The Best Place to Work, Part 6: Let People Be People
The Best Place to Work, Part 6: Let People Be People
Last week, in this continuing series on creating the best place to work, I talked about being a great enabler of people, meaning you do your best to let people do their best work. This week, I want to talk about Letting People Be People.
I wrote about topic a bit this last year when I wrote my series on Return Path’s Core Values, in particular the post on our value People Work to Live, Not Live to Work .
Work-life balance is critical. I’ve worked in a grind-it-out 100-hour/week environment as an analyst before. Quite frankly, it sucks. One week I actually filled in 121 on my hourly time sheet as a consultant.  If you’ve never calculated the denominator, it’s only 168. Even being well paid as a first-year analyst out of college, the hourly rate sucked. Thinking about 121 gives me the shivers today…and it certainly puts into perspective that whether you work 40, 45, 50, 55, or 60 hours in a given week can pale by comparison, and all still let you have a life. An average week of 40 hours probably doesn’t make sense for a high-growth company of relatively well-paid knowledge workers. But at 121 you barely get to shower and sleep.
While you may get a lot done working like a dog, you don’t get a lot more done hour for hour relative to productive people do in a 50-week environment. Certainly not 2x. People who say they thrive on that kind of pressure are simply lying – or to be fair, they’re not lying, but they are pretending they wouldn’t prefer a different environment, which is likely disingenuous and a result of rationalizing their time spent at work. Your productivity simply diminishes after some number of hours. So as a CEO, even a hard-charging one, I think it’s better to focus on creating a productive environment than an environment of sustained long hours.
Work has ebbs and flows just like life has ebbs and flows. As long as the work generally gets done well and when you need it, you have to assume that sometimes, people will work long hours in bursts and sometimes, people will work fewer hours. Work-life balance is not measured in days or even weeks, but over the long term. So to that end, We Let People Be People as a means of trading off freedom and flexibility for high levels of performance and accountability. At Return Path, we create an environment where people can be people by:
- Giving generous maternity leave and even paternity leave, at least relative to norms in the US
- Having a flexible “work from home” policy, as people do have personal things to do during the business day from time to time
- Allowing even more flexible work conditions for anyone (especially new parents) – 3 or 4 days/week if we can make it work
- Letting people take a 6-week paid sabbatical after 7 years, then after every 5 years after that
- Having an “open vacation” policy where people can take as much vacation as they want, as long as they get their jobs done
As with all the posts in this series, this is meant to be general, not specific. But these are a few of the things we’ve done to Let People Be People, which has created an incredibly productive environment here where people have fun, lead their lives, and still get their jobs done well and on time.
Gmail, I Don’t Get It, Part III
Gmail, I Don’t Get It, Part III
This is the third in a somewhat drawn-out series of postings on Gmail featuring some interesting data from Return Path’s Email Change of Address service, which captures self-reported address change data from nearly 1 million consumers every month.
The first posting, back when Gmail launched nearly a year ago, was that I didn’t understand the fuss. This is even more true now that Yahoo is in a “free storage” war with Google.
The second, in November, had some change of address stats reporting that the numbers of people joining Gmail was tiny relative to other ISPs…and also that Gmail was starting to have people switch away from it, but only at the rate of about 1 for every 3 people joining it.
So we have some new updated data now from the first quarter that are even more interesting. First, the number of people joining Gmail seems to have flattened out over the last couple of months. Our metric is about 14,000 in each of the last few months (remember, that’s not the whole number, just 14,000 out of our 1 million). But the flattening is the highlight. There’s still the same competitive set — lots of Hotmail churn, some Yahoo, very little from AOL and other providers.
Here’s the kicker, though. At least within our data set, we actually saw more people LEAVE Gmail than join Gmail in February and March. That surprised me quite a bit. One side note, about 9% of the change volume for Gmail is people changing from one Gmail account to another.
Is Gmail in trouble? I doubt it. But I do continue to wonder if they’ll ever be able to achieve the market share in email that people predicted at the beginning of Gmail.
Everyone’s a Direct Marketer, Part III
Everyone’s a Direct Marketer, Part III
With every company as a direct marketer, and with (hopefully!) every company embracing some of the best DM principles, what does this shift mean for the way companies will be structured in the future?
First, let’s talk about the internal structure of a company. The biggest shift going on here is that customers are becoming a more important part of all employees’ daily lives, not just those in the advertising department. I wrote an earlier posting called Everyone’s a Marketer which applies here. Most likely, more and more members of your organization are touching customers every day — and they need to be trained how to think like marketers.
But beyond that, companies will be constructed differently in the future as well. While not true in some industries, there are many industries founded on the “mass” which will never be the same again. Here are three examples of how direct marketing is infiltrating — but enhancing the opportunities of — corporate America.
– Disney’s film unit used to make movies only for theatrical release. Today, they have an enormous volume of direct-to-video (or DVD) movies that never see the big screen but that drive huge sales numbers when marketed to Disney’s customer email database.
