Tom Peters’ Re-Imagine ! EXCELLENCE 2015 Distinguished Leadership and Innovation Conference Port of Spain/13 April 2015 (Slides at tompeters.com; and our fully annotated 23-part Master Compendium at.

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Transcript Tom Peters’ Re-Imagine ! EXCELLENCE 2015 Distinguished Leadership and Innovation Conference Port of Spain/13 April 2015 (Slides at tompeters.com; and our fully annotated 23-part Master Compendium at.

Tom Peters’
Re-Imagine
!
EXCELLENCE
2015 Distinguished Leadership and Innovation Conference
Port of Spain/13 April 2015
(Slides at tompeters.com; and our fully annotated 23-part
Master Compendium at excellencenow.com)
FIRST THING
BEFORE FIRST
THING:
CONRAD’S
COMMANDMENT
CONRAD HILTON, at a gala celebrating
his career, was called to the podium and
“What were the
most important
lessons you learned
in your long and
distinguished
career?” His answer …
asked,
“Remember
to tuck the
shower curtain
inside the
bathtub.”
XCELLENCE
E
Excellence1982: The Bedrock “Eight Basics”
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
A Bias for Action
Close to the Customer
Autonomy and Entrepreneurship
Productivity Through People
Hands On, Value-Driven
Stick to the Knitting
Simple Form, Lean Staff
Simultaneous Loose-Tight
Properties
Action
People
Customers
Values
EXCELLENCE is not a “long-term”
"aspiration.”
EXCELLENCE is the ultimate shortterm strategy. EXCELLENCE is …
THE
NEXT
5
MINUTES.*
(*Or NOT.)
EXCELLENCE is not an "aspiration."
EXCELLENCE is … THE NEXT FIVE MINUTES.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
EXCELLENCE
Or not.
is your next conversation.
is your next meeting.
is shutting up and listening—really listening.
is your next customer contact.
is saying “Thank you” for something “small.”
is the next time you shoulder responsibility and apologize.
is waaay over-reacting to a screw-up.
is the flowers you brought to work today.
is lending a hand to an “outsider” who’s fallen behind schedule.
is bothering to learn the way folks in finance (or IS or HR) think.
is waaay “over”-preparing for a 3-minute presentation.
is turning “insignificant” tasks into models of … EXCELLENCE.
Why
Not?
“Why in the
World did you
go to Siberia?”
An emotional, vital,
innovative, joyful, creative,
entrepreneurial endeavor that elicits
maximum
Enterprise* (*at its best):
concerted human
potential in the
wholehearted pursuit of
EXCELLENCE in
service of others.**
**Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Communities, Owners, Temporary partners
“It may sound radical, unconventional, and
bordering on being a crazy business idea.
However— as ridiculous as it sounds—joy is the
core belief of our workplace.
Joy
is the reason my company,
Menlo Innovations, a customer software design
and development firm in Ann Arbor, exists. It
defines what we do and how we do it. It is the
single shared belief of our entire team.”
Joy, Inc.:
How We Built a Workplace People Love
—Richard Sheridan,
PEOPLE
PEOPLE
PEOPLE
People:
1/4,096
“Business has to
give people
enriching,
rewarding lives …
1/4,096: excellencenow.com
“Business has to give people enriching,
or it's
simply not
worth doing.”
rewarding lives …
—Richard Branson
“You have to
treat your
employees like
customers.”
—Herb Kelleher,
upon being asked his “secret to success”
Source: Joe Nocera, NYT, “Parting Words of an Airline Pioneer,”
on the occasion of Herb Kelleher’s retirement after 37 years at Southwest
Airlines (SWA’s pilots union took out a full-page ad in USA Today
thanking HK for all he had done) ; across the way in Dallas, American
Airlines’ pilots were picketing AA’s Annual Meeting)
“hostmanship”/
“consideration
renovation”
“The path to a
hostmanship
culture paradoxically does not go through
the guest. In fact it wouldn’t be totally wrong to say that the guest has nothing to do
with it. True hostmanship leaders focus on their employees. What drives
exceptionalism is finding the right people and getting them to love their work and see
it as a passion. ... The guest comes into the picture only when you are ready to ask,
‘Would you prefer to stay at a hotel where the staff love their work or where
“We went
through the hotel and made a ...
