2014-12-18

「知識課」與「思考課」:你喜歡上哪一種課?

No comments:

Image Credit: sahca


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

本週三 (12/17) 我受邀到一家新創公司為他們安排的企業內訓進行與職場進階有關的分享,課程分享之後再發,先談一個有趣的發現。

因為是企業內訓,都是有相當工作資歷的同仁,在開車進去的路上我自問,「我喜歡上課嗎?」

答案很簡單,「當然喜歡!但也不是什麼課都喜歡上,喜歡上的課最基本的要求應該是:有趣、有料、有收獲!這…應該不過份吧!」

很多觀念說來簡單、做到可比登天難,其中最難的之一,就是「換位思考」。

而我總愛挑戰自己這些「人類智力極限」,並將這樣自我挑戰的過程與結果,藉著寫寫短文或現身說法,給有緣的好友一絲絲動腦、思考的機會。



知識課 vs 思考課


以上在課前的「換位思考」,讓我想到這次的分享,將重新定調這次的課程屬性,我也在開場輕鬆地暖身後不久,就清楚宣告這堂課,不會是一般以提供很多有用、實用、精采內容的「知識課」,而是一堂架構簡潔、論點清析、高度互動的「思考課」。

列出幾個當天討論最熱烈的提問供好友參考,也可一併想想自己對這些課題與字詞的理解與認識有多少?



  1. 什麼是「資訊」?
  2. 什麼是「知識」?
  3. 還有一個叫「見解、洞見」(Insight) 的東東又是什麼?這三種的差異與用途分別是什麼?有辦法把這三者清楚辨識?又應該如何有效善用?
  4. 什麼是「管理」?
  5. 進行「工作」時是該用「處理」?或該「管理」?兩者有何不同?
  6. 「領導」、「信任」、「溝通」這些高來高去的東西,能不能講一個是人都聽得懂的說法來感受一下?又在實務上怎麼讓學員可以「讓專業入世」,「讓能力上身」?
  7. 什麼是「策略」?有效且能勝出的「策略」要具備什麼樣的條件?
  8. 什麼是「專業」?如何清楚定義「專業」?如何精準養成「專業」?


在內訓中增加互動的作法


課程進行時,我採取「免負責回應」的作法,在提問請學員舉手回應的時候,學員可以完全不依自己真實的狀況或想法回應,簡單說就是在回答提問時可以「亂舉」。這麼做,主要是考量這是企業內訓,老闆主管和所有同仁就在前後左右,大家在舉手表態的時候,多半會有心裡負擔,很難能據實回答,既然如此,反正得到的回答都不會是最完整、最正確的,那乾脆直接打破一般認定是據實回答的作法,而是「直接公開鼓勵大家亂舉」,還加上一句,「反正,我一講之後,你們今天的舉手情況我就都會視為是來亂的,完全不會因為誰舉手、誰沒舉手、多人舉、少人舉而影響我在課程進行時對你們實際狀況的評判。」補上這一句,還真的讓全場都笑了出來,我想,在場學員的心情想必也立刻放鬆很多吧!


免負責,才是更負責


之後,我陸續在提問要求學員舉手回應時,很認真又有趣地一再強調這個「亂舉」的訴求,在場的學員從開始覺得這有好笑,到後來的舉手情況越來越積極,而換成是提問需要學員回答的時候,同樣強調是比照「免負責回答」精神,回答的好壞,都只是為了討論時必須的互動效果,而非誰答的好、誰答的差,更沒有對錯的評斷,只有對願意回答者的主動表示獎勵與感謝,這樣特別針對小型新創公司的企業內訓設計與設想的上課方式,花了我好一段的心思,而這堂課後續的全場互動也比我原先預期的熱烈許多。

從成效而論,這個「免負責互動」的作法,其實才是更負責的作法,您認為呢?

---

延伸閱讀:

「溝通」,就像「共同作畫」
「對象」與「時效」:掌握有效溝通與簡報的時間密碼
「高效溝通」與「第一印象」:個人形象是人際互動的隱形決定因子

大哉問:「什麼是策略?」

No comments:

文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

什麼是「策略」?

平常應該很常聽得到在對話當中有人在談論策略或討論策略,但,仔細想想,有幾個人真得懂得策略是什麼,而正在交談著關於制定策略或執行策略的人,彼此間又對策略有相同的理解與認知嗎?如果沒有一定的共識,成天圍繞著策略這個想法,又或常常引用策略這個說法,到底真能創造出什麼高明又有用的策略?

在這裡,我試著以自己的理解和實務作法,分享我對策略的觀點與應用。

一開始,我先分幾個層次來說說看。

談策略是什麼之前,先設定討論的邊界 (Boundary),說說策略不是什麼

1. 策略不是「創意發想」


常遇到的策略形成是靠「腦力激盪、頭腦風暴」(Brainstorming) 之類的創意發想方式,其實,真正有效且具長久價值的策略計畫,必須靠一套紮實的程序才能發展的出來 (詳后)。


2. 策略不是「經驗至上」


制定策略或拍板定調策略時,不可單依「經驗法則」,因為每次遭遇的狀況與變數都不同,可以參考相關的經驗,但不能是主要的影響決策因素,所以,那些靠著官大學位大訂出來的策略,多半都徒具權勢上的口號或形式,真正執行的時候全派不上用場,而這些虛有其名的策略制定會議,也都是惺惺做態的無意義之舉。


3. 策略不是「概念喊話」


要分辨一個策略的好壞,除了「策略方向」要清楚、有創見,從務實面來看更要緊的其實是「策略作法」,方向提供指引,作法導出成效。因此,策略絕不能只是做半套的「概念喊話」而已,例如:Cost Down/Leadership 本身絕對不能稱為是「策略」,最多只是策略方向罷了,其背後必須有完整的策略作法提供實際的行動指南才能在執行時有所依據。若單單只是策略方向的簡述,其他的任由執行單位自行發揮,這樣的策略在後續的執行上,在過程與成效勢必與原本的預期有很大的落差。


先排除以上常見對策略的誤解之後,就來談,「什麼是策略」。


1. 定義:


策略是「總合描述如何達成一個目標的行動指南 (An abstract as the action guide on how to reach a particular goal.)
更簡單講,策略即是「行動指南」,說明從 A 點到 B 點抽象的行動依據,也就是指述從起始點 (A: 處境或狀況) 到目的點 (B: 狀態或成果) 的行動路線圖解。


2. 前提:


訂定策略之前,必須完成 2 個關鍵步驟:


1) 獨立思考:


在時限內,收集與達成目標所需的全局 (All around) 資料,能綜整出專業的獨到論點 (Comment),而這個論點的提出者所提的論點必須能契合其所代表的組織或個人的專業立場,後者是關鍵,因為必須是建基在「專業立場」的「專業論點」。


2) 邏輯思考:


