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September 26, 2008

Freakonomics: Around the world in cover images

Filed under: Design — Kate @ 10:36 am
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Check out these cover images. Each time a new edition of Freakonomics is published, Steven and Stephen add it to their online collection.

I’d love to hear the cultural reasoning behind each design. Any insight?

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September 25, 2008

Profile of a Marketing Guru

Filed under: Marketing — 800-CEO-READ @ 2:48 pm
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This week BusinessWeek ran a profile of our friend Seth Godin.

Godin’s ability to synthesize and combine topics helps account for his broad influence. “Some people want a deep dive; they want metrics. But if you want someone to take a complicated topic and boil it down to the core, that’s Seth,” says John Moore, a brand consultant and former Whole Foods Market (WFMI) marketing director. Godin finds patterns of behavior and general problems that exist in seemingly unrelated fields. He sees Mary Anne Davis, a potter at one of his seminars, grappling with the same problem as executives at Boeing (BA): How do you market effectively when your products aren’t the kind people buy based on an ad? And this focus on the general rather than the specific explains part of Godin’s wide appeal. “The big win is when I say something that’s just vague enough that it’s useful, but people think I wrote it just for them,” he says.

Seth mentions the article on his blog, http://sethgodin.typepad.com/.

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Our first Milkshake Moment

Filed under: Big Ideas,Customer Service — 800-CEO-READ @ 1:13 pm
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This is just a short post to give a shout out to our friend Steve Little. Today at lunch, when the waitress took our drink orders, Michele asked for hot chocolate. It’s getting to be fall here in Wisconsin, so hot drinks are common requests. She said, “I’m not sure if we have hot chocolate, but I’ll check.” She came back a few minutes later and said no, she was sorry, but the restaurant wasn’t offering hot chocolate, yet. That’s a seasonal drink, and they’re still serving summer drinks.
After she left, we all turned to each other and said “Milkshake Moment.” Here’s why.

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Essay from Byrne Murphy, author of Le Deal

Filed under: Global Business,Small Business — 800-CEO-READ @ 9:54 am
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Byrne Murphy, the author of Le Deal: How a Young American, in Business, in Love, and in Over His Head, Kick-Started a Multibillion-Dollar Industry in Europe, graciously wrote this essay for our blog. Le Deal is best described as an entrepreneurship book, but there are elements of memoir, adventure, global economics, and business narrative here.
Murphy recounts his abrupt decision to move his life and family to Paris, his early struggles to gain a foothold in a foreign business culture, and his eventual success with McArthurGlen Europe, “which created nearly 8,000 jobs, opened 1,500 stores featuring 500 brands, and attracted nearly 40 million shopping visits per year.” The Wall Street Journal calls Le Deal “a tale fraught with frustration and filled with insight.” In the essay below, Murphy explains the challenges he faced when attempting to run an American business model in a European market, and the ways he had to both change and be changed by the work culture around him.
The Management Mirage: Creating Teams in Foreign Cultures
by Byrne Murphy
In late 1992 I found myself alone at the kitchen table of a rented apartment in Paris. I had just arrived in Europe with an idea for a new business. In front of me was a pencil, paper, and a phone. The only thing missing was someone to call.
I didn’t know anyone to call; not in Paris nor anywhere in Europe. Yet, eight years later, McArthur Glen Europe had opened thirteen specialty retail centers in five countries featuring 1,200 stores, over 300 brands, and was generating nearly one billion euros of sales from almost three million square feet. Approximately eight thousand jobs had been created. The company had restored abandoned factory buildings in England, added revitalization to small towns in France and Scotland, created leisure destinations in Wales and Austria and much more. The company was a success.
But it was a success born out of agony…in fact many agonies.
The toughest challenge was not with the ruthless local politics nor with blackmail and graft nor even the grinding, endless hours. The most relentless, exhausting challenge was the most fundamental of all management tasks–creating an effective team from an ever-growing group of multi-national, multi-cultural, polyglot Europeans who held as many centuries-old biases about each other as they did about Americans.
The challenge was elemental but was also mission-critical: within a few years the company comprised nearly two hundred people featuring more than a dozen nationalities working from seven offices across Europe. The pressure was intense. Our success had attracted serious competition in every market. The race was on and time was not our friend. Effective teamwork was the key success factor. The question was how to get all those national oars rowing in the same direction and to the same cadence?
Americans have an advantage when operating overseas. Despite our reputation for being naive and heavy-headed there is respect for the longstanding success of American business. There is often a willingness to grant the benefit of the doubt to American managers regarding the many new concepts and innovations emanating from the States. But this benefit of the doubt is precariously balanced, as though on an old-style scale with two plates on which a new substance is measured against known values. On one plate is a heap of respect for America and what it stands for. On the other plate is resentment for what America has achieved and how it handles those achievements. When starting up an American-inspired venture abroad, if the listening and hearing skills of the American manager are not acute enough to take into real consideration the context of the culture in which the venture is operating, the weight of resentment will quickly outweigh that of the respect. The benefit of the doubt has worn off and the scale is out of equilibrium. The manager’s task becomes infinitely more difficult.
At McArthurGlen we were most successful when we derived clear objectives and worked hard in listening to each office on how best to achieve them. We did put in place a classic, American-style profit-sharing scheme to reward success in one’s home market and to encourage cooperation across borders. Interestingly, the plan met with only partial success and eventually lost credibility. Bare-bone entrepreneurial tools only go so far in most European settings. The more effective tactic was the listening and the hearing.
Europe is not America, not in its values nor in its practice. It is not the land of entrepreneurs but rather the land of large governments which play pivotal roles in the economy. Many Europeans–in some places most Europeans–do not live to work and to constantly achieve in the traditional American sense. Those differences must be taken into account. It is vital to realize that though it may be your concept, it’s their country. Context matters–a lot. The host culture matters…a lot. If managers ignore the context in which they are working then surprises are surely headed their way–most of them unpleasant.
At the same time a manager is striving to understand the host culture he/she needs to quickly establish him/herself as the unwavering leader in the effort. And not just any leader but one exhibiting certain key attributes. These attributes include:

  • Leading decisively from the front, ready to spearhead the struggle and, importantly, to absorb the first and the second wave of adversity, showing the team he/she is willing to suffer more than they are expected to suffer. They need to know when all the external responses to the team’s efforts are “NO NO NO,” that their manager insists on “YES YES YES”–they need to know, in effect, their manager is sincere. Over time, sincerity and integrity transcends all languages.
  • Believing completely in “The Mission” in order to have others buy-in. If the manager does not truly believe in The Mission, the team will perceive that and will not commit themselves.
  • Setting and maintaining simple and clear goals, easy for all to understand even with language barriers. A lack of clarity leads to debate, then to confusion, then to lack of buy-in and a “not my job” mentality. Once that sets in, there is no team.
    Our newly globalized world presents both significant challenges and great opportunities to American businesses and entrepreneurs. Only by recognizing that when operating abroad it cannot be business as usual can those opportunities be realized. After sixteen years of working overseas, I have found that the most important step to take is addressing management philosophy.

* * * * *
Byrne Murphy, MBA, is an entrepreneur who has created several companies across Europe over the last fifteen years. His book, LE DEAL: How A Young American, In Business, In Love, And In Over His Head Brought A Multi-Billion Dollar Industry To Europe, was recently published by St. Martin’s Press.

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September 24, 2008

Taking the Show on The Road

Filed under: Publishing Industry — Todd Sattersten @ 10:45 pm
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800-CEO-READ is celebrating its 25th year this year and we have sold business books in almost every conceivable manner during that time. So, we thought it was time to share some of what we know with others.

Tomorrow, Jack and I are speaking in St. Paul, Minnesota to the Midwest Booksellers Association and next week we are in Detroit giving a similar talk to the Great Lakes Independent Booksellers Association. The final trip for the fall is in a few weeks when we fly out to LA and talk to the Southern California Independent Booksellers Association.

The topic is how bookstores can sell more business books. The category has a number of unique aspects when compared to other parts of book publishing. We want to point those out clearly and give booksellers some ideas on how to make that uniqueness work for them.

If you are going to be at any of these events, we hope you’ll come sit in on our session. If you can’t see us live, we have an article on tap for next week, based on the speech we are giving, that we will post here.

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David Foster Wallace

Filed under: Jack's Thoughts — Jack @ 5:23 pm
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David Foster Wallace died on September 12. I have read his collections of essays and I appreciated his, as The Wall Street Journal states “blending inventive language, intellect, humor, philosophy and cultural references in his writing.” Someday I will tackle his novels.

In 2005, he addressed the graduating class of Kenyon College. Friday’s WSJ has an abridged version of the speech here.

As Todd and I prepare for the publication of our book, I have come to appreciate the skill needed to convey thoughts in the spoken format. DFW was not only a remarkable writer but, as you can see, a remarkable speaker.

The world is a lesser place.

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Got a meeting this morning?

Filed under: General Management,Human Resources/Organizational Development — 800-CEO-READ @ 8:57 am
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Quick Meeting Openers for Busy Managers: More than 50 Icebreakers, Energizers, and Other Creative Activities That Get Results by Brian Cole Miller is an easy book to consult when you want to kick off a group meeting in a fun way.
Here are a few creative activities to get the group started:


Quotes

This is…
> A meeting starter in which participants share their favorite quotes with the group.
Use it to…
> Help the group warm up as well as get to know each other better.
Best group size…
> Up to about 20.
Materials you’ll need…
> No materials are necessary for this activity.
Here’s how…
1. Before the meeting, tell participants to bring their favorite quote (either written down or memorized).
2. In the meeting, have participants share their quote and then explain why it is important to them.
For example…
> “‘To thine own self be true’ is my favorite quote. When I was in my early 20s I realized that I was trying to be what others expected or wanted of me. I wasn’t happy. When I came to terms with who I am, and then lived true to that, I found great joy as well as inner peace.”
Tips for success…
> You go first to demonstrate how much detail you want them to go into. It doesn’t have to be an actual quote, it could be a “saying” or “words to live by.”
Try these variations…
> Make this more difficult by not giving participants advance warning. Allow them to paraphrase their favorite quote if they can’t remember it word for word.
> Rather than a quote, have participants share their favorite saying or lesson learned from their parents while growing up.
> Divide larger groups up into smaller teams of 8 to 20 members to use this activity.

