It's not all about the iPhone -- or is it?
Saw this on the NYTimes blog section today.
V.C. Advice to Entrepreneurs: It’s Not All About the iPhoneTwo learning points here, I think.
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
Though almost every discussion at the MobileBeat conference in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Thursday centered around the iPhone, venture capitalists told mobile entrepreneurs to broaden their focus and build applications for all phones. Still, all anyone wanted to talk about was the Apple App Store, from which users have downloaded 30 million applications for the iPhone this month.Startups should “intelligently hedge their bets across multiple platforms,” advised Richard Wong of Accel Partners. His firm has invested in mobile games and application site GetJar, “the store for the other 3 billion phones that aren’t iPhones,” as Mr. Wong put it.
Rick Segal of Blackberry Partners Fund and JLA Ventures reminded developers that the iPhone only accounts for a tiny share of the worldwide market. In India, for example, Nokia has 70 percent market share. “You must think multi-platform,” he said.
Some investors insisted that multiple mobile platforms–whether Apple’s, Google’s, Research in Motion’s or others–will thrive. Matt Murphy, head of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers’ $100 million iFund, said most entrepreneurs who pitch him have iPhone applications, but that the platform war “is not a winner-take-all game.”
David Sokolic of Battery Ventures disagrees. He predicts a shakeout akin to the PC market and Microsoft’s Windows, with a clear leader emerging...
Framing, Obama, Jesse
And while we're on framing:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-te.md.jackson11jul11,0,3451704.story
The civil rights frame is "racial justice". Obama's is something to do with "beyond race." Some middle-of-the-road and right-wing listeners don't want "racial justice" to incur a penalty on them for things they didn't do ("I'm not a racist, why should my government have to use my tax money to create racial justice?") They want everyone to have a chance to make it in America, black or white, and to take responsibility for their own success or failure. That's the "personal responsibility" frame.
So, the argument that Jesse Jackson is making is essentially this: By Obama's adoption of the "personal responsibility" frame, he is rejecting the social/racial justice frame that created (and creates for many today) meaning with regards to civil rights and justice.
The communications lesson is that choosing a frame right can help you appeal to specific, desired audiences -- and at the same time keep you from appealing to other audiences, depending on the amount of bias for or against certain frames. I expect Obama knows what he's doing here. The risk for him is not capturing the middle. He knows he's got the left. So the personal responsibility frame can work for him from the middle to the right. As analysts have said, Jesse's comments probably make white middle-class people comfortable.
Framing, frames and globalization
We think and remember in stories, metaphors and other "non-literal" structures.
Benefits of strong global leadership talent
I got my executive MBA from TRIUM, which bills itself as the first truly authentic global MBA for executives. The small program (a cohort has ranged in size from 35 to more than 60) has been around since 2003 and over those years has slowly increased its reputation on the street until it burst to #4 (Financial Times) the first year it was ranked, only to better that ranking in its second year, becoming #2 globally.
Feeding vegetarians to cattle -- social responsibility?
I'm so way behind on updating my blogs it's crazy, but work has been at a white-hot temperature lately, starting with prep and follow-up for the Bogota CRM/CEM summit, and client work, and my talk on loyalty to the American Strategic Management Institute.
Vienna Beef has entered the natural food arena with its All Natural Franks. Made from premium, vegetarian-fed cattle, the naturally cured hot dogs are formulated according to the Chicago manufacturer's century-old recipe, and contain no artificial flavors and colors, as well as no antibiotics or synthetic hormones. According to company president Howard Eirinberg ...and so on.
Bogota, home of our upcoming CRM/CEM Summit
Rafael Rodriguez, director of Focused Management in Colombia, is a sharp management consultant and a leader in the country on organizational development and CRM. He also lectures and does executive training, which is how I met him several years ago, when he and I were doing that in Shanghai together. I had the great privilege of sitting in on a half-day session he did on CRM and the balanced scorecard.
