Starbucks, Starbucks, Everywhere, Part II
Starbucks, Starbucks, Everywhere, Part II
In 2004, I blogged about Starbucks’ implausible Forbidden City location (post includes picture) in the heart of one of China’s most prominent national monuments.
Today, under pressure from the Chinese government, Starbucks announced that they’re closing the location, reflecting “Chinese sensitivity about cultural symbols and unease over an influx of foreign pop culture,” according to a very short blurb about this in today’s Wall Street Journal.
It must be indescribably different to live in a society that’s so tightly controlled.
Help Me, Help You
Help Me, Help You
I’m conducting a really short reader survey about OnlyOnce. There are about 10 questions, half about the blog, and half about reader demographics. Please take 2 minutes to complete it for me so I know how I’m doing! All responses are anonymous, as you’ll see. Click here to go to the survey.
Back to Business?
Back to Business?
Today is the day every year that everyone keeps saying, "well, it’s back to school time." Ignore for a moment the fact that half of the schools I hear about now start in the middle of August…it’s interesting to see how some things in the business world really slow down in the summer, especially in August as well as the school system.
People really disappear for vacations, short and long. Even if we aren’t like our European counterparts who really have it figured out and can virtually shut down in August, it’s just harder to get things done. People might not all be out at the same time or for as long, but having one or two key people out any given week just makes it harder to make progress on things.
So, it’s time to get Back to Business. September and October are the busiest months of the year in our industry with a packed conference schedule, planning cycles for next year, and the ever-present "holiday season" for our retail clients, so it should be a crazy fall!
My end of year routine (Taking Stock, Part III)
I have an end of year work routine that’s a pull-up and self-assessment. I’ve been doing this for years, and I’ve written about its evolution in Part I and Part II of this series.
I’ve always taken a few minutes at this time of the year to ask myself these four questions:
- Am I having fun at work?
- Am I learning and growing as a professional?
- Is my work financially rewarding enough, either in the short-term or in the long-term?
- Am I having the impact I want to have on the world?
If I answer at least 2.5 of these questions as yes, I feel like things are on track. If I am below that, or even at 2.5 sometimes, it’s time for a rethink of what I’m doing or how I’m doing it.
I was having lunch with my friend Bryton, the CEO of Aquabyte, a few weeks back, and that conversation spurred on a 5th question, which I’ll now add to my end of year routine:
- Am I excited about what I’m doing?
I’ve realized now that I’m over two years into the journey at Bolster that there’s a significant value in being really into the subject matter of the business. I thought I was at Return Path…but now I realize that I wasn’t nearly as excited about what I was doing as I could have been. Our work at Bolster of helping founders be more successful is more personally meaningful to me than solving email deliverability challenges. That work had real impact on the world…but I just wasn’t into it as much.
And that makes a big difference in answering the general question of “Am I on track?” at the end of the year. I’ll skip next week and see you all in 2023. Happy New Year and Happy Holidays, everyone!
Email Deliverability Data
Email Deliverability Data
We just published our 2004 year-end email deliverability report. Feel free to download the pdf, but I’ll summarize here. First, this report is very different from the reports you see published by Email Service Providers like Digital Impact and DoubleClick, because (a) it measures deliverability across a broad cross-section of mailers, not just a single ESP’s clients, and (b) it is a true measure of deliverability — what made it to the inbox — as opposed to the way some ESPs measure and report on deliverability, which is usually just the percentage of email that didn’t bounce or get outright blocked as spam.
Headline number one: the “false positive” problem (non-spam ending up in the junk mailbox) is getting worse, not better. Here’s the trend:
Full year 2004:Â 22%
Second half 2003:Â 18.7%
First half 2003:Â Â 17%
Second half 2002:Â 15%
Headline number two: mailers who work on the problem can have a huge impact on their deliverability. Obviously, I’m biased to Return Path’s own solution for mailers, but I think you can extrapolate our data to the broader universe: companies that work on understanding, measuring, and solving the root causes of weak deliverablility can raise their inbox rate dramatically in a short time — in our study, the average improvement was a decrease in false positives from 22% to about 9% over the first three months. But we have a number of mailers who are now closer to the 2% false positive level on a regular basis.
