Tag Archives: Business and Economy

Put This Thought In Your Pipe

You’re going to be hearing a lot about the proposed merger of Comcast and Time Warner Cable if you haven’t already.

pipeline

(Photo credit: LizMarie_AK)

That’s not really what today’s screed is about but it is what triggered the topic.  Many people are very outspoken against the merger; just as many seem not to care.  Whether you are for it or against it, the interesting thing is that the argument is over “the pipe.”  More and more, the pipe – the channel through which content is delivered – matters less and less.

Let’s take it out of digital terms.  Take Starbucks. Their “content” is coffee and coffee drinks.  Their pipe was initially their stores.  Then the content moved to other channels – supermarkets, airports, etc.  They also got many of their customers – 7 million of them at latest count – into a Rewards program using phones and other digital assets.  They continued to make the content experience appropriate to the channel – you get a nice china mug when you’re drinking in-store, you get free WiFi, etc.  What has that meant?

“Holiday 2013 was the first in which many traditional brick and mortar retailers experienced in-store foot traffic give way to online shopping in a major way,” said Howard Schultz, chairman, president and ceo of Starbucks Coffee Company. “As our solid traffic growth and record Q1 results demonstrate, Starbucks unique combination of physical and digital assets positions us as one of the very few consumer brands with a national and global footprint to benefit from the seismic shift underway.”

In other words, it’s the content.  If you’re really good at it, the content morphs as needed for the particular channel.  In general, however, most of us can access that content though multiple channels, and if we’re unhappy with one we generally have the option to go to another to get the content we seek.  Sure, that’s not universally true on a free basis but if you throw in the ability to rent – generally for less than the cost of one Starbucks drink – you’d be hard-pressed to find anything that’s inaccessible (and I’m not including all the illegal availability either).

Yes, it’s important that consumers are protected from monopoly control.  Yes it’s important that the Internet remain open and equally accessible to all.  Those discussions are worth having but if the concern is that one pipe will be less attractive, believe me there are other ways to get to what it is we’re really after – the content.  The demand for that will drive the market to find a way around any pipe that gets blocked.

Thoughts?

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Filed under Thinking Aloud, What's Going On

How Many Nakamotos Are There In Your Business?

You may have heard of Bitcoin.

The bitcoin logo

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It’s a digital currency which, depending on your point of view, is either the greatest thing since the transistor or a giant Ponzi scheme. It was invented by someone named Satoshi Nakamoto. It’s a hugely volatile currency but is beginning to gain acceptance by merchants as a payment method for goods and services. It’s not small either: there were transactions of nearly $500 million a day at its peak. With me so far?

The weird thing about Bitcoin is that no one knew who this Nakamoto guy was. Rumors ranged from he was a young whiz kid programmer living in Japan to an “entity” that is a composite of a number of people who worked on the project.  Nakamoto owns about $400 million in Bitcoin yet won’t talk on the telephone so people who work with him have never heard his voice.  In fact, many people wondered if Nakamoto was his name at all since lots of folks in the Bitcoin community use pseudonyms.  He (and Bitcoin) have been the subject of much discussion and analysis on tech blog and programs yet other than swapping rumors no one seemed to be checking this guy out.

Along comes  Leah McGrath Goodman of Newsweek who does some good old-fashioned reporting.  She found the 64 year old Nakamoto living in California very quietly.  She wrote this piece about the process and the man she found at the end of the trail.  It’s a great read, great journalism and, more importantly, makes our business point today.

Many businesses have “Nakamotos” – important people or facts or policies about which little is known.  There is uncertainty about how they came to be or how they operate.  There are a lot of rumors but very little fact-checking.  That’s not smart business.  This reporter’s commitment to pursuing the facts as opposed to repeating rumors or unverified “facts” resulted in solving the mystery.  Frankly, it gives me a bit (pun intended) more faith in the Bitcoin system now that I understand who this fellow is.

We need to unearth the Nakamotos in business and not be deterred by the common wisdom.  The truth is generally hiding in plain sight but you have to be looking in order to see it.  Are you?

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Salt Of The Earth

It’s TunesDay and time to pause from our work day to celebrate a bit of music.  Since it’s a business blog, work will be our subject today and the Rolling Stones will be our instructors.  There was a lovely moment during the concert following the 9/11 disaster during which Mick and Keith came out to play a song from Beggar’s Banquet.  It spoke loudly to the audience of police and firefighters as well as to any of us who have ever gone to work:

The “salt of the earth” line comes from the Bible, of course, but it’s the “salt” imagery which prompted the thought today.  Salt has always been incredibly valuable throughout human history.  Once people could begin to preserve food, they could begin to explore and travel long distances without worrying about having enough to eat or to go hunting or foraging.  Certain cultures used it as currency and although Roman soldiers were not paid in salt (they were given money with which to buy salt), it’s the genesis of the expression “worth his salt.”  People fought wars over it and many cities were built on mining, producing, and trading salt.  Impressive for something so common and inexpensive now.  Which leads to my thought.

In a time when technology has made productivity incredibly high, I think many of us tend to devalue work and workers.  Specifically, some managers believe that the people who provide that hard work are interchangeable pieces, common and inexpensive like salt.  However, it’s those hard-working people that keep businesses going.  To carry the salt analogy a bit further, when a dish lacks salt, the flavor isn’t fully developed and the dish lacks brightness.  When we devalue the labor force, our businesses turn out the same way.

Mick and Keith put it very well:

Raise your glass to the hard-working people
Let’s drink to the uncounted heads
Let’s think of the wavering millions
Who need leading but get gamblers instead

Given the economic crisis and part of the reason it happened, that’s quite well put, especially 40 years before the crisis occurred!  Regardless if you’re the chef or the cook, the boss or the intern, I’m raising a glass to the hard work you do today.  Who’s with me?

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Filed under Music, Reality checks, Thinking Aloud