computer-driven communications, blogs, chat rooms, Tweets, Facebook pages, and apps galore, the consumer has come of age. There is a fast-growing movement afoot, and customers of the 21st century will not be denied.
Feuer explains that at OfficeMax he had an army of customer service reps who were trained to do the right thing for the customer the first time around. Still, periodically, tenacious customers who were outraged by a perceived transgression made it their mission to reach the CEO directly. It was during those phone conversations that Feuer truly learned what listening to the customer really meant.
“I would identify myself when I answered my phone, and the irate caller would, many times, launch into histrionics,” he recalls. “He or she would often suggest I take the angst-causing product and place it where it shouldn’t go and wouldn’t fit. After the ranting and raving stopped, however, I almost always solved the problem by simply saying, ‘I’m very sorry. I apologize. You’re right.’ Listening. That’s all it took.
“Whatever kind of business you’re running—whether it’s a retailer, software development firm, restaurant, accounting firm, or manufacturer—it’s imperative to listen to what your customers are really saying when they tell you what they want from your business,” he adds. “You must learn how to think like your customers and see things through their eyes, not just yours. In essence, you must create an environment, a product offering, and a way of doing business that makes you the company of choice.”
The journey better be as much fun as the destination. Many a great entrepreneur has been derailed by burnout. It’s a disease that can be caused by many factors, but which ultimately boils down to this—too much focus on the final outcome and an inability to enjoy the day-to-day elements of being an entrepreneur. In short, you have to enjoy the journey as much as you enjoy reaching the destination. If you don’t, you might make it there, but you won’t last long once you get there.
Feuer explains that he always incorporated this mindset into his business plans, right down to his daily activities. He’d start the day by handling his most difficult or unpleasant tasks first. With those out of the way, he’d take a management walkabout checking with staff members at all levels. Then he’d move on to thinking time, meeting with colleagues, or sometimes just schmoozing, bonding, or focusing on new and better ways to get things done.
“I always tried to teach through my own example that the journey for everyone should be as much fun as the destination,” says Feuer. “It’s important to shape your day-to-day work in a way that allows you to have some fun. By getting the hard stuff out of the way early, you don’t have to work with a sense of dread and you’re freed up to enjoy the rest of the day. Build some fun into every day, and you’ll stay refreshed and focused on making your business the best it can be.”
Let “Mother” do the hiring. Bad hires are not only disruptive to businesses—they’re also expensive. According to a variety of studies, the cost of firing senior- or middle-management personnel can be as high as 300 percent of that person’s annual salary, and in some cases even higher. This includes the cost of finding a replacement, training, and the ancillary emotional and unsettling peripheral and disruptive effects. How can you stack the deck in your favor when making a new hire? Listen to your mother.
“If there is a voice in your head that sounds like your mother and it’s advising you not to hire a certain candidate, the voice is probably just your entrepreneurial instinct telling you to proceed with caution,” says Feuer. “But beyond what I call the Mother Rule, there are ways to get job candidates to reveal their own crucial character traits.
“One way I vet candidates is to ask them to provide a letter of interest outlining why they think they can get the job done, and what it would take to get them to join the organization,” he adds. “This shows me how the candidate thinks and articulates ideas and concepts—and also lets me know if he or she is thorough and has a sense of urgency by getting back to me in a timely fashion.”
Don’t drink your own bathwater. When success is reached, history tends to be rewritten about who did what and why, and how victory was snatched from the jaws of defeat. At a certain level, this is all well and good. The problem arises when the true story gets filtered down, and the lessons from the experience lose their meaning because they’re not accurate or they’re too vague. This makes it increasingly difficult to apply what you learned to similar future efforts. If something didn’t work and no one remembers why, you’re usually destined to repeat past mistakes.
“Whether you have hit your stride or have reached a milestone, it’s imperative to remember one thing: If you don’t remain hungry to achieve continued success, you’ll soon find yourself believing that you are as great as your last success,” notes Feuer. “Moreover, if you do that, you could drown drinking your own bathwater or make bad mistakes because you trusted without verifying.”