再來,以獨立思考產出的獨到論點為基礎,逐一從資料中找出該主題中的各種主要的脈絡與影響邏輯,從中將因果、順序、關聯、直接/間接/強/弱/正向/反向關係等一一分析,然後要能產出同樣基於專業立場的專業定見 (Insight),真正的定見,必定有所本,且以一定的推論為基礎,而不能只是空泛的創見 (Idea) 或與未經紮實推論的主觀論點 (Personal Comment)。


3) 策略思考:


最後,則是最重要、也是收成的步驟。從邏輯思考找出該主題中幾個主要的重點邏輯 (Key Logic),在這個主題叢林地圖 (Jungle Map) 裡所展開來的探路結果與路況預測,就正是「發展策略」的重要起點,因為,可以從這裡逐漸看出各式各樣的路況指標 (Road Indicator),例如:屢試不爽、此路不通、前有惡犬等各個經過上一個獨立思考 (資料) 與邏輯思考 (程序) 的步驟所推論而得的路標指示,之後,從找到起始點 (A) 開始,一步一步找到邁向目的點 (B) 的最適路線圖,其中各路段要有直行、繞道、暫緩、停頓、借物等的各種行動指示與行事提醒,而最後形成的策略地圖 (Strategy Map) 將會足以完成兩個重要的效果,第一,是讓高層決策者得到足夠的必要資訊,且在具有清楚邏輯支持的前提下,能夠核決該策略規劃;第二,是讓後續的執行團隊能透過這個策略規劃的說明,清楚接續將此策略規劃展開成行動計畫時,能夠依此展出具體有用的行動工作與相關安排。

策略,原本就是一個概念式的形容,既是概念,各人的理解與領悟也不一,因此,建立自己的策略力,最好的作法就是不斷地做中學、學中做,更好的方式是整理自己的心得,分享給有興趣的同好,大家交流砌磋,持續精進,如此而已。

延伸閱讀:

2014-12-16

演講要這樣聽才有效

No comments:

Image Credit: levo


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

先說,「聽演講」或說是「參加演講」是一個人能夠站在巨人的肩膀上看得更遠的重要方法,而且比光看書讀資料要來得真實,因為,想法或經驗被文字化整理後多少有漂白美化的處理,真實成份有多少很難分辨。而現場的演講,看得不單只是講者的口說能力,還有語氣動作,以及最重要的「現場互動」。很多人私底下自己一個人慢慢寫可以寫出很好的文章,但當一與人互動的時候,有不少都會讓人有「被硬摔回現實」的錯愕感。往往最真實的表達方式,才能瞭解講者實際經驗與真切想法最直接有效的型式,因此,我總是大力推薦多多聽演講與參加座談。


活動到處都有


現在要聽演講真的很方便,根本是遍地開花處處香,再加上交通便利,人際間的交流互動的頻率增加、成本也低,例如學生可以輕易地找到校內或他校各類的學術報告或職場分享的演講活動;在職的人也很容易找到坊間目前由學界、業界或文創、新創圈舉辦的各式講座、學堂、小聚等以專業分享或建立人脈為目的的聚會活動,不僅主題多元,更重要的是,主講人也從以往總是老面孔的名人講者,換成現在有許多各行各業的新興專業人士大量站上講台進行分享,參加這些活動,可以遇到不同領域的高手同好,一方面可以學習他們的專業與經驗,另一方面,其實更是藉由實際與人互動上的多元刺激來認識自己,這會是能夠找出自己的喜好與特點的一個重要方式。


參加活動的重點在「人」


特別是「實際互動」的部份,藉由演講,去聽聽、去感受各有不同經驗與人生觀點的講者身上,找到自己覺得有趣、有共鳴的亮點,這種從人與人之間的直接互動所產生的共鳴,是無法從靜態的文字 (例如書藉或網頁上的內容等) 獲得相同的效果與感動的,而講者在互動過程中的各種思路與情緒轉折的臨場表現,更是要親身參與現場的演講才能完全體驗得到,這些,就算是即時的演講直播或事後的錄影重播,都不能提供同等的臨場感與真實的交流,到現場,即使只是講者與學員之間的眼神交流,那個心意、那個電流,就是參與現場演講會比隔著螢幕看影像要有價值、有收獲的原因


演講要怎麼聽?


在台灣,很可能受到學校教育與社會氛圍裡「多聽少說」、「只聽不說」、「多說多錯」、「多言無益」等等的束縛所限,聽演講都當成是「去聽課」,也就是上述所提的「初級:聽資訊」(What) 的層次,因此,可以想見,在聽演講的時候就大致會有以下這樣的「心情」:


  1. 重點勒?沒有指出重點在哪,我怎知道這演講在講什麼?
  2. 笑點勒?沒什麼笑點怎麼聽得下去 (開始滑手機…)
  3. 別點我!最好不要問台下問題,要也不要點我…
  4. 沒問題!有問題的怎麼也是別人啊!Q&A 時才不要舉手發問勒!

聽到這樣的聽演講心情有沒有很熟悉、一直點頭?


說實在的,這麼做也不會有什麼問題,阿大家不也都這麼過了大半輩子了嗎?但我想提出的是,「有什麼不同的方式可以更好?


聽演講的層次


如果要參加一場演講,要怎麼準備才會更有收獲?
首先,先定義出聽演講的 4 個層次:


  1. 初級聽資訊 (What)
  2. 中級學技巧 (How)
  3. 高級知因果 (Why)
  4. 頂級學人生 (Who)


能夠把握這 4 個層次,才能讓自己在參加演講的時候,知道什麼時候要用什麼方式來學習。

稍後再找時間寫寫各層次的經驗心得。

2014-12-15

開創人生的新局,靠的是「想像力」

No comments:

Image Credit: dracus.wordpress.com


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

每個人看似要按照這個環境制定的路線前進,但,卻又看到身邊一個個真正稱得上成功的例子,全是靠突破常規、開創新局才辦得到,把這兩者在眼前一擺,不難看出此間的衝突與矛盾,不是嗎?


身邊比比皆是的違和感


但是,這樣近在咫尺的現象卻似乎總被刻意回避,而每個人都還是每天過著一樣的日子,一邊是淡淡的、悶悶的、鳥鳥的現實日子,另一邊又是想望、渴望擁有成功的一切財富、權勢、聲名的美好期待,看看會不會有捷徑、賭運氣、中大獎的事發生在自己身上。反而,真正花時間想透這兩者之間的衝突與差異的人少之又少。

我淺見,重點是自己,所以要想如何從自己的現況出發去得到想要的人生。因此,要能找到可以立即啟動又能持續前進的生命態度與生活規劃,清楚自己面對生活中不同面向的事物,自己該怎麼看待,又當別人對自己也許不那麼符合常規作法時可能會有的異意時,要怎麼有技巧地回應與自我調適心情等等,設法讓自己懷著夢想,又能活在當下,每天都是在享受生活,也是在建構未來的狀態裡。


自己人生自己創


這很難嗎?是的,特別是一開始,要讓自己從處事心態與日常習慣上轉換至另一個模式狀況,其實就有點像換了一個人一樣,的確很不容易。有人問:「有必要讓自己變成另一個可能連自己都認不得的人嗎?」這個問題其實是要靠另一個問題來解答:「你喜歡而且接受現在的自己擁有的一切與未來可能的一生嗎?」如果是肯定的,那就不需要這一層的轉變,而如果不是,那就要好好想一想了,你不是隨意變成另一個人,你是要變成另一個你想要成為的人。

