Experience on the Edge


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May 2008

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SugarCon 08 Rocks

  • CEO of SugarCRM Speaks to Investors
    This gives you a flavor of what SugarCon 08 was all about. It was like a high tech lovefest. Children of the 60s and the 90s and the millennium would be happy here.

Recommended CRM Readings

  • C. K. Prahalad: The Future of Competition: Co-Creating Unique Value with Customers

    C. K. Prahalad: The Future of Competition: Co-Creating Unique Value with Customers
    This is great stuff on co-creation of value. Take this book, mix it with The Experience Economy, a dash of CRM at the Speed of Light and the future is ours, man!!! (*****)

  • B. Joseph Pine II & James Gilmore: The Experience Economy

    B. Joseph Pine II & James Gilmore: The Experience Economy
    This is a groundbreaker, folks. One that you should be reading right now. Go. Shoo. Go get it now. It is affecting you as you read this, whether or not you know that. Seminal work on what has been a transition to a new type of economy. (*****)

  • Christopher Locke, Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Rick Levine: The Cluetrain Manifesto

    Christopher Locke, Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Rick Levine: The Cluetrain Manifesto
    If this book didn't spend so much time proclaiming its manifesto and explained it a little more, it would be a disruptive innovation unto itself. It is a powerful and often metaphorically lovely book about the new customer a few years before that customer even knew it was what the cluetrain crew train said it was. A great book but strident as hell. This was a more important book than many realize it was. Or is. (****)

  • Naras Eechambadi: High Performance Marketing

    Naras Eechambadi: High Performance Marketing
    If marketing is something you do, then this book is something you read. Not only does this dynamic book look at marketing in a contemporary fashion - with the customer at the center - but it also helps you figure out how to (finally!) measure your activities and results. A genuinely refreshing brace of business thinking in a field that needs it. (*****)

  • Shoshana Zuboff: The Support Economy

    Shoshana Zuboff: The Support Economy
    This is a revolutionary book. I love this book (partially because it validates everything I say :-)) because it recognizes that the "enterprise logic" of managerial capitalism is no longer sufficient to interest a consumer who is trying to control his/her own value. There's so much more.... (*****)

  • James G. Barnes: Secrets of Customer Relationship Management: Its How You Make Them Feel

    James G. Barnes: Secrets of Customer Relationship Management: Its How You Make Them Feel
    This is a you gotta read, read. Jim is a board member of CRMGuru, has won numerous academic honors, is a real world CRM consultant, runs marathons, and can write up a storm. He thinks out of the box and then provides approaches to how you can. This book is undegoing updating but is well worth it as is. Get it. Now. What are you waiting for? Hurry up!! (*****)

  • Jill Dyche: The CRM Handbook

    Jill Dyche: The CRM Handbook
    The ultimate guide to implementation of CRM. This book is about as practical as it gets. Just lays it right out and boom, you should have an idea of what you have to consider when it comes to CRM. (*****)

  • Paul Greenberg: CRM at the Speed of Light

    Paul Greenberg: CRM at the Speed of Light
    This is the best book on CRM EVER written. So I say. And it is written by me and so I pass judgment on myself. (*****)

  • Donna Fluss: The Real-Time Contact Center

    Donna Fluss: The Real-Time Contact Center
    As Donna points out, this is an ironic title. All contact centers are already "real-time." None the less this is both cutting edge and definitive and reading it is a must (*****)

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May 07, 2008

Pictures At An Exhibition: Michael Maoz Kicks Some Intent-Driven Butt Into Gear

Got to see Michael Maoz (Gartner's superstar analyst) both hanging out and presenting at the SAP CRM Theater. Aside from just the sheer pleasure of seeing someone I count among my special friends, he did a GREAT job at the presentation, unveiling some new material on CRM and the social actions of the new customer. Some of his stuff was validating to me because it overlapped (with different verbal assignments) what I've been saying. Some of it was outright fascinating & I think he personally is onto something here. I'm going to summarize in about 200 words what he said for an hour so needless to say this will be the spare version. Gartner Research apparently found that CRM is THE top priority for businesses in 2008 - in part due to the economic difficulties - because people need to retain customers when the going is bad. but what was interesting is the different spins different segments have - for examples the biggest business issue is enhancing and retaining relationships with customers (8.1 on scale of 10) while #2 is tracking new customers (pay attention Business Objects!!) (8.0/10). When CEOs only were queried they thought that sales productivity (36%) and customer care (35%) were the #1 & #2 issues respectively - which for those of who think in a classically siloed way - are two of the three pillars of CRM. When IT was queried about their business expectations the number 1 for 2008 (and '07 & '06) was improving business processes and #2? Attracting & retaining customers. Innovation went from #10 in 2007 to #3 in 2008. He then went thorough a significant amount of other Gartner numbers of which, I'll let you in on a few more. The availability of channels for the customer has increased in both scope and complexity and what was fascinating is that as self-service via the web increased to 50% of channel activity in customer service in 2007, the parts of customer service that still relied on humans (e.g. contact center CSRs) found that it got far worse for them and even with all the new technologies and the reduction in the amount of human to human contact (though, for example, T-Mobile has 300 million incoming so I can't see that calls have been reduced THAT much), the attrition rate among CSRs is worse than ever. The reason? If someone goes to the extent of calling, given they can take care of many of their problems or queries via the web, they are REALLY REALLY mad. REALLY mad. Really....mad. The lesser problems have been solved online. See the theme here? Customers, customers, and, oh crap, yeah, all things related to customers. Which means that CRM is the #1 priority for us'n in 2008. But, and this was the kicker, as Michael said, his daughters don't know that. They do their purchasing due to what they are told to on Facebook. They ask their friends via Facebook, or MySpace or perhaps use the aggregators like FriendFeed to find out where to go tonight or the best place to get a bargain handbag or how to figure out a more complex purchase. All that "stuff" that companies are doing doesn't mean squat to them. He also pointed out in a very interesting way that he's had three varieties of Toyota SUV, or car or lux car (Lexus), and has been a committed Toyota customer for 10 years, but Toyota didn't grow with him so it couldn't make a suggestion about what might interest him. Why not? THEY DIDN'T KNOW. All they know is that he bought some cars for some reasons other than what they can fathom. In fact, I find this to be a HUGE problem with companies and a complex one to solve. How do you grow with the customers? Each of them grows differently and yet, if you knew, the likelihood of repurchase or of a new purchase or cross sell or whatever salesy terms you are comforted by, goes up exponentially because the emotional state attached to that knowledge and indication of that knowledge to the customer is that "hey, they CARE," or in a Sally Fieldsian way, "They like me. They REALLY like me." Procter & Gamble is the only company I'm aware of doing that "growing up with the customer" to some degree. They have a product called "Sparkle Body Spray" that in 2005 (long story with this that you should attend my classes to hear) was aimed at the 14-15 year old girl market and had a social site that was associated with the themes that you'd find with that age group. Contests, blogs with colors associated with the body spray (anti-perspirant) scents, putting together dream date and then emailing info or text messaging info to friends, etc. This was wildly successful, all word of mouth built with 12,000 unique visitors a week who averaged 25 minutes per visit on the site. But if you look at it now, when the girls are now around 17-18, the site is tied to another site "Because You're Hot" which has video dance contests that win you a JLo music video slot and surveys about the sexiest scent, etc. In other words, the site is growing up with its audience. (BTW, this is me, not Michael in that red paragraph. I don't want to put words in his mouth) He made the point that his kids and many others are moving to control their own experiences outside the channels provided by the company and this is an inevitable march. This peer to peer relationship, the external communities not in the control of the business, are all creating a new set of expectations which he identified as:
  • 24/7 availability of services
  • want to be needed, recognized
  • Dialogue, experience control
  • Give them, show them you have domain expertise

The optimal enterprise here would not be the current one which he called the function driven enterprise, but instead the "Intent-driven Enterprise." That is a company that knows not just what I want, but knows my intent - what are the reasons I want what I want, and what WILL I be interested in down the road - the knowledge of which they got from me, senor, senorita, senora customer. He then identified the top "functionality" requirements for the Intent-driven Enterprise:

  1. It is in sync with evolving needs (key here is evolving)
  2. It engages community opinions
  3. It is reliable & trustworthy
  4. It allows independent ratings
  5. and
  6. It uses "like type" comparisons (similar here to the Edelman Trust Index findings - the most trusted person I know is someone like me).
Because this is so complex, success can't be defined as good "suboptimal" results (good marketing, good sales, good service, etc.) but has to be defined as the engagement of an integrated ecosystem made available to the customer.

