Saturday, July 12, 2008

 

Why Google may not win the Social war

This piece would not happened without the encouragement from Andy Mulholland, Global CTO of Capgemini. He was kind enuf to post this to his CTO blog, and we did manage a pretty decent response. The original posting can be found on http://www.capgemini.com/ctoblog/2008/06/why_google_may_not_win_the_soc.php Read on...

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I was very interested by the views of a younger colleague – who therefore is more representative of the mainstream social networking – and I asked him if he would write a guest Blog piece. This is the result and I think it ought to encourage some really good responses. Here it is:

In the past few weeks, I have been spending most of my time reading, debating and challenging some popular wisdom around the future of the social networking scene. I would like to share some of my conclusions and ask for your reactions to my thoughts.

Microblogging site Twitter was one of them and I find it exciting. However, leveraging Twitter for business purposes provides a different challenge. My twittering for business quest got a major push when I read the story of how Southwest Airlines is using Twitter for customer service and brand protection. A bit of googling, got me further twitter success stories at companies like Jetblue, Fox Chicago and Comcast. Companies and users can very easily do a brand search on Tweetscan and create a feed for any new postings. Twitter is quickly becoming the place where conversations are exploding well before they even make it to mainstream blogs and companies are latching on. While Twitter is big in the US and Japan, it is yet to make much inroads into the UK, but looks like we are onto something and I would love to hear more stories.

The other thing I am keenly looking forward to is 'Web Slices' that make their debut with IE8 next year. While Microsoft has gone to great lengths to explain the whys and the hows, a simplistic view of Web Slices is to look at them as glorified mini-RSS feeds located inside the web browser real estate. So why visit the Facebook website, if all your friend’s status updates can be fed directly into your browser? Or Why refresh your ebay page, if a part of your browser is updated directly when the auction is updated. It is a simple idea whose time has come and I think it is the next evolution. My reasons are based on history. After Blogs, we had micro-blogging. The likes of Twitter, Pownce, Jaiku etc are taking the Internet to the next level of interactivity. Similarly after RSS we need micro-RSS technologies like Web Slices to make the Net more useful. I am sure once we have got used to web slices, we will wonder how we lived so long without it.

While the trend to become micro seems to be working fine, the other end of the spectrum is where things get a bit tricky. Most technology trends seem to find a flavour in trying to be Mega (or rather Meta). During the early days of search engines, when Altavista and Yahoo Search ruled the world; there was a brief period of Meta search engines - search engines that would parse your query to other engines and displayed the results. The theory of having such a search engine is sound and some of these still exist (Mamma.com, dogpile.com, search.com, metacrawler.com), but they have barely got out of the blocks after all these years. A similar grave yard can be seen in the Instant Messaging scene. IM fatigue gave rise to Meta or Multi-protocol IMs like Trillian, Gaim, Meebo etc which could consolidate your AOL, Yahoo Messenger and MSN among other. While such technologies have scored with early adopters, the success of these among the wider Internet user community is still debateable.

This sets me up nicely into the debate around OpenSocial from Google. While much is being said about what it can do, it is still very unclear on what it can deliver. The big stumbling block is the lack of Facebook in the OpenSocial movement. Also, at this stage OpenSocial is more ‘Open Widget’ rather than ‘Open Social’ since a ‘list of friends’ of one social network cannot connect with others through OpenSocial. OpenSocial does provide a platform for developers to port their widgets across networks. I think Google is unfortunately caught in the wrong place, since a move towards Open Widget does not provide too much end user benefit, but a move towards becoming a meta-social engine does not bode well with history. Will Facebook do to Google what Google did to other search engines? I guess we will wait and watch, but I am not giving up my Facebook account in a hurry.

As the whole point is the ‘social’ or people aspect it will follow the direction that we all choose to make happen, so I hope this will start a good debate on how you think the future will go.

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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

 

Death of the back office

Its been some time since I stood back to smell the roses. Yesterday I had some intellectually stimulating conversation with Patrick, which got me thinking again. And here are my thoughts for the evening.