Know when it’s time to pull the plug. One of the biggest dilemmas for any entrepreneur, CEO, or business owner is to know when enough is enough. There are peaks and valleys in virtually every company and industry. The trick for an owner is to understand these vacillations and know when it’s time for you to sell—to the highest bidder, of course.
“The key to fulfillment and continued success is knowing how and when to reinvent one’s business and even personal life,” says Feuer. “It’s all about looking for that new twist or turn that might ignite a new burning in the belly.
“That time arrived for me when I decided to sell OfficeMax,” he adds. “The company had been—in my mind anyway—something I did for almost 16 years but not who I was. I was thrilled that what I did employed 50,000 people and did business in every state but Vermont, with international operations in China, Japan, Brazil, and Mexico. At the end of the day, I knew that my team and I had built OfficeMax to fulfill its promise of ‘serving its customers, creating opportunities for its employees, and building value for our shareholders.’ With this realization, I knew it was time for me to move on.”
Know how to put lightning back in the bottle again and again. It is absolutely possible to be a repeat entrepreneurial success. Most successful second-act players have honed their instincts and skills and created a series of methodical steps that they follow. They understand how to get from A to Z while minimizing pain and wasted motions and maximizing available capital. Experience has taught them where to spend the most time and effort to ensure that they meet or beat both others’ and their own expectations.
“Like many successful entrepreneurs and operators at this stage, I live to work rather than work to live,” says Feuer. “I love the challenge, thrive on naysayers telling me it can’t be done, and get great satisfaction in proving the pessimists wrong. I won’t presume to understand the psychological reason why anybody does anything, but the simple answer for me is that I put lightning back in the bottle because I know I can. There’s nothing more gratifying to me than starting from scratch and building a meaningful and relevant business, and if it’s a giant, so much the better.”
“Navigating a start-up venture is about as close as you can get to a 24/7 ride on the world’s scariest roller coaster,” says Feuer. “Every morning, when the entrepreneur gets out of bed, it’s showtime. And every evening, when that same would-be tycoon restlessly drifts off to sleep, he says a silent prayer, giving thanks for the fact that he’s survived the preceding 18 hours or so and asking to be granted the strength to fight another day.
“If that sounds like an exhilarating life to you—and if you’re prepared to lead and to put the interests of your customers and employees ahead of your own—why not go for it?” he concludes. “Take a chance. Pull the trigger. Start building something great. It doesn’t matter what’s going on in the economy. If you’re feeling that burning in the belly, there will never be a better time than now.”
Tags: and Outwit the Competition, best practices, book, Build Your Business, Business advice, CEO, how to run a startup, Michael Feuer, OfficeMax cofounder, The Benevolent Dictator: Empower Your Employees, Viewpoint Posted in Business advice, Viewpoint | Comments Off
Tuesday, June 7th, 2011
 Joelle Jay
By Joelle Jay, Ph.D.
What if there are things you are doing – or not doing – that are sabotaging your success? What if there are few key things you’re missing that could help you get even better results? There’s only one way to find out, and that’s by getting feedback.
Unfortunately, feedback is sometimes given a bad rap. Poorly conducted performance reviews, harsh criticisms by thoughtless colleagues, and bad experiences with multi-rater feedback systems all contribute to the temptation to steer clear of feedback if you can help it.
But feedback is how we learn. Without feedback and reflection, you have no way to know how you’re doing. You don’t know what others think of you or how you might be holding yourself back. What you don’t know can hurt you. A lack of self-knowledge can limit your opportunities and even stall your career.
On the other hand, when you seek feedback, you open yourself up to reflection. You become much more thoughtful about what you’re doing and why, how you can improve, how you can maximize your efforts and get better, more predictable results.
When you get high quality feedback, you gain a tremendous advantage. By seeing yourself as others see you, suddenly you realize where, why and how you can improve. You understand where you’re holding yourself back and where you have the opportunity to surge ahead.
Asking for feedback can benefit you in the following ways:
· Identifying Your Strengths. Feedback helps you maximize your natural
strengths and reach your full potential. This is a good idea anytime, but
especially when you’re secure in your skills and competence and want to
truly excel.