He (almost) closed with what I would call a perceptual model for the future customer. He said the customer had to have the illusion of free will, of the availability of multiple paths for exploration and of the means to achieve several goals with the business. While the business is needed to provide it, the business reality is that the paths are probably pre-determined, that there is one process that is truly available and that one goal is there for the customer. Michael wasn't advocating this, he was saying that's what the business reality is and probably will be. This is very much the same concept in a somewhat different framework that Joe Pine 2 advocates in "Authenticity" which is fake real in a manner of speaking. My take on this has been more benign since I don't think that fake ANYTHING is what needs to happen but I do think that you don't need to own luxury, you need to "feel luxurious." You know the old saying, "whatever floats your boat?" That is what I mean, but the business has to see it from what it costs them to make the boat that the customer wants to float, and no one in their right mind can argue this is wrong. I do think there is an optimal state possible, though. I think that the engagement of the entire ecosystem of the company for the customer opens up options for the customer that give them increased degrees of freedom while at the same time allowing the enterprise to execute its business plan successfully. Meaning a "real real" collaboration. Primarily because there are a lot of forces involved in an ecosystem - not just one company and one customer but multiple value chains associated with either the customer or the enterprise. What Michael (though not in this presentation, more in discussions) and I make abundantly clear in our own inimitable styles is that business value and customer value while sharing the word "value" are two very different ideas that have to work in conjunction for both the customer to get what he/she wants & the business to get what it wants.

Pay attention to this "intent-driven enterprise" thing - its important and this is the first I've seen it. I hope that Gartner gets on board with Michael's thinking here. It would do them well to be more than cursory about it. This is really good stuff.

May 06, 2008

Its 2008. SAP FINALLY Gets It. They Really, Really Do.....

I'm more than pleasantly surprised. Much more actually. As you know from my past "tough love" posts on SAP and their often dusty messaging, while I liked the company, I thought that they just didn't get "it." The "it" being the contemporary customer's approach to the world and the social changes going on that were affecting business in a rather dramatic way. In fact, one year ago at this time, I'd have to have said (and did) that most of large software - actually all large high tech - companies - were ignoring the changes and still trying to please the enterprise customer in ways that no longer made sense nor has an iota of reasonable excuse for continuing. But, I'm sitting here at Sapphire 2008 heading into day 2 after a very productive day 1, and not only hearing messaging at this conference that I think is on the money, but getting the anecdotal evidence I need to make me believe that this is more than messaging - that SAP seems committed to transforming itself down to its core culture - and has been proceeding to do so. Two things before I outline some of what I'm seeing here:
  1. For those of you who don't know it. SAPPHIRE is SAP's annual conference, which for the last 3 (I think) years has been a joint effort of SAP and ASUG, their user group umbrella organization. This is a MASSIVE conference - with over 15,000 attendees - apparently stuck down here in Orlando FL for a few more years (too bad on that one) at the Orlando Convention Center. Which can handle the traffic. I just don't love Orlando.
  2. My approach to figuring this all out is straightforward, I listen to the stuff said on the stage, then I go and talk to people and, ahem, eavesdrop on the more casual conversations that go on and watch and listen for the smaller things that indicate cultural and intellectual transformation. So, for example, if someone says, as Henning Kagermann, the CEO of SAP, did, that SAP is committed to a culture of co-development and co-innovation, then I go out and find the signs that they are by seeing what they are actually doing and hearing how people are talking
OK. Enough of the preliminaries. Now on to the meat (though there is a vegetarian alternative phrase if requested). I sat in on the morning Executive Session for Business Influencers (I have this nice ego-boosting black tag on my badge that says I'm one. Thank god someone believes that. I'll save the badge for when I need to remember) and one brief observations. Analysts wear far too much wool. Its hot here but about 80% of the audience were wearing suits. Yuck. The message that was presented yesterday morning at the Exec. session was claro. SAP is successful, growing and SAP is changing and meeting the requirements of that change. On the successful side, SAP's global market share was 32.6% with organic growth up 0.9% over the last year and growth of market share through acquisition 3.3%. They had some significant revenue growth too with total revenue for example in EMEA at 1,306,000,000 euros which is 21% year over year growth in that sector. I didn't manage to get the totals, but so what? You get the idea which is the idea of this number. The themes that were presented for their "as is" (as opposed to forward thinking) state were that they could handle complex systems by innovating quickly; they were people centric with the ability to develop ad hoc processes (I presume they meant here processes that were appropriate to the audiences and not pre-cut); and (KEY THEME) collaborative networks were their love and their neo-raison d'etre - which meant having relationships that provided and were provided insight and connecting people to share info so that those insights could be realized (though, admittedly, I find this a little abstract as a message though a great idea). Hennings Kagermann also made the point in his opening segment that they were making SAP enterprise apps along the line of CRM-SRM-SCM-PLM-ERP-and what is still unknown to me EhP/EhP (??????) easy to "consume" and available for continuous innovation without upgrade. Again not explained much but borne out later in conversations I had about it - though I intend to find out more later today on this if possible. They are going to have an announcement today about a new product, but I don't know if I should say anything since the announcement is today, not yesterday. Its interesting to me though and not CRM but something that I think needs to be talked about when it is released. John Schwartz, CEO of Business Objects, talked about what they are doing in merging with SAP and painted a rather rosy picture. He said BO had 45,000 customers and 6500 employees - pretty massive and made it seem that the merger and unification of the cultures was going just great, thank you very much. I'll choose to remain a skeptic since nothing of that magnitude has ever gone that smoothly but its not an area I care that much about really so warts, glitches, wind and fire will not be the subject of this. There was only a brief discussion of cloud computing which I would suggest to SAP they pay more than brief attention to with the Google-IBM and Google-salesforce.com alliances that have been announced in the last two weeks or so. Hennings K. mentioned that SAP is agnostic when it comes to cloud computing because they realize that not everyone is going to want the same thing and so SAP needs to be above the clouds (that's mine, not his. I take full responsibility for the bad pun). So that's the "as is" state of the company's cortex - what about the "to be" and "going forward" states?

Follow the Yellow Brick Road

There were three things they mentioned, much to my delighted surprise as their path going forward. They were:
  • Co-innovation - That was specifically discussed with the recent RIM/SAP alliance to provide all of SAP's applications, starting with what might be a brilliant execution from what I saw of SAP CRM for the Blackberry. Driven by SVP of Mobility and Analytics Michael De La Cruz on the SAP side and a variety of folks on the RIM side including my good bud, Paul Briggs as the marketing guy for RIM in this effort, the application I saw was easily the most comprehensive and user friendly CRM application for the Blackberry bar none. I saw it in pre-production so I don't know how its going to play but even in that state it was fully integrated with the RIM alarm and calendar and contacts and accounts. In other words, the native Blackberry apps - which makes sense given that in the spirit of co-innovation, RIM actually developed the app for SAP - which is a marked departure, by the way, for BOTH companies in how they do things. That alone for those of us into the arcane machinations of company politics and culture - is important. But the idea of SAP doing it alone is seemingly not entirely a thing of the past but has become simply one of the approaches. While coopetition is not new, as old as 1990 or 1994 or something (a Novell guy wrote a book by that name), the idea of collaboration and co-development was never something that was culturally comfortable - apparently until now.
  • Web 2.0 - what made this particularly interesting was not just the new use interface of SAP CRM 2007 which was I think the best looking interface and perhaps the most functionally useful and simple one I've ever seen in a large enterprise CRM application, but also the fact that SAP claimed that they were "living the Web 2.0" - which is the harbinger of their cultural change. Now, I treated that as a marketing claim until I had the ability to speak with some of the senior management at the conference (from CEO Hennings Kagermann - a really nice guy - to SVPS of varying title to VPs to some of the less senior) and I had the ability to listen in on some "ordinary" organic conversations - and I think they are being authentic. Or as we say on the street (yeah, Paulie, you're quite the street guy aren't you? Right.), they're real. Keep in mind, I'm a skeptic not by nature but by profession to some degree. But the level of interest and activity among a decidedly younger management and staff than I expected (given that I'd talked with several of them in the past) around Web 2.0 tools and the freedom to innovate which seems to have seized control over the last year or so or some more recent time period is amazing. They don't seem to always move as glacially as they did in the past though they still (as I can personally attest) have their icebergian moments. (yes, I made that word up. But you know what it means don't you?). They seem able to take an idea and incorporate it quickly into their thinking. For example, I had a meeting with one SVP who was pointing out to me (proving it, really) what they were going to do in future generations of their products around the social applications - which was on a more significant scale then I expected. I mentioned something that I thought they needed to consider, a lightbulb seemed to go off in his head and he then made serious note of it and I do think he'll follow up. None of that "traditional" SAP "we'll do it and you'll like it" approach that characterized the past. In multiple discussions with analysts from Gartner, Forrester, AMR and IDC, there was a universal agreement amongst them that there is something different about SAP as a company and all really like the new SAP CRM 2007 and the Blackberry implementation of SAP CRM out there besides. I'd like to think that while I certainly am naive enough to be made a fool of on occasion, these folks (about 6-8 of them) are far more seasoned and "foolproof" than me and they saw what I saw. SAP is living the Web 2.0 "philosophy" or whatever you call it and they are different than they were even a year ago. What's amazing is that I'm not sure what triggered it at all. But it's good.
  • Analytics and Insight - Insight in particular was a word that was thrown out there a hundred times. Now, this is maybe the one glitch in the soft message. This is now a pillar of the trio of pillars because they acquired Business Objects and they have to do SOMETHING with it. Actually it seems to be a good acquisition but this is the one part that smacked a bit of self-aggrandizement. Its forgivable. Its their conference, for godssakes. What they emphasized here, though, was still a plus - the idea of providing real time analytics embedded across applications so that dynamic insights could be provided in real time.