I think the whole story about offshore will go away!!
No, I don’t mean, offshore will not work anymore, but I believe, offshore will be yet another commodity within the next five years. The 500 of the Fortune 500, the 1000 of the Fortune 1000, businesses in the US, UK and continental Europe (the so called new offshore battleground) will have already offshored. What needs to be offshored, will have been offshored. Quantum leaps in bottomline growth via offshoring will have been factored in. Marginal bottomline gains will continue to be made via a mixture of
1) Location: Which country to offshore ie. India, China, Poland etc
2) Automation: Anything that can be automated, should be automated
3) Project Delivery Pyramid and Efficiency gains: Flatten the delivery pyramid (more junior resources) and reduce the number of people via efficiency gains.
4) Pricing Models: Service oriented pricing, output based pricing etc etc
5) Business Process changes: Adopt industry best practices and install packages to implement them (chicken and egg story here)

Debates around choice of offshore location and level of automation will continue in the newer future – since these are the easiest parameters to tweak. However, I think cost reductions via pyramid and efficiency gains probably carry the highest risk in the new scheme of things. Similarly changes to pricing models will continue to tweak the bank balance.

However, points 1-4 will only deliver marginal gains to businesses which are currently outsourcing some or all their tasks. I believe the next few years will require businesses to swing the pendulum back to their front offices. It will come not thru taking more meat off the bone via cost cutting, but by changing the way we do business. Businesses will need to change by changing the way they address customers, the way they innovate products and services, they way they extend their brand.

Two companies equally admired (and loathed) by me, Dell and Apple are prime examples of this phenomenon. Both have taken major chunks of cost out of their bottomline. I am not even sure where their products are made these days – except that they arrive in the post 10 days after they are ordered. However, both companies are facing very diverging futures. While Dell continues to thrive in the sub-1000 GBP PC/laptop market, it still finds it difficult to break into the lucrative gaming PC/laptop market.. Why? – as I cannot see Michael Dell playing Halo 3 in his blue suit, similarly a green+black Dell gaming laptop does not appeal to me either. As Dell struggles to break the top end, it is getting a run for its money by Lenovo et al at the lower price bracket. Any guesses on it future is not worth making.

Apple on the other hand, has re-invented itself in the product innovation space. A company with no future less than a decade ago has been revived thanks to the iPod. An iPod is a simple laptop hard disk or a clumsy USB memory stick with a fancy cover. But it was Apple which reinvented a commodity product into a Christmas must have toy – and Steve Jobs has been laughing all the way to the bank. I believe, we will see more product innovations on the iPod rather than simple extensions on size (4, 8, 30, 60, 80GB.. what next – and what happens when a Chinese company comes out with a 300GB mp3 player?). iPhone is a good extension of the brand – but we need more. I believe, the only thing that will differentiate Apple and the 300GB Chinese company will be the customer experience. After all, a brand is nothing but an experience and this will be a new battleground after cost and commoditisation creates market shakeouts.

This is also a more difficult battle since, unlike offshoring, customer experience is ethereal and winds can change without notice. I am sure Apple did not expect the force of customer backlash when they dropped the price of the iPhone within weeks of the launch. The media has been awash with reports of customer feeling cheated. The $100 handouts by Apple may only go a small distance in getting back some of the lost goodwill.

As the service offshore industry matures, the battle will move back to the front office. The current credit crunch and looming recession will only accelerate the need for the fight for the customer. As any trained stock market punter will tell you, buy when the markets are low: Business will have to learn to attract more customers rather than just reduce costs. The pendulum is indeed swinging.