‘consideration renovation.’ Instead of
redoing bathrooms, dining rooms, and
guest rooms, we gave employees new
uniforms, bought flowers and fruit, and
changed colors. Our focus was totally on
the staff. They were the ones we wanted
to make happy. We wanted them to wake up every morning excited
management has made customers its highest priority?’”
about a new day at work.” —Jan Gunnarsson and Olle Blohm, Hostmanship:
The Art of Making People Feel Welcome.
“ … The guest comes into
the picture only when you
are ready to ask, ‘Would you
prefer to stay at a hotel
where the staff love their
work or where management
has made customers its
highest priority?’”
Rocket Science.
NOT.
“If you want staff to
give great service,
give great service
to staff.”
—Ari Weinzweig, Zingerman’s
Source: Small Giants: Companies That Choose to Be Great
Instead of Big, Bo Burlingham
“Contrary to conventional
corporate thinking,
treating retail workers
much better may make
everyone (including their
employers) much richer.”
Source: The Good Jobs Strategy, by M.I.T. professor Zeynep Ton.
1996-2014/12 companies every year/
341,567 new jobs/+172%:
Publix
Whole Foods
Wegmans
Nordstrom
Cisco Systems
Marriott
REI
Goldman Sachs
Four Seasons
SAS Institute
W.L. Gore
TDIndustries
Source: Fortune/ “The 100 Best Companies to Work For”/0315.15
Profit Through Putting People First Business Book Club
Nice Companies Finish First: Why Cutthroat Management Is Over—and
Collaboration Is In, by Peter Shankman with Karen Kelly
Uncontainable: How Passion, Commitment, and Conscious Capitalism Built a Business Where Everyone Thrives,
by Kip Tindell, CEO Container Store
Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business, by John Mackey,
CEO Whole Foods, and Raj Sisodia
Firms of Endearment: How World-Class Companies Profit from Passion and
Purpose, by Raj Sisodia, Jag Sheth, and David Wolfe
The Good Jobs Strategy: How the Smartest Companies Invest in Employees to
Lower Costs and Boost Profits, by Zeynep Ton, MIT
Joy, Inc.: How We Built a Workplace People Love, by Richard Sheridan,
CEO Menlo Innovations
Employees First, Customers Second: Turning Conventional Management Upside
Down, by Vineet Nayar, CEO, HCL Technologies
The Customer Comes Second: Put Your People First and Watch ’Em Kick Butt,
by Hal Rosenbluth, former CEO, Rosenbluth International
It’s Your Ship: Management Techniques from the Best Damn Ship in the Navy,
by Mike Abrashoff, former commander, USS Benfold
Turn This Ship Around; How to Create Leadership at Every Level,
by L. David Marquet, former commander, SSN Santa Fe
Small Giants: Companies That Choose to Be Great Instead of Big, by Bo Burlingham
Hidden Champions: Success Strategies of Unknown World Market Leaders, by Hermann Simon
Retail Superstars: Inside the 25 Best Independent Stores in America,
by George Whalin
Joy at Work: A Revolutionary Approach to Fun on the Job, by Dennis Bakke,
former CEO, AES Corporation
The Dream Manager, by Matthew Kelly
The Soft Edge: Where Great Companies Find Lasting Success, by Rich Karlgaard,
publisher, Forbes
Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, by Tony Hseih, Zappos
Camellia: A Very Different Company
Fans, Not Customers: How to Create Growth Companies in a No Growth World, by Vernon Hill
Like a Virgin: Secrets They Won’t Teach You at Business School, by Richard Branson
“YOUR
CUSTOMERS
WILL NEVER BE
ANY HAPPIER
THAN YOUR
EMPLOYEES.”
—John DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution:
Training =
Investment
#1
In the Army, 3-star
generals worry about
training. In most
businesses, it's a
“ho-hum” mid-level
staff function.
Is your CTO/Chief Training Officer your top paid “C-level” job (other than CEO/COO)?
If not, why not?
Are your top trainers paid as much as your top marketers and engineers?
If not, why not?
Are your training
courses so good they
make you … jump up
& down with glee?
If not, why not?
Randomly stop an employee in the hall: Can she/he meticulously describe her/his development plan for the next 12
months?
If not, why not?
Why is your world of business any different than the (competitive) world of rugby, football, opera, theater,
the military?
If “people/talent first” and hyper-intense continuous training are laughably obviously for them, why not you?
Is your CTO/Chief Training Officer your top paid “C-level” job (other than CEO/COO)?
If not, why not?
