Tag Archives: Business plan

Free Lunch

I was going to write our Foodie Friday Fun piece about Jacques Pepin and his insistence in cracking eggs on a flat surface until I realized that I had written it already almost three years ago.  I guess that sort of proves his point – small details are what makes good cooking.  It makes good businesspeople and managers too.  Apparently, it makes for less redundant blogs as well.

Lunch

Lunch (Photo credit: munir)

Instead, let’s write about free lunches.  We’ve all heard about them and that it’s supposedly impossible to get something for nothing.  It comes from the old tradition of bars serving free food if you bought drinks.  I was reminded of this as I experienced yet another “freemium” model.  The problem is that many companies have turned freemium into bait and switch.  They’ve also made the free product pretty useless without the premium purchase.  There’s a really nice piece on three gaming companies and how they approached this balance on The Mary Sue (hat tip to my girl geek youngest daughter for pointing it out!).

In my case, I used an online golf trip service.  It’s a great idea – in fact, it was a concept my buddies and I had talked about doing ourselves to help other groups plan golf trips and score golf tournaments.  The problem is this:  the basics – organizing emails, setting up housing, and communicating with the group are free.  Another free element is setting up scorecards.  Once you actually have scores, you can input them but tournament results are part of the paid system.  So is the trip accounting.  Now if you’ve ever traveled with other folks you know that keeping track of the money and dividing it all out is a big pain.  So is scoring a golf tournament when handicaps, match play, and other side bets factor in.  The price to upgrade is per player, per round, so as the trip gets bigger or longer, the cost goes up until, as in our case, it became prohibitively expensive.  In other words, I scored the tournament manually, the accountant is figuring out the bills manually, and we won’t be back to the service since it offers us nothing we really need.

I’ve had the freemium business model discussion with many clients over the last few years.  I think it’s a good idea but I also think it the free part needs to be valuable on its own and the paid part needs to be an add-on, not an integral part of why folks would use the product in the first place.  As always, the focus needs to be on the customer and providing value, not on luring them in with a semi-broken product that only a payment fixes.  Look at Pandora or Skype – great freemium businesses. So is Valve, the game company.

There may not be any free lunch but we certainly can provide some great free snacks that whet folk’s appetites without making them angry.  You with me?

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Planning For Perfect

Anyone who has ever dealt with large numbers knows that near perfection still gives a few exceptions to a standard. If you deal with 100,000 customers in a year and 99.999% of them are happy, there’s still one guy who is dissatisfied. The problem is this: we don’t think about that one guy often enough – we plan for perfect. In an extreme case, some folks won’t even acknowledge that imperfect is possible. That sort of thinking precipitates crises like the oil rig problem in the Gulf.  Workers didn’t raise safety issues out of fear.  The Italian cruise ship didn’t take the safety drills seriously.
What got me thinking about this is the discussion over the Keystone Pipeline as well as some of the reporting on the Japanese nuclear problem.  Putting aside politics (maybe an impossible request, but let’s try), it seems to me that the people involved had been (or are) planning for perfect.  Emergency plans were paid lip-service but not much more and the true impact of a problem is exacerbated by the lack of preparation.

We don’t ask what can go wrong often enough, and when we do we sometimes fall into the “but that will never happen” trap.  If something can go wrong, we should assume it will.  Servers fail.  So does power, including back-up units.  Things get lost in the mail, inclusive of private shippers with full package tracking.  We arrive on business trips without luggage.  No one plans to screw things up and yet things very often end up that way.People don’t always behave honorably even though we might always try to do so ourselves.

If we always plan for perfect, we’re not optimists.  We’re idiots.

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Recipes and Business

Many of you will be cooking something for Sunday’s big game and so this Foodie Friday we’ll think a little bit about what recipes to follow.  Actually, it’s more about how one follows any recipe, and what that has in common with business.

An example recipe, printed from the Wikibooks ...

Image via Wikipedia

As I think you might know, my feeling about cooking is that it’s more like jazz while baking is more Baroque music– far more structured and precise.  Given that, the way I see recipes might differ from how you see them and how that perspective carries into business.  Let’s see.

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