In fact, it was Rafael's talk that got me thinking about the long list of management frameworks that have been paraded out by gurus, consultants and academics. Which really work? (Check out the book "What Really Works," one of the best responses to the question, and a solid methodology that I prefer over many other more famous ones.) My own pursuit of the answer has focused on redefining the question like this:
What Really Works = What Activities Generate Results that Consistently Attract and Retain Profitable Relationships with People and Businesses?
Notice that the results of these activities are not necessarily products or services. The only operant attribute of the whole business of doing good business lies in the nature of processes. I can hear many finance folks out there saying that shareholder value can be achieved through things like currency swaps and futures trading and so on. While the wealth is real, and I don't begrudge my rich friends in financial markets their moolah, gotta say, not interested. I'm interested more in the human side. What can we do to attract and retain customers?
Zaltman's ZMET method provides a clue. In "How Customers Think", he nails it when he says that CRM strategies need to figure out how to get people to remember your company, and to tell stories about it -- and hopefully great stories. So, these strategies should focus on what creates positive memories.
If that sounds like soft, social science stuff, be warned: The best experience management strategies involve some of the most advanced mathematics available. And they require some of the most advanced approaches to HR training, innovative qualitative intake, and ultra-disciplined operational measurement and improvement.
In any event, Rafael Rodriguez, my friend and colleague in Bogota, was a key inspiration for getting me to reassess the merits of many common management frameworks.
Rafael, along with conference organizer Practica, has put together a great roster of speakers and trainers for their upcoming summit on CRM and customer experience management, and I was thrilled to be asked to be part of it. (Here's a link to the online promotional page for the conference.)
The great news is that several of my TRIUM global executive MBA colleagues are in Bogota. One of them, Alfredo, is on the TRIUM Alumni Steering Committee (TASC) with me, and as the date approached for my visit, he and another TRIUM colleague, Leopoldo ("Polo") have worked to set up a cocktail party at the famed, swanky Gun Club for TRIUM alumni, as well as for alumni of TRIUM's sister schools, the London School of Economics, the Hautes Etudes Commerciales, and NYU-Stern. These three schools put together TRIUM, and have found the accredited degree program to be a big hit (we were ranked the #2 global executive MBA program last year by the Financial Times, boast, boast). My hat is off especially to Polo, who has worked especially diligently with the alumni contacts for the three sister schools. I am looking forward to a great cocktail party, and to meeting some of the top business leaders on Colombia.
Rafael, gentleman that he is, also has agreed to be one of the sponsors, a fantastic gesture.
So, today, I'm cleaning and packing, rehearsing my custom presentation I did just for Rafael (on my model of the Five Forces of Customer Experience Management), and -- best of all -- waiting in anticipation of Angela's special dinner for me. Tonight, it's coq au vin. She has a great technique for this dish, and it's one of my favorites. (If you want to see her cooking in action, you MUST check out her food blog here.)
I think my next blog posting will be pursuant to a request I heard from my Dubai CEM delegates, on cross-cultural issues in CRM. I've got a lot of stuff to say on that. And it sounds like the problem of "global CRM" that shapes this blog is truly a management challenge, everywhere I go. That's good for me! :) Luckily, there are indeed some best practices, a lot of research, and plenty of failures for managers to study carefully. Or else!
Dubai is done, time to fly home
I had a terrific time with the delegates at the most recent GCCRM customer experience management training, which I did with fellow partners from Shanghai and Dubai (via Ireland). The folks in the room were bright, senior execs charged with either CRM or CEM responsibilities at their companies, confirming the trend I noted in London earlier this year that "experience management" is increasingly part of the title of senior managers. In fact, I'm seeing it more often in titles that I've seen CRM in titles.
This may be a sign that companies appreciate the strategic importance of CEM, while simultaneously demonstrating that their faith in CRM as a strategic initiative may be flagging. That's a shame, because CRM is indeed strategically helpful (except in rare instances where it's only a platform for sales efficiency).