Sometimes a Good Loss is Better than a Bad Win
I just said this to a fellow little league coach, and it’s certainly true for baseball. I’ve coached games with sloppy and/or blowout wins in the past. You take the W and move on, but it’s hard to say “good game” at the end of it and feel like you played a good game. And I’ve coached games where we played our hearts out and made amazing plays on offense and defense…and just came up short by a run. You are sad about the L, but at least you left it all out on the field.
Is that statement true in business?
What’s an example of a “bad” win? Let’s say you close a piece of business with a new client…but you did it by telling the client some things that aren’t true about your competition. Your win might not be sustainable, and you’ve put your reputation at risk. Or what about a case where you release a new feature, but you know you’ve taken some shortcuts to launch it on time that will cause downstream support problems? Or you negotiate the highest possible valuation from a new lead investor, only to discover that new lead investor, now on your Board, expects you to triple it in four years and is way out of alignment with the rest of your cap table.
On the other side, what’s an example of a “good” loss? We’ve lost accounts before where the loss was painful, but it taught us something absolutely critical that we needed to fix about our product or service model. Or same goes for getting a “pass” from a desirable investor in a financing round but at least understanding why and getting a key to fixing something problematic about your business model or management team.
What it comes down to is that both examples – little league and business – have humans at the center. And while most humans do value winning and success, they are also intrinsically motivated by other things like happiness, growth, and truth. So yes, even in business, sometimes a good loss is better than a bad win.
Taking Stock
Taking Stock
Every year around this time, I take a few minutes to reflect on how the business is doing, on my goals and development plans, and on what I want to accomplish in the coming year. Although most of that work is focused on how to move the business forward, I also make sure to take stock of my own career trajectory. I always ask myself three questions when I do this:
- Am I having fun at work?
- Am I learning and growing as a professional?
- Is my work financially rewarding enough, either in the short term or in the long term?
Of course, I always shoot for 3 YES responses. Then I know my career is on track. But as long as I get 2 YESses, then I feel like I’m in good shape, and I know which one to work on in the coming year. I’m not sure I’ve ever had a situation in the dozen years of running Return Path where I’ve had 0 or 1 YESses. If I did, I’d probably spend more time thinking about whether I was still in the right job for me.
I think these three questions can work for anyone, not just a CEO. Hopefully everyone takes the time to take stock like this at least once a year. It’s healthy for everyone’s career development.
Boiling the Frog
Boiling the Frog
We boiled the frog recently at Return Path.
What the heck does this mean? There was an old story, I’ve since been told apocryphal, we told a lot back when I was a management consultant trying to work on change management projects. It was basically that:
If you throw a frog into a pot of boiling water, it will leap right back out. But if you put a frog in a pot of water on the stove and then heat it up to boiling, you’ll boil the frog because it never quite realized that it’s being cooked until its muscles and brain are slightly too cooked to jump out.
How have we boiled the frog? Two ways recently. First, we let a staffing problem sneak up on us. We were short one person in a critical area (accounting and business operations), and we had decided to try to go without the extra person for a month or two for cost-savings reasons. Then, another person in that group unexpectedly left. Then, another person in that group got seriously sick and was out for several weeks. The result? We were down three people in an area very quickly, without a proper pipeline of candidates coming in the door for any of the open positions. So for a period of time, we can’t get the things done out of that group we want to get done, despite the heroic efforts of the remaining people in the group.
Second, we have had an Exchange server problem that has been plaguing one of our three offices for six months now (no, the irony of an email company having internal email problems isn’t lost on us). In retrospect, the first time we had a big problem with it, we should have dropped everything, brought in an outside consultant, and done a rapid-fire infrastructure upgrade/replacement. But we were truly boiled here — we kept thinking we’d fixed the problem, the situation kept deteriorating slowly enough to the point where the productivity of this one office was seriously compromised for a few weeks. Happily, I can report this weekend that our IT team is cuting over to our new environment — "the promised land," as they call it.
How do you stop yourself from getting boiled? I think you have to:
1. Recognize when you’re in a pot of water. What areas of your company are so mission critical that they’re always at risk? Have you done everything you can do to eliminate single points of failure?
2. Recognize when someone turns on the burner. Do you know the early-warning signs for all of these areas? Can you really live without an extra person or two in that department? Is it ok if that server doesn’t work quite right?
