Weekly Download 14.13
Posted: July 7, 2014 Filed under: Change, Technology, Weekly Download | Tags: Flip Video, Pro Leave a comment
Here’s a recap of news and notes from around the Web that caught my attention over the past week or so.
How change happens: by empowering the lunatics. If that catches your attention, read more about it in To Create Real Change, Leadership Is More Important Than Authority. That reminds me of this very good 2001 book, Tempered Radicals: How People Use Difference to Inspire Change at Work.
Why GoPro’s Success Isn’t Really About the Cameras. There is a big difference in selling an experience versus a piece of technology. The Flip Video was the first to capture the idea of easy to use and inexpensive digital video GoPro is selling the experience of your adventure. Cisco paid $590 million in stock for Flip in April of 2011, only to shutter it 23 months later. Meanwhile, GoPro continues to thrive.
Here’s a headline that describes a seismic shift in how consumers are using mobile devices: comScore Says that Over Half of Digital Media Time Spent is On Mobile Apps. One standout piece of information is that 60% of digital time is being spend on mobile devices, up from 50% just a year ago. Numbers are even more dramatic for access to digital radio, maps, photos, messaging, and social media. While this is probably not surprising for those closely in touch with Gen X and Gen Y folks, older generations might find it shocking.
Weekly Download 14.11
Posted: June 20, 2014 Filed under: Business, Technology, Weekly Download | Tags: Aristotle, Edward Tufte, email, Pavlov's, PowerPoint Leave a comment
Here’s a recap of news and notes from around the Web that caught my attention over the past week or so.
Did PowerPoint Ruin GM? This interesting WSJ article describes the potential that facts relating to the ignition switch fault were edited out of long PowerPoint presentations at GM. It reminds me of a much older Edward Tufte essay that discusses the pitfalls of what is now commonly referred to as “death by PowerPoint.” Tufte also analyzes a Boeing presentation to NASA, and takes the company to task for oversimplifying and obscuring crucial information. How often do we let monotonous slides and the related editing process dictate the flow of conversation? Wouldn’t it be better to just write a report and not present anything? I have moved away from PowerPoint-driven meetings as much as possible, sometimes even handwriting the key points I want to discuss. How do you make sure the right dialogue is occurring in your meetings?
I remember writing a blog entry (a rant, really) about six or seven years ago on why email needs to go away. We allow valuable hours to be driven (like Pavlov’s dog) by what arrives in our inbox. With the number of communication and information points today, it becomes unruly to manage the sifting and sorting. A Company Without Email? Not So Fast discusses a couple of solutions that are picking up traction.
You never know where simple, profound inspiration may be found. Like in a fortune cookie. Great Things are Made from Little Things cites one of my favorite quotes:
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”—Aristotle
Weekly Download 14.10
Posted: June 11, 2014 Filed under: Business, Technology, Weekly Download | Tags: Accenture, enterprise IT, Quartz, Tab Dump, user-centric IT, Very Short List Leave a comment
Here’s a recap of news and notes from around the Web that caught my attention over the past week or so.
The Next Generation Enterprise Platform explores the need “for a technical approach for the next generation enterprise that’s beyond what is currently available, or maybe more accurately, supports the need to use available technology in a somewhat different way.”
User-Centric IT: Transforming IT to Put People First looks at a new paradigm for enterprise IT. The five core principles resonate with me:
- User-Centric IT serves the business by empowering people.
- User-Centric IT adapts to the way people work, not the other way around..
- People, information and knowledge must connect in real time.
- Mobility is a work-style preference, not a device..
- Security should be inherent and transparent to the user experience.
A graphic overview of Accenture’s six key IT Trends 2014. You can click on each box for a deeper dive. Then, take a second look at the trends in a circle graph that shows the evolution from technology to the building blocks for new business models.
New ways of consuming information are making news:
- Have you heard of Quartz? Think Tumblr meets Wired magazine. This is old media (Atlantic Media) innovating to stay relevant.
- Very Short List describes themselves as a “delightful e-mail that shares cultural gems from a different curator every day.”
- Tab Dump is a curated list of news available via RSS, Twitter or email.