Map It

This is…
> An activity in which participants form a human map based on where they live.
Use it to…
> Help groups visualize their proximity to each other outside of work.
Best group size…
> Unlimited.
Materials you’ll need…
> No materials are necessary for this activity.
Here’s how…
1. Gather the group in a larger, open space.
2. Have participants create a map by standing relative to one another based on where their homes are.
Tips for success…
> Place something in the middle of the space to represent where they are now. All points should be relative to that point.
> Beyond that, don’t help or guide anyone; let the group figure it all out. Don’t be surprised if someone else steps up and starts to lead, though.
Try these variations…
> Have participants map where they were born, where they last went on vacation, where they plan to retire, or where their favorite restaurant is.
> Have participants map where their work locations are. Afterward, discuss what impact geographic diversity has on the work they are about to do, if any.

Find more lively activities in Quick Meeting Openers for Busy Managers: More than 50 Icebreakers, Energizers, and Other Creative Activities That Get Result.

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September 23, 2008

Peter Drucker's Five Questions

Filed under: General Management,Social Responsibilty,Strategy — Todd Sattersten @ 9:32 am
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Peter Drucker ‘s body of work is mostly recognized in the business community, but he spent an enormous amount of time thinking about the non-profit sector.

One of his many legacies is the New York-based Leader to Leader Institute, an organization that focuses on developing leadership in the social sector. The Institute has updated and reissued a book that was written for non-profits originally but works for any organization.

In the early 1990′s, Drucker and the then Drucker Foundation published a self-assessment tool titled “The Five Most Important Questions”. In writing why he created the tool, Drucker said:

Although I don’t know a single for-profit business that is as well managed as a few nonprofits, the great majority of the nonprofits can be graded a “C” at best. Not for a lack of effort; most of them work very hard. But for lack of focus, and for lack of tool competence.”

Let’s not be fooled. Business needs plenty of help too.

Drucker’s questions are simple, but as is always found in Drucker’s writings, the simplicity is deceiving and the clarity of the questions forces you to reexamine your assumptions.

  • What is our mission?
  • Who is our customer?
  • What does the customer value?
  • What are our results?
  • What is our plan?

The new book is titled The Five Most Important Questions You Will Ever Ask About Your Organization and the Leader to Leader Institute has enlisted some big names to expanded on Drucker’s original message. Jim Collins, Phil Kotler, and Jim Kouzes along with Judith Rosen and Kasturi Rangan each provide an essay that follows one of five questions.

The book is a quick read; I was able to finish it during a flight back from the West Coast.

It’s the answers to the questions that I am still working on.

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September 19, 2008

Our Tribe

Filed under: Uncategorized — Todd Sattersten @ 2:25 pm
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Things have been kind of quiet around here lately.

You haven’t been talking much here. We get a random comment here or there, but I don’t remember the last time we had a conversation that drew a couple dozen people out to share their thoughts.

We are failing you in some way. Maybe, we are not highlighting the right ideas. Maybe, what we find interesting isn’t.

On Monday, the folks who write and edit the blog and our other sites are getting together.

Give us something to talk about.

Leave a comment and tell us how can we be more helpful.

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September 18, 2008

Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year

Filed under: Book Awards — dylan @ 1:02 pm
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The shortlist for the 2008 Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award has been announced.

Lloyd C. Blankfein, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Goldman Sachs, says of the finalists:

We chose from an outstanding selection of books. The finalists address what we think are the most important global issues spanning a broad array of industries and disciplines.

Lionel Barber, Editor of the Financial Times comments:

At no time has there been a greater need for books that provide an insight into modern business issues.

We couldn’t agree more.

Their shortlist is:

  • A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World
    by William J. Bernstein, April 2008, Atlantic Monthly Press

  • Cold Steel: The Multi-billion-dollar Battle for a Global Industry
    by Tim Bouquet & Byron Ousey, Little Brown Book Group UK (not yet available in the US)

  • When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change
    by Mohamed El-Erian, July 2008, McGraw-Hill

  • McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld
    by Misha Glenny, April 2008, Knopf

  • Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy
    by Lawrence Lessig, April 2008, The Penguin Press

  • The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life
    by Alice Schroeder, September 2008, Bantam
    The winner will be announced on the 14th October 2008 at a gala event in New York City.

    Last years winner
    was The last Tycoon, and the award went to China Shakes the World in 2006.
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