Are your top trainers paid as much as your top marketers and engineers?
If not, why not?
Are your training courses so good they make you giggle and tingle?
If not, why not?
Randomly stop an employee
in the hall: Can she/he
meticulously describe her/his
development plan for the
next 12 months?
If not, why not?
Why is your world of business any different than the (competitive) world of rugby, football, opera,
theater,
the military?
If “people/talent first” and hyper-intense continuous training are laughably obviously for them,
why not you?
>> 8 of 10
CEOs, in 45-min
“tour d’horizon” of
their biz, would
NOT mention
training.
Bet #4:
What is the
#1
reason to go
berserk over
training?
What is the best reason to go
bananas over training?
GREED.
(It pays off.)
(Also: Training should be an official part of
the
R&D budget and a capital expense.)
Training #1: Bottom Line
NOBODY gets off the
hook! “Training & Development
Maniac” applies as much to the
4-person
business as to the chief
leader of the
of the 44,444-person business.
“The topic is probably the oldest and biggest debate in Customer
What is more important: How well
you hire, or the training and culture you
bring your employees into? While both are
service.
very important,
75
percent is the
Customer service training and the service
culture of your company. Do you really think that
Disney has found 50,000 amazing service-minded people? There
probably aren’t 50,000 people on earth who were born to serve.
Companies like Ritz-Carlton and Disney find good people and put
them in such a strong service and training environment that
doesn’t allow for accept anything less than excellence.” —John
DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow Conventional Business,
Inspire Employees, and Change the World
6/2/3*
SIX MONTHS to develop
THREE MINUTES of new material
*It takes Jerry Seinfeld
TWO
or
(documentary: Comedian)
st
1 -Line
Bosses
(Cadre of) =
Productivity Asset
#1!
Is there ONE “secret” to
productivity and
employee satisfaction?
YES!
The Quality of your
FULL CADRE of …
1st-line Leaders.
“People leave
managers not
companies.”
—Dave Wheeler
Hiring
“It’s simple, really,
Tom. Hire for s,
and, above all,
promote for
s.”
—Starbucks regional manager,
on why so many smiles at Starbucks shops
Observed closely: The use of
“I”
or
“We”
during a
job interview.
Source: Leonard Berry & Kent Seltman, chapter 6, “Hiring for Values,”
Management Lessons From Mayo Clinic
hundreds
of times better
here
“I am
[than in my prior hospital assignment]
because of the support system. It’s
like you were working in an
organism; you are not a single cell
when you are out there practicing.’”
—quote from Dr. Nina Schwenk, in Chapter 3, “Practicing Team Medicine,” from Leonard Berry & Kent Seltman,
from Management Lessons From Mayo Clinic
Me
“Being aware of yourself
and how you
affect everyone
around you is
what distinguishes a
superior leader.”
—Edie Seashore
“The biggest problem I shall
ever face: the management of
Dale Carnegie.” —Dale Carnegie, diary of
"Everyone thinks
of changing the
world, but no one
thinks of changing
himself."
—Leo Tolstoy
!
WOMEN RULE
“Research
suggests
that to succeed, start by
promoting women.”
[by McKinsey & Co.]
—Nicholas Kristof, “Twitter, Women, and Power,” NYTimes
“In my experience, women
make much better
executives than men.”
—Kip Tindell,
CEO, Container Store
“Women are rated higher in fully 12
of the 16 competencies that go into
outstanding leadership. And two
of the traits where women
outscored men to the highest
degree — taking initiative and
driving for results — have long
been thought of as particularly
male strengths.”
—Harvard Business Review
For One (BIG) Thing …
“McKinsey & Company found that the
international companies with more
women on their corporate boards far
outperformed the average company in
return on equity and other measures.
Operating profit was …
56%
higher.”
Source: Nicholas Kristof, “Twitter, Women, and Power,” NYTimes, 1024.13
Context:
1,000,000
China/Foxconn:
1,000,000
robots/next 3 years
Source: Race AGAINST the Machine, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee
“Since 1996, manufacturing employment
fallen
by an estimated 25 percent.
