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March 31, 2008

April Titles

Filed under: New Releases — Kate @ 5:10 pm
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As we start the next month, here are a few of the titles coming out in April that are sure to be covered in various media outlets.

  • From the author of A Whole New Mind, comes the first ever manga business book. Dan Pink’s The Adventures of Johnny Bunko: The Last Career Guide You’ll Ever Need.
  • Procter and Gamble’s A.G. Lafley and Ram Charan worked together to publish The Game-Changer: How You Can Drive Revenue and Profit Growth with Innovation.
  • Nudge:Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness by two professors at the University of Chicago
  • Climate Change: What’s Your Business Strategy? (Memo to the CEO) by Andrew J. Hoffman and John G. Woody on the subject everyone is talking about: how business will change as the climate changes.
  • From the Cult of Mac author, Leander Kahney takes a look Inside Steve’s Brain.

Enjoy your April.

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March 28, 2008

Random Links For Your Friday Afternoon

Filed under: Friday Links — delicious @ 1:28 pm
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Here’s some things you may find interesting, like we did:

Maya Angelou celebrates turning 80 years old.
Financial firms letting go of thousands of workers – many face unemployment in the real estate and finance fields at all levels.
South African activist Ivan Toms passed away at the age of 55 in his home, this past Tuesday.
The new book: The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food – brings to light a truly all-American food item.
Something else to watch out for during airport security screenings .
Take a CREATIVITY break!
And… for all of you sci-fi geeks: Welcome to ‘Firefly’ Fridays! – courtesy of Hulu.com!!
Little House on the Prairie: The Musical (!?!?!?!?!?!) Yes, tickets go on sale June 27th (Cheers, Half-Pint!)

Happy Friday, everyone!

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March 27, 2008

EyesOpen

Filed under: Uncategorized — dylan @ 9:47 am
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Who doesn’t love IDEO and the work they do. Fast Company recently listed them at number 5 on its “Fast 50” list of the world’s most innovative companies, and they have been hired in the past year by such stalwart and venerable organizations as the CDC, the Acumen Fund, the Red Cross and HBO (hey, HBO heals too).
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I write today to tell you of a great new project they’ve embarked on… and of course, we being who we are, it revolves around books. They are not quite business books, but when I got word of them, I knew I needed to place an order and see what IDEO is up to this time. Well, they came in the mail today, and they are great. It is a series of travel guides–or “field guides for the curious” as they put it–and they are really unique. Entitled EyesOpen, the series starts with New York and London, and step off of the typical tourist route to take you around the cities in the way a good friend who lives there and knows the city well might. As they state on their website:

Eyes Open guides shift the attention of the traveler and everyday observer away from sightseeing toward looking–really looking–at their surroundings. This series is an intimate exploration (starting with London and New York) that celebrates finding inspiration at every turn. These guide books step away from the proverbial sense of “place” toward experience, reminding us all to keep our eyes open in the world to gain a better sense of how we fit in.

You’ll find places such as Hackney City Farm in London, an organic community farm in the middle of the city…
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…and the Chelsea Flea Market in NYC, which takes leftover urban space and turns it into a vibrant community of vintage thrift culture.
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You’ve just got to give it up to IDEO (author and experience designer Fred Dust in particular) and Chronicle Books for this series. The books will definitely slow productivity a bit as they pass around our office today. They’re really fascinating, and additionally, this isn’t just a series of books. You can go to the EyesOpen website and read stories of other unique places and even contribute your own. These people are unstoppable.

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March 25, 2008

Finding It

Filed under: General Business — delicious @ 2:39 pm
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Recently, I was at a popular electronic “super store” (think Circuit City/Best Buy type). I was browsing through the DVDs and noticed a flaw, basically due to the fact that I’m a big trivia geek: most of The Thin Man mystery series were shelved with movie musicals like Grease, West Side Story and everything Elvis. Odd, right? One of them is titled ‘Song of the Thin Man’, so I could see why that one may have gotten mixed within the musicals. But what about all the other titles in the series? Seemed peculiar to me, so I asked an employee. He said he knew about the discrepancy and laughed about it. Before he left me, I asked why he didn’t correct or report the mistake. He shrugged, ‘Well that’s how our company has it categorized’.

Whatever happened to empowerment in organizations? What happened to taking initiative? Good will? Common sense?

Following are some titles that deal with empowerment. Just a little reminder for those who think that one person can’t do anything to change the way another person, or for that matter, a company thinks.

Zapp! The Lightning of Empowerment by William C. Byham
Control Your Destiny or Someone Else Will by Noel M. Tichy and Stratford Sherman
Heroz: Empower Yourself, Your Coworkers, Your Company by William Byham and Jeff Cox
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
The Dream Manager by Matthew Kelly
You’re in Charge, Now What? by Catherine Fredman/Thomas J. Neff/James M. Citrin
Getting it Done: How to Lead When You’re in Charge by Roger Fisher
Managing Your Boss by John J. Gabarro and John P. Kotter

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What book is your favorite?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Kate @ 12:01 pm
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Of all time. Vote today. Books added daily.
The final list will be in Jack and Todd’s book due out in January ’09.