– Ralph Lauren used to make Polo shirts with a fixed number of configurations of shirt color and knitting color of the logo. Now, you can go onto Polo.com and custom build a personalized shirt for someone with the right size and color combination of their college or company or favorite baseball team.
– Barry Diller used to run a studio, then he bought a TV network called the Home Shoping Network (and, I’d add, a lot of people laughed at him for doing so). He has now turned HSN into InterActive Corp, a true convergence company that mixes content and media with commerce and direct marketing with brands like Match.com, Ticketmaster, eVite, CitySearch, and Expedia.
That’s it for this series. All thoughts and comments are welcome.
How to Negotiate a Term Sheet with a VC, Part III
How to Negotiate a Term Sheet with a VC, Part III
Brad has kicked off his blogging year with a a good new post on VC valuations. It’s along the lines of the ones he, Fred, and I have written over the past six months and has the wonderful line in it:
If you are negotiating a deal and an investor is digging his or her feet in on a provision that doesn’t affect the economics or control, they are probably blowing smoke, rather than elucidating substance.
Happy New Year!
I Don’t Want to Be Your Friend (Today), part III
I Don’t Want to Be Your Friend (Today), part III
My first thought when my colleague Jen Goldman forwarded me a SlideShare presentation that was 224 pages long was, “really?” But a short 10 minutes and 224 clicks later, I am glad I spent the time on it.
Paul Adams, a Senior User Experience Researcher at Google, put the presentation up called The Real Life Social Network. Paul describes the problem I discuss in Part I and Part II of this series much more eloquently than I have, with great real world examples and thoughts for web designers at the end.
If you’re involved in social media and want to start breaking away from the “one size of friend fits all” mentality – this is a great use of time.
Why I Love My Board, Part III
Why I Love My Board, Part III
My prophesy is starting to come true. In Part I of this series four years ago, I asserted that
Fred may be the only one of my directors who has done something this dorky, this publicly, but quite frankly, I could see any of us in the same position.
Now, Brad Feld is no shrinking violet. As far as I’m concerned, he made his film debut in the memorable “Munch on Your Bones” video (short, worth a watch if you’re a Feld groupie) something like 6 or 7 years ago for an all-hands meeting I ran. But his newest short feature film, “I’m a VC,” made with his three partners, Jason, Ryan, and Seth, is a must-see for anyone in the entrepreneur-VC set and puts him up there with Fred in the pantheon of “this dorky, this publicly.”
Political versus Corporate Leadership, Part III: The First Debate
Political versus Corporate Leadership, Part III: The First Debate
Well, there you have it. Both of my first two postings on this subject — Realism vs. Idealism and Admitting Mistakes — came up in last night’s debate.
At one point, in response to Kerry’s attempted criticism of him for expressing two different views on the situation in Iraq, Bush responded that he thought he could — and had to — be simultaneously a realist and an optimist. And a few minutes later, Kerry admitted a mistake and brilliantly turned the tables on Bush by saying something to the effect of “I made a mistake in how I talked about Iraq, and he made a mistake by taking us to war with Iraq — you decide which is worse.”
So each candidate exhibited at least one of the traits of good corporate leadership, but on this front anyway, I think Kerry did a better job last night in turning one of his mistakes into a zinger against his opponent.
Everyone's a Marketer, Part III
Everyone’s a Marketer, Part III
Along the lines of my "Everyone’s a Marketer" series of postings, Seth Godin put a finer point on it today. If Everyone’s a Marketer, then you can easily make the case that the CEO is the CMO.
For Whom the Bell Tolls, Part III
For Whom the Bell Tolls, Part III
My original posting singing the praises of VOIP and Vonage in particular (for those of you who haven’t tried Voice-Over-IP, it’s still working great and unbeliebaly cheaper than traditional phone service) was met with a criticism by my colleague Tom Bartel, who said Vonage in particular didn’t allow him to keep his particular phone number. This is something that varies carrier by carrier, area code by area code.
So Tom tried an alternative service in Colorado called Lingo. So far, he seems to be having the same positive experience that we are in NYC.
The Rumors of Email’s Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated, Part III
The Rumors of Email’s Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated, Part III
Now it’s Groove Chairman Ray Ozzie saying that email is toast, since his kids use IM as their preferred channel, relegating email to something to be avoided since it’s only from parents or teachers.
Um, ok. What about bosses and clients and colleagues? You may not want to hear from them, either (especially that pesky boss), but I’m still struggling with the argument that because kids aren’t addicted to the medium, it will surely die. Kids eventually grow up and do things differently than they did when they were kids. Perhaps email is one of those things you have to grow into when life isn’t (regretfully) just about chatting with your friends?
Blogiversary, Part III
Blogiversary, Part III
OnlyOnce turns three today. While year 1 was exciting and year 2 was still a build, this year has been more about maintenance. I don’t mean that in a bad way — I still enjoy writing it, but I am finding it a little tougher to make time for it (probably more a function of other things going on in life). Also, I periodically catch myself starting some post or other and realizing that I wrote it, or something much like it, sometime in the past!
I think in honor of the third blogiversary, I’ll reinvigorate today by posting three times!