· Seeing Into Your Blind Spots. You might want feedback because you want to
improve your leadership and see into your blind spots. This is particularly
important when you have been newly promoted or are in the throes of a new
endeavor.
· Meeting Your Goals. Feedback gives you specific direction on how to meet
your goals. This approach works best when you are already clear on what your
goals are. You don’t need information about what to do, but rather how you
are to do it.
· Preparing for Advancement. You might want feedback to prepare yourself for
advancement. This method is best when you are seeking less self-awareness
and more advice and direction.
· Becoming More Effectie. Feedback can help you become more effective in
your current job, which is helpful at any time and in fact is a strategy you
might want to use over and over. Feedback can even give you a sense of what
your clients want and need. By asking questions not just about yourself, but
about your clients and customers, you can better serve their needs and
therefore increase your value to them.
What are your reasons for seeking feedback? What results do you want to
achieve? Think about your reasons for feedback in advance to take the
fullest advantage of the learning it has to offer. Then, before you actually
get the feedback, give careful thought to what will happen when you receive
it.
Leaders all react to feedback differently. Reactions range from tears to
elation. Are you interpreting the feedback in the way that will be most
helpful to you?
Here are ten dos and don’ts that will help you make the most of the feedback
you receive.
1. Do choose one or two areas to work on.
Use your feedback as a jumping-off point for an action plan. Choose one most
impactful area to master. Make some decisions about what it will take to
improve in that area, and find a commitment you can get started on right
away. You can always come back for more later.
2. Do focus as much on your strengths as your weaknesses.
As you read your feedback, remember to focus on what’s right, not just
what’s wrong. It’s just as important to build on what’s working than it is
to improve what’s not.
3. Do save your feedback for a specific time set aside for review and
reflection.
Give yourself the chance to absorb the feedback. Take the time to get in the
right mindset to hear both good and bad news, and be sure you have enough
time to work with the information productively.
4. Do seek further detail and clarification as needed.
You may come across feedback you don’t really understand. Don’t just
speculate. Go find out. While you’re at it, thank the people who gave you
feedback for their time and thoughts. Giving feedback can be just as risky
as receiving it.
5. Do take notes and explore your observations.
Your feedback isn’t the final word on you. It’s just a place to start. Add
your own insights to what you learn in order to make sense of it and find
the real learning.
6. Don’t choose too many areas to work on.
Feedback can be overwhelming. Every comment, good or bad, can be a place to
look for improvement. Be careful not to get caught in “analysis paralysis.”
7. Don’t focus on the “bad stuff.”
It’s easy to get sidetracked by fixating on what’s not going well. Feedback
is important, but it’s not everything. Even when you get harsh feedback, you
can learn to put it in perspective.
8. Don’t just skim the feedback.
Slow down and analyze it well. You might even want to read or review your
feedback several times to really understand the message.
9. Don’t hold feedback against the people who gave it to you.
Every single person who gets feedback feels the same way: exposed. You might
feel a little defensive, or even angry. Learn to connect with others over
the experience for support. Don’t shoot the messenger.
10. Don’t put the feedback in a drawer.
Feedback is a message given to you by others who care enough to tell you the
truth. If all you do is throw it in a drawer and forget about it, it’s not
worth going through the process at all.
If you adhere to these suggestions, you will be in a much stronger place to
capitalize on the learning available in the feedback you receive.
Of course, feedback isn’t the only way to learn about yourself. It’s also
helpful to round out the feedback you get from others with the reflection
you do on your own, by taking psychological or scientific assessments, and
having good old-fashioned one-on-one conversations with people who can help
you be a better you.
But feedback is a powerful tool. Like all tools, it
serves a particular purpose. The more you learn about how to use feedback
for what it can and can’t do, the more productive the experience will be.
The process of receiving feedback is a vulnerable one, but ironically the
feedback can strengthen you as a leader. Follow these dos and don’ts to be
sure you make the most of the opportunity.