    There is one piece of advice that I hope they take. I noticed that there was almost far too much consistency to the conversations about SAP product releases. So for example, in every discussion I heard or had, without exception, when it came to the discussion about the Blackberry CRM product, whether in a speech or on in a conversation, they all began the discussion with how people use the alarm on the Blackberry to wake up. EVERY-LAST-ONE-OF-THEM. Obviously everyone is well schooled in what the messages need to be around product, but it comes across as plastic which isn't good. A little messaging freedom might be nice.

    That's a niggling thing though by comparison to the sea change that SAP seems to have undergone. Look, maybe over the next several months, they'll break my heart and turn out to be what they used to but I don't think so. This one is here to stay.

    If I had to venture a guess as 2008 keeps moving inexorably to its end - I'd say that salesforce.com is going to be challenged by SAP and Oracle for CRM 2.0 leadership. Not expected at all, but welcomed. I'm not sure I'm right because my big caveat is that I haven't seen either Oracle or SAP new products in live customer environments over time and THAT is the final arbiter of success, culture change or not.

    As far as SAP goes, they've revitalized themselves and it seems unanimous among those I spoke with here - analysts, some customers, SAP staff members - that the change is deep and real.This is a far cry from what Microsoft did at Convergence at month ago to itself at this location and a far cry from what SAP did to itself a year ago in Orlando. But this time, SAP did good. Real good.

    Good for them.

April 27, 2008

Aggregating Some Ideas and Products For Aggregating

Further (and new) thoughts on a few items:


  • For CRM 2.0 to be successful, I've been continually making the point that the company has to change its business model from being a provider of goods and/or services to an aggregator of products, services, tools and experiences that allow the customer to personalize the kind of relationship and the experience that they have with the company. What makes this important is the same thing that makes a PC important to someone's life - a means to give someone a sense of control over their own life. Ultimately, that's what we all are looking to have and what makes us advocates of something is that they treat us in a way that gives us the intelligence and knowledge to extend that control over our own life. For example, that's why things like social network aggregators are as important as the social networks in this new world. Take a look at Cerado's Ventana, a creation of Chris Carfi's (he's all OVER this entry isn't he? He's an important social thinker AND doer which is why he is all over this blog). The pix here will give you an idea how it works:

What makes it important is that it is device-aware (can show it on your iphone) and is aggregator of multiple social activities. You can coherently and in a single place either online or on a mobile device, look at your Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Twitter, etc. accounts and see all the joint activity going on and respond accordingly. OR you could do what you see here with the BlogHer Guide to Political Bloggers- here is an aggregation of what is now over 150 women in politics who have blogs and here is a single screen (or conjoint set of screens), mobile or online that you can see all the women who are politically blogging through BlogHer and (note the "News" tab) you can see what's new and what's up with a single click.

There are competitors that I've written about in this field in May 2007 with the leading one being Profilactic. I wrote about them separately. But the model that Ventana has is unique and interesting. Its not just aggregating social networks that are out there - its pretty much aggregating content in the format that you want and that's immensely valuable especially when you can carry it mobilely and without a whole lot of baggage or digital overhead. My interest in this doesn't come because I love Chris Carfi in a manly sort of way. It comes because I think that this is a genuinely interesting and potentially really valuable aggregator for consumers but even more so for businesses. Imagine integrating this with wikis and podcasts and blogs so that you can find out what you need - and intelligently deal with a company that you work for or want to deal with (as an employee or a customer respectively) while staring at your iPhone or your Blackberry in real time or nearly so.

Very cool AND very important. I'll be following this more. I've seen it and it works.

I'm Paul Greenberg and I approve this blog entry.




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April 19, 2008

Contemporary Irritations: Changing History

As you know, I've always been adamantly opposed to negative campaigning. I don't mind honestly critical thinking - in fact I welcome that - and I don't mind a battle on the merits of something. But I really don't like it when one company trashes something.

It gets particularly painful when companies I like do it.

When companies I don't like do it, I'm pretty much on it. You hear about it.

When companies I truly like and sometimes even admire do it, I'm honestly not as enthused but I still have to be a straight shooter and do it anyway.

This is the tale of a company that I like.

A Tale of Infusionsoft

Last week, I heard from Infusionsoft via press releases and links that they were changing their name from InfusionSoft CRM to Infusionsoft (the full press release on their name changes is here) and that they would no longer be involved in CRM but now in "e-marketing." Their reasons are discussed on their website:

"Looking for Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software for your business? Before you go down that path, there's something you should know about CRM. For years CRM software companies have made big promises. And for years, they've missed the mark. Outrageous claims of all-in-one business solutions turned out to be…well, outrageous. CRM software has been a big disappointment... especially for entrepreneurs and small businesses. Why, you ask?

  • CRM software is old technology invented decades ago
  • CRM was originally created for very large businesses, not entrepreneurs
  • CRM solutions for "small business" aren't much more than contact managers & static data repositories
  • CRM has an extremely (and embarrassingly) high failure rate

Basically, CRM software has failed to live up to the Customer Relationship Management philosophy and what it was supposed to be. And unfortunately, small business owners have thrown countless dollars away on "miracle" CRM solutions that amounted to little more than frustration & additional headaches!

Today's small business needs something that goes WAY beyond CRM software. If you want to grow your business instead of just managing it, then you need eMarketing software."

Now they are an "emarketing" company and that is supposed to be completely different and far more successful than CRM.

First, before I get into it.

I have no problem with being critical of CRM. I don't even like the term and think that it needs to be changed or evolved or eliminated for something else. We are in an era where customer engagement is the order of the day and managing customer relationships is no longer viable nor desired. The name reflects a period that had different customer expectations and different perceptions by practitioners and vendors.

But what's going on here is disappointing for more than one reason.

First, for purely selfish reasons, Infusionsoft is reducing CRM to a software solution - despite the software industry claims to know better. Anyone in the field including the good folks at Infusionsoft, know that when we're dealing with CRM, we're dealing with a strategy for customers, not just an application or on demand service. The reasons for its failure were not uniformly ponderous software but more often than not failed thinking about the strategy and the programs prior to the implementation of the software. In fact, if you look at the reasons that were given when CRM did fail, the big ones were failure to adopt (which is a software issue) and a failure to define the elements/metrics/indicators for success (not a software issue). So this description is pretty self serving.

Second, as my good buddy Brent Leary has pointed out in many columns, we're at a point (despite Infusionsoft's claims) that there are numerous options for small business to choose from ranging from Infusionsoft (emarketing notwithstanding) to CRM Guaranteed to Zoho to salesforce.com etc.