Sunday, May 06, 2007

 

From Korma to Vindaloo

‘Chicken Balti!!!’, screamed the customer. It was a Friday evening, time for the great British tradition of ‘Curry and Beer’. It did not help that it was nearing what passes for as ‘summer’ in the UK and India was out of the World Cup. The kitchen was humming with activity, but the orders were not coming through at the rate it was expected. As I peered at the customer through the kitchen porthole, I looked at my ‘Front Office’ taking the orders and I remember saying to myself – ‘Good Lord what have I got into, there is no such thing as a Chicken Balti in India.’ Chicken Balti or for that matter, Vindaloo, Madras et al don’t exist in India; neither does the ubiquitous Cobra. All these should find a place in the museum as part of the Great British Inventions along with the Hovercraft and Viagra.

As you would have figured out, India is slowly becoming the ‘Kitchen of the IT world’. We are dishing out whatever the world is ordering or has an appetite for. So whether it is Siebel Upgrade, Oracle CRP in a week, SAP in a box - the kettle is on 24x7. I don’t make any pretensions that we get it right all the time, and that everyone is ok with curry. However, it is still a great thing to enjoy especially, since we can alter the flavour to suit every taste. Little wonder that Tesco has a ‘Indian Food Heat Guide’ in its world food aisle. A bit of caveat emptor – If Vindaloo is not your cuppa, why not try the Korma – we have got it sorted

The Rightshore™ kitchen is motoring along well. The great thing about the kitchen is that you get opportunities to work with multiple front offices. Indeed they do say cooking Indian ‘Balti’ is really simple. All you need is 3 basic types of gravy – Yellow, Yellow-Red and Red – and you dunk in your meat or veggies as per order and presto, you have the full range from Korma to Vindaloo. Indian IT is a bit like that too, we do the full gravy range from Bespoke Java/.Net to Package Siebel/SAP; Dunk in ‘Industrialisation (low prices) of the Back Office’ and ‘Intimacy from the Front Office’ and presto, a great value proposition for the client.

I can continue gazing out and wondering why is it taking the Front Office so long to take the order, but my yellow gravy is starting to boil over and I need to run. In future editions, I hope to share with you some of the recipes for success. But at the moment my greatest fear is someone in India ordering for a Chicken Glasgow or a Lamb Liverpool for they don’t exist either!!!

-This article by me appeared in the Capgemini 'Organic Kitchen' CRM Newsletter.. (C) Capgemini


Thursday, September 21, 2006

 

Service of Nations

The two buzz words that is attracting a lot of attention these days is SOA or Service Oriented Architecture and Shared Services.  Will talk about Shared Services later, however SOA intrigues me.  Not necessarily because of what it does but because of the aura around it and the hype that it creates.  Put simply, it means, that a certain ‘service provider’ will be able to provide the service to anyone who request it.  I don’t think it is a new big idea.  I think it has been around for some time.  Nearly decade ago, I remember working on OCX, and then component programming (COM/DCOM) etc etc.  I don’t think the new SOA concept was very different from this.  At a very basic level, the very fact you can have an Ms-Excel within Ms-Word or Ms-Powerpoint is a very deconstructed version on SOA according to me.  (Purist look away!!!)

 

I am sure that the purist would want to look at much stronger opinions at how SOA adds up.  I have seen very little of it in action.  The only souped up working implementation that I have seen, was while working for a bank in Sydney.  However, this blog is not about SOA.  This is about SOA and Nations

 

Kotler has a book called ‘Marketing of Nations’, Adam Smith has ‘Wealth of Nations’, as we globalise further, are we seeing ‘Services of Nations’ coming into play.  Last decade we saw the rise of China as a manufacturing hub.  This decade saw the rise of India as an IT and ITeS (read BPO, Call Centres) hub.  As the two nations race to become even more competitive, verticalisation of these skills will help them draw further productivity gains from scales and scope of ‘service’.  It is difficult to hide from stories of massive Chinese sweat shops that churn out a billion buttons, a billion shirts or a billion socks.  While working conditions cannot be ignored, the effect of these industries on the Chinese economy cannot be ignored either.  Similarly, it is also difficult to hide from stories about IT and ITeS work being delivered out of India.  The effect of the IT industry on the India economy and its social fabric cannot be understated.  However, this blog is also not about this either.