打造一個更好的自己


關於這個「變身過程」的一個小提醒,初期在心態上與實際生活上的撞牆期會很容易令人卻步、並且會懷疑繼續這麼做的意義,這時要堅信,如果自己訂定的目標就是若沒完成,將會遺憾終身的人生終極目標,這時就就要告訴自己一定要挺住,而在這時候,在還沒有達成一定的小成功而帶來能夠鼓舞打氣的正面訊號之前,有一個祕技是支持自己的關鍵,就是「想像力。」套用一句最近很夯、略修改於「牧羊少年奇幻之旅」書中名句的話,「 如果真心想要完成一件事,所有的人都會一起來幫你。 」這句話裡,在必要的幫助出現之前所依靠的支持力量,除了信念之外,就是各種的想像力。

不信?那聽聽另一位 Albert 說的應該更有說服力吧!

艾伯特.愛因斯坦:「想像力比知識更重要。

2014-11-30

我去聽一場演講:「從太陽回來的人」

No comments:


左:陳星合老師,右:就是啊!

Image Credit: Albert Weng

文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

隔了一週,終於好好坐下來寫一寫上週二特別去聽的一場演講的心得。當天是專程請假去聽,因為知道肯定精采,心得文一出,總不好是翹班去聽的吧!


從太陽回來的人


這場演講的主講人是 陳星合 老師,他最廣為人知的重大事蹟,就是台灣第一位加入全球最知名的雜耍劇團「太陽劇團」(Cirques du Soleil) 的成員,並且在該劇團目前唯一以高空互動表演舞台聞名的「」劇正式登台演出。在參加這場演講之前,我除了持續追縱他在臉書上的各種驚奇的進展故事之外,也曾當面和他交流請益一些關於他太陽人生的點點滴滴。在 11月的時候,知道他即將有一系列的演講行程時,就一直希望能有機會親臨現場,親身感受那股炙熱的太陽能量!終於,我的念力讓夢想成真,幾天後,陳星合老師告知有一場在台北的企業內訓可以帶幾位「工作人員」進場,聽到這消息後,立即排除萬難爭取這個「無作為工作人員」一職,這真是心想事成!

當天我提早到,還走在路上一邊找路的同時,陳星合老師眼明手快地從舉辦這次內訓的公司在同棟大樓一樓的營業處所門口一把叫住了我,「李佳啦!歡迎歡迎!」只要是當老師的人似乎無時不刻都有給人自動指路的超能力!一進入後,陳星合老師馬上為我介紹當天與他同行的二位團隊成員,也同時介紹我是來自科技業的門外大叔,恩,好吧!在人家的場子有時候就是得這樣…,這不是重點,繼續看下去。



從「愛達行銷定律」(AIDA Principle) 來談這場演講


接連來了幾位其他的工作人員,其實都是陳星合老師特別為這次的企業內訓邀請來的貴賓,稍坐閒聊之後,我們一行人被告知樓上的訓練教室與學員都已準備好了之後,就起身往二樓移動。這個教室是左右較寬的空間,剛進入時,看到滿座的內訓學員,立刻感受到這家企業的活力與親和,大部份學員當天的樣子都很開心,看到我們幾位外人也都適度給予微笑,這點在過去參加過的企業內訓相比,這樣的入場讓我耳目一新,也對原本不熟悉這家公司的我,建立很好的印象分數。

入座時很榮幸跟著幾位外賓同時被安排在中央第一排的搖滾區,演講活動在主辦單位的課程主持人迅速的張羅之下,很快地由陳星合老師登場,「開演囉!」


一開場,先以投影片和台下學員互動,契合主題又幽默的「」,即使只是透過控制投影片的播放時間,陳星合老師的這個開場,都十足切中「愛達行銷定律」最關鍵的第一個要素:「Attention」,獲取對方巨大且強烈的注意力,緊接著在開場投影片暖場後,就立刻來上一段精采的「雜耍」表演,在陳星合老師這段表演時,全場時而全神貫注、時而笑聲連連,一場華麗又有趣的生動演出,立刻達到「愛達行銷定律」的第二要素:「Interest」,引起對方從自身的喜好產生興趣,在觀賞這段表演的過程中,從大家的表情大略可看得出,有一半以上的人隨著表演的動作,心裡一邊在想像著自己似快也能同樣巧妙輕鬆地把一顆簡單的球,操控自如地拋、滾、彈、繞、丟、接自在的耍玩,起碼當下,我的心裡就很想說,「恩,那個球可不可以借我丟丟看?」


在開場的演出後,緊接著陳星合老師從自身的成長歷展開始講起,部份的故事,也曾在 2013 的 TEDxTaipei 提過,但當天的時間較 TED 充裕,講起故事的精采程度與細節的轉折趣味,就不是隔著螢幕看影片可以比擬,演講中,我特別喜歡陳星合老師年輕的時候做過的幾件一般人不會做、不敢做、不想做,但卻很可能是一點一滴改變了一生的事,我只試舉幾個例,其他更有趣有料的,推薦找機會去現場聽聽當事人的現身說法,絕對是掛保證的精采!



1. 為自己立個大志


戲班子出身,在得知世界上有一個叫作「太陽劇團」的最高殿堂時,陳星合老師在當年還自認為什麼都不是的時候,就已在心裡跟自己說,「我一定要進太陽戲團」。之後也確實為實現對自己的諾言,狠下苦功把自己拉高到準太陽戲團的程度,才有機會入選。

當下的年輕人,要能更為自己許下雄心壯志,不僅有機會為自己開創精采有趣的人生,身邊有更多這樣的人,整體環境才會更有活力、朝氣,充滿向上的力量。


2. 直接找向大人物 (Hello, Mr. Big!)


陳星合老師曾多次以粉絲同好的身份,趁著大師級的國際演出者來台表演時,直擊後台睹人要簽名與合照,好幾次竟也都成功,甚至還有機會在休息室聊上幾句,這對於當時正在朝向相同的表演生涯努力準備的他而言,這樣的親身互動產生了莫大的激勵效果,而當時留下來的簽名與合照,都成了不斷刺激他、激勵他的一個個火苗,「當時什麼都沒有的我都可以了,沒理由都已經去了一趟太陽又回來的我現在辦不到啊!」這句話,相信會是時時支持著他持續成長、不斷進步的重要提醒。

一點小補充,很多沒見過大人物的人一般都會對所謂的「大人物」有許多先入為主的想像,而這樣的想像,也往往是限制自己不敢或不會直接去找大人物的第一個、也是最主要的阻礙。但是,每個人其實都有許多共通點,一樣要吃飯、一樣要睡覺、一樣需要有人聊聊天、講講正常人會講的話,所以,找到合適的時機,直接找向大人物去提出你的要求或提問,常會是最直接有效、但大多數人不會做的事。


