The iPad’s Limitations as a Business Device
The iPad’s Limitations as a Business Device
I love my iPad. Let me just start with that. I’ve found lots of use cases for it, and it’s very useful here and there for work. But I’ve seen a bunch of people trying to use it as a primary business device, which I can’t quite figure out. Here are the things that prevent me from making it my main business device:
- lack of keyboard (can mitigate with the keyboard dock, which I have)
- lack of mouse (not a killer limitation, just takes some getting used to, also the arrows on the keyboard dock help)
- lack of connection to files and true Office compatibility (this can largely be mitigated through a combination of the Dropbox or Box.net app and the QuickOffice app)
- lack of multitasking (this is the main killer)
Much of the time, I need to be rapidly switching between and simultaneously using email, the web, and multiple Office documents. Having to basically shut down each one and then fire up another instead of having them all up at once on multiple monitors or at least easily accessible via alt-tab is a big pain, especially when trying to cut and paste things from one to another. The iPad is awesome for many many things, and for limited work usage (other than complex spreadsheets), it works “well enough.” But I would find it difficult to make it my primary business machine other than for a fairly short (1 day) business trip.
B+ for Effort?
B+ for Effort?
Effort is important in life. If Woody Allen is right, and 80% of success in life is just showing up, then perhaps 89% is in showing up AND putting in good effort. But there is no A for Effort in a fast-paced work environment. The best you can get without demonstrating results is a B+.
The converse is also true, that the best you can get with good results AND without good effort is a B+.
Now, a B+ isn’t a bad grade either way. But it’s not the best grade. In continuing with this series of our 13 core values at Return Path, the next one I’ll cover is:
We believe that results and effort are both critical components of execution
We’ve always espoused the general philosophy that HOW you get something done is quite important. For example, if the effort is poor and you get to the right place, maybe you got lucky. Or even worse, maybe you wasted a lot of time to get there. Or if you burned your colleagues or clients in the process of getting to the right place, a positive short-term result can have negative long-term consequences.
But when all is said and done, even with the most supportive culture that values effort and learning a lot (more on that in the next post in this series), results speak very loudly. Customers don’t give you a lot of credit for trying hard if you’re not effectively delivering product or solving their problems. And investors ultimately demand results.
Our “talent development” framework at Return Path – the thing that we use to measure employee performance, reflects this dual view of execution:
The X axis is clearly labeled “Performance,” meaning results, and the Y axis is labeled “Potential – RP Expectations,” which basically means effort and fit with the culture at Return Path. We plot out employees on the basis of their quantitative scores coming out of their performance reviews on this grid every year. Which box any given employee falls in has a lot to do with how that employee is managed and coached in the coming months. We’re always trying to move people up and to the right!
The definitions of the different boxes in this framework are telling and speak to the subject of this post. To be an A player here, you have to excel in both effort and results – that’s our definition of successful execution.
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! We’re getting to the end of this series…only two more to go.
You Can’t Teach a Cat How to Bark, But You Might be Able to Teach it How to Walk on its Hind Legs
You Can’t Teach a Cat How to Bark, But You Might be Able to Teach it How to Walk on its Hind Legs
My co-founder George and I have had this saying for a while. Cats don’t bark. They can’t. Never will. They also don’t usually walk on their hind legs in the wild, but some of them, after some training, could probably be taught to do so.
Working with people on career evolution sometimes follows that same path. Lots of the time, an employee’s career evolution is natural and goes well. They’re playing to their strengths, in their sweet spot, progressing along nicely. But often that’s not the case. And it goes both ways. Some employees want something different. The sales rep wants to be a sales manager. The product manager wants to try marketing. Sometimes the organization needs something different out of the person. Be a stronger manager. Be more collaborative. Acquire more domain or functional expertise.
These transitions might or might not be difficult. It completely depends on the person involved and the competencies required for the new role. And that’s where the barking cat comes into play. There’s more art than science here, but as a manager or as the employee, figuring out the gap between existing strengths/experience and the required competencies for the new job, and whether the missing elements *can* be taught or not is the exercise at hand.
I’m not sure there’s a useful rule of thumb here, either. I had a boss once many years ago who said you can teach smart people how to do anything other than sales. Another boss said you can teach anyone any fact, but you can’t teach anyone empathy. Both of these feel too one-size-fits-all for me. One thing we do at Return Path from time to time is encourage an employee facing some kind of stretch transition (for whatever reason) to participate in or run a short-term side project with a mentor that lets them flex some relevant new muscles. Essentially we let them try it on for size.
Corporate Sniglets
Corporate Sniglets
This might be showing my age, but those who may have watched Not Necessarily the News in the 80s might remember the Sniglets segment that Rich Hall pioneered which spawned a series of short, fun books. Sniglets are words which are not in the dictionary, but which should be. I can remember a couple of examples from years ago that make the point — aquadexterity is the ability to operate bathtub dials with one’s feet; cheedle is the orange residue left on one’s fingers after eating a bag of Cheetos.