 

My mind wanders to the fact that, does this mean that China and India will start being the default ‘service providers’ for manufacturing and IT.  Similar to the technology ecosystem, these nations would be able to provide standardised output to a standardised input.  As verticalisation of these countries within these industries increase, their ability to deliver more and more with less and less will increase.  In China, industries have moved further inland, and need larger batch sizes to enable lower rates. Similarly, in India, IT companies have started to move inland to negate increasing cost of IT delivery.  What does this mean to the nations which act as consumer of the service.  Nay sayers are used to talking about the western world ending up becoming a country of ‘burger flippers’ or ‘hair dressers’.  I don’t agree to this view.  While there are many ways to argue this point, lets take what happened to the ‘consumer’ in the software ecosystem.  Those of you who have used Word 95, PowerPoint 95 or Wordstar i.e. software which pre-dates the SOA era know the pain of using them.  These pieces of software were not very feature rich – Try inserting an editable picture in Wordstar L.  However, as these pieces started to talk to each other, subsequent releases were able to enrich the user experience.  In other words, I believe that the consumer countries will evolve further to become stronger economies as they leave behind commoditised work for service oriented countries like China, India etc i.e. I see  great times ahead for them.  I will write more about these benefits in subsequent blogs.

 

Meanwhile, Food for thought, does it mean we would soon have Poland become the service country for bricklayers?


Friday, September 15, 2006

 

Writing for Sanity and Insanity (& IBM)

Me getting back to writing has had varying reactions from different people who have navigated to the site.  Some cant understand why I did it, and if there is any hope in writing a blog in the first place, when our time can be better spent ‘doing stuff’.  Others have been a bit more supportive.  Though I am not sure how much is lip service and how much is genuine.   

 

I think writing is not an ability that everyone possesses.  However, the emergence of blog and vblogs and mblogs etc, have provided people with the ability to stick their thoughts on the web without much rethink.  It does have its up-sides since we all get our release, but the downside is that it the whole thing starts looking a bit like a gutter with quiet a mishmash of thoughts going nowhere.  But then, not everything in life needs to run with a bottom line attached.  It can be a stagnant cess pool with no cross currents driving across them.  It can be bog that boggles the mind and the mindless.  Eventually, someone will find a business idea that can string these together and make enuf money to line someones bank account or a boat.  Little wonder that sites like Blogspot  and Youtube are going great guns.  

 

While writing may be for the active mind, the rest of the divided world needs to let some steam off too!!  During one of my chats with a friend on strategies to drive Internet traffic, he suggested that I should pose questions or queries for the reader to respond to.  According to him, everyone wants to be heard and want to give their opinion on everything under the sun.  This should have a cascade effect on site traffic.  I have been using Yahoo Answers, and it is exactly the same phenomenon.  I posed some random queries about Cameras, Golf, Relationships etc.  It is very interesting to see how the world at large reacts, and wants to be heard.  Sure enuf there is a business idea lurking there too.  Maybe sites like TrinTrin, Arzoo etc that wanted to get into Social/Open networking systems were ahead of its time and went under.  However, more solid business models like CollabNet are staying afloat.  As the CollabNet website boasts “Today, more than 800,000 developers and IT project managers use CollabNet to collaboratively develop software and deliver better products.”. Now that is a thought

 

Quite recently, one of my mentors, had a peek at my blog, and sent me a note in his rustic style (laced with the chosen expletives) While the note itself made interesting reading, he liked the fact that I am trying to retain my sanity thru this.  Indeed, it takes 10 minutes of the day to keep the system unclogged.  In case you still have doubts about the insane world, check the body copy of this advertisement from IBM  In a world flattened by globalisation and collaboration, where the riptide of commoditisation threatens to pull us into a sea of sameness, the key to staying on top is to do something no one else does.To do something special.  That’s where IBM comes in….  Q.E.D  (ROFL :) )


Wednesday, September 06, 2006

 