3. 英文程度不重要,敢用出來才有用


演講中一再聽到在不同階段的重要時刻裡,陳星合老師如何把當時的英文能力運用到破表的超展開狀態,然後一個一個都獲得令人欣慰的結果。結合我個人在國際市場開發的經驗,英文雖是目前最普及的國際商業語言,但也因此,並不是大多數人的母語或主要語言,簡單講,英文作為一種人與人之間溝通的語言,主要的目的是在表達與交換彼此的想法與作法,能達到這樣的目的才是重點,而不在看誰的英文程度高。陳星合老師在寫信向太陽劇團洽詢獲得錄取通知之後的正式合約上,還有就是每每有國際級的表演者來台灣演出時,都能想盡辦法盡力表達與溝通自己想傳達的訊息,就是敢用出來的最好例證。

包含以上三點,這場演講帶給讓台下的學員最大的啟發,應該是對於探索自己、實現自己這件事,多少打開更多的可能性,也就是「愛達行銷定律」中的第三要素:「Desire」,激發成就更好的自己的動機,不論是開始給自己立個大一點的職業志向或人生志向,還是能夠打破心理障礙,可以試著開始直接找向心中認定的大人物開口問、開口要,或者,能拋開對英文的恐懼,開始以「敢用、實用」為焦點,提升自己的英文能力,我想,就能夠完成「愛達行銷定律」裡排在最後、也是最關鍵的要素:「Action」,具備展開足以實現目標的行動

而我寫下這篇心得,也是聽完演講後採取行動的最好證明。有機會的話,十分推薦親自參與陳星合老師的演講,收獲肯定比我更多。


從現在起,開始學著「為自己打分數」吧!


我在開場前的閒聊時,提到,在過去的傳統觀念裡,具有權勢的師長或主管常是為我們打分數的人,而一般人也因此就不知不覺地活在一個總是等待別人給自己打分數的心理狀態之中,自己的成功失敗,完全不是自己定義的,甚至沒幾個人想到或知道怎麼定義自己認定的成功,試想,如果自己追求或努力的成功都是別人定義、要求的,就算最後達成了,「自己」會因此而感到快樂嗎?看到身邊很多人仍看不到、看不透這一點,很可惜。

我在陳星合老師的身上,看到最大的一個特質就是,他一直在為自己找終極的人生定義與價值,並且,希望藉由自己的持續努力與四處分享,也啟發、激發一些些人,就一些些,因為,要事,急不得。您覺得呢?

陳星合老師的臉書專頁

---

延伸欣賞:

來自太陽的勇者陳星合 (Hsing-Ho Chen) at TEDxTaipei 2013




20140913 公視 [老師,您哪位?] S1-6 陳星合的表演藝術課


2014-11-06

President Barack Obama: Remarks by the President in a Press Conference (Mid-term Election)

No comments:

Image Credit: usatoday

Remarks by the President in a Press Conference

East Room
2:57 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Have a seat.
Today, I had a chance to speak with John Boehner and congratulated Mitch McConnell on becoming the next Senate Majority Leader.  And I told them both that I look forward to finishing up this Congress’ business, and then working together for the next two years to advance America’s business.  And I very much appreciated Leader McConnell’s words last night about the prospect of working together to deliver for the American people. On Friday, I look forward to hosting the entire Republican and Democratic leadership at the White House to chart a new course forward.

Obviously, Republicans had a good night, and they deserve credit for running good campaigns.  Beyond that, I’ll leave it to all of you and the professional pundits to pick through yesterday’s results.  What stands out to me, though, is that the American people sent a message, one that they’ve sent for several elections now.  They expect the people they elect to work as hard as they do.  They expect us to focus on their ambitions and not ours.  They want us to get the job done. 
All of us, in both parties, have a responsibility to address that sentiment.  Still, as President, I have a unique responsibility to try and make this town work.  So, to everyone who voted, I want you to know that I hear you.  To the two-thirds of voters who chose not to participate in the process yesterday, I hear you, too.  All of us have to give more Americans a reason to feel like the ground is stable beneath their feet, that the future is secure, that there’s a path for young people to succeed, and that folks here in Washington are concerned about them.  So I plan on spending every moment of the next two-plus years doing my job the best I can to keep this country safe and to make sure that more Americans share in its prosperity.
This country has made real progress since the crisis six years ago.  The fact is more Americans are working; unemployment has come down.  More Americans have health insurance.  Manufacturing has grown.  Our deficits have shrunk.  Our dependence on foreign oil is down, as are gas prices.  Our graduation rates are up.  Our businesses aren’t just creating jobs at the fastest pace since the 1990s, our economy is outpacing most of the world.  But we’ve just got to keep at it until every American feels the gains of a growing economy where it matters most, and that's in their own lives. 
Obviously, much of that will take action from Congress.  And I’m eager to work with the new Congress to make the next two years as productive as possible.  I'm committed to making sure that I measure ideas not by whether they are from Democrats or Republicans, but whether they work for the American people.  And that’s not to say that we won’t disagree over some issues that we’re passionate about.  We will.  Congress will pass some bills I cannot sign.  I'm pretty sure I'll take some actions that some in Congress will not like.  That’s natural.  That's how our democracy works.  But we can surely find ways to work together on issues where there’s broad agreement among the American people.
So I look forward to Republicans putting forward their governing agenda.  I will offer my ideas on areas where I think we can move together to respond to people’s economic needs.
So, just take one example.  We all agree on the need to create more jobs that pay well.  Traditionally, both parties have been for creating jobs rebuilding our infrastructure -- our roads, bridges, ports, waterways.  I think we can hone in on a way to pay for it through tax reform that closes loopholes and makes it more attractive for companies to create jobs here in the United States. 
We can also work together to grow our exports and open new markets for our manufacturers to sell more American-made goods to the rest of the world.  That's something I’ll be focused on when I travel to Asia next week.
We all share the same aspirations for our young people.  And I was encouraged that this year Republicans agreed to investments that expanded early childhood education.  I think we've got a chance to do more on that front.  We’ve got some common ideas to help more young people afford college and graduate without crippling debt so that they have the freedom to fill the good jobs of tomorrow and buy their first homes and start a family. 
And in the five states where a minimum wage increase was on the ballot last night, voters went five for five to increase it. That will give about 325,000 Americans a raise in states where Republican candidates prevailed.  So that should give us new reason to get it done for everybody, with a national increase in the minimum wage.
So those are some areas where I think we've got some real opportunities to cooperate.  And I am very eager to hear Republican ideas for what they think we can do together over the next couple of years.  Of course, there’s still business on the docket that needs attention this year.  And here are three places where I think we can work together over the next several weeks, before this Congress wraps up for the holidays.
First, I’m submitting a request to Congress for funding to ensure that our doctors, scientists, and troops have the resources that they need to combat the spread of Ebola in Africa and to increase our preparedness for any future cases here at home.
Second, I'm going to begin engaging Congress over a new Authorization to Use Military Force against ISIL.  The world needs to know we are united behind this effort, and the men and women of our military deserve our clear and unified support.
Third, back in September, Congress passed short-term legislation to keep the government open and operating into December.  That gives Congress five weeks to pass a budget for the rest of the fiscal year.  And I hope that they’ll do it in the same bipartisan, drama-free way that they did earlier this year.  When our companies are steadily creating jobs -- which they are -- we don’t want to inject any new uncertainty into the world economy and to the American economy.
The point is it’s time for us to take care of business.  There are things this country has to do that can’t wait another two years or another four years.  There are plans this country has to put in place for our future. 
And the truth is I’m optimistic about our future.  I have good reason to be.  I meet Americans all across the country who are determined, and big-hearted, and ask what they can do, and never give up, and overcome obstacles.  And they inspire me every single day.  So the fact is I still believe in what I said when I was first elected six years ago last night.  For all the maps plastered across our TV screens today, and for all the cynics who say otherwise, I continue to believe we are simply more than just a collection of red and blue states.  We are the United States. 
And whether it's immigration or climate change, or making sure our kids are going to the best possible schools, to making sure that our communities are creating jobs; whether it's stopping the spread of terror and disease, to opening up doors of opportunity to everybody who’s willing to work hard and take responsibility -- the United States has big things to do.  We can and we will make progress if we do it together.  And I look forward to the work ahead.
So, with that, let me take some questions.  I think that our team has got my list.  And we're going to start with Julie Pace at Associated Press.