Third, and most ridiculous is that "a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." Meaning all Infusionsoft did here, unless they can prove otherwise, is rebrand themselves - which is great and fine. But they felt that in order to rebrand (and distinguish) themselves, they had to start reviling something they had actually been no more than 2 weeks ago without any fundamental changes to anything but their message and website. They were (and still are) a CRM application - a very good one for small businesses I might add - and just because they call themselves something else doesn't make them something else. Maybe I should change my book title to "EMarketing at the Speed of Light...."

I just find this sad -- and silly. I truly like this company, think that Clate Mask is both a smart guy and a great guy. But this effort that they are making to distance themselves from CRM without any changes but to their message and the generic trashing of CRM that's used to trash CRM non-specifically is just...well, sad, sad, sad. Because they didn't need it just to rebrand.

If they had simply said that they were going to rebrand as emarketing and explained it around changes they made to their applications functionality - and how they had been misaligned as CRM when they were actually more of a company providing emarketing (which in all fairness is more of the weight of their applications than any other components) then, okay. No problem.

But, in effect, to rebrand and then blame it on the failure of CRM and then not change their applications to reflect what they're doing? That smacks of desperation to differentiate. If they are actually changing their applications and just not telling us, then their timing is bad. They shouldn't announce their bye byes to CRM until they've eliminated their salesforce automation components and their ecommerce components so they can truly eat their own yummy emarketing dog food.

And don't bother with the CRM sucks argument. Stay positive. Just be straight as to why you decided to rebrand. How can you be one thing one day and then trash it totally the next and not make any other changes than verbiage? If you're making other changes that gives me (and everybody else) a sense of why you truly had to trash CRM to make the changes, please announce them so I can say, okay, that works for me (and everyone else). I have no vested interest in CRM nor do I have one in emarketing. But because I like you guys, I'd like to see you not do things like this which seem somewhat petty.

Damn, I'm disappointed.

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April 07, 2008

Love This Video----PLEASE?

Neighborhood America, my favorite social networking platform for technological, business and personal reasons (I LOVE the people there - all passionately), did this video on enterprise social networks called: CRM and the Social Customer that highlights some of the comments I (and others, but I'm sufficiently narcissistic to say mostly "moi.") made at their executive summit in January. Watch it. Its actually pretty damned cool.


While you're at it, check out their site and learn something about them. I'm going to be doing a full review of their newest version of their social network platform - the good and the bad - there really is no "ugly" here - next week. In a super nutshell sneak preview, the tagline is that they are a strong contender for best social network platform for the enterprise but they are still missing some features that I know are in their pipeline but need to be released to kick them right to the top - for me. They are still probably the strongest one that's out there at the moment either way. Right now, they rock, but not rule. But when those pipeline features are released - they will rule.

Without a doubt in my mind.

Details next week.

In the meantime, watch this video frequently enough on YouTube to make it viral. Okay?

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April 06, 2008

The Terran Trio: "I Think Therefore I Am", "I Am Therefore I Act", and "Live from NY, It's SATURDAY NIGHT!"

Just a forewarning. This is a really, really strange entry, especially if you've followed my stuff for awhile (though maybe not if you know me personally):

It Starts Here.....


Not sure whether or not any of you have ever been students of philosophy, but if you have, you probably heard one of the greatest almost cliche-ish philosophical declarations. That would be the Rene Descartes "Cogito, ergo sum" "I think, therefore I am." This masterpiece of Cartesian understatement is more accurate as "Dubito, cognito, ergo sum" - "I doubt, therefore I think, therefore I am, " but however its used it has been seen as the philosophical proof positive of human existence - cognitive reasoning - for hundreds of years - though not everyone in this world is a fan of the man. The idea behind is simple. I doubt, and someone must be doing the doubting, which proves that I exist or I wouldn't be able to think about the fact that someone (me) is doing the doubting.....or something akin to that.

Okay. We've established that we exist and we exist apart from non-reasoning creatures though with all creatures nonetheless. I doubt that animals doubt their existence which proves their existence though really it proves my existence because I'm the one writing about their existence; they aren't writing about mine and then does that mean that they don't exist in their own minds, but we know they do and ARRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHH! (I wonder if I exist in my more animal-like states of mind?) (GAAAAAAACCCKKKK!)

Time for a 21st century makeover. (Still wondering what Saturday Night Live has to do with this?)

So, I'm declaring a new post-modern Cartesianism. "I think therefore I act (or I should act - shouldn't I?)." Now this statement of mine has no inherent reasoning or even logic that I can see (though it sounds like a philosophical dictum) Just because "I" think (Understand) doesn't mean "I" act on that understanding (that would be active knowledge), thus stopping me (that would be the real me - Paul Greenberg rather than the universal "I" - the generic individual mentioned above. We're heading toward another GAAAAACK here)

Actually, lets refine this a little. In fact, rather than a post modern Cartesianism, let's call this a neo-Dante-ist perspective.

Dante Alighieri, best known, of course for his "Divine Comedy" poetic trilogy, wrote this work called "Convito." In Convito, he identifies Love (in part) as the "deep contemplation which is the earnest application of the enamoured mind to that object wherewith it is enamoured." His thinking follows that since this love is based on reason and logic (though highly emotional - whole brained, not left brained) it can be universally shared and the more who participate in that sharing, the greater it becomes. So the actions of reasoning being who are participating in the sharing of Love (with a capital "L") according to Dante, is something that makes it greater. (Still wondering about Saturday Night Live aren't you? AND wondering if I've lost my mind? AND wondering what in the eternal spirit's name does this have to do with CRM?)

Okay, time for the payoff in this insane posting. (you do knowing I'm playing with you, right?)

All this means that when Beth Comstock, President of NBC Universal Integrated Media says to Fast Company last May:

"If consumers are in control, they're going to figure out how they want to watch. We have to find the right solution."

and then she goes out and does something about it, she is acting on what she thinks AND providing the means to share in the results which make them greater still. So Descartes and Dante can stop rolling over in their resting places. I'm applying them to the 21st century now.

So what are the "objects of the enamoured mind" here? Saturday Night Live videos.

Wha'?

Last night, Yvonne (those who don't know. My wonderful wife of 26 years) and I were watching Christopher Walken hosting Saturday Night Live. He is the best host they've ever had and was one of the main characters in one of their greatest skits ever - More Cowbell. (Wanna watch it?)

At the end of the show, they announced that you could go to NBC and embed some of their skits for tonight (and prior shows) onto your blog or website. I did a doubletake and thought - WOWEEWOWEEWEE! This is coming from the station that actually tried to remove one of the key things that made SNL popular again from YouTube et. al. That would their Lazy Sunday Digital Short that had over 6 million views and, in the pre-Beth Comstock days, drew attention to SNL again.

They have come around to Beth Comstock's (and Dante's) view on both user generated content and sharing - you share and the more who participate in the sharing of that object (content), the greater it becomes. Now bloggers are encouraged to embed SNL skits into their blogs - and in honor of that - and Dante and Descartes (who lived two hundred years after Dante - a case of Descartes following the....never mind), I'm going to embed a couple of Christopher Walken skits for you from last night one in particular where Kristin Wiig is a riot (you'll have to suffer a commercial or two though):


Now a couple of more that NBC provided from earlier shows that I love.

First a great appearance by Mike Huckabee, easily the funniest by far of all the presidential candidates (though I'm a Democrat and Obama guy):



Now one by Joshua Hill (Superbad etc.) as a six year old Jewish comedian with his single parent Dad at Benihana's.



Wow. What a post. All that philosophical stuff to tell you that I love SNL skits sometimes and Christopher Walken.

Though there is a point here.....

The point is that NBC and many other companies are figuring out that the levels of participation of the population in producing and sharing content is now skyrocketing to the point that its become a mainstream activity - unleasing waves of participation and innovation (potentially - and along with a lot of shlock too) at unprecedented levels. And, to make sure that their businesses are responsive and thus, surviving or even fluourishing, they have to go with the flow. Interestingly, it takes the 14th century poet and Platonist Dante Alighieri to give the greater benefit of all this - we are reasoning beings participating in creation of something that is tied to our emotions and the more that we share it, the more will participate. Isn't this the basis for the success of social networks and communities? Or of user generated content? It is and that's why the transformation is social and affects all institutions - not just business. Its the way that people are expressing their creative "impulses" - "deep contemplation which is the earnest application of the enamoured mind to that object wherewith it is enamoured." That statement from Convito is no different than an emotional, personalized experience.

Proving once again, mankind is always continuing its own history by elevating its capabilities to greater and greater heights. All that's going on now is that we have new tools and new paradigms to meet those historic needs. Its why we think and how we act as individuals and as a species.