That’s over 30,000,000
fewer Chinese workers in that
in China itself has actually
sector, even while output soared by 70
percent. It’s not that American workers are being replaced
by Chinese workers. It’s that both American and Chinese
workers are being made more efficient [replaced] by
automation.” —Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee,
The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity
in a Time of Brilliant Technologies
“Meet Your
Next Surgeon:
Dr. Robot”
Source: Feature/Fortune/15 JAN 2013/on Intuitive Surgical’s
da Vinci
/multiple bypass heart-surgery robot
IoT/Sensor Pills: “Proteus Digital Health is one of several
pioneers in sensor-based health technology. They make a
silicon chip the size of a grain of sand that is embedded
into a safely digested pill that is swallowed. When the chip
mixes with stomach acids, the processor is powered by the
body’s electricity and transmits data to a patch worn on
the skin. That patch, in turn, transmits data via Bluetooth
to a mobile app, which then transmits the data to a central
database where a health technician can verify if a patient
has taken her or his medications.
“This is a bigger deal than it may seem. In 2012, it was estimated
that people not taking their prescribed medications cost $258
BILLION in emergency room visits, hospitalization, and doctor
visits. An average of 130,000 Americans die each year because
they don’t follow their prescription regimens closely enough..”
(The FDA approved placebo testing in April 2012; sensor pills are
ticketed to come to market in 2015 or 2016.)
Source: Robert Scoble and Shel Israel, Age of Context: Mobile, Sensors, Data and the
Future of Privacy
“Software is
eating the
world.”
—Marc Andreessen
“The intellectual
talents of highly trained
professionals are no
more protected from
automation than is the
driver’s left turn.”
—Nicholas Carr, The Glass Cage: Automation and Us
Betterment/
“Ambitions of a
Robo Adviser”
“could put tens of
thousands of U.S.
investment advisors out
of their jobs”
—FT/1217.14/
“Ten Million Jobs at Risk from
Advancing Technology: Up to
35 percent of Britain's jobs
will be eliminated by new
computing and robotics
technology over the next 20
years, say experts at Deloitte
and Oxford University.”
—Headline, Telegraph (UK), 11 November 2014
The New Logic: Scale w/o Employment
145,000
Kodak: 1988/
employees; 2012/bankrupt
Instagram: 30,000,000 customers/
13 employees
(WhatsApp: 450,000,000 customers/
55 employees/
Valued @ $19,000,000,000)
Source: Robert Reich’s Blog/0317.15
“The root of our problem is not
that we’re in a Great Recession
or a Great Stagnation, but rather
that we are in the early
Great
Restructuring
throes of a
.
Our technologies are racing ahead,
but our skills and organizations
are lagging behind.”
Source: Race AGAINST the Machine, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee
THE MORAL
IMPERATIVE:
PEOPLE
DEVELOPMENT
Your principal
moral obligation as a leader is to
develop the skillset, “soft” and
“hard,” of every one of the people
in your charge (temporary as well
as semi-permanent) to the
maximum extent of your abilities.
The bonus: This is also the
#1 mid- to long-term …
profit maximization strategy!
CORPORATE MANDATE #1 2015:
“The role of the Director is to
create a space where the actors
become
more than they’ve ever
been before,
more than they’ve
dreamed of being.”
and actresses can
—Robert Altman, Oscar acceptance speech
INNOVATION
/49:
WTTMSW
WHOEVER
TRIES
THE
MOST
STUFF
WINS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
A Bias for Action
Close to the Customer
Autonomy and Entrepreneurship
Productivity Through People
Hands On, Value-Driven
Stick to the Knitting
Simple Form, Lean Staff
Simultaneous Loose-Tight Properties
“WE HAVE A
STRATEGIC PLAN.
IT’S CALLED ‘DOING
THINGS.’ ”
—Herb Kelleher
“DON’T ‘PLAN.’
DO STUFF.”
—David Kelley/IDEO
“We made mistakes, of course. Most of them were
omissions we didn’t think of when we initially wrote the
software. We fixed them by doing it over and over, again
and again. We do the same today. While our competitors
are still sucking their thumbs trying to make the design
perfect, we’re already on prototype version
#5.
By
the time our rivals are ready with wires and screws, we
are on version
#10. It gets back to
planning versus acting: We act
from day one; others plan how
to plan—for months.”
—Bloomberg by Bloomberg
“You can’t be a serious
innovator unless and until
you are ready, willing and
able to seriously play.
‘Serious play’ is
not an oxymoron; it is
the essence of innovation.”
—Michael Schrage, Serious Play
WTTMSW/Corollary
“FAIL. FORWARD. FAST.”
—High Tech CEO, Pennsylvania
“FAIL FASTER.