As is the case with many companies, we have made up some of our own words over the years at Return Path – think of them as Corporate Sniglets. I’m sure we have more than these, but here are a few that we use internally:
- Underlap is the opposite of Overlap. My colleague Tom Bartel coined this gem years ago when he was leading the integration work on an acquisition we did, as in “let’s look for areas of Overlap as well as areas of Underlap (things that neither companies does, but which we should as a combined company).”
- Pre-Mortem or Mid-Mortem are the timing opposites of Post-Mortem. We do Post-Mortems religiously, but sometimes you want to do one ahead of a project to think about what COULD go wrong and how to head those things off at the pass, or in the middle of a project to course-correct on it. I believe my colleague George Bilbrey gets credit for the Pre-Mortem, and I think I might have come up with Mid-Mortem.
- Frontfill is the opposite of Backfill. While you Backfill a position after an employee leaves, you can Frontfill it if you know someone is going to leave to get ahead of the curve and make sure you don’t have a big gap without a role being filled. Credit to Mike Mills for this one
RPers, are there others I’m missing? Anyone else have any other gems from other companies?
Soliciting Feedback on Your Own Performance as CEO
(Excerpted from Chapter 12 of Startup CEO)
As a CEO, one of the most important things you can do is solicit feedback about your own performance. Of course, this will work only if you’re ready to receive that feedback! What does that mean? It means you need to be really, really good at doing four things:
- Asking for feedback
- Accepting feedback gracefully
- Acting on feedback
- Asking for follow‐up feedback on the same topic to see how you did
In some respects, asking for it is the easy part, although it may be unnatural. You’re the boss, right? Why do you need feedback? The reality is that all of us can always benefit from feedback. That’s particularly true if you’re a first‐time CEO. Even more experienced CEOs change over time and with changing circumstances. Understanding how the board and your team experience your behavior and performance is one of the only ways to improve over time. It’s easier to ask for feedback if you’re specific. I routinely solicit feedback in the major areas of my job (which mirror the structure of this book):
Strategy. Do you think we’re on target with what we’re doing? Am I doing a good enough job managing to our goals while also being nimble enough to respond to the market?
Staff management/leadership. How effective am I at building and maintaining a strong, focused, cohesive team? Do I have the right people in the right roles at the senior staff level?
Resource allocation. Do I do a good enough job balancing among competing priorities internally? Are costs adequately managed?
Execution. How do the team and I execute versus our plans? What do you think I could be doing to make sure the organization executes better?
Board management/investor relations. Do you think our board is effective and engaged? Have I played enough of a role in leading the group? Do you as a director feel like you’re contributing all you can? Do I strike the right balance between asking and telling? Are communications clear enough and regular enough?
Accepting feedback gracefully is even harder than the asking part. You may or may not agree with a given piece of feedback, but the ability to hear it and take it in without being defensive is the only way to make sure that the feedback keeps coming. Sitting with your arms crossed and being argumentative sends the message that you’re right, they’re wrong, and you’re not interested. If you disagree with something that’s being said, ask questions. Get specifics. Understand the impact of your actions rather than explaining your intent.
The same logic applies to internalizing and acting on the feedback. If you fail to act on feedback, people will stop giving it to you. Needless to say, you won’t improve as a CEO. Fundamentally, why ask for it if you’re not going to use it? And that leads right into the fourth point, closing the loop with the person who gave you feedback on whether or not your actions achieved the desired change.
Deliverability Resources
Deliverability Resources
After my last posting on email deliverability, a few people emailed me to ask about different resources that Return Path has published over the last six months or so on the subject.
Clicking this link will take you to the white paper download form on our web site, which has all the white papers we’ve written in the past 12 months or so listed, and the most recent one on deliverability pre-checked to get you started. You can check as many of the boxes you want in one shot, and although the download will trigger an email and/or call from someone in our sales department, you can simply respond to the email and tell them thanks but no thanks if you’re not interested in learning more about our services (of course, you’re also welcome to take the call if you’re interested).
Anyway, deliverability topics we’ve covered of late which are on this list inclue:
Email Blocking and Filtering Report
Beyond Authentication: Keys to Email Delivery Success
Bonded Sender Increases Email Deliverability by more than 20%
Email Accreditation Programs: What Is All the Buzz About?
Back to the Basics: Deliverability 101 – Getting your email into the inbox
Email Indigestion: How to Avoid Deliverability Failures by Optimizing Your Permission Practices
Email Deliverability Rates Impacted by Time Campaigns Sent
The Secret Role of the Email Address Book…and what it means for your email delivery
How Data Partners Impact Your Email Performance: The checklist for all email aquisition marketers to live by.
Avoiding the Spam Filter Trap
Enjoy!
OnlyOnce – The Car
OnlyOnce – The Car
Not really contemplating a brand extension to my blog — the book is enough, but my friend Bill Wise just saw this car today in Larchmont, NY!
