Archive for January 2010

Platform Agnostics

Jan
14
2010

4
Comments

I was having lunch with my buddy and “Social Media guru” Kyle Lacy the other day at LaPiedad here in Broad Ripple. Everytime I have lunch with Kyle something interesting comes out of it.

Somehow we started talking about CRMs (Customer Relationship Management) and how we don’t find them very useful. We both felt a little guilty about it. Turns out we are both using the same methodology (roughly)- paper and email to manage leads and tasks.

Personally I start every week by writing all active projects on a notepad and then creating a list of “to-dos” and active leads. That pad of paper is my CRM. I look at every project everyday, I can’t avoid it like a CRM that requires me to log in, etc. I’m sure there’s great ones out there but everyone I’ve tried, and I’ve tried a few, end up not being used. Paper just works.

We both felt that technology, in this instance, actually added an unnecessary layer to our process. Kyle said something like “it’s weird cause I think of myself of a techie” to which I responded “you’re not a techie, you’re a platform agnostic, you use whatever works.”

Normally the word “agnostic” is used in the religious arena- “I don’t know if there is or isn’t a God so I’m not going to take a stand, etc.” The non-religious definition is “a person unwilling to commit to an opinion about something”. I’m using it more broadly here as “someone who has little to no platform or channel loyalty.” A little bit of a re-definition I admit but I’m not sure what other word would capture that idea.

definition time- what I mean by “channel” and “platform”
channel:
medium used to reach an audience- radio, tv, internet, text, etc.
platform: operating system and corrresponding hardware that runs software often connecting via a channel. i.e. Laptops, iPhones, GPS, Satellite Radios, etc. Or, for our purposes: paper (operating system), pencil (hardware) and language (software).

What I’m seeing is a generation that doesn’t care what platform or channel they use as long as it works. And by “works” I mean it does the job effectively and they enjoy the experience. If a piece of paper works better than a computer- great! If I can hear the songs I want via Pandora then I don’t care about the new station in town. If my cell phone gets good reception at home then who cares about a land line? MySpace full of losers? Hello Facebook! All these iPhone fanatics (myself included) are just one great phone (maybe the G-Phone?) away from cancelling their AT&T contracts. We have no loyalty to AT&T, if anything our experience with their service has decreased any existing brand loyalty.

Since there is very little channel or platform loyalty it creates real challenges for brands that relied heavily, increasingly past tense, on their channels and platforms as a differentiators- think Comcast grappling with the upcoming move to Internet TV, Microsoft with the move to web software eroding their desktop market share, AT&T totally fumbling the transition from land lines to cellular towers (or the lack therefore).  As consumers rapidly jump around many companies are panicking. They aren’t scaled to do that. They aren’t agile.

So how does a company deal with all these Platform Agnostics out there messing everything up? Focus on the user experience- create a superior user experience, the “killer app” of user experiences.

Look at the business card or the post-it note.
No digital technology has replaced these and I’m not seeing a near future where that happens. Same with email- an “antique” digital technology. There were high hopes for Google Wave to be “email 2.0″ and maybe that will happen but right now it looks more like “antique” email will continue to be king and only slowly integrate Wave-like elements over time. Business cards, post it notes, note pads, email- they are all “killer apps” and no-one has come close to dethroning them despite numerous attempts.

Technology isn’t going to slow down but for every new shiny object that reaches critical mass usage there will be dozens if not hundreds of others lying along the road. Users are selfish. They only care about themselves. Keep this front and center in all your efforts and you will convince some of these Platform Agnostics into believing your creed.


The Power Of Facebook

Jan
11
2010

10
Comments


People talk a lot about the power of social media. Mostly it’s just talk, no real examples. Here’s one.

The Small Box offices are above Qdoba here in lovely Broad Ripple, Indianapolis. If you step out on our “deck” (aka the roof access we have at Small Box) you have a 25% of chance of being blasted by smoke from their grills. Ah….nothing like chicken grease in the morning!

Up to recently you were also likely to hear their questionable music mix softly blasting through the floorboards of our main room where I happen to sit with 3-4 other team members every weekday.

Everyday…the same songs by Tom Petty…3 Doors Down…Coldplay…The Fray….ugh. It was the bane of our existence. We mockingly sang along in falsettos and I even got a mix CD of Qdoba music for Christmas from Karl Hosttetler (very funny Karl).

(Crazy thing is we continued to routinely order from Qdoba. Hey, it’s good stuff! One visit would be to grab a burrito, another to complain about the noise. Maybe a good thing we can see them make our food!)

Keep in mind that Small Box happens to be run by a bunch of music nerds. People that pride themselves on thinking they know a thing or two about music and will probably tell you as much over drinks if you are ever so “lucky”. So this wasn’t just a pet peeve but a serious issue (at least in our snobby minds).

So, we tried to get them to turn down, repeatedly. We went down and talked to them, had the landlord call the owner, called them almost daily “I really do love Tom Petty but I just can’t hear American Girl another time…please turn it down!”. They said it was corporate policy, no dice, had to be this loud.

We even thought about moving and we really love the space. We love being in the middle of Broad Ripple. But the music was driving us crazy. People were working from home to avoid it. Something had to break.

Then it happened.

Jerry Hellmann, one of the guys that was enduring the daily onslaught of Celine Dion, posted a comment on Qdoba’s Central Indiana Facebook Page. Here’s what he posted:

“Qdoba! I have the absolute BEST Christmas gift you could give to your customers!! Please, PLEASE turn down or change that terrible VH1 classic, 10 song muzak playlist that is rumbling my floor! I work above your Broad Ripple office and I’m considering seeing a psychiatrist because of this. A man can only take so much of hootie’s “i only want to be with you” and the painfully horrible “Rockabye”…..last but not least……the office favorite…..Annie Lennox’s “no more i love you’s”. Please Qdoba, have mercy on us all. Turn down that horrible sound….our ears won’t stop bleeding. NO JOKE – Train’s “Drops of Jupiter” just started playing. GOD HELP US!!!!!!!!!!!
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/pages/QDOBA-Central-Indiana/189858001092?v=wall&ref=mf

The next day we had a representative from the Qdoba corporate office at our door. She was there to drop off a gift certificate for Jerry who was out at the time. PJ and I had her sit down and listen to the music wafting through the floors. We begged her, please! fix it!

…and they did. We can no longer here Qdoba’s finely tuned, demographically targeted music mix. We can actually sit quietly and think. They have put in new speakers that no longer broadcast into our room. We have been saved!

Thank you Jerry!
Thank you Facebook!
and yes, thank you Qdoba!


Just Say No

Jan
11
2010

1
Comment

Looking back on 2009 I’m coming to see that it has been defined as much by the opportunities that we didn’t pursue as the ones we did. Opportunities in years past we would have gone after with gusto. Maybe some of them would have led to bigger better things but my gut says that we probably dodged a number of bullets in 2009.

Every minute of our days is being tugged- “check this out”, “I have an idea”, “have you heard about this…” There is often a sense of panic, at least I can feel it, that I’m missing out on something “big”.

and maybe I am but I’ve made a conscious decision to be ok with that. Sure, I may miss out here and there but looking back I only have a handful of regrets from the past year- “gee, I wish I’d done that” kind of moments.

So I’m slowly learning to “just say no” to opportunities that aren’t the right fit. It goes against my entrepenureal spirit but maybe that’s the trick- finding the balance between success and happiness by saying no as much as yes.