SUCCEED SOONER.”
—David Kelley/IDEO
“MOVE FAST.
BREAK THINGS.”
—Facebook
“REWARD
excellent failures.
PUNISH mediocre
successes.”
—Phil Daniels, Sydney exec
“What really matters is
that companies that don’t
continue to experiment—
COMPANIES THAT
DON’T EMBRACE
FAILURE — eventually get in
a desperate position, where the
only thing they can do is make a
‘Hail Mary’ bet at the end.”
—Jeff Bezos at Business Insider “Ignition” conference, 1202.14
“In business, you REWARD people
WHEN IT
DOESN’T WORK
OUT YOU
PROMOTE THEM -
for taking RISKS.
BECAUSE THEY WERE WILLING
TO TRY NEW THINGS. If people tell
me they skied all day and never fell
down, I tell them to try a different
mountain.” —Michael Bloomberg
Facebook, iPod,
etc. … ordinary
ideas /SJ as
“tinkerer” par
excellence
LBTs*
*Little BIG Things
Big carts =
Source: Walmart
2X: “When Friedman
slightly
curved
the right angle of an
entrance corridor to one property, he
was ‘amazed at the magnitude of
change in pedestrians’ behavior’—the
percentage who entered increased from
one-third to nearly two-thirds.”
—Natasha Dow Schull, Addiction By Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas
(1) AMENABLE TO RAPID
EXPERIMENTATION/FAILURE “FREE”
(NO BAD “PR,” NO $$)
(2) QUICK TO IMPLEMENT/QUICK TO
ROLL OUT
(3) INEXPENSIVE TO IMPLEMENT/
ROLL OUT
(4) HUGE MULTIPLIER
(5) AN “ATTITUDE”
(6) DOES NOT BY AND LARGE REQUIRE A
“POWER POSITION” FROM WHICH
TO LAUNCH EXPERIMENTS.
We Are What
We Eat.
We Are Who We
Spend Time
With.
“You will become like
the five people you
associate with the
most—this can
be either a blessing
or a curse.”
—Billy Cox
The “We are what we eat”/
“We are who we hang out with”
Axiom: At its core,
every (!!!)
relationship-partnership decision
(employee, vendor, customer, etc.,
etc.) is a strategic decision about:
“Innovate,
‘Yes’ or ‘No’ ”
“The Billion-man
Research Team:
Companies offering
work to online
communities are
reaping the benefits of
crowdsourcing.”
—Headline, FT
“The Bottleneck is at the …
“Where are you likely to find people with
the least diversity of experience, the
largest investment in the past,
and the greatest reverence for
industry dogma …
Top of the
Bottle”
— Gary Hamel/Harvard Business Review
“Who’s the most
interesting person
you’ve met in the last
90 days? How do I
get in touch with
them?”
—Fred Smith
Innovate
or Die:
Measure It!
Innovation Index: How many
of your Top 5 Strategic
Initiatives/Key Projects
score 8 or higher (out of 10)
on a “Weird”/“Profound”/
“Wow”/“Game-changer”
Scale? (At least 3???)
VALUE-ADDED
STRATEGIES
TGRs:
8/80
Customers describing their service
experience as “superior”:
8%
Companies describing
the service experience they provide as
“superior”:
80%
—Source: Bain & Company survey of 362 companies, reported in John DiJulius,
What's the Secret to Providing a World-class Customer Experience?
Conveyance: Kingfisher Air
Location: Approach to New Delhi
“May I clean
your glasses,
sir?”
Conveyance: Southwest Airlines
Location: Boarding, Albany NY
“May I help
you down the
jetway.”
“We look for ...
listening, caring,
smiling, saying
‘Thank you,’ being
warm.”
— Colleen Barrett, former President, Southwest Airlines
“Courtesies of a small
and trivial character
are the ones which
strike deepest in the
grateful and
appreciating heart.”
—Henry Clay
7X.
7:30A-8:00P. F12A.
7:30AM = 7:15AM.
8:00PM = 8:15PM.
(2,000,000)
Source: Vernon Hill, Fans, Not Customers
<TGW
and …
>TGR
(Things Gone
WRONG-Things Gone RIGHT)
“Experiences
are as distinct
from services
as services are
from goods.”
—Joe Pine & Jim Gilmore, The Experience Economy:
Work Is Theatre & Every Business a Stage
C
*Chief e
O*
Xperience Officer
TGRs:
3 Minutes/
!
