Archive for the ‘Work and Technology’ Category

Roger Federer wins Basel Open for 5th time

Monday, November 7th, 2011

With a tear in his eye (minute 5:15 in video)! Forever the hometown boy. I admire the segment of the program where the finalists distribute medals to the ball boys and girls.

John Opel, 5th IBM Chairman, 1925 – 2011. Not all Mad Men

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

From an IBM corporate post: “For Opel, the way the company treated people was its most important attribute. “Mutual respect and openness and honesty among people is what makes a company work well over time,” he said.”

Company G, 442 Regimental Combat Team “Go For Broke”

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Medals awarded on November 2, 2011 at dinner in Washington, DC.

My friend’s father was wounded in Italy fighting with the 442nd. The regiment consisted of Japanese-Americans, a majority of whose families were incarcerated at the start of WWII because of their Japanese ancestry and appearance. The boys wanted to show their patriotism and loyalty, fought hard to get a chance to fight and suffered the highest casualty rate of any regiment in the Army in Europe (13,000 served and awarded 9,000 Purple Hearts). There is only a handful remaining and the memories of their contributions are well faded.

Theirs is the most highly decorated unit in Army history. Their commitment to purpose and contributions to the freedom of our country are inspiring to recall at this moment.

“We also thank the government, which allowed us to serve in the U.S. Army to defend our country and to prove our loyalty to America,” Sakato said.

I wish that more CEOs communicated this way, both externally & internally

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Especially when a senior executive is sentenced to a prison term or a former Board member passes away or when a icon of the industry passes away.

Ramen noodles or a Grande Latte Venti?

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Our younger son was born tall and hasn’t stop since. He plays on the junior varsity basketball team with a strict regimen of four practice shots per month, maybe less. His preferred sport is lacrosse where he, in true form, is catching a big wave at an opportune moment. Just ask Nike and ESPN. Even though lax is a spring season sport, one can play organized lacrosse year-round: leagues include the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, complete with helmet, pads and crosse. BTW, lacrosse received its name when the visiting team, aka the French Priests, saw the Canadian Indians playing their village to village game and declared that their sticks looked like the ceremonial cross that the bishops carried. OK, so maybe FCA teams are not so ironic after all. And there is Fall Ball and Frosty Ball (winter,’natch) and post winter but before spring ball – not really, but it is kind of an endless season. Which brings me to the concept of traveling teams, those things I scoffed at and derided when other parents told me of their lost weekends driving around the state, region and even to interstate venues. I think some place north of someplace that I have never been to.

Right you are, comeuppance time. Or should I describe it as ‘I know that I cannot afford either a new bbq grill or a new lawn-mower, but how could I not seize the chance(s) to invest $700 for a weekend away in the heat, rain and chill to watch other miserable parents watch their children pretend to be on ESPN.’ Away tournaments are kind of attractive, at least one is not asked to cook-out or to cut the grass. But, on Mondays, I look forward to getting in the car on Friday for a journey to the away tournaments entitled Select or Showcase, cause this is where the scholarships to D-1, D-2 and D-3 schools are awarded. We’re not talking college, we’re talking divisions of college. I cannot tell if being 50th of 100 in D-1 schools is better or equal or worse than being in the top 10 of a D-3 school?! I do know this: athletic scholarships are the dope of college applications = get those 15 year olds thinking about life at 22 as soon as possible, complete with a $600 HD video package of how he performed at the Select Camp so that the other coaches can view junior’s talents on-line asap. I’d offer a sarcastic comment including Harvard or Michigan or other elite institutions, but they are all rushing into lax as fast as possible. Untapped revenue streams have to be tapped and women’s tennis is not the spring draw desired.

I never dreamed that a sport that I never dreamed of when I was young would occupy so much of my attention and disposable income. How about this: I’m a certified high school lacrosse ref. I mean, how else could I learn about this simple and complex game?! Run, shoot, score…with face-offs, creases, warding and slashing. Happily, it all happens in a hurry with lots of scoring. In short, not golf. I plan to use lax as my vantage point for the college application process. Once again indicating that even though most of us will never play a professional sport, there is no harm in making a business out it anyway.

Latest phone app from Blue Pane Studio

Monday, September 26th, 2011

This launch page lay-out with buttons that take users directly to desired content has become ever more popular. The metaphor seems to be an “app comprised of apps.” This app developed for the office of minority recruiting at the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.

This project was especially satisfying because of the nature of the client’s work, namely broadening the appeal of science, and the validation of Blue Pane Studio’s client focus: scientists. It is a thrill to provide – design and develop – the newest software for this important community within our economy. Instead of forcing scientists to grind through grant proposals and the procurement processes incumbent with large, public entities, we work with their existing budgets, confident that if we deliver on schedule with compelling projects that we’ll earn respect, trust and sponsorship. So far, this formula works. The possible reduced profit margins are exceeded by the satisfaction of helping to introduce new productivity tools to organizations who know what to do with them.