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New Excerpt Up – from The IT Value Stack

Filed under: Uncategorized — 800-CEO-READ @ 9:46 am
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There’s a new excerpt up on our Excerpts blog: the introduction to The IT Value Stack: A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership by Ade McCormack. From the inside flap: “Successful IT value realisation is a cloudy subject. This in part contributes to the overall dissatisfaction many organisations have with IT. This book tackles the subject of IT value realisation head on. Most importantly it provides a model to help CIOs and business leaders maximise the return on their IT investment.”
Here are the author’s reasons for writing a book about IT Leadership:

Introduction: What’s IT All About?

“Leadership has a harder job to do than just choose sides. It must bring sides together.”
Jesse Jackson, US Civil Rights Leader

Introduction

Welcome to The IT Value Stack – A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership. Before we get into the content proper I have provided some insights into why I have written this book. This opening chapter also details the book’s structure.

I have my Reasons

Having worked in the IT sector for more than two decades, I have made a number of observations that are in many ways interrelated:

  • The IT industry has a poor delivery record.
  • Business people do not know what IT people are talking about. And this doesn’t
    seem to bother IT people.
  • Users are generally suspicious of IT people.
  • Executives are frustrated that they cannot measure whether they are getting
    good value from their IT investment.
  • There is a perception that all problems involving IT are ipso facto the
    fault of the IT department.
  • The IT industry suffers from low self-esteem.
  • Many businesses do not know what business they are in. I will dwell on these
    in the next chapter.

Here’s a direct link to the excerpt: http://800ceoread.com/excerpts/archives/007824.html

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Excerpt from The IT Value Stack

Filed under: Misc. — 800-CEO-READ @ 9:19 am
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The following excerpt is from the introduction to The IT Value Stack: A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership by Ade McCormack, a book that tackles the subject of IT value realisation head on and provides a model to help CIOs and business leaders maximize the return on their IT investment.

Introduction: What’s IT All About?

“Leadership has a harder job to do than just choose sides. It must bring sides together.”
Jesse Jackson, US Civil Rights Leader

Introduction

Welcome to The IT Value Stack – A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership. Before we get into the content proper I have provided some insights into why I have written this book. This opening chapter also details the book’s structure.

I have my Reasons

Having worked in the IT sector for more than two decades, I have made a number of observations that are in many ways interrelated:

  • The IT industry has a poor delivery record.
  • Business people do not know what IT people are talking about. And this doesn’t
    seem to bother IT people.
  • Users are generally suspicious of IT people.
  • Executives are frustrated that they cannot measure whether they are getting
    good value from their IT investment.
  • There is a perception that all problems involving IT are ipso facto the
    fault of the IT department.
  • The IT industry suffers from low self-esteem.
  • Many businesses do not know what business they are in. I will dwell on these
    in the next chapter.

Information Technology is not a Black Box

Whilst IT is an exciting (possibly too exciting) industry, it has a number of critical problems, which are both perceived and real. These problems may appear parochial to those dwelling beyond the IT department periphery. However, modern businesses are increasingly dependent on IT. As IT becomes part of the organisational DNA, these so-called IT problems will become everyone’s problem. Thus, IT is too important to compartmentalise, and so does not fit neatly onto the organisational chart. Treating IT as a “black box” is not an option. Even aligning this black box with the business is not enough.

Information Technology has become Important

For many organisations IT was no more strategic than catering services. “Nobody died today, so why does the catering manager want to talk to me?” bellows the CEO. So it is with the CIO, “The email works so why does he want to talk to me?”

However, the world has changed. Users are in the driving seat. Regulatory compliance lingers like a dark cloud. The threats extend beyond the traditional boundaries. Global competition, cyber crime and terrorism require different rules of engagement. Tactics are the new strategy. We hear of on demand, real-time, Darwinian, agile and other market-responsive terms to describe businesses. Information technology isn’t an optional extra, it is a condition of entry to most markets. It is the enabler of business sustainability. The CEOs who don’t get that are either in the wrong job or have done some calculations in respect of their retirement date and this reality dawning on the shareholders.

What Problem?

Business and the public sector/society are increasingly underpinned by IT. Unfortunately, many organisations are unaware of this. They can be identified by the lack of IT representation at board level. And those that do recognise the importance of IT to their survival are generally vexed by the poor delivery/value and the generally dysfunctional relationship between the users and the IT department.

A Deserved Reputation

Through my experiences working in the roles of technologist, management consultant, CIO coach, user and buyer of technology services, I believe I can see where the problems lie, and what needs to be done to resolve them. To that end I have developed a framework that encompasses what I believe to be good practice.