Even NBC figured that out.

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April 03, 2008

The Shootout Is On: Microsoft v. Salesforce.com

Just a brief one today. If you remember I wrote a posting on Microsoft Convergence a few weeks ago and I noticed that Steve Ballmer had claimed that the configuration tools that Microsoft CRM Dynamics Online nee Live had were "unparalleled" when it came to comparison with salesforce.com's. Now, granted, his job is to say things like that, so some of that is just marketing "stuff." But, it did raise the "whose configuration tools are better if anyone's are" question to me.

So I decided to issue a challenge to both Microsoft and salesforce.com. The idea is to for each company to take on an identical configuration task (or tasks) and then do them. A panel of independent judges would, using specific criteria and a scoring system, then judge the results and declare the winner - or a tie, which could be possible and we'd publish (to a point) the results of the contest online so that you'd have the comparison made.

I'm glad to say that both Microsoft and salesforce.com have accepted the challenge. The Configuration Shootout is a go (a better name would be appreciated). The judges are being recruited, the initial criteria (subject to approval by the participants) are being draw up and we should have something going pretty soon.

Stay tuned.

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March 31, 2008

Miscellany Works When the Yankees Are Rained Out

I think I'm going to go random today and tell you things that are sitting on top of my skull at the moment.....


  1. The Yankees- Blue Jays Opening Day game was rained out and that really sucks.
  2. I'm going to start writing a monthly column for InsideCRM. CRM at the Speed of Light, 3e
  3. The 4th Edition of CRM at the Speed of Light is way behind and of all of you who signed onto the private wiki to make suggestions - only a very few have.
  4. The next few blog entries will be on the Forrester Report on CRM 2.0 written by the always fascinating Bill Band, chief of Forrester's CRM practice and star analyst; on Neighborhood America's ELAVATE release of their industrial strength enterprise social networking - the (mostly) good and the missing. There is no bad that I saw.
  5. CRM Playaz, the show that will turn CRM on its head (or actually get my head right side up again) will be starting in a VIDEO format for me and my bud and noted SMB/social media/CRM analyst Brent Leary and it will be within a month or so. Getting a video format down is a whole 'nother thing.
  6. The CRM Association national conference which was to start tomorrow is actually postponed until September. Make sure that you start putting aside the time that month and checking back here to get the final dates.
  7. I'm told by Brent L. that Ryan Zuk of Sage labeled me, him, superstar analyst Denis Pombriant and CRM writer/humorist/pundit CRM Magazine Senior Editor Marshall Lager as the "Gang of Four." I thought more "The Fantastic Four." Aren't I cute?
  8. Damn. Yankees Blue Jays postponed.

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March 13, 2008

Microsoft Convergence - Some Right Stuff - Wrong Convergence

There are 9500 souls wandering around the Orlando Convention Center (not as I write this since its 4:00am and I can't sleep but during the day) - all attending Microsoft Convergence 2008. I have to assume most of them are good souls. They are also Microsoft fanboys (and girls), willing to drink Microsoft kool aid - which tastes pretty good much of the time (yes, Apple isn't the only company with fanboys (and girls)) - and which absorbs Microsoft messages - especially at Convergence - with nary a peep of concern or protest, because they make a good living either using or selling Microsoft enterprise applications - at Convergence 2008 - in particular - ERP related (like Dynamics AX 2009, GP10, etc.) or CRM (Dynamics CRM on premise or Live 4.0). But, that isn't the reason I'm losing sleep. I'm not sleeping here because a. the bed at the Peabody, an otherwise totally lovely hotel, is too hard and b. the messaging that Microsoft is throwing out to the crowd is really a mixed bag. It's not wrong - but it's not what I'd be doing up against SAP and Oracle, salesforce and Sage. Let me take you back 24 hours or less to Steve Ballmer's keynote......

What Preceded The Keynote

Except for one unique and genuinely interesting "opening act", all that preceded Senor Steve was pretty much standard industry conference junk. I still wonder why some 30 years plus after the movie came out, that every industry conference or product launch I go to thinks that doing something themed on Star Wars is really "cool" or "hip" or.... I'm tired of seeing cartoons, actors and plastic puppet figurines that look like Yoda, Chewie, Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker and R2D2 in non-stop "war between the dark side and whatever it is that we're pushing at the event" with of course, the forces of the event winning every time. I swear, that if they do it one more time - any of 'em - I'm going to take my lightsword and...... But right before Ballmer went on, they did something that on the surface of it might have violated the laws of political correctness but was actually a genuinely astounding thing (while trying to sleep, I came up with a much cleverer turn of phrase than this but lost the thought by the time I go to my laptop to write it). It started with five stunningly gorgeous/hot women in rather skimpy outfits - all white ones (the outfits, that is). I'd say P.C. violation here, except that they then proceeded to do a really rather awe-inspiring Cirque du Soleil like ballet rising into the air and doing those twists and combinations and swirling aerial stunts/dances that amaze you at the athleticism and the occasional flirtation with aesthetic beauty (not hotness) that you see at times. It was genuinely terrific - and did I tell you the women were incredibly good looking? Good start. Ballmer - up next

Steve Ballmer - Always Enjoyable, Not Entirely On Point (At Least MY Point)

Steve Ballmer, as those of you who have seen him speak (which might be 28% of the entire planet), is an entertaining, well orchestrated histrionic speaker. He knows exactly what he's doing, with cadences measured to the size and nature of his crowd and with gestures and questions which seem spontaneous - but as a pretty decent speaker myself (if I do say so myself - and I do), I know they ain't. But he always has a message for the crowd he speaks with. I was on a stage with him about 3 years ago for two speeches in one day - just two speakers - him, then me - tough act to follow - and one of the crowds was 250 small business people and the other 300 association people (in the opposite order actually). I'd like to think they were there to see me but....don't think they were. In any case, he had a clear message for both crowd and for each crowd. Same message, different metaphor and different cadences. For the sake of brevity, just take my word for that. It was masterful. While masterful in delivery and cadence at the Convergence 9500-strong keynote (with folks from 65 countries consisting of customers, partners, prospects and press/analysts), his message was not wrong, but it was wrong. It was a message that you could get away with, but wasn't visionary and wasn't something the CEO of a company that was competing with Oracle, SAP etc. should have said. The missing parts of the messages were loudly absent from the keynote and from pretty much the entirety of the conference so far (still have something of another day to go) - though there were signs that it wasn't being ignored in Microsoft backrooms or in their labs.

The Fundamentals

One of Steve Ballmer's core points was outlined during what he called a "history of PC computing" not really an apt name for what followed. He spoke to 4 pillars in the history. The first three were
  1. Personal productivity - characterized by usability (well represented in a discussion at a later press event with Jakob Nielsen, web design guru now Microsoft lab leader in Copenhagen), mobility (which he tied to Windows Mobile only - a big mistake) and portals (which of course was Sharepoint - good product, up against serious competition because much of its feature set is getting a bit dated).
  2. Analysis and teamwork - tied somewhat seemingly randomly but not entirely without merit - to workflow, search and business intelligence. Though nothing about collaboration really
  3. and
  4. Application platforms - tied to scalability, integration and simplicity - a genuinely great choice here - and he made the point that to that end, there was going to be a release of a product called Windows Server Essentials to simplify (not strip down, thenks got) installations of Windows server apps for small and medium enterprises.
All in all, so far, not bad. But what came next was the most telling part of the entire speech.

The 4th Pillar - White Spaces, Missing Places

He saw the greatest future opportunity as falling between personal productivity and applications platforms - the white space in between the two - a kind of strategy that leading superstar analyst Denis Pombriant (also in attendance) points out is a 15 year old Microsoft strategy. And there is nothing wrong with what he said per se. As I pointed out in a blog entry in a universe a far far away and a long time ago (OH NOOOOOOOOOO!), Microsoft builds out ecosystems, not channels and they fill in white spaces with partners who have expertise. So there is nothing wrong with saying or doing that. Except....except, except, except, they are competing with Oracle, SAP and salesforce.com.

A Brief Subplot Before the Main Event....