What do you do, actually?!

Friday, September 16th, 2011

I’m often, too often, asked ‘where’s the money or business value in Social Media or Web 2.0 or the games that the younger people play?’ Next week, I’m contracted to organize a four day Innovation workshop for a successful Swedish Bank. The draw for their visit is the popular and interesting Finovate Conference (no presentations, only demonstrations). I suppose that a joke could be that someone needs to innovate a correct way to hold an ‘innovation conference.’ In the notes below, I try to prepare my clients for our discussions so that we will perceive our meetings as but an important step in the on-going dialogue-relationship-friendships that must be established if we are actually to influence changes in their enterprise. I feel that this is marginally self-serving and for that, I apologize. On the other hand, I could take you through a couple of dozen slides….

16 Sept 2011 Good morning,

It’s a beautiful Friday in New York City, the final weekend of summer so the City is in a happy mood.

I’m the IBM executive responsible for the relationship with Tuck Business School. Tuck is part of Dartmouth College, located in Hanover, New Hampshire and known for a hands-on approach to its business classes.

The Center for Digital Strategies convenes an executive roundtable three times per year with IBM as a participant. Attached is the Tuck Enabling Innovation report. If you scan this doc, I believe that you’ll find a couple of thoughts that may apply to our own discussion next week. Of course, valuable innovation is not about ideas, but about execution.

On Sep 15, 2011, at 1:39 PM, Christopher Perrien wrote:

Hello all,

I’m enroute to New York this afternoon as I have briefing with a South Asian bank tomorrow. I look very forward to meeting each of you and promise that I will do my part to help make our time together both productive and memorable.

Like each of you, I’ve participated in numerous briefings of all flavors over my career; most wear us out with the parade of presentations that seemingly have no interconnection and do not in purposeful ways link to our jobs and companies and decisions. “Death by Powerpoint” is the cynical phrase. The second challenge to off-site meetings is that we have to return to on-site where “the Tyranny of the Urgent” trumps our fresh thinking and sincere desire for incremental change.

I realize that you know what needs to be done to keep the bank healthy in an unsettled economic climate; as well, you have many ideas for how to better connect the bank to its clients and to its employees. Our discussions and the uncommon venues of next week may offer new ways for understanding each other and may renew our excitement for taking on the challenges of institutional change.

BTW, Fortune is on our side as the extended weather forecast in New York is favorable, cool in the evenings (by American standards) and warm by day (by anybody’s standards). Fashion Week will end tomorrow so the City should still be looking good and in good spirits for your arrival. Tony and I tried to hold one of our sessions at the NYC Fashion Institute of Technology but they were fully booked for next week. I feel that our industry should look broadly and especially at changes in retail distribution for clever ideas that may apply to banking. Lots to think about next week!

On Sep 14, 2011, at 7:50 AM, Christopher Perrien wrote:

Good morning from North Carolina,

Since I wanted to encourage you to think about the potential of video, I planned to make a short, related video then realized that sending a big file to Sweden may not be worth it. So, here is a photo of me in my home office as I write this note to you. I’m a jazz fan (a poster of Louis Armstrong is on the left side of the photo over my right shoulder) as New Orleans is my hometown. I find that business and jazz composition have much in common. There is a baseline or beat and thematic objective, but pretty much the musicians are on their own to challenge and to complement one another within this framework. All innovation requires boundaries.

For the past 18 months, I’ve encouraged my clients to watch this video by Simon Sinek which describes How Great Leaders Inspire Action. His references are Apple Computer, the Wright Brothers and Dr. Martin Luther King. It is brilliantly simple without being simplistic. I marvel at his provocative question of Why is Apple Computer consistently successful with no advantage in funding, access to talent, hardware & software components? Mr. Sinek’s presentation was first offered at a TED Conference. BTW, he is a biologist by training.

Speaking of jazz: there is plenty in New York. If you’d like to spend an evening in club or two, this can be arranged with pleasure. Here is a link to a performance on a late night television show from New York where two forms of American music, jazz and country-gospel, come together in vibrant harmony. Only view this if you want to get your feet moving.

On Sep 13, 2011, at 11:55 AM, Christopher Perrien wrote:

Me again,

I cannot believe that Djokovic exhausted Rafa in the US Open final! What a spectacular and confident performance! What he improved over the past year were small elements of his game which he totally controlled: his fitness and his serve, especially his ball toss so that opponents were not able to guess the direction of his serve. Incremental change can make big differences in performance and achievement is a lesson that I learned from this.

PARTICIPATION is the secret of social media. Just that simple. Not a tool such as Facebook or Twitter or a specific app on a smartphone. We’ve all grown-up, were educated, were / are measure in a world of Knowledge is Power, but it is hard to know something – at least for a long time – that is not easily known by others thanks to the speed of the Internet. Sharing Knowledge or helping others To Know is the opportunity. Younger generations and, certainly, our children understand this concept without evening knowing that they know this.