Overkill
THERE ONCE
WAS A TIME WHEN A
Relationships
(of all varieties):
THREE-MINUTE
PHONE CALL WOULD
HAVE AVOIDED SETTING OFF THE
DOWNWARD SPIRAL THAT
RESULTED IN A COMPLETE
RUPTURE.*
*Divorce, loss of a BILLION $$$ aircraft sale, etc., etc.
THE PROBLEM IS
RARELY/NEVER THE
PROBLEM. THE
RESPONSE TO THE
PROBLEM INVARIABLY
ENDS UP BEING THE
REAL PROBLEM.
(OPPORTUNITY).
Social Business/
Customer
Engagement
“Customer engagement is
moving from relatively isolated
market transactions to deeply
connected and sustained social
relationships. This basic change
in how we do business will make
an impact on just about
everything we do.”
Social Business By Design: Transformative Social Media Strategies
For the Connected Company —Dion Hinchcliffe & Peter Kim
“It
takes 20 years to build a
reputation and five
minutes to ruin it. Also, the
Welcome to the Age of Social Media:
Internet and technology have made
customers more demanding., and
they expect information, answers,
products, responses, and resolutions
sooner than ASAP.” —John DiJulius,
The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow Conventional
Business, Inspire Employees, and Change the World
“The
customer is in
complete control of
communication.”
Welcome to the Age of Social Media:
—John DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow
Conventional Business, Inspire Employees, and Change the World
“I would rather engage in a Twitter
conversation with a single
customer than see our company
attempt to attract the attention of
millions in a coveted Super Bowl
commercial. Why? Because having people discuss your brand
directly with you, actually connecting one-to-one, is far more valuable—not to
mention far cheaper!. …
“Consumers want to discuss what they like, the companies they support, and the
organizations and leaders they resent. They want a community. They want to be
heard. …
“[I]f we engage employees, customers, and prospective customers in meaningful
dialogue about their lives, challenges, interests, and concerns, we can build a
community of trust, loyalty, and—possibly over time—help them become
advocates and champions for the brand.”
—Peter Aceto, CEO,
Tangerine (from the Foreword to A World Gone Social:
How Companies Must Adapt to Survive, by Ted Coine & Mark Babbit)
“Amy Howell
[social marketer extraordinaire,
ignites
epidemics. In a good way,
of course. Epidemics of
excitement. Epidemics of
business connections.
Epidemics of influence.”
founder of Howell Marketing]
—Mark Schaeffer, ROI/Return on Influence: The Revolutionary
Power of Klout, Social Scoring, and Influence Marketing
Social Business/
New Game
ZMOT
: ZERO Moment Of Truth/Google*
“You know what a ‘moment of truth’ is. It’s when a prospective customer
decides either to take the next step in the purchase funnel, or to exit and
seek other options. … But what is a ‘zero moment of truth’? Many behaviors
can serve as a zero moment of truth, but what binds them together is that
the purchase is being researched and considered before the prospect even
enters the classic sales funnel … In its research, Google found that
84%
of shoppers said the new mental
model, ZMOT, shapes their decisions. …”
—Jay Baer, Youtility: Why Smart Marketing Is About Help, Not Hype
*See www.zeromomentoftruth.com for ZMOT in booklength format
(BIG) Data =
(BIG) $$$
“Caesars’ Entertainment
have bet their future on
harvesting personal
data rather than
developing the fanciest
properties.”
—Adam Tanner,
What Stays in Vegas: The World of Personal Data—Lifeblood of Big
Business—and the End of Privacy as We Know it
DESIGN
Design Rules!
APPLE market cap
> Exxon Mobil*
*August 2011 (0410.15: $740B, 2X #2)
“Huge
degree of
care.”
Apple design:
—Ian Parker, New Yorker, 23 March 2015, on Jony Ives
“Steve and Jony would discuss corners
for hours and hours.”
—Laurene Powell Jobs
O*
C
*Chief
Design
Officer
Hypothesis: Men
cannot
design for women’s
!!??
needs
Women BUY
(Everything)
!
“Forget CHINA,
INDIA and the
INTERNET: Economic
Growth Is Driven by
WOMEN.”