And, given those institutions recent moves - especially in CRM and soon their enterprise applications - that changes the game. First, two other points about Ballmer's keynote that are relevant to what I'm going to say - he identified the competitive sweet spots for them as small and mid-market ERP and all size ranges for CRM. He even talked about what he called XRM - extended CRM - which he said was "helping to manage relationships in all forms" - though the only "forms" he identified were government to citizen and politician to constituent. That statement has two problems and one irony. The biggest of the problems is that CRM is no longer about managing relationships as much as it's about engaging customers. The second problem is that he limited the extension to public sector examples - which is far too limiting a way to talk about extending it - though in his defense it came from a discussion around the use of Dynamics CRM by British local governments so that was top of mind I presume. The irony is that in its very early days, CRM was called XRP - extended ERP and was as narrowly defined in its extension as Steve B. did with XRM. He had a great chance to really do some on point messaging here but failed to and that leads me to what that on point messaging should be.

....Now the Main Event

In the last few months, Oracle, SAP and salesforce. have been putting forward versions of their applications and supportive messaging around, not finding white space in existing enterprise frameworks, but creating whole new unified collaborative frameworks that enable all the improvements in customer-corporate interactions and corporate to corporate interactions. Their messages are not those of extension of the traditional operational and singular but integration of the operational and collaborative. Not the management of relationships but the engagement of customers and employees. THe message is one of a very productive, high return future with new models - in other words, visionary. Each of them is backing it up in a different way. Oracle announced some extraordinarily productive tools based on Web 2.0 (and CRM 2.0) technologies for their Oracle Siebel CRM on Demand version 15 as I outlined in my March 11 blog post; SAP last fall announced a major revamp of their SAP CRM 2007 by making it highly personally configurable and interoperable and device centric. Salesforce has been utilizing it's partner ecosystem to integrate social capabilities with its basic platform and, at Dreamforce 2007 released a highly configurable user experience based toolset for their platform called Visualforce. Ad infinitum. In other words, they are not saying, let's squeeze new areas out of the "inbetweenness" of traditional frameworks, but lets move forward by creating new frameworks that don't ignore the old operational requirements for all businesses but recognize the ascendancy of the customer, recognize the incorporation of consumer thinking in the enterprise, recognize the integration between personal and business and provide the business tools to meet the need of the 21st century business. Exciting and practical, customer focused. Not practical and customer-centric corporate focus. THESE ARE THE COMPANIES THAT ARE COMPETING WITH MICROSOFT!!! The irony here revolves around two things:
  1. Microsoft has a huge opportunity, because Dynamics CRM 4.0 is not only their first truly excellent product that can compete and win and grab market share if done right
  2. but
  3. Microsoft is clearly aware of the issues that I'm talking about and working on it in multiple ways (aside from their Live offering).
Its just that no one made those points all that clear. Let's look at the last first. Two things were said during the day that made it clear that Microsoft labs knows all about the way that the customer universe has changed. During the SB presentation, they did a short demo of the Call Center of the Future. While the dialog was so cheesy, even the fans in the crowd were laughing at it (it was of the variety of "oh thank you call center using Microsoft products for not only being able to truly understand me but also to make the changes that I need on time and on budget."), the content was anything but that. It showed that Microsoft was well aware of customer needs and how much they've changed. For example, they identified a presence-based engine that sought and found the first available agent at the call center and then made sure that agent had all the updated customer information at the ready - improving by a long shot the speed of answering the call and the effectiveness of its result. The key to the customer information was that it maintained its context so records didn't have to be re-pulled and questions re-asked. So it's clear Microsoft understood engagement from the standpoint of both presence and context - two of the important social characteristics that were necessary to satisfy contemporary customer requirements for engagement. Second, in a press event that was held a bit later on the Microsoft User Experience, the aforementioned web user focused design guru Jakob Nielsen made the strong point that their labs were not just studying and designing according to the standard design foci of usability and utility, but they are adding desirability as a design feature - which goes to the heart of personalization and the contemporary customer. All in all, a terrific move, especially as the younger & younger generations of new employees enter the workforce and are NOT enamored of Outlook because they grew up on the web-based free services like GMail, AOL and Yahoo (Microsoft NEEDS to get Yahoo) which have a completely different user experience - look and feel that will replace the standard regime of Outlook comfort as a focus.

In Sum.....

I think that Microsoft has an extraordinary opportunity to grab some market share and even, with some fortuitous breaks lead the market. But right now, I'm not feeling the Microsoft Love (they talked about this) that I need to feel others are feeling. They are not talking about building new frameworks for their ecosystem - just sending the message that they are extending the old one - and that old one is based on a corporate framework/ecosystem that is long broken and now being replaced by one dominated by the customer. They can get by with that message and even do pretty well with it but this is a company used to leading. That said, being a fan (but NOT a fanboy) of this company for a long time and seeing their first truly good CRM product emerge, they have a chance to make a midcourse visionary messaging correction that they need to make. Otherwise, Oracle, SAP and salesforce in particular, and, in a different way, Google, will begin to make them less relevant - though NEVER irrelevant - than they are now - and that, for them, wouldn't be a good thing.

Some Miscellany

  • Microsoft needs to make itself "device friendly", not "Windows Mobile device friendly." They have Exchange. If they show interoperability with the Blackberry OS and other mobile OSes, by providing native Exchange compatibility then they are being smart. The Blackberry partners who provide that hosted service are doing great with it. Staying Windows Mobile OS only, not that smart and missing lots of opportunity. There are signs they are loosening up with, as Kevin Schofield of Microsoft pointed out to me last night, the announcement of iPhone Exchange compatibility, but until they are compatible with Blackberries natively, they ain't there yet.
  • In the Q&A Steve B. was asked about the differences between Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 and salesforce.com. He mentioned one of them as "unparalleled" simplicity of customization by comparison with salesforce.com. Given the level that salesforce.com has gone to provide strong customization and configuration tools like Visualforce, I'm not sure that he can sustain that claim, but I haven't seen the customization tools. To that end, I'm going to put Microsoft and salesforce.com feet to the fire. In the next week or so, I'm going to contact both companies and see if they are willing to do a bakeoff. The idea would be to customize the same exact set of things under the same (or as close to the same as possible) set of circumstances. I don't have the criteria yet but I'd like to see who's customization is simpler (since that is the primary basis for Steve B's claim) and easier for the non-technical user. If the two companies are too afraid, I'll contact the partners for each and if they are too nervous I'll find independents who can and who use the tools. Stay tuned on this one. It will be real soon.

