Last night I was reading to my son and came upon this fable by Aesop. It is a classic product management issue and applies to many entrepreneurs as well who often bounce from one advisor or investor or mentor or industry veteran to the next and change their story every time an "expert" voices an opinion. Much better to gather to a bunch of input, seek inspiration and weigh comments against the views of your team and make fewer more well thought out decisions.
The Man the Boy and the Donkey
http://www.aesops-fables.org.uk/aesop-fable-the-man-the-boy-and-the-donkey.htm
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Innovation in a Recession
Here is a positive spin on our current landscape from an innovation perspective.
http://www.psfk.com/2009/04/video-joi-ito-on-innovation-during-a-recession.html
There are many aspects of this perspective that are accurate however the reduction in available funds for current initiatives that are losing money is a very real threat. While the strong ideas should survive and emerge even stronger for it - it is going to be very hard for many organizations and initiatives to survive to the end of the year without major restructuring.
http://www.psfk.com/2009/04/video-joi-ito-on-innovation-during-a-recession.html
There are many aspects of this perspective that are accurate however the reduction in available funds for current initiatives that are losing money is a very real threat. While the strong ideas should survive and emerge even stronger for it - it is going to be very hard for many organizations and initiatives to survive to the end of the year without major restructuring.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Most business plans are a waste of everyone's time
It seems that no one wants to read to your business plan - probably not even yourself.
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/14/investors-pay-business-plans-little-heed-study-finds/.
This is in part because the document format we learned writing reports in school is ultra boring and padded with unnecessary fluff and filler and excessive syntax that isn't appropriate, efficient or useful for conveying exciting new ideas.
Well conducted dialogue and demonstrations are far superior (possibly supported by images, key facts and examples). And trusted referalls are really the only way to get the real mindshare of potential investors.
While in theory business plans help entreprenuers to focus and think through critical issues - the reality is that the usual effort put into sentence structure, readability, flow of logic, grammatical correctness, formatting, and layout generally sucks up a ton of valuable time that isn't repayed. Concise summaries, point form, and presentation form, (all with references to sources and supporting information) will pay off - big plans won't.
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/14/investors-pay-business-plans-little-heed-study-finds/.
This is in part because the document format we learned writing reports in school is ultra boring and padded with unnecessary fluff and filler and excessive syntax that isn't appropriate, efficient or useful for conveying exciting new ideas.
Well conducted dialogue and demonstrations are far superior (possibly supported by images, key facts and examples). And trusted referalls are really the only way to get the real mindshare of potential investors.
While in theory business plans help entreprenuers to focus and think through critical issues - the reality is that the usual effort put into sentence structure, readability, flow of logic, grammatical correctness, formatting, and layout generally sucks up a ton of valuable time that isn't repayed. Concise summaries, point form, and presentation form, (all with references to sources and supporting information) will pay off - big plans won't.
Time to Commercialize Tech in Various Verticals

This diagram was taken from a study by the National Petroleum Council http://www.npc.org/Study_Topic_Papers/26-TTG-OGTechDevelopment.pdf which juxtaposes the incredible advances that that technology has provided to the industry against the massive hurdles faced by new innovations in getting to commercialization.
In a study by McKinsey, consumer products were shown to take on average about 8 years to go from idea to 50% market penetration, medical products take 12 years, ADSL as an example in telecom took 15 years, and the 15 E&P technologies profiled to an average of over 20 years to get to the commercial stage and almost 30 years to get to 50% adoption.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Tech Management Team Composition and Compensation
Great salary, equity ownership and management team composition evolution information for private technology as they grow and conduct various financing rounds http://bit.ly/5ysl9.
4 idea generation processes to consider
Great little presentation on 4 processes for idea generation
http://rymatech.fileburst.com/~marketing/Documents/feb18.ppt
http://rymatech.fileburst.com/~marketing/Documents/feb18.ppt
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