Source: Headline, Economist
W>
2X (C + I)*
*“Women now drive the global economy. Globally, they control about $20
trillion in consumer spending, and that figure could climb as high as
$28 trillion
in the next five years. Their
$13 trillion in total yearly earnings could reach $18 trillion in the same
period. In aggregate, women represent a growth market bigger than China and India combined—more than
twice as big in fact. Given those numbers, it would be foolish to ignore or underestimate the female consumer. And
yet many companies do just that—even ones that are confidant that they have a winning strategy when it comes to
women. Consider Dell’s …”
Source: Michael Silverstein and Kate Sayre, “The Female Economy,” HBR, 09.09
“Women are
THE majority
market”
—Fara Warner/The Power of the Purse
Women as Decision Makers/Various sources
Home Furnishings …
Vacations …
92%
94%
(Adventure Travel … 70%/ $55B travel equipment)
91%
D.I.Y.
… 80%
Consumer Electronics … 51%
Cars … 68% (influence 90%)
Houses …
(major “home projects”)
(66% home computers)
All consumer purchases …
Bank Account …
83% *
89%
67%
Small business loans/biz starts … 70%
Health Care … 80%
Household investment decisions …
*In the USA women hold >50% managerial positions including >50% purchasing officer positions;
hence women also make the majority of commercial purchasing decisions.
MOST
SIGNIFICANT
VARIABLE in EVERY
“The
sales situation is the
GENDER
of the buyer, and
more importantly, how the
salesperson communicates to
the buyer’s gender.”
—Jeffery Tobias Halter, Selling to Men, Selling to Women
Sales/After-sales Process
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Kick-off – Women
Research – Women
Purchase – Men
Ownership – Women
Word-of-mouth – Women
Source: Martha Barletta, Marketing to Women: How to Increase Your Share of the World’s Largest Market
Does your
organization
reflect this—e.g.,
staffing, exec
team?
AND THE
WINNERS
AREN’T/ARE
-1/+1/2
“I am often asked by
would-be entrepreneurs
seeking escape from life
within huge corporate
structures, ‘How do I build
a small firm for myself?’
The answer seems
obvious …
Source: Paul Ormerod, Why Most Things Fail: Evolution, Extinction and Economics
“I am often asked by would-be entrepreneurs seeking escape from
life within huge corporate structures, ‘How do I build a small firm for
Buy a
very large
one and just
wait.”
myself?’ The answer seems obvious:
—Paul Ormerod, Why Most Things Fail:
Evolution, Extinction and Economics
S&P 500
+1/-1*
*Every …
!
2 weeks
Source: Richard Foster (via Rita McGrath/HBR/12.26.13
AND THE
WINNERS
AREN’T/ARE
Roll Out the
RED Carpet!
THE RED
CARPET
STORE
(Joel Resnick/Flemington NJ)
Retail Superstars:
Inside the 25 Best
Independent Stores
in America
—by George Whalin
JUNGLE JIM’S INTERNATIONAL MARKET, FAIRFIELD, OH:
“An adventure in
‘shoppertainment,’ begins in the parking lot
and goes on to
1,600
cheeses and
1,400
varieties of hot sauce—not to mention 12,000 wines priced from
$8-$8,000
4,000
a bottle; all this is brought to you by
vendors. Customers from every corner of the globe.”
BRONNER’S CHRISTMAS WONDERLAND, FRANKENMUTH, MI, POP
5,000: 98,000-square-foot “shop” features
ornaments,
50,000
6,000
Christmas
trims, and anything else you can
name pertaining to Christmas. …”
“BE THE BEST.
IT’S THE ONLY
MARKET THAT’S
NOT CROWDED.”
From: Retail Superstars: Inside the 25 Best
Independent Stores in America, George Whalin
Small &
Middle-sized
NicheMicro-niche
Dominators!
I love …
"Own" a niche through EXCELLENCE
(Writ large: Germany’s MITTELSTAND)
!
Michael Raynor and Mumtaz Ahmed’: THE THREE RULES:
How Exceptional Companies Think*:
1. Better before cheaper.
2. Revenue before cost.
3. There are no other rules.
(*From a database of over 25,000 companies from hundreds of industries covering 45 years, they
uncovered 344 companies that qualified as statistically “exceptional.”)
LEADERSHIP
“I’m always stopping by our
at least
a week.
stores—
25
I’m also in other
places: Home Depot, Whole Foods, Crate &
Barrel. I try to be a sponge to pick up as
much as I can.” —Howard Schultz
Source: Fortune, “Secrets of Greatness”
MBWA
Managing
By
Wandering
Around
“IT’S
ALWAYS
SHOWTIME.”