I suggest that we spend some of our time next week discussing what would changes in participation look like and feel like across the bank.

Or we could hire a crowd of “financial doctors” to tell us how to get smaller as did a large US bank. I don’t think I’d be interested in attending that party. Here is the related article.

cp

On Sep 11, 2011, at 7:51 PM, Christopher Perrien wrote:

Hello all,

I don’t know if you are tennis fans as I am and I am inspired by the victories of Novack Djokovic and Samantha Stosur even tho Roger Federer, my hero, was defeated. I’m less fond of Serena Williams, btw.

Novack showed supreme courage and a bit of reckless spirit as he faced two match points on Roger’s serve. His go-for-it shot so stunned Federer that he could not recover over the next four games which Djokovic won to take the match. Stosur has won only three titles in her career, including the longest match played between women at the US Open- and that was this year! Now she is the first Aussie champion in nearly 40 years.

Despite being on the cliff of defeat, Novack decided to lose with his strongest shot and ended up the victor; despite the image of never playing to her potential in the important matches, Samantha envisioned a different result and defeated Serena handily.

Certianly, life is not sports and banking is not about miracle moments. Yet both have opportunities where courage after hard work is rewarded. I hope that after our discussions next week that we will be on a path to realize new opportunities for the bank or opportunities for a renewed bank.

Here is a link, http://www.economisttalk.com/bmw, to a recent BMW series of dinners on Innovation and Technology. A related quote that appeals to me:

“Change starts with the individual. Imagine people in positions of leadership seeing themselves as more than heads of a company, but seeing themselves as leaders of societies.”. Diana Glassman, Founder and Owner, Integration Strategy. I feel that your banking culture understands her statement more than most might understand it.

Tomorrow, I’ll send a note revealing the secret of social media.

Blue Pane Studio’s latest app for Dartmouth College

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

Home screen design with multiple icons becoming the lay-out of preference for clients so that user can go immediately to desired info source. App complements recently renovated Grad.Studies web site.

Who will defend us from the ‘show me the money’ barbarians?!

Saturday, August 27th, 2011

Sculley, Spindler & Amelio! Oh My! Then Steve returned.

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

In the mid-1980s while working at Bath Iron Works, one of the documentation specialists for the Electrical Engineering Department raved about this PC that so improved the quality and speed of his work. “Called an Apple,” he exclaimed, “it’s incredible, man. It’s like I do my work the way that I want to without wasting time on how the machine works. It’s unbelievable! Everybody in the Department should have one.”

Then I moved to North Carolina and hooked-on to a start-up where everyone was issued one of these Macs with the 9″ screens. We could open two documents at once – yeah, baby! – network with other Macs and even share a $10,000.00 laser printer around the cubicle farm.

Paid $2,200.00 in 1990 for a Mac with 2 megabytes of RAM and a dot matrix printer.

But somehow these Apple products had a feminine overtone; real men used DOS (before Windows 95 introduced phrases such as Blue Screen and Security Patch into the office vernacular). No doubt that Apple had plenty of chances to rule the roost if only they woulda licensed the operating system to other PC manufacturers. Finally, Windows did catch-up by virtue of its broad distribution relegating the Mac to beatniks and hippies and designers and those who favored taste eg ease of use over price. Apple hovered at loyal 6% market share for a long time.

Jobs was replaced by the man from Pepsi, John Sculley, who was replaced by the German Diesel, Michael Spindler, who tried to sell Apple to IBM or Sun or Philips, and then was replaced by the NCR execs Gil Amelio and Ellen Hancock. Folks, those were dark days of fractured market positioning and the dullest of product ideas. Mac batteries were reported to burst into flames on occasion. My related personal misfortune was to be an Apple developer during the Spindler-Amelio period; visits to Cupertino felt like a tour of a movie set were a once renown film was made. “Watch out for tumbleweed in the lobby” sort of ambience.

No one dreamed that Jobs would return; that Pixar would rescue Disney; that Apple would invigorate both our telecommunications and retail shopping industries. I spoke with a senior banking executive last week who purchased recently his first Mac product. He said, “when you get it, it’s like.. sort of feels like…” he hesitated. Two of us finished his remark by saying, ‘it’s like receiving a present so well packaged is the product and so welcoming to open. We all feel that way.” He agreed. My colleague rejoined, “I keep my Apple packaging.” With a conspiratorial smile, the exec agreed that he kept his also.

I paid $750 for a Newton in 1993! Hand-writing recognition estt not soet grtate, tho.

I could dance all night on the wonder of this company and the genius of the man who steered it to its brilliance. Of course, I’m saddened by his ill health and scared that we’ll retreat under the onslaught of the cost-accountants and marketeers who treat us as though, well, we have no taste.

For now, and amidst this uncomfortable economic time, we must admit that we have an example of design genius, marketplace understanding, technology-driven productivity and a vivid example that beauty and function are indeed compelling roommates.