Joelle K. Jay, Ph.D. (joellekjay.com) is an executive coach
specializing in leadership development and the author of The Inner Edge: The
10 Practices of Personal Leadership, in which shows leaders how to improve
their effectiveness by learning to lead themselves. Her newsletter, The
Inner Edge Quarterly, offers articles, exercises, tips, quotes, and success
stories from real leaders to help you excel. SEE:
www.TheInnerEdge.com and click on Newsletter, or email
Info@TheInnerEdge.com.
Tags: 10 tips for getting feedback, best practices, Business advice, Joelle Jay Posted in Business advice, Columns, Viewpoint | Comments Off
Tuesday, May 31st, 2011
Despite near unanimous agreement that improving core business processes like contracts management, accounts payable and order fulfillment make more successful organizations, few companies understand how to improve these data-intensive processes. That’s according to a recent survey of 5,500 company records managers. But Iron Mountain says better information management can help.
Conducted by Iron Mountain Incorporated (NYSE: IRM), the information management company, the survey on business efficiency asked respondents to weigh the importance of improving processes through better information management against the current state of those processes in their organizations.
The results reveal most are unhappy with how their core processes run, despite having formal programs for how their companies should manage information. The key findings include:
- Efficiency is “mission critical” – 90 percent of respondents rank process efficiency as imperative to their business goals and to the overall success of their organization;
- Most aren’t happy with their present processes – 93 percent of respondents are dissatisfied with their revenue-generating and business-support processes and/or are actively trying to improve them;
- The urgency for improvement isn’t there… yet – More than half of respondents (58 percent) have not yet experienced a “trigger” event like an audit or lawsuit that would spur improvement of records and information management processes;
- Structure is in place, but not everyone is following through – Three-quarters of respondents are managing their records and information themselves, but only 35 percent of the respondents believe their program is being used by everyone in the organization.
“Information drives businesses today and can be a real competitive advantage if managed properly and efficiently,” said Sue Trombley, director of consulting for Iron Mountain.
“It plays a vital role in the revenue-generating and core operational processes that keep organizations running. And it can provide valuable insight into not just your own organization but your customers, your industry, your partners and your competitors. The right policies and procedures, implemented across the entire organization, efficiently executed and regularly enforced, can give you a tremendous opportunity to unlock this advantage.”
In response to these findings, Iron Mountain offers the following information management tips to unlocking records and information management efficiencies:
- Eliminate obstacles to sharing information – Consider the utility of a piece of information within the organization: Does it need to be accessed by multiple departments? How often? Breaking the silos and single-ownership habits of information creation and management allows for easy sharing and ensures it can move freely in the organization;
- Take paper out of the equation when you can – Digitizing or even removing paper from traditionally paper-heavy processes (such as travel and expense reimbursement) can streamline your business, making it easier to share and improve revenue-generating operations like accounts payable or billing;
- Don’t be a “copycat” – Look for areas where redundant copies are slowing down your business and consider centralizing information for better access;
- Be prepared – A defining characteristic of an efficient organization is a comprehensive disaster recovery and litigation readiness plan, ensuring that if something does happen, you have access to the critical information that keeps your business running;
- Keep it simple, for agility’s sake – Simplifying your information management policies and procedures (e.g., reducing the number of “touches” and approvals needed for a document), will make it easier to adapt core processes in times of change or growth.
Tags: best practices, Business advice, Four tips to improve business efficiency, information management, Iron Mountain Inc. Posted in Business advice, Internet/New Media, IT, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Wednesday, May 25th, 2011
 Ray Bryant - CEO, Idappcom
By Ray Bryant, CEO of Idappcom
Stop for a moment and take a look around you – IT isn’t just the computer on your desk, the lap top in your bag or the mobile in your pocket. The truth is it’s controlling who is and isn’t entering your building- virtually and physically, how and where your customers are being dealt with, it’s driving your production line and it even has a part to play in how your coffee is produced.
IT is no longer confined to a small back office, possibly in the basement, staffed with geeks all speaking their own language. IT keeps you open for business, but if you’re not careful it can close you down for good. On the heels of the crippling cyber attacks that brought down Sony’s Playstation network and will cost the firm millions to correct, every firm should be considering how to effectively counter such attacks.