—
“IT’S ALWAYS
SHOWTIME.”
—David D’Alessandro, Career Warfare
“I am a
dispenser of
enthusiasm.”
—Ben Zander, symphony conductor and management guru
“A man without
a smiling face
must not open
his shop.”
—Chinese Proverb
“The
4 most
important
words in any
organization are …
THE FOUR MOST IMPORTANT WORDS IN ANY ORGANIZATION
“WHAT
DO YOU
THINK?”
ARE …
Source: courtesy Dave Wheeler, posted at tompeters.com
Acknowledgement
!
“The deepest urge
in human nature
is the desire to be
important.”
—John Dewey
(In Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence
People (“The BIG Secret of Dealing With People”)
“Employees who
don't feel significant
rarely make
significant
contributions.”
—Mark Sanborn
!
Meetings ROCK
(Make that: SHOULD Rock)
Complain all
you want,
but meetings
are what you
(boss/leader) do!
Meetings are
#1
do. Therefore,
thing bosses
100% of
those meetings:
EXCELLENCE.
ENTHUSIASM.
ENGAGEMENT.
LEARNING. TEMPO.
“The doctor
interrupts
after …*
*Source: Jerome Groopman, How Doctors Think
18 …
18 …
seconds!
(An obsession with) Listening is ... the ultimate mark
of
Listening
Listening
Listening
Listening
Listening
Listening
Listening
is
is
is
is
is
is
is
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
Listening
Listening
Listening
Listening
is
is
is
is
...
...
...
...
the heart and soul of Engagement.
the heart and soul of Kindness.
the heart and soul of Thoughtfulness.
the basis for true Collaboration.
the basis for true Partnership.
a Team Sport.
a Developable Individual Skill.* (*Though women
are far better at it than men.)
the basis for Community.
the bedrock of Joint Ventures that work.
the bedrock of Joint Ventures that grow.
the core of effective Cross-functional
Communication.* (*Which is in turn Attribute #1 of
organization effectiveness.)
(cont.)
Respect
.
Suggested
Core Value
#1: “We are Effective
Listeners—we treat
Listening EXCELLENCE as
the Centerpiece of our
Commitment to Respect
and Engagement and
Community and Growth.”
“I always write
‘LISTEN’ on
the back of my hand
before a meeting.”
Source: Tweet viewed @tom_peters
Step Up To
Creating/
Living/
Maintaining an
Effective Culture
“What matters most
to a company over time?
Strategy or culture?
WSJ/0910.13:
Dominic Barton, MD, McKinsey & Co.:
“Culture.”
“If I could have chosen not to tackle the IBM culture head-on,
I probably wouldn’t have. My bias coming in was toward
strategy, analysis and measurement. In comparison, changing
the attitude and behaviors of hundreds of thousands of people
Yet I came to see in
my time at IBM that culture
isn’t just one aspect of the
is very, very hard.
game
—IT IS THE
GAME.”
—Lou Gerstner, Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance
“The topic is probably the oldest and biggest debate in Customer
What is more important: How well
you hire, or the training and culture you
bring your employees into? While both are
service.
very important,
75
percent is the
Customer service training and the service
culture of your company. Do you really think that
Disney has found 50,000 amazing service-minded people? There
probably aren’t 50,000 people on earth who were born to serve.
Companies like Ritz-Carlton and Disney find good people and put
them in such a strong service and training environment that
doesn’t allow for accept anything less than excellence.” —John
DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow Conventional Business,
Inspire Employees, and Change the World
“INSANELY GREAT”
STEVE JOBS
“RADICALLY THRILLING”
BMW
“ASTONISH ME”
SERGEI DIAGHLEV, TO A LEAD DANCER
“BUILD SOMETHING GREAT”
HIROSHI YAMAUCHI, NINTENDO, TO A SENIOR GAME DESIGNER
“MAKE IT IMMORTAL”
DAVID OGILVY, TO A COPYWRITER.
Kevin Roberts’ Credo
1. Ready. Fire! Aim.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
If it ain’t broke ... Break it!
Hire crazies.
Ask dumb questions.
Pursue failure.
Lead, follow ... or get out of the way!
Spread confusion.
Ditch your office.
Read odd stuff.
10.
AVOID MODERATION!
“You can’t behave in
a calm, rational
manner. You’ve got
to be out there on
the lunatic fringe.”
— Jack Welch