2014-11-05

酸言酸語的酸人生

No comments:

Image Credit: myfacewhen
文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

很少談負面的訊息,今天就講一下這個「酸」是怎麼回事。那為什麼平時很少講現在要講,最後再回答。

酸人者,在酸一件事之前,他自己的心情多半早就已經酸掉,甚至酸掉很久了,因此,遇到什麼事就找機會酸一下,甚至常常只是看到影子就開槍,而不見得是他對那件事真的有什麼特定、篤定或清楚的看法,所以,充其量,這種酸言酸語的表現,只不過是這個人為自己的負面情緒找個機會發洩,而不全然是對特定事件或說法擁有那麼義正言辭的觀點。

如果把這個現象當成是「問題」,那接想要想的是,那「問題背後的問題」是什麼?

沒錯,這才是我真正想探討的。這背後的問題是這樣的。


1. 酸人者,換被人酸!


看到不認同的看到事情或觀點可以提出事實、數據或論述來交流討論,若只是一味的一直酸一直酸一直酸別人,喂!換個角度想想,哪天換作是自己被酸,也會一樣覺得,「別來亂,要就拿事實、搬數據、講清楚,否則輕封鎖,重斷交」。要酸人之前,先退一步換位思考一下,既然如此,何必當初!



2. 酸言完全無濟於事!


這是基本的人性啊!沒有人在被別人以酸言酸語的口氣唸被修理還會深自檢討,立志改進的啦!會的人請喊「優」!反而是被酸之後會很認真 (氣憤) 地反擊,不論原本的言行是否正當,這時候面子問題最大,先討回來再說。這樣的一來一往,都是虛功,沒有產生有用的價值,徒增彼此的口舌而已,若是在公開的平台相互指責,不是更讓人看戲,還是一部沒啥營養的戲 (而這樣的劇情都會接著出現討抱取暖的戲碼,屢試不爽…)。



3. 既然這樣,為何要酸?


一來是給自己原本就有的負面情緒找個出口,這種情況就是被酸者要自認倒楣。另一就是酸人可以給自己「哼!看吧!我比你厲害!」的一種自嗨的 fu,這就可以為自己稍稍建立一丁點的瞬間小確幸,但是,瞬間過後,立馬消失,真的。



4. 有時候不酸就忍不住啊!怎辦?


酸酸有兩種,一種是酸了就跑,不關我事;一種是提出看法,期待交流。

建議試試看第二種方法,因為要提出看法,而不是直接反應,所以,情緒面的立即反應會先被放下,然後整理一下自己的「看法」再發言,同時,不忘提出讓對方回覆的訊息,即使對方不回,這樣的表述也會讓自己的發言得體,而自己在這樣的心境與思路轉換之中,不致失控失言,後悔莫及。

最後,來回答一下一開始的自問:「為什麼要談這個」。



1. 會不自覺被貼標籤


自身過去豐富的酸民經驗告訴我,酸人這件事對自己一點幫助而沒有,只會讓別人對自己貼標籤,對,你想的沒錯,是不好、以後不想聯絡的那種。


2. 還有更有趣、有用的事啊!


這世界與社會有太多的事需要或可以被創新、被改善,透過這個時代創造出來的網路平台資源,一起把心力多放在一些助人利己的事不更好?真心話。


3. 人是會相互影響的,只是不知是正面還是負面



多一段酸言酸語,就容易引發其他更多的人加入這個「破窗理論」效應。而如果可以少一個,就有機會多一個加入推動社會前進的力量,一個都不嫌少。

這樣講雖然能理解,但有時候就還是忍不住要酸一下咩!

我知,都說了我的資深酸民來歷了,情緒的事用情緒的方式解,而不要因情緒調和不及,反而誤事就更不好了。

希望這篇帶著淡淡酸意的短文,給大家一點酸中帶甜、酸而不澀的 fu!有嗎?

2014-11-01

閱讀的好處是什麼?說說「從 0 到 1」這本「談新創、建未來」的新書

No comments:

Image Credit: brightyoungthings


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

「閱讀的好處是什麼?」在我想,閱讀的好處總共有三,以及試舉其類型範例:

  1. 抒發情緒:小說、勵志、心靈…
  2. 增長知識:學術、專業、工具 (書)…
  3. 促進思考:此類文體較無一定形式,要自己找

這三項好處,或單獨存在,或合併發生,不論閱讀的人得到什麼樣的好處或成效,先清楚閱讀的目的以及閱後實際獲得的成效,才能持續強化閱讀的動機與動力,而持續閱讀,真的很重要,為何重要,不在此述。



促進思考


曾幾何時,有看過一本從「促進思考」的角度來撰寫的書?

這本 Peter Thiel 的新書「從 0 到 1」,談的是一般人的主導思維總是聚焦在「持續改進 (模仿、抄襲、單降成本等皆屬此類)」,充其量只是一種「從 1 到 N」的作法,而真說穿了,這不過是紅海裡的小打小鬧而已,真正具開創性、破壞性的作法,是近乎從無到有的嶄新事業樣貌,包括市場策略、產品設計、通路佈局與行銷手法都得自成一格,呈現「從 0 到 1」般的創新效益。

這本書讓我最愛不釋手的原因,在於論述的範圍極大,談歷史、論文化、講產業、評成敗,所舉的例與串起的事,既深且廣,更重要的是,作者強調「獨立思考」、「自己求解」,而不給現成的答案,甚至是主動挑戰既定的主流認知,提出其他事例來刺激讀者、鼓勵讀者要自己找自己的答案,因為,他的經驗或他能給的答案,在極大的比率之中,不會適用於每位讀者的個案情況,正因為作者設定的閱讀建議模式是希望讀者自覺、自省、自立,這本書讀起來就更顯得探索意謂十足,挑戰性頗高,閱讀的難度與思考的樂趣也一左一右,特別來勁。

這本書其實是無心插柳之作,原是 Peter Thiel 在 Stanford 所開設的 CS183 課程太精采,當時課堂上的學生之一 Blake Masters 把上課的筆記完整記下並公開分享在自己的網誌上,不料引來爆量的點閱與全球網友的廣大回響,因此,原本只是一堂課的教學,結果是促成一本精采好書出版至全球!而 Blake Masters 也一夕爆紅,躍升全球知名的暢銷作家之林。把筆記做好的附加價值,原來可以這麼大!