For every company there is a requirement to exercise due diligence and care of the company’s assets and the future ability to produce returns for investors, from revenues. This is increasingly embedded in legislation, regulation, standards and best practice guidelines.
I’m not going to provide a definitive list – it is neither necessary for this article, nor realistically possible due to the frequency it changes or is amended, further complicated by differences in terminology between sectors and countries. Suffice to say that, in order to exercise due diligence and care, you need to plan for the day you can’t – in other words, a business continuity plan.
I challenge you – get a copy of your plan (if you have one), dust it off and actually read it. In the majority of cases it will cover eventualities such as damage caused by fire, theft or even flooding. If you’re based in one of the cities it may even include a section on external threats i.e. terrorist attacks and other disaster eventualities. You’ve probably got a plan for overcoming a power failure, where to resource external staff if yours are ill and, if you’re in production, crisis management if your product fails.
What does it say about suffering a cyber attack? Chances are it doesn’t.
In this day and age most companies, irrespective of whether a single office or a large international conglomerate, are reliant on computer systems to function. If you were attacked tomorrow, the reality is it will shut you down. How long it takes to get back up and running, if at all, is down to you. Sit up, take note and plan for the inevitable.
You’re Under Attack
An attacker isn’t just interested in stealing your information or funds. Organisations are experiencing attacks, whether denial of service or injected with malware, that is designed to wreak havoc and ideally shut the business down. Recent high profile victims include Wikileaks, Facebook and Twitter.
However, it’s often not just the victim that suffers as PayPal, VISA and Mastercard can attest having fallen victim by association. Any company can be a target as it’s not just anonymous cyber terrorists waiting to pounce, a disgruntled employee could wreak just as much havoc on your system if the notion takes them. What about if your IT system just fails, even the BBC has to hold its hand up to that one!
The effect of being closed for business, however temporarily, will cost the organisation money. For an online retailer it’s a little more obvious as, if customers aren’t able to make purchases, there’s the immediate loss of revenue.
However, for a large manufacturing company, if its IT infrastructure fails and production has to shut down for 24 hours the costs will soon mount potentially into the millions. The expense isn’t limited to the immediate problem of restoring services or production – there’s the lost time, ruined stock, ongoing costs of rebuilding confidence in the customer base and potentially amongst shareholders, plus the knock on effects such as an increase in insurance premiums. The costs quickly mount.
The AT&T Business Continuity Study 2010, reported that:
- Three-quarters (77%) of organisations indicate that employee use of mobile devices plays a major/minor role in the business continuity plan
- Half (50%) have virtualized their computing infrastructure, with less than four out of ten (38%) having implemented a business continuity plan for the virtualized infrastructure
- 84% of all companies surveyed have e-mail or text messaging capabilities to reach employees outside of work, and three-fourths (73%) have systems in place that enable most employees to work from home or remote locations
While, on the surface, all of these resources offer a lifeline to an organisation in the event of a general infrastructure failing, and you’ve probably rubber stamped the budget on some of these initiatives yourself. However, on a day to day basis they also ‘throw open the doors’ to the outside world risking extreme disruption through attack.
First Line of Defence
An organisation’s IT team has many responsibilities with one main, overriding objective – to deliver the best service possible. However, this does not always promote the best security possible. Why? Well, budgets are usually the biggest issue. CEO’s MUST understand the need for enhanced security and ensure their IT team deliver it.
When the corporation has spent millions on network defences it is then close to incompetence to not make sure those investments are working to the optimum effectiveness. Regular audit and validation leads to enhanced security, that costs very little and is a must have process. With constant vulnerability testing and security enhancement through configuration, better rules can be defined and implemented. This activity can even avoid additional capital expenditure in unnecessary security devices, saving budgets.
Making sure your defences are working to the optimum is not just the responsibility of your CIO, CSO or whatever you call your IT management head. It goes all the way to the top. The function of the CEO and board of directors, as part of their legal responsibility and charge by shareholders, is to exercise good corporate governance.