Virgin Atlantic v/s Jet Airways and FC Kohli


I had a distinct hope that I would be able to write more ever since I discovered email blogging, however the chaotic work day can keep one away from it. So it is a triumph of human (read laziness) over technology to help write this one. The reason I wrote this is because, this idea struck me in a Eureka moment in the shower. Before I get there here is what happened. A few weeks ago I had the privilege of listening to Dr F C Kohli, widely regarded as the Father of the Indian IT industry. To the surprise (and chagrin of a few) of many in the audience, he ritually ripped apart the advantages of the Indian IT industry over China. He did make sense. The whole idea of the talk was not to demoralise but to rally everyone to move towards the greater goal.. and he was successfully too!!. But that is not the idea of this blog either.

One of the things that FCK mentioned was the convergence of hardware and software. Acc to him, anyone has a hardware advantage, would finally win the software war. He had a fair point. The best example was the increased convergence (read collapse) of software into hardware in the mobile phone industry. As you see these days, most of the software is now hardware, and phones are becoming more powerful thanks to all the embedded software. I lingered on it for some time, but it looked plausible.

On my way to India, I flew Virgin Atlantic. I am a flying Silver member. It is a decent airline, but not a great airline – unfortunately, they don’t live to the Branson image; but that could be a separate blog. One of the USP for Virgin is the onboard massage in business class. The masseuse is very effective and the experience is good. The food is ok, the private seats which resembles a small coffin is good provided you get a good one. I had a bad one - the table would not work plus it was too warm to be comfortable. Anyways, the point is, the massage is the USP and in my view, it is difficult to beat that, since you need special work area to be created onboard for the masseuse. In all, there is a good entry barrier for competition.

On my way back, I flew the India based new Jet Airways. Its got a young crew and a young fleet of airlines. The food is good, they have movies on demand and lives upto Young India’s reputation. I liked it. The full flat bed in business is very good, and the goodie bag handed out was awesome (Virgin has lost out on all this now) The only thing standing between Virgin and Jet was the massage. As I was struggling with the plethora of buttons that control the bed, I found a little button – A MASSAGE button!!!. Jet had gone ahead and integrated massage functions into their business class!!!!. No longer was I required to wait for the appointment with the Virgin’s masseuse, I could have my massage when I wanted, as much as I wanted. A true winner. FCK’s words came to my mind. This is true case of software being built into the hardware. Now take a guess which airlines would be my choice for my next trip. Question, will hardware help win the software war?




Sunday, September 03, 2006

 

Microsoft v/s Google-eBay

While reading 'The World is Flat' and trying to get my Adsense working, I think i might have found a perfect storm for Microsoft.  Google buying eBay or vice versa. Ironically, this may have nothing to do with their individual core competencies i.e. Search and Auctions.  I think the more potent combination is Adsense and PayPal.  Currently it is my understanding that they may not be interoperable, but the combination is lethal.  I spent some time on Yahoo Answers and similar sites and traweled thru the Net for 'money making ideas', and most of the advice i got was 'to sell lots on eBay'.  Personally, i know a few blokes who make a living on eBay.  So there is a community that does this and it is expanding. 
The second common advice was to put a lot of Adsense advts on my site and get money when people click thru.  Another good idea in practice (and I put a few Adsense on my blogspot), but I think very few people will click thru, because of the sheer teeming masses that have Adsense on their website.  I think that people will be burdened by the sheer fatigue of seeing Adsense.  It can be irritating too, since they can appear innocously and you might click on it thinking it is part of the website, only to be transported to sheer madness.  This is particularly true on my Indian stock market monitoring site (Moneycontrol.com).. Adsense appears on the side looking like links to stocks or Mutual funds.  the moment u click on it, it takes me to US stocks and useless penny stocks in the US.  What good is that to to anyone.  Anyways, coming back, I get a sense from people that they THINK that Adsense will make them money. 
PayPal is increasingly becoming the defacto standard to money transactions on the web, Adsense seems to be a money making tool. Why dont they talk to each other.  If they do, it can be a good synergy.  So why should Microsoft be worried?
In my view, Microsoft may own the desktop, and people will use Windows to boot up, IE to get onto the Net and use Adsense and PayPal.  However, once Adsense and Paypal own the backend (and the way to the purse strings and hearts) they they integrate forward towards the desktop.  It will take time and some more partners, but worth watching.  I think the future is bright for the consumer.  Is anyone reading this at MS, GOOG or eBay?