3. Recognize when you care about the frog. You can’t solve all problems, all of the time. Figuring out which ones need to be solved urgently vs. eventually vs. never is one of the most important roles a decision-maker in a company can make.
The Problem with Titles
The Problem with Titles
This will no doubt be a controversial post, and it’s more of a rant than I usually write. I’ll also admit up front that I always try to present solutions alongside problems…but this is one problem that doesn’t have an obvious and practical solution. I hate titles. My old boss from years ago at MovieFone used to say that nothing good could come from either Titles or Org Charts – both were “the gift that keeps on giving…and not in a good way.”
I hate titles because they are impossible to get right and frequently cause trouble inside a company. Here are some of the typical problems caused by titles:
- External-facing people may benefit from a Big Title when dealing with clients or the outside world in general. I was struck at MovieFone that people at Hollywood studios had titles like Chairman of Marketing (really?), but that creates inequity inside a company or rampant title inflation
- Different managers and different departments, and quite frankly, different professions, can have different standards and scales for titles that are hard to reconcile. Is a Controller a VP or a Senior Director? And does it really matter?
- Some employees care about titles more than others and either ask or demand title changes that others don’t care about. Titles are easy (free) to give, so organizations frequently hand out big titles that create internal strife or envy or lead to title inflation
- Titles don’t always align with comp, especially across departments. Would you rather be a director making $X, or a senior manager making $X+10?
- Merger integrations often focus on titles as a way of placating people or sending a signal to “the other side” — but the title lasts forever, where the need that a big title is fulfilling is more likely short term
- Internal equity of titles but an external mismatch can cause a lot of heartache both in hiring and in noting who is in a management role
- Promotions as a concept associated with titles are challenging. Promotions should be about responsibility, ownership and commensurate compensation. Titles are inappropriately used as a promotion indicator because it inherently makes other people feel like they have been demoted when keeping the same title
- Why do heads of finance carry a C-level title but heads of sales usually carry an EVP or SVP title, with usually more people and at least equal responsibility? And does it sound silly when everyone senior has a C level title?  What about C-levels who don’t report to the CEO or aren’t even on the executive team?
- Ever try to recalibrate titles, or move even a single title, downward? Good luck
What good comes from titles? People who have external-facing roles can get a boost from a big title. Titles may be helpful to people when they go look for a new job, and while you can argue that it’s not your organization’s job to help your people find their next job, you also have to acknowledge that your company isn’t the only company in the world.
Titles are also about role clarity and who does what and what you can expect from someone in a department. You can do that with a job description and certainly within an organization, it is easy to learn these things through course of business after you join. But especially when an organization gets big, it can serve more of a purpose. I suppose titles also signal how senior a person is in an organization, as do org charts, but those feel more like useful tools for new employees to understand a company’s structure or roles than something that all employees need every day.
Could the world function without titles? Or could a single organization do well without titles, in a world where everyone else has titles? There are some companies that don’t have titles. One, Morning Star, was profiled in a Harvard Business Review article, and I’ve spoken to the people there a bit. They acknowledge that lack of titles makes it a little hard to hire in from the outside, but that they train the recruiters they work with how to do without titles – noting that comp ranges for new positions, as well as really solid job descriptions, help.
All thoughts are welcome on this topic. I’m not sure there’s a good answer. And for Return Pathers reading this, it’s just a think piece, not a trial balloon or proposal, and it wasn’t prompted by any single act or person, just an accumulation of thoughts over the years.
If Only International Relations Were This Easy
If Only International Relations Were This Easy
Iceland is one of those weird places on earth where two continental plates meet — and you can see it. Here we are, me on the American plate and Mariquita on the Eurasian plate, with the earth seemingly coming apart at the seams in between.
If anyone’s interested in a short travelog to Iceland, here it is.
Morning in Tribeca
We live on the 35th floor of our building in Tribeca (downtown Manhattan), facing south, about 7 blocks up from the World Trade Center site. From 1994-2001, our view was grand and corporate. For a short time in September 2001, it was horrific. Since then, it’s just been depressing. Seeing such a large gap in the skyline every morning just made us remember what — and who — used to be there.
It’s not getting a lot of coverage because it’s not the Freedom Tower, but the new World Trade Center 7 building is on its way up.
As far as I’m concerned, it’s the most beautiful construction site I’ve ever seen. It’s definitely morning once again in Tribeca!