我更喜歡英文原文的書名,簡單俐落,「談新創、建未來,由此入
Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future

2014-10-20

視 Negotiation 為「商議」:商議無所不在、無所不能

No comments:

Image Credit: theleadershipsource


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

這幾次回台科大的座談裡,發現幾個很有意思、也很讓我振奮的進展,像是:



  1. 專注的焦點,從「找一份工作」慢慢變成「想一個職涯」
  2. 參加的目的,從「學習有用的面試技巧」變成來「認識不同領域的專家同好」
  3. 所提的問題,從「如何面試」漸漸轉成「怎麼談判 (Negotiation)」

尤其是後者,就如我在上週三 (10/15) 強調的,特別是在國際職場,合作與接洽的對象來自各國,彼此的背景、程度、期望與習性都不同,而且一般而言,彼此互動與相處的時間較短,必須很快讓對方知道「你是誰?」、「重點/好處在哪?」、「要做什麼/怎麼合作?」,因此,這此間的 Negotiation 其實是無所不在、隨時發生,因為,真正成功的 Negotiation,是從接觸的前中後持續累積的致勝局面 (Winning Game),而不是大多數人刻板地以為只有在依照進度,在談合約、價錢、條件時所安排的正面會議才是在進行 Negotiation。

在我的字典裡,Negotiation 這個大多用在商場上且是外來的字眼,我也給了它一個我自己理解後的定義:「商議」,而不是一般常見的「談判」。因為,商議本來就是無時不刻都會發生的「小動作」,而談判更像是雙方約定好了要「如何如何」才來進行的「大動作」。忽略了「小動作」如何做得好,只重視「大動作」如何取勝,恐怕容易因小失大!

對 Negotiation 有興趣的好友,或許可以讀讀這本較具突破性的書:《
交涉的藝術哈佛商學院必修談判課妥協讓步破局都可能是一種好結果 (The Art of Negotiation: How to Improvise Agreement in a Chaotic World)

喔!還有,本書作者美國哈佛大學商學院惠勒教授提到如何在持續變動的交涉中邊開船邊掌舵的概念,正與我在 10/15 談「思考能力」略有契合之處。

「思考能力」的三大支柱依序是:

  1. 獨立思考:拼出必要的全局資訊,產出:評論 (Comment)
  2. 邏輯思考:理出關鍵的因果關係,產出:見解 (Insight)
  3. 策略思考:找出最佳的致勝途徑,產出:行動 (Action)



邊看書的同時,也可以一併以上述三大支柱自主檢查,在對的程序產出對的結果,不急不徐,精準商議,而後得勝。



懂得商議 (Negotiation) 精髓的人,會無時不刻把自己準備好,當任何對達到重要目的或計畫有幫助的機會出現時,就能夠也將會主動出擊,出奇不備,以小勝大,化原本以為的不可能為可能。

---
書摘:

惠勒教授相信,再好的戰略與計劃,當面對多變的交涉情境時都是張不完整的地圖。雖然有圖在手可以給人前進的信心與動力,但惟有保持警覺,不斷學習因應環境變化,這張不完整的地圖才能真正帶領我們到達目的地。

2014-10-17

「用心」的關鍵,在於「多一點 (Extra)」

No comments:

Image Credit: thatswhatsgoodmedia

文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

很多人常掛在嘴上要人得「用心」,但怎樣才是「用心」?

  • 比別人預期的想多一點
  • 比自己以為的試多一點
  • 比一般會做的做多一點

一個人用不用心,從旁人的眼光很容易就看得出,怎麼看出的?差不多就是從一開始是到的這個「多一點」。

用心的人多半會比一般人在想在做都會「多一點」,只要稍加留意,其實很容易看得出來。從自己的角度出發,是要在一開始經由特意讓自己在一些事情上多努力一點、多表現一點,漸漸明顯在這些事情上多做一點,再來,漸漸把凡事「多一點」的作法養成一定的習慣,到後來,則是變成對於凡事都用心,這個「讓用心入身」的過程,會讓人時時刻刻都看得出其做人處事的細心周到之處,而這些,都是從當初特意修煉「用心」而成的重要個人特質。

當「用心」變成明顯的特質,開始有旁人說:「某某某是個很用心的人。」一個人到了這樣的境界、有了這樣的肯定,絕對是在很多場合都能勝出的終極本事之一。

看別人容易,看自己困難,最重要的是在找自己、做自己之前,先練練「觀自己」,也一併修煉這個「用心 = 多一點」吧!

我這「用心 = 多一點 = 雞婆」的分享,也算有「用心」吧?

---
簡單的事重覆做,你就是專家
重複的事用心做,你就是贏家

2014-10-16

「學生」與「考生」:心態對了,才能全力發功啊!

No comments:

Image Credit: maine.edu


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

昨天的座談我特別講了這個概念,大家一定以為所謂的「考生」就是指那些正面臨重大考試的學生當下的身份,考完試、入學後,就是「學生」了。

其實,這與教育環境和學生心態有關,我認為,在台灣大部份的學生,其實「考生」對他們來說不是一種面臨考試時的暫時身份,反而一直都是在學生時間的「真實心態」。

「考生」是指專注在某場特定的考試,得想辦法找到考試範圍、出題方向、答案重點,並且以得到高分為主要目的的應考者。

試想,目前的「學生」,不正是以同樣的心態在面對每一堂課?知道教科書與參考書是哪幾本,老師要教哪幾章 (學期時間有限,多半也只能跳著教),有哪些小考大考,題目怎麼出、有沒考古題 (學長姊幫幫忙)、打分數的偏好等等,然後設法拿到想要的分數。

前後段一比,其實,一般學生的心態與行為,其實正與「考生」幾乎完全相同無誤!

那,「學生」又該是什麼樣貌?

「學生」是一個知道自己需要在特定領域廣泛學習的人,所以在學習的一開始,應該是快速地先從「入門 (Introduction)」著手,水平掃一遍對這個領域所涵蓋的範圍有一個較廣的瞭解,這時,最重要的是找出自己對這個領該的興趣與想要學習的重點,然後,再比對老師指定的授課範圍,一定會發現有重疊與完全不同的部份,這個發現非常重要,因為這樣才知道在老師教授的部份自己要花多少時間,而在自己所劃定的部份若不在老師的授課範圍中,則要靠自己另外找時間去學習、補足,這樣才能把「自己的」學習目標達成。

一個老師再厲害,也不可能規劃出符合每位學生所需的課程,又加上每個學生的人生路應該是自己去探去闖出來的,怎麼能僅接收老師教的單一版本就以為這樣就算可以把這個學問學起來了呢?