You wouldn’t build your office on the sand, so why allow your IT infrastructure to have insecure foundations. Ignoring your network defences is tantamount to corporate suicide.
Ray Bryant started working life in a firm of London Chartered accountants, qualified as Chartered Company Secretary in 1979. His career in I.T. started in the very early days at Control Data Corporation, in finance, production and logistics, Ray was 15 years with Ciba Geigy, Switzerland, on Finance and ERP software implementations in UK, USA, Saudi Arabia, Greece, Turkey and the Philippines. A period at SSA Global technologies as a financial systems consultant culminated with the creation of an independent compliance company, SLA Management Services (Barham Group)
Tags: AT&T Business Continuity Study 2010, best practices, Business advice, business continuity planning, cyberattacks, due diligence in continuity planning, Idappcom, planning for cyber attacks, Ray Bryant Posted in Business advice, Internet/New Media, IT, Security, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Tuesday, May 24th, 2011
No one wants to lose. That’s true whether you’re talking about the Super Bowl, a friendly basketball game with the neighbors, or a footrace between eight-year-olds. Yes, the desire to win is embedded in the human psyche. So why is it that in the business world the “win or (almost) die trying” principle seems to falter? Why do so many talented, well-led teams, enterprises, and organizations—many of them with clear, reasonable goals—fail to win victories that should have been easily within their grasps?
Leadership expert John Hamm says it’s because they’ve been infected with a disease he calls “failing elegantly.”
“Failing elegantly is a very sophisticated and veiled set of coping behaviors by individuals, the purpose of which is to avoid the oncoming train of embarrassment when the cover comes off the lousy results that we’d prefer no one ever see,” explains Hamm, author of Unusually Excellent: The Necessary Nine Skills Required for the Practice of Great Leadership (Jossey-Bass/A Wiley Imprint, February 2011, ISBN: 978-0-47092843-1, $24.95,www.unusuallyexcellent.com). “In other words, it’s a fancy way to lose.”
Essentially, says Hamm, this debilitating syndrome sets in when people stop believing they can be successful and start devoting their energy to how best to lose.
According to Hamm, the driving elements of failing elegantly are 1) having a sophisticated explanation for the loss, and 2) making sure we appear to have tried everything in our power to avoid this unwanted outcome. But, he notes, what this mentality forgets is the following harsh reality: There are no style points for second place.
Seven leadership mistakes that put your team in danger of failing:
Setting impossible goals. Leading the goal-setting process to arrive at objectives that are perfectly sized is very tricky work, but this effort has never been more important to success than it is in today’s geographically dispersed, virtual organizations. Taskmasters and pacesetting leaders need to learn the fine line between an invigorating challenge and a wholly deflating expectation. They also need to realize that everyone on the team may not share their level of maniacal commitment.
“While top performers are inspired by ‘stretch’ goals that seem slightly out of their reach, smart team members will not waste their time training for a ‘three-minute mile,’” says Hamm. “Goals that are clearly beyond any reasonable confidence of achievement are worse than easy goals—they actually disengage your team’s energy. The predictable and natural response is ‘Why bother?’”
Letting people get pseudo-wins by “majoring in the minors.” Very talented people can and do lose focus on the critical path problems that must be solved to transform an idea into reality. Those are often the knottiest problems, and sometimes we resist them for a period of time, preferring to create some satisfying momentum on simpler tasks, or ones that are simply more fun.
“Leaders must develop an eye and ear for this weakness—and must try to listen for it in every conversation and look for it in every ops review,” notes Hamm. “They must relentlessly redirect energy to the hard problems, realizing that it is human nature to drift from the tough stuff in favor of more emotionally fulfilling and easier project modules.”
Tolerating “The dog ate my homework” and other common excuses. In an organization, too much tolerance can be a dangerous notion, mainly because without a clear line in the sand defining acceptable and unacceptable, a blurred line between success and failure follows. When you’re failing elegantly, for example, you tolerate “The dog ate my homework” and other classic excuses. No results plus a good excuse is presented in lieu of results—and tolerated. Massive amounts of energy are poured into sophisticated justifications and rationalizations for certain courses of action, and there is veiled blame for everything outside the team’s control.