Counter Cliche: How Much Paranoia is Too Much Paranoia?, Part II
Counter Cliche: How Much Paranoia is Too Much Paranoia?, Part II
After the original posting, one of my readers wrote in with the following question:
I was one of the first employees at a pre-funding enterprise social networking company, after having consulted on doing their business plan for them (not coming up with it; mainly turning the CEO and CTO’s engineer-speak into English).
After being asked to participate more fully in the marketing and biz dev aspects of the company, I quickly found myself stymied by the level of secrecy the CEO maintained. Now, I understand that you wouldn’t want important information getting out to competitors, but that can be handled by making that clear to team members. I found it frustrating and that it encumbered the kind of “team spirit” that a good startup should have; it prevented the sharing of how someone moved the ball forward, and having others weigh in on how incremental moves based on this new information could make non-linear gains.
So with all that background, when you say “open book” to your employees, can you break that out some more? I have an idea of what I think that means, and what it doesn’t, but I’d love to hear your thoughts on it too.
My thoughts on this are quite simple. We are willing to share everything internally other than compensation. We publish detailed monthly financials and reporting to the team, and we ask that they treat the information as extremely confidential. We have had only good things come from this level of openness with our team. Good ideas, good esprit de corps, and a radical reduction in fear of the unknown (the old "Looks like we had a bad quarter, does that mean I need to look for a job now? Are we running out of money?").
In fact, I know one other CEO who goes so far as to publish an only-slightly modified version of his Board books to the entire company.
Transparency is a good thing.
Good Help is Hard to Find
Good Help is Hard to Find
We’re having a bitch of a time lately hiring good sales people. We’re growing like crazy this year and are trying to invest more in our salesforce, but it’s not easy. And we’re a good catch. Good brand, healthy company, good comp and benefits, charming CEO, the works.
I just traded emails with a friend who is CEO of another online marketing services firm who said the same thing, with the exact same explanation I have:
I have been so unimpressed with everyone from our space (weak links drop out, mediocrity churns from company to company, and true talent is retained).
Anyway, we have gotten very lucky with a few key hires the past few months — and we certainly work like mad to retain the talent we have (or at least we try hard!) — but the reality is that it’s a good year for Internet businesses, and it’s hard to get people to jump ship when they have an established book of business and good commission check flow.
Most of the people I know who are doing well with sales recruiting in our space these days, including ourselves, are mostly pulling people out of adjacent industries or even out of clients. I’d ask my general readership for advice, but I assume if you have the secret sauce here, you’ll hoard it for yourself!
In the Land of Too Many Conferences, This is a Good One
In the Land of Too Many Conferences, This is a Good One
It’s rare that I’m sad to leave a conference — usually I can’t leave fast enough. But such is my mood today leaving Mediapost’s third Email Insider Summit.
Our industry is way over-conferenced in general. I’m guessing that our company’s full conference calendar has 40+ events on it over the course of a year. It’s more than we can afford to exhibit at, participate in, speak at, attend. We do our best, and what money we spend is much more carefully monitored and measured than it used to be, but usually it’s with that sick feeling in the pit of our collective marketing stomach that we’re throwing money away just because our competitors are there.
But the Email Insider Summit is different. While there are some aspects of the show that I don’t love — four days is a long time, and three half days of golf and snorkeling is a little too heavy on the boondoggle side for my personal taste — the content and attendees are fantastic. Mediapost’s formula of comping marketers and charging vendors very high prices to attend ensures an intimate, high level, and vendor-light crowd. That’s a recipe for success in my book!
The two most interesting nuggets from today:
1. John Stichweh from Coca-Cola’s observation that brand marketing and direct marketing continue to rapidly converge, and that measurement of outcome (e.g., ROI) as opposed to measurement of process (e.g., GRPs or impressions) are gaining steam, never to look back. I couldn’t agree more. What can be counted will be counted. And it can all be counted in the world of advertising, somehow.
2. Lisa Galli from CNET’s discussion of mobile marketing and what they’re doing to take advantage of the channel. The best example I’ve heard in years of a marketer leveraging a medium is their new SMS Reviews product — just text message CNET1 the words Review xxx (insert name of product here), and you’ll get a text message back with a product review. Now THAT ought to make shopping for electronics much more interesting.
I’m ready for more conferences like these, and fewer mammoth trade shows.
Do Business Books Suck for Entrepreneurs?
Do Business Books Suck for Entrepreneurs?
Ben thinks they do. Some of his reasons are pretty good, but I’d challenge a few of them, or at least his finer points.
My experience over the years is that while most business books are not geared toward entrepreneurs, a good entrepreneur will figure out how to milk them for what they’re worth quickly and apply key learnings to his or her company.
The reality is that running a startup or high growth company is a multi-faceted and incredibly dynamic experience, and having a bunch of outside inputs in the form of business book examples and theories can be really helpful.
Even bad ideas can spur good thinking.