Saturday, March 08, 2008

Design's Differentiating Power

HP's design practice helps the company to differentiate itself in the marketplace and be more efficient by leveraging the talent across its business lines. ...

... "Hurd gave his backing to Lucente's plan to ramp up the companywide design practice. These days, conventional wisdom holds that good design is indispensable for differentiating products, building brands, and forging new markets. " ...


Via Fast Company: Design's Role in HP Transformation

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Thursday, March 06, 2008

Collaboration Services

IBM offers a set of services to help an enterprise take advantage of collaboration through social networking. The services include support of the adoption of these technologies to create value through expertise location and leverage. ...

... "Adoption - helps introduce collaborative and social networking technologies to an organization through online collaborative events such as company-wide collaborative events (based on IBM's Innovation Jams) or smaller departmental events. Provides social networking analysis, identifying patterns of interaction and the key topic experts and enablers within the organization. " ...


Via IBM: Services for Collaboration

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Tuesday, March 04, 2008

IT Investment in the Crunch

Financial firm is expected to increase its IT investment during the contraction in the credit market, which is a contrarian strategy. ...

... "The impact of the credit crunch on HSBC's accounts is unlikely to have a knock-on effect in the group's IT strategy ... " ...


Via UK Computing: HSBC

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Monday, March 03, 2008

Outcomes-Based Leadership: Not Common Sense

We've often written here on PMThink about the need to focus on outcomes. It occured to me that a lot of people look at Outcomes-Based Leadership as a "given." They say, "Of course leadership should be based on outcomes! What else would it be based on?"

It is surprising then how little focus is really given to outcomes in organizations. They focus on activities, tools, processes, forms, measures, costs, schedules, and so on. Everything except outcomes.

If we really revisited many of the processes and tools in our organizations with a keen eye toward outcomes (i.e. what purpose is it intended to serve, and is that the best and fastest way of serving it), we'd see how far we miss the boat.

I have a model I like to use called SET. It stands for Simplicity, Engagement, and Technology. It's simple, but powerful, and works well with outcomes-based leadership.

When we look at outcomes, we must keep these three factors in mind : Are we taking the simplest effective route (and do we even understand and agree on what the outcomes should be in the first place)? Are we engaging others in the best way to achieve our outcomes? Are we leveraging technology effectively or is it getting in our way?

Most organizations have a Chief Technology Officer. To this, they should add a Chief Simplicity Officer and a Chief Engagement Officer. If all three were focused on outcomes, and geared all people, budgets, departmental structures, processes, and tools toward the outcomes the organization is striving to achieve, strange things would begin to happen. People would become energized, not weighed down by the saddle of overused, misused, and rigid processes. It would become second nature for people to ask, "And just why are we doing this?"

Meanwhile, I'm afraid Outcomes-Based Leadership is not common sense. But I have hopes that one day it will be.

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Skills to Archive

List of skills that should be archived from your / our minds. ...

Obsolete Skills

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Sunday, March 02, 2008

Microsoft Cloud Computing Predictions

In order to seecure a foothold into the future of computing beyond desktops and servers, Microsoft appears poised to make eye-popping investments in a cloud-computing infrastructure that rivals peer companies in the space. ...

... "Microsoft has the resources and, it appears, the will to invest many billions in the physical infrastructure necessary to secure a place ... " ...


Via Nicholas Carr Blog: Microsoft data-center investment likely

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