I feel strongly about this. I am not proud to be working for an industry that is held in such low esteem. Much of IT’s reputation is sadly deserved. Reasons include:

  • Socially inept technologists who seem incapable of communicating with the
    users.
  • Unscrupulous sales people who, through a toxic combination of not quite
    knowing what they sell coupled with aggressive sales targets, will confidently
    tell users what is best for them.
  • Technology providers that regard delivery as a by-product of their primary
    business, which appears to be sales.
  • A mystifying deluge of user-unfriendly terminology.
  • A lack of standardisation, both in respect of technology and terminology.

Every industry has elements of the above. If we look at it from a Bell curve distribution perspective, such occurrences are usually at the extreme. For IT, these reasons represent the norm, rather than the extremes. That has to change.

Grow Up

In defense of the IT industry, it is young and to some extent pubescent. So its behaviour can possibly be attributed to “hormonal effects” that are beyond its control. Well, it is time for the IT industry to grow up. Again IT is not a fashion accessory for twenty-first century organisations. The value they extract from IT will determine their success. Users expect IT to deliver; if IT fails to deliver then this will have profound consequences on the global economy.

The IT industry needs to get its act together. This is both a warning and an opportunity; particularly for CIOs who want to influence the business, and for technologists who recognise the link between user happiness and their career progression.

Snap

Without wanting to sound too visionary, I had a road to Damascus (actually to St Bart’s hospital) experience circa 20 years ago, which involved a prolonged stay in hospital and four operations. Prior to this my IT experience involved some Fortran programming during my Astrophysics degree, and three years of real-time embedded software engineering at a large engineering company. This would understandably suggest I was a “hardcore techie.” Anyway, my reason for hospitalisation was that I broke (snapped) my forearm cleanly during a judo demonstration (!). During my stay(s) in hospital I was struck by the skill, knowledge and caring manner of the medical staff. Nurses and doctors inspired confidence, managed expectations well and were consistently knowledgeable about their trade. It was at this point I decided that, despite the lack of professional standards in the IT industry (anybody can call themselves a programmer or a CIO), I would endeavour to be more professional. Specifically, in respect of my industry knowledge, which up to that point extended as far as my day job’s minimum requirements. But I was also determined to improve my own professional bedside manner in terms of how I engaged with the users.

Over the years it became apparent that my initial observation, which was really me noting a need for personal improvement, was a problem endemic to the IT industry.

My Objective

Twenty years later my experiences of working with organisations at every level, across many industries, on both sides of the business/IT divide, have given me the evidence I needed to make what appear to be sweeping, and somewhat harsh, generalisations about the IT industry. But my objective in writing this book is to provide a positive way forward that will benefit IT-centric organisations, and make the IT industry one that people are proud to work in. An attractive industry will attract the best talent, and nothing less will be needed, given the importance that IT is increasingly playing in business and society.

But the IT industry doesn’t exist to give IT people jobs. We are here to serve organisations and society. So ultimately those that extract value from their new technology investment will determine the industry’s success.

Excerpted from The IT Value Stack: A Boardroom Guide to IT Leadership by Ade McCormack, published by John Wiley & Sons; 2007.

Download
the first two chapters of The IT Value Stack.

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links for 2008-03-25

Filed under: Uncategorized — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:18 am
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  • Stirring It Up >> Advertising Age | The CE-”Yo” Speaks: Gary Hirshberg Blows the Lid on Stonyfield’s Green History
    Hirshberg has shown environmental ethic and profitability can coexist in a business plan–long before “going green” became as common a brand position as the oft-cited platitude, “The consumer is king.”
    (tags: biography greenbusiness businessbooks)
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March 24, 2008

Brain Rules

Filed under: Uncategorized — dylan @ 10:35 am
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A rather interesting book was released last week by Pear Press entitled Brain Rules. It was written by the director of the Brain Center for Applied Learning Research at Seattle Pacific University, John J. Medina, and he writes in the introduction:

If you wanted to create an education environment that was directly opposed to what the brain was good at doing, you probably would design something like a classroom. If you wanted to create a business environment that was directly opposed to what the brain was good at doing, you probably would design something like a cubicle. And if you wanted to change things, you might have to tear down both and start over.

And while this book doesn’t actually give you the tools to tear down the whole system (and what would those be anyway?) it does lay out the basic principles of how the brain really works and gives us some tips that can help us start working more efficiently and holistically.
The book also comes with a DVD, and you can find samples from that and a trove of other information on this great site devoted to the book.

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New Titles in Spanish!

Filed under: Foreign Titles — delicious @ 10:08 am
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Another listing of titles in Spanish came to my attention! These can be great as gifts for bi-lingual clients or employees! If you want to place an order for any of these books, let me know (roy@800ceoread.com).

Mas alla de el secreto (Beyond the Secret) by Brenda Barnaby
Sera mejor que lo cuentes! (Will Be Better To Tell Us the Story) by Antonio Munez
Espejimsmos (The Halo Effect and Other Business Delusions) by Philip Rosenweig
Gane cualquier negociacion (How to Win Any Negotiation) by Robert Mayer
La magia de pensar a lo grande (The Magic of Thinking Big) by David J. Schwartz
60 segundoes para organizarse (60 Second Organizer) by Jeff Davidson

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