Links for October 31 2010

Links for October 31 2010
  • The Consumerization of IT By Zack Urlocker on GigaOm

    Quote: In a recent presentation, Lew Cirne, CEO of application performance management vendor New Relic (it’s an anagram), revealed the company now has 5,000 customers and just one sales rep. That’s astonishing. Cirne points out that there’s a new class of customers for whom “there is no reason whatsoever for application performance management to be sold by a direct sales force.” If you’re building a cloud-based application on top of a standard Ruby, .Net or Java stack, much of the complexity has been factored out already, enabling a much simpler self-service sales model.

  • When Is Process Improvement Strategically Important? by Brad Power on Harvard Business Review

    Quote: Process improvement programs that do not expressly target competitive advantage are doomed to fail. This may sound like common sense, but it happens far too frequently. Process improvement zealots often warn senior managers of the need to continually assess and improve processes everywhere in the organization. They project a religious and indiscriminate tone that can lead to improving the wrong activities and ignoring the ones that matter.

  • The “right” time for innovation by Jeffrey Phillips on Innovate on Purpose

    Quote: So it actually all comes down to this – my prospects and clients need to understand when the “right” time for innovation is. After all, what we usually hear from executives is that “this isn’t the right time” for innovation. Not that they don’t want innovation, or don’t need innovation, or that innovation is too risky or expensive. No, the usual response is that this simply isn’t the “right” time.

  • Ray Ozzie’s Message to All Industries by Andrew McAfee – Harvard Business Review

    Quote: Microsoft recently announced that Ray Ozzie, its Chief Software Architect and a sage of the high tech world, is leaving the company. On his way out the door, he wrote a public memo titled “Dawn of a New Day”. I believe the scenario he presents in the memo is important enough to place it alongside other famous, game-changing documents, such as Bill Gates’ “The Internet Tidal Wave” memo from 1995, which set the direction for Microsoft for the next 15 years.

  • Should You Keep Your Goals to Yourself? by Michael Hyatt

    Quote: I have always believed that you are more likely to accomplish big goals if you declare them publicly. My rationale has been that this creates the accountability you need to follow-through. But now I am not so sure.

  • Making IT Better For Customers by Mike Schaffner on Beyond Blinking Lights and Acronyms

    Quote: IT spends a lot of time trying to improve our system and the user interface, especially when they will be used by our external customers. Most of the time, we’re pretty good at delivering easy-to-use applications. However, I recently came across two examples of how our systems can impact customer perception even when the customer doesn’t use them, or when it is a minor utility application.

  • How Much is Your Brand Worth to a Fan? by Valeria Maltoni on Conversation Agent

    Quote: What if we asked how much is your brand worth to a fan, instead? Not so much in terms of what you can make people do. More about what people are inspired and attracted to be as a result of their association with a brand, use of a product or a service.