可是,除出授課老師教的以外,難到其他部份都得靠自己硬啃生吞?

以前可能是這樣,拜網路之際,現在有更棒更有效的方法,在此推薦二個。



1. 從線上免費教學平台報名同質性的他校課程來學習


Coursera上面有非常多的主流與非主流課程,而且不斷在增加中。
Northwestern 開行銷、策略,Stanford 開創業、George Tech 開科技、工程,還有很多很多的全球頂尖課程,從頂級老師的親自授課影片、教材、講義,加上來自全球共同修課的虛擬同班同學一起無國界討論,這樣的資源完全免費。



2. 尋找具有相關領域專長的 EMBA 學長姊就近請益


特別是主流的領域,幾乎都可以在 EMBA 裡直接或間接找到能夠給予指點或諮詢的學長姊,這時候,要向高手強人學習,禮貌要到位,嘴巴要甜點,一定也可以加強很多特別是與實務有關的寶貴知識。

總之,「考生」是對別人負責的人,所以清楚考試範圍與評分方式,就會設法讀到拿到好分數,而真正學到什麼,能實際運用的程度有多少,就不見得會被放在心上了。

反觀,「學生」是對自己負責的人,所以會窮盡一切的方法就為了讓自己紮實學好一樣東西。而且,這個學習會隨著自己對未來有更多的想法與企圖,不斷調整也不斷增強,然後所學的東西就會不停地被重組、重學、重建成自己深厚的實力,這,也才是一個「學生」真正該具備的態度與成效,不是嗎?

2014/10/15 - 『「以出走創未來」打造品牌行銷的國際職涯座談』後記 (一)

No comments:

Image Credit: 張振書

昨天的「以出走創未來」座談有非常多的「創新」,一定要高調一下。

1. 新創公司創辦人參加


第一次有新創公司的創辦人好友學長參與,給了在場參加的學弟妹多一層交流請益的對象,太棒了!感謝 Brandon ChuangBordy Kau 邀請公司同仁一同參與。



2. 已就業的同學持續參與


今年 3 月開始一系列想辦就辦的職場分享與職涯規劃座談,現在已有學弟妹陸續投入職場,他們選擇繼續回校與大家交流,一定可以讓在學的學弟妹有更多學習與借鏡的機會,同時,也可以因應未來更好的職涯發展持續做準備,特別提醒,職涯發展 (Career Development) 不該是在遇到要找工作或想換工作時的一時興趣,而是一種想建構成功職涯的一種不間斷的努力。



3. 「大一」學弟參加


這是在座談中場的問答時才發現的,說真的當下真是又驚又喜,驚的是才大一怎麼會留意到這類型的活動訊息 (這位學弟應該要特別感謝台科大仁哥 鄭乃仁學長的成功宣傳),喜的是我一直希望不要只有大四碩二在即將面臨就業壓力的時候才「被迫」參加,而應該在更早的大二、大二、碩一就好整以暇地及早接觸,多方找路,只是,沒想到,這次來的竟是才「大一」的學弟,哇!席間,這位大一的學弟也參與討論,提出幾個論述完整、邏輯清析的見解,聽完後,還在為了他才大一的身份就主動參加座談而驚訝的我,對於他的回答,更是印象深刻!



4. 再次告捷,有學妹當天錄取某知名科技品牌大廠


這位學妹是我 4 月份其中一場座談的主辦人與引言人,當時會加辦那一場,是源自於她在參加前一場後非常謙和有有地來信問了幾與科技品牌廠與代工廠關於「產品經理 (PM)」這項職缺的問題,後來,稟持一直以來的「想辦就辦」精神,就由她主辦了 4 月份的第二場。她的主動態度更表現在活動之後,再次與幾位同學約了我回校進一步針對每個人的就業準備提供個別的諮詢,然後,她在應徵了幾家公司之後,就在昨天下午正式接獲一家知名科技品牌大廠的 PM 職缺錄取通知。


哇!哇!哇!因為很驚喜,所以要說三遍。

這位學妹特別在座談後留下來交流的人移到走廊時,才找機會跟我分享這個超級好消息,我當下忍不住要在場留下來的人一起給她一個掌聲鼓勵,因為我實在太為她開心了。她謙虛的說,其實她在面試時的表現自己覺得並不特別突出,但是,她一直試著以我之前分享的「把面試轉為面談」技巧,所以過程中都能保持一定的「對談」,而不是去「應考」,所以,她覺得當初的「把面試轉為面談」對她的幫助很大。

開心!開心!開心!噎!那家科技品牌大廠怎不是我最熟悉的那家???Orz...

鄭乃仁 在這次的引言中說,聽了幾次我的座談,覺得收獲最大的就是,他可以從我的分享中找到讓自己進步的方法,然後會覺得,有些事,只要有對的方法,他也可以做得到。

是的,成功者找方法,做不到常只是「還沒做到」,而還沒做到欠缺的,就是「方法」而已。讓我們一起學習、進步、分享、打造一個更好的好所在。

謝謝大家,我也跟大家學到很多,心更是因此更柔軟、更溫暖,祝福大家。

2014-10-09

2014 最撐場的座談:火力全開,預備爆氣

No comments:

Image Credit: veiledexcursions


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

這次將在 2014/10/15 (三) 於台灣科大舉辦『「以出走創未來」打造品牌行銷的國際職涯座談』座談,整體的規劃是以「明快、實用、交流」為主,先預告幾個重點,請報名的好友先看看,有任何意見歡迎留言,可以修正、可以加碼,我肯定是會火力全開,至於會不會爆氣,就讓你們的留言給我一點方向唄!

座談議程:
1. 品牌行銷的國際經驗分享
2. 從個人職涯規劃看國際品牌行銷之路
3. 從公司市場開發看國際品牌行銷之計
4. 現場問答交流

在「個人職涯的國際品牌行銷之路」部份,將會以 4 個面向來分享:
1. 本事:談需要具備什麼樣的「本事」才能在國際職場上一較高下?
2. 談判:跨文化工作場域到處是「談判」場合,怎麼判斷?怎麼談?
3. 簡報:簡報力是指美美的簡報檔?來談談怎麼「簡報」才真有力!
4. 英文:英文不好有機會走國際線嗎?來談國際職場的英文衝天祕辛!

我自己認為,光是這 4 點的分享就絕對讓參加的人滿滿滿滿載而歸,都是第一手走遍許多國家的親身經驗,有成功的、有失敗的,當天要分享的心得,都是點滴血淚的精采故事,一般對外的演講不會有這種「掏心版」滴!

2014-10-02

「自信」是什麼?怎麼養成?

