What goes ’round comes ’round

Australian manufacturing has been decimated over the last few decades, and whilst there is no single reason for this impact, the determination of the major retailers to use the opening of global sourcing options to reduce their costs and compete on price has been a major contributor.

In my patch, the food industry, a whole layer of mid sized Australian owned food manufacturers have simply gone broke, or sold out to multinationals consolidating manufacturing internationally, as FMCG retailers increasingly sourced overseas. The very few that are left are fighting a rear guard action, and will probably lose.

Therefore, when I hear retailers bleating about the competition from international retailers selling into Australia using the same tools the retailers have used on former Australian suppliers, I think “good one” The latest bleating culminating in an advertising campaign, and lots of appearances by Gerry Harvey amongst others, does nothing but encourage me to believe that the short sighted retail sourcing policies which are just about landed price, with no acceptance of the long term benefits of having a vibrant and innovative manufacturing sector are coming back to bite them on the arse.

Retailers have been dishing it out for years, thumbing their noses at any form of regulation of retail, ignoring the potential and growth of e-tail, it is illuminating to see how they are reacting to some of their medicine coming back to them, although the sales loss is currently only very small, and the consumers they want slugged with GST for online purchases are also their customers, unlikely to thank them for the GST led cost increase.

Get over it, and figure out how to compete on other than shelf price, meanwhile, a few of us are enjoying the sight of retailers squirming.

Intellectual Capital and the crowd.

    The Microsoft business model has resisted all efforts to introduce open innovation practices into its markets, and many would argue, has stunted its growth and innovative potential as a result.

    How rapidly things can change, even when you resist from a position of strength.

    Microsoft introduced “Kinect” in the US just before Christmas, with the objective of wresting back some of the gamer/activity market into  its X-Box offering which has suffered at the hands of the Wii.   At the  heart of Kinect is a chip with advanced capabilities, and very quickly hackers have found how to add open source access those capabilities, and are starting to explore applications that would not have occurred to Microsoft, or would have cost too much to pursue.

    U-Tube is being used extensively to communicate the astonishing stuff being done, this one being the use of the Kinect  chip extracted from a Kinect device bought for $150, to create 3-D images

    The message in all this is simply that open source innovation that engages the crowd outside the boundaries of your ability to harness IP is the exploding as the driver of innovation.

     IP is almost unprotectable nowadays, the management task is now a question in two parts,

  1.  “How do we create the conditions for the development of Intellectual Capital around our “patch”? ,
  2. ” How do we evolve our business model and monetarise it?
  3.  

Performance appraisal time…. Already?.

New year usually signals it is time for one of the most misused management tools to be pulled out of the box again, the dreaded performance appraisal.

Done well, a system to manage  the performance of employees, and their managers is one of the most powerful tools to optimise performance, as it encompasses change initiation and management, culture evolution,  project implementation,  personnel development, strategic and tactical development and implementation, all the stuff we talk about regularly, but often do not get around to doing.

It is easy to put aside hard things, who has never seen some of these practices used,  but amongst the thinking that often gets done in this quieter time of the year, it would be wise to review your own systems, perhaps we should rename them “Performance Optimisation” system, rather than performance management. 

More than, rather than more of.

20th century  marketing tools have their place, in the 20th century; they will be progressively less effective as we progress through the 21st. Mass media, mass distribution, superficial differentiation,  and all the rest are failing to excite in the 21st.

You need to do more than, not just more of.

Apple has done a great job over 30 years, and particularly the last 10 of engaging consumers, often to the point of illogical connection  to and engagement with, the brand, and they have done it again with their “friend store” designed to ensure once you become an Apple user, you  do not leave.

Contrast Apple to the boring, sterile, and just plain ordinary marketing executed by their competitors in computing, telephony, and music devices, and the value of “more than” becomes obvious. Apple in fact sells things that do not really fall into these simplistic manufacturing designated categories, they redefine the boundaries of their products, and the way they market by being committed and passionate, as well as different.

As you consider how to attack the challenges of the new year, think “more than” rather than just more of the same.

A thought for 2011.

On the eve of a new decade, it is perhaps useful to consider the changes that have occurred, recognise that the pace of change is still accelerating. For myself, and I suspect most of my readers, to even try and anticipate the changes to come in the next decade, on top of absorbing the impact of the last decade,  just hurts the old brain.

However, where there is change, there is opportunity, and the opportunities that emerge will all require that the individual and the group is “connected” and using the communication and collaboration tools of the new decade. Part of the challenge here is throwing off the pre-conceptions of a disconnected world, the one we have all lived in to date, and to see the world through a different lens.

Chance favors the connected mind, so in 2011, get connected!