I was particularly struck by the diversity of the companies. We had banking, oil, grocery retail, hospitality ... and by and large the evaluations were really positive, for which I am grateful.
I'll post a picture up here when I get a copy from Alice Tse, the coordinator, who as usual did a tremendous job with the event.
Now, I'm off to dinner, and then I hop on a plane back to DC sometime very close to dawn. I haven't slept well the last couple of nights because of jet lag. Now that I'm heading back, I can feel the double-whammy jet lag already!
First, Dubai, next Colombia
I'm in Dubai, getting ready to teach another round of the CEM Certification course that I've put together with my GCCRM global partners (see the link on the right). We've got folks from automotive, pharma, banking, hospitality -- it's going to be great, and a terrific opportunity to do cross-cultural strategizing with the people here in attendance.
We're staying at the Crowne Plaza Dubai, which is a popular stop for the local government folks every Thursday, and which sports Irish, Italian and Polynesian food. There's even a McDonalds on the first floor. (You can bet I'm photographing their merchandising on a break. I took a bunch of pics of Burger King when I was in Montreal -- that's worth a couple of blog postings by itself!) My colleague Sampson does a touchpoint/brand value assessment of McDonalds and Burger King in the course. It's fascinating.
Check out the May 20-21 lineup for a customer experience global summit here. We've got a terrific front-line team! And I've put together a private blog for all attendees. We hope to have over 100 in attendance, which should make for an invigorating session, and a blog with some staying power. (You need a high number of blog readers to ensure sustainability. The number varies with the blog's focus and the level of topical concern of the audience, so you can't generalize. If we get between 20 and 40 registered bloggers, we'll be good.)
Google + Salesforce = Microsoft + Yahoo?
The buzz about salesforce.com's integration of Google apps into its platform has gotten people thinking about the value of a potential merger.
In Montreal
I'm inside yet another hotel conference area in a fantastic city. But of course so far all I've seen is the hotel, which looks just like every other hotel in North America. So, Montreal will have to wait until I get through my part (although I may skip out to dinner in old Montreal with my client contact tonight).
My client, a service agency of the Canadian government is doing a three day session on CRM and I'm contributing to the CRM strategy training on Day 2. Today is Day 1 and I'm listening in (both in French and in English) on the plans, vision and challenges facing the agency. A stellar group of people, good leadership skills, some systems in place (especially in acquisitions), but still a need to define and execute on key performance indicators, especially client satisfaction.
More of an update later ...
And the prize goes to ...
I'm heading off to Montreal to deliver a customer strategy training with the Canadian government tomorrow, but I wanted to give a shout out tonight, very briefly, to Sampson Lee, a dear friend and colleague who heads up GCCRM (http://www.gccrm.com). Sampson (pictured on the far left, above) has again put together a tremendous program in Shanghai on customer management. I was privileged to be a trainer to a solid group of marketing professionals at the InterContinental Pudong (which provided me excellent support as well for a cocktail party I put together for TRIUM, HEC-Paris, NYU-Stern and the London School of Economics alumni).
Sampson has the largest portal in China dedicated to customer management issues, and consults to top Chinese companies. His partners are consultants from around the world, and his activities increasingly are global in scope, with trainings being held around the world, and comprehensive customer experience studies being executed across many cultures and continents.
But with all this activity, Sampson, along with his business partner Alice Tse, still manages to put together an annual awards ceremony to global companies best representing leading customer management strategies and cultures. And, he makes a donation to Operation Hope, a child-focused charity.
Here are some pics, the one above is from 2004, when I participated in a huge awards ceremony in Shanghai, giving an award to China Merchant Bank. The first one in the posting is from just a few days ago, again in Shanghai, where Dialog Telekom, the leading telecom in Sri Lanka walked away with many awards for their incredible customer-focused solutions, service and support. (Hello to Ayomal and Sandra!)