“What you want, and what the winner’s mindset demands, are insightful explanations for the gap between expected and actual performance,” says Hamm. “These are informed guesses—as informed and objective as they can be, untainted by the effort expended in dodging responsibility. There is tolerance of the simple fact that we don’t have control over every variable in the game, so at times—through either forces outside our influence or simply not having run our best play—the results are not as we wish.”
Allowing sloppiness and imprecision. The nice guy in you wants to avoid the perception of being a hardcore hard-ass and will politely look the other way, or catalog it away with some good-natured humor, allowing a corner to be cut, a report to be incomplete, or some shoddy work to pass as acceptable. Shoddy work and sloppiness almost always stem from being lazy or uncommitted or not having enough pride in the finished work.
“Leaders want to be good people, and they want to show others that they have the wisdom to accept human frailty,” notes Hamm. “So they allow themselves to tolerate a little sloppiness here and a little imprecision there in their subordinates’ work. But high reliability organizations never allow sloppiness, because they know it equals death. Unusually excellent leaders have a zero tolerance policy for sloppiness.”
Encouraging “editorialized” data. One of the most pernicious points where failure can take hold is in the feedback process. Leaders, being eternal optimists and enthusiasts, also have a dangerous tendency to signal, often unconsciously, their dislike of bad news, their inner revulsion toward failure. When that happens—especially when that leader hasn’t regularly established an absolute demand for accurate, objective data—subordinates will begin to shape and color the data to meet the leader’s hopeful expectations and emotional needs, rather than the leader’s intellectual needs. The feedback data starts becoming corrupted, and that in turn begins to undermine the overall strategy—until the likelihood of success itself begins to plummet.
“Unusually excellent leaders demand that performance feedback data be delivered promptly and be uncolored, objective, plentiful, and robust,” says Hamm. “This data is used to figure out what is working and what isn’t, so that corrections to course and speed can be made.”
Failing to measure what matters. The right metrics will serve you in enormously useful ways. As the Crosby Quality Institute reminds us: You will get what you inspect, not what you expect.
Hamm writes about one CEO who was constantly entertaining requests from his sales force for changes to the company’s product line—change orders—in response to “customer requests.” In this case very few of these requested changes, which came at great expense in engineering time and cost, resulted in orders from the people who had passionately argued the case. Instead of getting upset about it, the CEO simply asked that the team begin to track the percentage of change orders resulting in sales orders, and—what do you know?—this costly practice came to a screeching halt as soon as the sales force knew their bosses were looking at this data, by salesperson, every month.
“Measuring what matters is perhaps the very highest use of leadership authority in leading the domain of execution,” explains Hamm. “Once the plan is set, the resources and funding are committed, and the action starts, there is mostly just feedback and response to the unknowns of the battle to be managed. The one thing you must have, to make the real-time course corrections that will inevitably be required, is good data. Invest in the design and the machinery required to gather, analyze, and present the data you need—quickly, accurately, and easily. This, more than anything else, will serve your leadership needs in the arena of live ammo—where the score is kept, the winners get to keep playing, and the losers go home.”
Allowing an absolute commitment to winning to slip. A tolerance for excuses, corrupt data that compromises strategy, and a distorted view of what is really happening “out there” is akin to boiling a frog one degree at a time. The frog can’t tell how hot the water has gotten until it is dead. But if you put all these factors together and add the heightened sense of urgency that always characterizes the execution phase, you’ll have plenty of the necessary ingredients in place for systematic failure. The key factor is the resignation and rationalization that occurs when we conclude that winning seems out of reach.
“Passive acceptance of failure, and the rationalization that always goes with it, is a cancer that can begin anywhere in the organization, then metastasize to every office, including your own,” says Hamm. “You can prevent it by setting clear and precise standards of behavior for everyone on the team, as well as clear consequences for the violation of those standards. And you can control it through continuous and open communication with every member of your team.”
Hamm’s book is also available in a Kindle edition.
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Tags: 7 Leadership Mistakes that put your team in danger of failing, Business advice, John Hamm, Viewpoint Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
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