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Archive for the ‘Agility’ Category

Markets are conversations… so what? Part II

Markets are conversations… so what? Part II

Following my last post a few folk asked me to expand on how to enable two-way comms.

To cut a long story short, if you’re a big company with loads of people wanting to talk, the only way to get scale is to empower your staff to talk to customers. Companies who’ve been around for a long time often can’t see a way to make this happen – or it’s already happening in pockets under the radar and they don’t know how to control it. The important point to remember is the same mentality and methods that’ll lead to success on the outside are those you need to apply internally first. The rest will follow.

Begin by asking yourself whether your staff are able to connect with one-another really easily. Can they find and converse with colleagues in different countries, offices, departments, at all levels? Or is communication and messaging top-down and one-way? Top-down one-way communications are distinctly unreliable. One weak link in the chain and the message gets lost; and no feedback means no improvement.

Multi-directional networked communications, on the other hand – enabled via enterprise social networking platforms, forums, wikis or other collaboration tools – equip you with armies of influencers to spread the word on your behalf.

If you fail to empower your internal advocates, you’re making life very hard and expensive for yourself.

What’s more, there are so many brains in big organisations that the knowledge, ideas and answers are always in there somewhere. The challenge is joining them up – making connections and finding ways to bring more transparency – so inspiration, participation and new behaviours spread all the way through, with newfound velocity.

As well as repairing weak, unproductive cultures and removing barriers to forward motion, the key reason it’s vital to harness collective intelligence nowadays is the quickening pace of change in the outside world. Big bureaucratic structures make sense when no radical change is taking place, but it stands to reason that a fast-changing environment calls for greater agility. Likewise, hierarchy becomes inefficient when we need more info, more interaction, quicker decision-making and rapid action.

So help your teams talk to one-another in all directions. That’s it. Those who understand the ‘markets are conversations’ mantra and how to leverage networked communications will be in there somewhere and they’ll spread their understanding like wildfire.

Universal, embedded understanding renders (expensive) control measures (and blind panic) completely unnecessary.


Introducing Palindromic Queries

Introducing Palindromic Queries

Your agile self

Your agile self

The word ‘agility’ is being bandied about a lot lately. Agile development processes are the norm in tech companies now – favoured over the old school linear (waterfall) method, for obvious reasons, like more rapid development and alignment with customer need.

It stands to reason we can no longer risk the time and money wrapped up in locking ourselves in a room, devising and developing, then unleashing on the world in the hope they like what we’re group-thunk. Instead we iterate, evolve, collaborate, release little and often and pursue a path of perpetual beta.

The thing is, agility doesn’t just apply to product development and business process. Agility applies to life as an individual too.

Consider agility in terms of education… locking yourself away in scheduled lessons for fifteen years, only to be unleashed on the world with a bunch of largely irrelevant skills and skewed expectations; versus learning little and often, applying it, veering in a direction that’s a better fit, tweaking, collaborating and remaining in a mindstate of perpetual beta / lifelong learning.

The insecurity experienced by those who’ve debted up to the nines on the pathway to release in the real world, without means of first validating demand by listening and iterating to suit, is causing a nationwide upsurge in lost souls.

Get something – product / self – out there now. Don’t wait for perfection or completion – there’s no such thing. There’s only assumption. And we all know what that’s the mother of.


Brookside, postboxes & SaaS development

Brookside, postboxes & SaaS development

Loads of illuminating analogies have emerged in conversations with Andrew Missingham, but today there’s one in particular that popped up…

You may remember when the soap Brookside launched on Channel 4. The storylines were based around folk living in a close of houses. They had some trouble at the outset however, in that script writers realised they hadn’t created enough ‘stock devices’ – places where people could meet that would fuel the dramatic unfolding of events. Their answer was to put a postbox on the street, so residents would accidentally meet.

Given that the ability to innovate relies on diverse skillsets and knowledge banks coming together, this analogy is more relevant than ever. New knowledge uncovered by researchers, for example, needs to be matched with entrepreneurs who can interpret and understand the opportunities, then commercialise… in turn with the help of skilled troops, whether designers, developers, craftsmen etc.

Barriers to entering this innovation ecosystem are lower than ever – and the very reason for the existence of Scramblr is to lower them even further.

The question I’m asking myself today, is ‘What are our postboxes?’


20 questions for agency biz dev

20 questions for agency biz dev

Client development is more important than ever in a business culture that has shifted markedly from hunting mode to farming mode (Seth Godin articulates this shift eloquently in his blog here).

I was recently asked to write a biz dev article and thought I’d post up an extract – my list of 20 questions agencies should ask themselves, given that they’re five times more likely to grow existing business than win new (and it’s the only real chance of short term revenue).

1. Do you celebrate those who grow existing clients as wildly as new new wins?

2. Is your approach to new business as formalised and structured as your approach to new new business?

3. Does your biz dev team share responsibility for account development with senior management?

4. Have you identified which clients will most enhance your reputation?

5. Do you avoid chasing clients who already have strong agency relationships?

6. Do you have a great rapport with all the clients on your top hitlist?

7. Do you know what you want? (e.g. to take clients form offline to online; or to work with sophisticated clients only)

8. Do you value winning extra assignments as much as winning new clients?

9. Do you ask your clients about their ambitions, life plans are and what keeps them awake at night?

10. Do your clients see you as a strategic partner and adviser rather than a project-by-project delivery partner?

11. Do you position your company in the wider context, through the lens of building brands as opposed to completing assignments?

12. Are you actively convincing your clients’ boards that they aren’t pursuing a digital fantasy?

13. Are you measuring the quality of your relationships?

14. Are you chasing more work in the honeymoon period rather than awaiting completion?

15. Do you and your clients really understand what one-another does and doesn’t do, beyond current/past projects alone?

16. Do you know exactly what your piece of success looks like?

17. Are you fully leveraging the ease of freelancing and outsourcing?

18. Have you invited procurement to your office to learn more about what you do?

19. Have you made your organisational objectives clear to your clients?

20. Are they helping you write your business plan?


More complexity theory & humanity 2.0

More complexity theory & humanity 2.0

Simplicity in apps and life

Simplicity in apps and life

Some simple genius ideas and tips on simple genius app-building from 37 Signals in their book Getting Real. Check it out here. Most lessons apply not just to development but life / work productivity in general too.

A couple of my favourite snippets:

‘The more massive an object, the more energy is required to change its direction.’

‘Simple rules… lead to complex behavior. Complex rules, as with the tax law in most countries, lead to stupid behavior.’


  
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