February 24, 2008

Facebook Is Not Your BFF - But It Is F----d

How frequently can someone screw up? How badly can someone wreck something that coulda been a contender? I think that Marc Zuckerberg and company are dedicated to finding out the answer to this incredibly stupid set of questions - and they are passionate about it. Its getting to be old news when its news - Facebook Screws Up Again! The headlines don't even scream it out anymore. Its more like, "hey dude, Facebook f----ed up again, ja hear?" "Yeah, ja hear that Tina and I are getting back together?" "NO WAY!" "Way." Or this text message: U hr Fbk f-ed up? K. TTUL. That's how commonplace their major league screw ups have been. Look, I get it. They want to turn a buck or two in revenue and a half a buck or so in profit. Been around, have 60 million "assets" a.k.a. friends a.k.a. profiles that should be MONEY (in all ways you can translate that). But they keep forgetting that their social network has evolved to the point that there are "rules of conduct" and there are "privacy concerns." Thats spelled p-r-i-v-a-c-y, Facebook moguls. That they may be masters of their Facebook universe but they are slaves to its behaviors. They have no way out. Yet, even after the Beacon fiasco of a few months ago, they seemed to have not learned ANYTHING. On Friday, an op. ed. appeared in the Washington Post by staffer Catherine Rampell called "What Facebook Knows That You Don't." The piece highlights a series of recent articles that say:
even if you "deactivate" your account, Facebook holds on to your profile data. This disclosure has gotten privacy groups and consumers up in arms. All the commotion about how Facebook hoards outgoing users' data got me wondering whether we're missing the more important privacy question: What happens to all the data we active members choose to delete, for privacy reasons or otherwise? Facebook's privacy policy is disturbingly cryptic on this issue. It says the company "usually keep[s] a backup copy of the prior version [of updated profile information] for a reasonable period of time to enable reversion to the prior version of that information." Facebook declines to enumerate how many days (or centuries) constitute a "reasonable period of time." Facebook users do not have access to this information, so it's unclear who exactly would be doing the proposed "reversion."
How incredibly stupid can Mark Zuckerberg and his minions be? Why hasn't he fired his entire legal department? This one is worse than Beacon. Basically, if you interpret what they are doing, its insidious. It basically is removing all control you have over your profile - or, in other words, what you care to record of your life online. So that if YOU decide that YOU don't want to be a member of Facebook - fine, as far as Facebook is concerned. THEY still will own YOUR profile. If YOU decide that YOU made a mistake and revealed something YOU shouldn't have or needed to get past something that YOU had done and recorded, that's fine as far as Facebook is concerned. THEY will still own YOUR history. One of the key psychological benefits of a social network is not just the peer-to-peer communications that it fosters. It is CONTROL of the life that is being exposed by the owner of that life. That is translated to a profile when it comes to a social network and the actions on that profile. What makes Facebook particularly nasty here is that it says to the "friend" - "your ownership is an illusion. Once you commit - you commit. And then, heh, heh, heh, the data is MINE, MINE I tell you. MINE!! I AM FACEBOOK - LORD OF THIS UNIVERSE - MASTER OF THIS SOCIAL DOMAIN." OR to put it in little kids terms: What's mine is mine. And what's yours is mine. Some of this is understandable - though not forgivable. They want Facebook to be a business, not a hangout, and thus they treat the profiles as assets. This is no different on the surface of it than the salesperson who is treating their contact database as their asset and leverage (in their case, to protect their livelihood). But there is a different protocol that governs social networks. Peer-to-peer trust is one major facet of that governance. As a social network there are three things that have to be remembered at all times:
  1. The social network is responsible for providing a reasonable expectation of privacy for each and every member of the network. That means that the individual who provides the profile retains ownership of the profile and is, in effect, licensing the use of that profile in a limited way.
  2. That the terms of the "license" must be mutually agreeable and always transparent. There are no hidden or undue uses of the profile by the social network.
  3. The social network is must do what it has to so that it is trusted AS A PEER by the individual members of the social network. This one is the most important and is critical to all businesses now. I'll be elaborating on this in future entries. For now, suffice to say, the social network can't be seen as an abstract entity by the individual members. It MUST be seen as a "trusted peer" to be successful.
Facebook is failing miserably at all of these and continues to make the kind of mistakes that will doom it in time to a footnote in the history of the social changes that have been roiling the world of human institutions in the last several years. That's sad. Look, I still like Facebook. I'll maintain my profile and you can see my Likenesses from PG to R rated. You can see who I'm poking (in a "good for all audiences" kind of way). You can read my conversations, see what other applications I use and what's going on with me from day to day. I have nearly 400 friends on Facebook and will keep growing that friends group. But at this point, I'll have a good time and put it to good use until it finally succumbs to the pressures of Google's OpenSocial API, Google's Social Graph API, some other social network that does get this and its own incredibly stupid mistakes - especially the ones that violate both public and private trust. In the meantime, I'll talk to my trusted peers on Facebook, as well as LinkedIn and Plaxo. But I have to say - Facebook, I don't trust YOU.

February 16, 2008

SugarCRM Rocks - No Really - Literally

I was sick all this week (for the second time in three weeks) and didn't really blog my butt off exactly, but am back to good health so I have a lot to be blogging about. First, a recap of my trip to Microsoft in Toronto and SugarCRM in San Jose CA a week ago. Old news sorta but it was fascinating in all its glory and its demands. Then later expect a look at the mobile market and how social networking plays in it and a look at something I've been working on for a bit on peer to peer and the enterprise (not what you might think unless you are prescient and a MAJOR empath).....oh yeah, and when I can, something that I did for a vendor that actually could be groundbreaking but then, maybe not......but REALLY interesting. On that one, since it was a white paper I have to wait until they release it and then I can go ahead. I love being the industry's radical sometimes!! I do, I do, I do, I do, I do.

Let's get moving so I can tell you about this trip to Microsoft and SugarCRM.

Microsoft, Toronto: Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow....Oh, Did It Snow

I was invited to be a member of an expert panel at the Microsoft Dynamics CRM 4.0 kickoff event in Toronto. This was one of 12 (if you can believe that. They go big when they go, don't they?) kickoff cities that Microsoft was launching CRM 4.0 in around Canada and likely to be the biggest of the events so, they figured, why not get a CRM generalist who can speak shallowly on anything in CRM on a panel. Actually, I was quite happy to do this one because, I like Microsoft usually although like several other companies it can be a tough love kind of liking, and because I love Canada, being married to a Newfie (for those of you who don't know the lingo, that's slang for a person from Newfoundland - which, for those of you who are geographically-challenged, is in Canada).

Problem with all of this was that I had to be on the panel at 4:00pm Toronto time on February 6 and then leave that night to get to San Jose CA to speak at 9:00am the following morning which meant arriving at the San Jose Airport at 1:30am and then getting to the Dolce Hayes Mansion (easily the oddest name of any place I've stayed) by around 2:15am and then going to sleep and getting up and.....wait, I'm getting ahead of myself.

Sadly, on the 6th of Feb, there was a snowstorm forecast for Toronto and in the wee hours of the morning there was one that restricted the attendance. Out of 800 registered for this event about 500 showed - which, given that its a CRM application kickoff is an AMAZING number of people who braved a possible snowstorm. The event itself was well run - done by Frank Falcone, who is a Senior Director of Microsoft Dynamics CRM in Canada. Young guy, smart, and definitely friendly Had the thing for the most part running like clockwork. The panel was me and and three Microsoft Dynamics experts and the crowd was responsive to the panel. Bunches of questions - and my general stuff (on SMBs and CRM 2.0) seemed to be well received. The keynote had been Jeffrey Gitomer, author of a gazillion "little" "fill in the color" books of selling - sold about 4 million of them. He was a New Jerseyan who likes to growl at crowds in a pretty entertaining way. What he knows about selling is pretty extensive and while I'm not going into it, I agree with a good deal of it. What he knows about CRM is not much and it showed. But he was entertaining.

Microsoft is doing a lot for this launch of Dynamics CRM 4.0. They should. From the demos I've seen of CRM Live primarily and the thrust of the work, this is probably the first CRM product they've released that will have the impact they were expected to have when they came into the CRM market. As I've pointed out in several prior entries that I'm too lazy to link to, the product's single code base, while probably meaningless to most business people, is actually a useful attribute for the product - because it does make the on premise/on demand integration and/or transition relatively seamless. Which matters.

But the story to come is even better.... mo' better......

I was done with my panel and had to rush off to the airport (if you want some detail on the impact of singular touchpoints on the customer experience, I podcasted a bit on this and its relationship to my stay at the Intercontinental Hotel in Toronto on the Experience on the Edge Episode #5 posted this week. As awkward as the previous sentence is, its still worth checking out). Imagine my surprise when I walked out to a limo for the airport and.....a BLINDING snowstorm with winds whipping.

What made this particularly difficult is that I had to go on Air Canada from Toronto to Las Vegas on a flight leaving at 8:40pm EST on the 6th and leave from Las Vegas on U.S. Airways at 10:30pm PST on the 6th and arrive in San Jose's airport at 1:30am on the 7th to get to the Dolce Hayes Mansion in San Jose by around 2:15am on the 7th to go to sleep and speak at the SugarCon 08 SugarCRM national conference as a keynote at 9:00am on the 7th. One missed connection or the flight not going out and BOOM, I was stuck and would miss my keynote time. Plus I had little phone signal.

It took an hour and a half to get the 30 miles to the airport at 20mph roughly while trucks were jackknifing behind us on an icy 25 mile ramp to the airport from downtown Toronto. They were canceling flights at Pearson right and left. Only five flights left the airport that night.

I was one of them.

As I was boarding the plane, the pilot was announcing that we would have to de-ice after we were all seated (delaying us of course by about 25 minutes) and that then we would be going a slower speed down the runway due to the icing of the runway. (Which of course sent a thought balloon through my head akin to something like "Hmmmm, doesn't a plane have to be at a certain speed for takeoff before the runway runs out and HOLY #*$@* we might CRASH!!!!")

I sat down in my aisle seat, provided by the Air Canada person who thought I may have to make a mad dash when I got to Vegas.

Lo and behold - Air Canada provided these big, beautiful touch screens with dozens, nay, hundreds of on demand movies, TV shows, games, and....did I tell you it was a touchscreen?

The Cro-Magnon male road warrior in me began to emerge - like in Alien with Sigournry Weaver - from my innards - TOUCHSCREEN, MOOO-VIES, GAMES, TEEVEE, did I say touchscreen.