 

Yahoo Answers - neat stuff

Now that i have resumed blogging (i hope it sustains the week), another thing that I discovered this week was Yahoo Answers.  I have been meaning to check it out earlier, but the daily grind to help pay the mortgauge is not very helpful.  Finally got some free time over the weekend and tried it out.  The gr8 thing is that u can assume a name distinct from your yahoo login.  I asked a few innocous questions, like 'opinion on good digital camera' etc, and got some decent response in no time.  Some were useful too.  The intresting on was the community under the 'Family and Relationship', looks like everyone and his dog is there.  A few tricky question, and everyone was quick to beat the path down to become an agony aunt.. Everyone has an opinion.. and some really intresting ones too. 
I think there have been attempts to create such communities before, but with limited success.  I remeber good ole Subra being part of TrinTrin, and some other services came and went.  The success would depend on how it rewards its participants.  I dont think I understood the Yahoo answers point system much, but, I could see many with 'Level 5, 6' etc.. so I guess it must be working. 
 
I think it is a good application, since it is helping everyone from Tokyo to Turkmenistan and from the nerdy basement to New York socialite to transform into Oprah and dish out advice under the garb of an assumed avtar.  how cool is that!!!

 

Browzar Un-intended Usage

In my previous blog, never thought I would use a Browzar.  Just found an 'unintended' use.  I kind of enjoy reading the Times of India epaper.  The online edition of TOI is full of adverts and even pop-up blockers cant help you.  The epaper is much better, and gives u a feel for the newspaper + reminds you of the days growing up.  However, i tried accessing TOI epaper from my home laptop with IE7, and it would not load. So tried using Browzar on it, and it worked!!!  It is quick to download, easy to install (nothing to install), and gets on with the job.  Really Nifty (as Babu put it).  Hats off to British engineering (finally)

 

new discoveries

I (re)discovered couple of things this week.. some intresting, some not so. Here they are in no particular importance
1) Browzar (www.browzar.com), It is a new browzer that helps safeguard privacy (or so it claims).  It is a thin veneer over your regular IE, but may be good in the long term.  I checked with my tech guru Babu, and he seems 'ok' ('really nifty' were his words) with it.  I did not find much use with it though
 
2) The IE7, its been almost a month that I have the IE7 Beta installed, and it looks ok.  I am getting used to the tabbed experience.  Unfortunately, I still have good ole IE6 on my office machine, so difficult to keep moving between the two.  However, 7/10 for IE7  (bit cheeky??)
 
3) Yahoo Beta.  i have started liking the new Yahoo Beta.. esp if u can start using the shortcuts.. but it can be a pig to run if u r on dial up.  I was in Mumbai last week, and the home broadband was down, so did a bit of dial up on my laptop, and had to switch back to normal Yahoo.. but now that i m back in the UK and on broadband, have moved to Beta again!!
 
Finally, managing to do a bit of reading on the train.  Tomas Friedman's 'The World is Flat', is a good read about the changes happening in the world, and how it is becoming flatter.  Still on the 80th page, but am clinging on to it.  Another proof that the world is flat and opportunities galore - The book is available in the UK at £8.99 and in India for £5.99 

 

Blogging via email

I thought I was good at writing stuff, hence I started this blog.  Hopeing that it will let me vent my stuff out, and maybe people may notice it too!!  How wrong I was, not about the people, but about my ability to come back to the site and write stuff.  I realised, the daily office grind leaves you with nothing to write.  But now I have seen blogging via email.  Let see if it works!!!

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