Howling winds outside, no visibility at all in the snow, icy runways, lost time - but I had a touchscreen and I began to take that GUY finger of mine and push the buttons and push and push and poke, poke, poke, poke.

Just what the customer experience ordered.

Exactly.

Think about this for a second. I was in the midst of what could have been potentially a REALLY LOUSY takeoff and experience and I was content in just playing with this incredible touchscreen (with a plug for my laptop on the right and what seemed to be a USB or firewire port on the left) and I was just male-guy-Y chromosome-Cro Magnon-fine. The dangers and discomfort of the outdoor situation was forgotten and I was lost in my touchscreen experience.

Which is exactly what Air Canada should have desired. It made a major plus impact on my customer experience. A point to think about in this journey. The result they got was the result they should have gotten from me. No problem with my experience - even with that raging weather.

Smart. It shows how granular each touchpoint can be (this was a touchtouchtouchtouchpoint) and how important a role the weight given by the customer to the individual touchpoint's interaction and result is. DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE WEIGHT. THIS IS THE MOST UNDERESTIMATED PART OF THE EXPERIENCE. A lot of customer experience technology only takes into account the moment and what happened - not how much importance the customer attaches to the moment in context (a.k.a. under the circumstances).

Okay. Lets move on.

SugarCon 08 Rocked - Literally, Figuratively and Whateverelsely You Can Think Of

So, with all of that I made it to my connection to Las Vegas and then made it to San Jose. No car there for me. They screwed up (the car service). I took a cab and got to sleep at the Dolce Hayes Mansion in San Jose by about 3:00am, got up at 6:00am (through no alarm. I just woke up) and spoke to about 400 people (I think) at the SugarCon 08 national SugarCRM conference on CRM 2.0.

I rocked. I was in great form and tired enough to have no inhibitions whatever. I could have stripped if I thought it would have advanced CRM but, while I contemplated it, I realized that might set back CRM by about 100 years so I decided to stay clothed.

I'm not going to go through my presentation. I may publish it to the blog and to Slideshare and to MyCRMCareer at some point really soon. I'll keep you posted. But I do want to tell you a bit about the SugarCRM national conference because it bears some telling.

I was more impressed than I ever had been about the way the event was planned and the personnel that SugarCRM have hired to make this thing work and some of what they are doing with their applications - though I've spoken to that before here.

First, to get a flavor of this event, you NEED to take a look at the Photo Album called SugarCon 08 Rocks at the column to the left of this entry. I'll get into that in a sec.

What's fascinating about SugarCRM and I've been a slow adopter and slow warmer to this company, is that the culture is reminiscent of PeopleSoft to some extent and of the high-tech companies of the early millennium. Before you get into the "uh oh Web 1.0 bubble" cortex frying, I'm talking about the culture here, not the business model. They have a fine business model - one that apparently investors like since they landed another $20 million last week, bringing their total funding to $46 million. Interestingly, CEO John Roberts (you gotta check out the photo album. Trust me.) says that SugarCRM is going to stay with CRM for awhile because its a big market. What makes this interesting is that SugarCRM is being used as a platform by their open source community of thousands of developers to develop well beyond CRM on the one hand (see this entry for that) and by their open source community to develop complementary CRM offerings on the other (see CarouselCRM for an example of that). I'm still a little diffident on their on demand offering since I'm unclear on how its being done - but that's due to a lack of knowledge more than anything but with the release of SugarCRM 5.0, they have developed a platform that can play in the world of platform offerings AND with the size and activity that their open source development community (30,000 strong) has, they can provide some serious output in lots of places/domains/vertical markets/non-CRM markets in a rapid and possibly cost-effective way. I've been told that SugarCRM 6.0 will be the one that has all the social offerings, not a point release later, and, if they get that to market soon enough, they will be ahead of the market. Even with 5.0 as is, they can provide what used to be called a composite application and now in the spirit of World Zen Speak 2.0, is called enterprise mashups - and that alone is an important feat for a platform. So they are getting a toe up now and with 6.0 whenever that is due a possible leg or pair of legs up, depending on the timing.

But enough of the product.

The Culture

I had the opportunity to speak to John Roberts, CEO of SugarCRM for the first time actually, at a party they threw the night of the 7th at the Testarossa Vineyards (good wine - especially excellent 2005 single vineyard Syrahs (Thompson was one of them)) in Los Gatos, CA. Aside from the fact he looks so damned friggin' YOUNG, he is an articulate and passionate lover of what he does and is. He is committed to SugarCRM and actually, much to his credit, has a genuine vision - something I often find lacking in CRM related and enterprise applications related CEOs. Many of them (I'll do an entry on the visionary ones later this year maybe) are just salespeople who push a product. They have no vision. They're fish peddlers. One of PeopleSoft's CEOs was a mackerel pusher and it wasn't Dave Duffield, who was (and is) a total visionary and probably the best CEO to emulate on this planet. The other one wrecked the company culture and thus, the company.

That said, John is a visionary and I have to tell you, the highest compliment I could pay, a real person. He had no persona he was pushing at me and it was a conversation, not a sales pitch or a "CEO talks to analyst about his company, careful to tread" discussion. We blabbed with a glass of wine each and it was insightful. But the best was yet to come.

They had a ROCK BAND made up of Sugar employees. Again, the photo album. I got pictures taken by the talented and red hot Georgia Moore - the MyCRMCareer Business Development Director. Her pix were great. Take a look at two of them

First up, Martin Schneider. This is a guy I've known for several years, chiefly in his immediate past job as a great, great analyst at the 451 Group in NY - and he has that New Yawker attitude too. But normally he's dressed in suits and looks, well, analyst-like. He now is the Director of Analyst Relations etc. at SugarCRM and he is a HUGE asset for them. And, know what else, he can SERIOUSLY play a guitar. He came onto the stage in a teeshirt that was, of course, Satanic black and black leather pants - yeah leather pants, and has a HUGE tattoo of some unknown.....thing.....on his arm and he went into a Jet song - "Wontcha Be My Girl" (you know the one that Apple iPod made famous) and did some Hendrix like riffs on the guitar.

Then, son of a bitch, John Roberts got up wearing shades, yeah, the CEO guy, and he and Martin dueted with Helter Skelter - the Beatles John Lennon song by Paul McCartney - and just cooked.

Though, I hope that these guys don't hate me for this. They are awesome instrumentally and a bit vocally-challenged all told. They are very good but they have an industry standard to meet - and that would be the Raving Daves of PeopleSoft and now, I'm happy to say, Workday!! Still the greatest corporate band ever to hit the world and actually, just a good band....period. They are so good, check out their website. I think that SugarCRM should work at it awhile and challenge them to a play-off, post it on YouTube and we'll get everyone to vote. In fact, go here and listen to some of their music. Its something to think about, SugarRock v. The Raving Daves. Competition is good, right?

That said, this was not just a good party but the conference itself was extremely well planned and well done and had some of that high spirited sense of community. What was particularly interesting to me was to see the genuine interest the customers, the partners and the developers had for the company, the people and the product itself. They liked it, sure, but they were INTERESTED in it and where it was going . They seemed to feel they had a stake in its success, which is as Shakespeare said somewhere, a "devoutly to be wished" position for a vendor to be in. Part of that was there seems to be an open culture and I hear from my friends at SugarCRM that they enjoy the ride they are on. Not something I've been hearing from too many of the CRM companies these days. Now I hear all the time that they are well run or they are producing excellent products or that they are doing some great things (and all of that, for the companies I hear about that - is true) but I don't hear much about enjoyment of the work and the ride. I hear it with SugarCRM now (and with Workday) and used to hear it with other companies a few years ago. But to hear startup excitement and rocking in a company that's no longer a startup is exciting unto itself - and for that, SugarCRM, I salute you.

Does that exempt them from my critique of their products? No. But from me, it gets some real admiration. Life is short and since work is part of life, work should be enjoyable too. Not just play. But when you get to play well - while executing the business plan - and then instrumentally - Now THAT is a big, big plus.



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February 04, 2008

YES!! GIANTS!!! From Cadillacs to Baseball

I'm heading out to Toronto to begin what might be a great but grueling week. I'm on an experts panel at the Microsoft Canada kickoff for Dynamics CRM 4.0 and then head out to San Jose, CA on Wednesday night to arrive at my hotel roughly 2:30am to speak as one of the keynotes at SugarCRM's national SugarCon at 9:00am the followi