No comments:

Image Credit: childrenandyouth


文:Albert Weng 翁溓松

自信 = 能力與經歷 (外) + 自知與自律 (內)

必要的能力與經歷是一個人在特定環境之所以能夠展現自己的重要關鍵,例如會口才好的人一上台就能吸引目光引經據典令人信服、會唱歌的人麥克風到手就開起演唱會還會安可不斷、籃球強的人一拿到球就 Kobe Bryant 上身般舉手投足整個帥到爆…,擅長的事越多,一個人會有自信的時間自然增加,例如一天下來,在工作、休閒與社交的場合內,都已是自己很熟悉與擅長的事,自信的氣場當然也油然而生!另一個外部的條件是經歷,在見識與經歷過各式各樣的大風大浪之後,面對小打小鬧的場面自然得以氣定神閒、不急不徐,所以,能力和經歷是建立自信的必經之路。

然而,真正的自信,其實更來自於「自知」與「自律」。

一個通透自知的人,瞭解自己的長處,接受自己的短處,隨遇自在、進退合宜,心安意清,自然自信。

而上述在能力與心智的學習與歷練,都是靠堅定與持續的自律才能辦得到。

或可以說,看到一個真正從裡而外都充滿自信的人,在其自信的表象是言行外貌的光采,然而,在自信背後的真相其實是一個選擇真誠看待自己,並且在日常生活裡能夠長期自我要求的人生態度。

這兩個發於心的「自知」與「自律」,要是從較宏觀的角度來看,則更是足以一式走天下的終極自信功夫。

2014-10-01

Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 4 Notes Essay

No comments:
Originally posted by Blake Masters on his blog here.

Special thanks to Peter Thiel and Blake Masters.

---

Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 4 Notes Essay

Here is an essay version of my class notes from Class 4 of CS183: Startup. Errors and omissions are my own. Credit for good stuff is Peter’s entirely. 
CS183: Startup—Notes Essay—April 11—The Last Mover Advantage
I. Escaping Competition
The usual narrative is that capitalism and perfect competition are synonyms. No one is a monopoly. Firms compete and profits are competed away. But that’s a curious narrative. A better one frames capitalism and perfect competition as opposites; capitalism is about the accumulation of capital, whereas the world of perfect competition is one in which you can’t make any money. Why people tend to view capitalism and perfect competition as interchangeable is thus an interesting question that’s worth exploring from several different angles.
The first thing to recognize is that our bias favoring competition is deep-rooted. Competition is seen as almost quintessentially American. It builds character. We learn a lot from it. We see the competitive ideology at work in education. There is a sense in which extreme forms of competition are seen as setting one up for future, non-competitive success. Getting into medical school, for example, is extremely competitive. But then you get to be a well-paid doctor.
There are, of course, cases where perfect competition is just fine. Not all businesses are created to make money; some people might be just fine with not turning a profit, or making just enough to keep the lights on. But to the extent one wants to make money, he should probably be quite skeptical about perfect competition. Some fields, like sports and politics, are incredibly and perhaps inherently competitive. It’s easier to build a good business than it is to become the fastest person alive or to get elected President.
It may upset people to hear that competition may not be unqualifiedly good. We should be clear what we mean here. Some sense of competition seems appropriate. Competition can make for better learning and education. Sometimes credentials do reflect significant degrees of accomplishment. But the worry is that people make a habit of chasing them. Too often, we seem to forget that it’s genuine accomplishment we’re after, and we just train people to compete forever. But that does everyone a great disservice if what’s theoretically optimal is to manage to stopcompeting, i.e. to become a monopoly and enjoy success.
A law school anecdote will help illustrate the point. By graduation, students at Stanford Law and other elite law schools have been racking up credentials and awards for well over a dozen years. The pinnacle of post law school credentialism is landing a Supreme Court clerkship. After graduating from SLS in ’92 and clerking for a year on the 11th Circuit, Peter Thiel was one of the small handful of clerks who made it to the interview stage with two of the Justices. That capstone credential was within reach. Peter was so close to winning that last competition. There was a sense that, if only he’d get the nod, he’d be set for life. But he didn’t. 
Years later, after Peter built and sold PayPal, he reconnected with an old friend from SLS. The first thing the friend said was, “So, aren’t you glad you didn’t get that Supreme Court clerkship?” It was a funny question. At the time, it seemed much better to be chosen than not chosen. But there are many reasons to doubt whether winning that last competition would have been so good after all. Probably it would have meant a future of more insane competition. And no PayPal. The pithy, wry version of this is the line about Rhodes Scholars: they all had a great future in their past.
This is not to say that clerkships, scholarships, and awards don’t often reflect incredible accomplishment. Where that’s the case, we shouldn’t diminish it. But too often in the race to compete, we learn to confuse what is hard with what is valuable. Intense competition makes things hard because you just beat heads with other people. The intensity of competition becomes a proxy for value. But value is a different question entirely. And to the extent it’s not there, you’re competing just for the sake of competition. Henry Kissinger’s anti-academic line aptly describes the conflation of difficulty and value: in academia at least, the battles are so fierce because the stakes are so small.
That seems true, but it also seems odd. If the stakes are so small, why don’t people stop fighting so hard and do something else instead? We can only speculate. Maybe those people just don’t know how to tell what’s valuable. Maybe all they can understand is the difficulty proxy. Maybe they’ve bought into the romanticization of competition. But it’s important to ask at what point it makes sense to get away from competition and shift your life trajectory towards monopoly.
Just look at high school, which, for Stanford students and the like, was not a model of perfect competition. It probably looked more like extreme asymmetric warfare; it was machine guns versus bows and arrows. No doubt that’s fun for the top students. But then you get to college and the competition amps up. Even more so during grad school. Things in the professional world are often worst of all; at every level, people are just competing with each other to get ahead. This is tricky to talk about. We have a pervasive ideology that intense, perfect competition makes the best world. But in many ways that’s deeply problematic.
One problem with fierce competition is that it’s demoralizing. Top high school students who arrive at elite universities quickly find out that the competitive bar has been raised. But instead of questioning the existence of the bar, they tend to try to compete their way higher. That is costly. Universities deal with this problem in different ways. Princeton deals with it through enormous amounts of alcohol, which presumably helps blunt the edges a bit. Yale blunts the pain through eccentricity by encouraging people to pursue extremely esoteric humanities studies. Harvard—most bizarrely of all—sends its students into the eye of the hurricane. Everyone just tries to compete even more. The rationalization is that it’s actually inspiring to be repeatedly beaten by all these high-caliber people. We should question whether that’s right.
Of all the top universities, Stanford is the farthest from perfect competition. Maybe that’s by chance or maybe it’s by design. The geography probably helps, since the east coast doesn’t have to pay much attention to us, and vice versa. But there’s a sense of structured heterogeneity too; there’s a strong engineering piece, the strong humanities piece, and even the best athletics piece in the country. To the extent there’s competition, it’s often a joke. Consider the Stanford-Berkeley rivalry. That’s pretty asymmetric too. In football, Stanford usually wins. But take something that really matters, like starting tech companies. If you ask the question, “Graduates from which of the two universities started the most valuable company?” for each of the last 40 years, Stanford probably wins by something like 40 to zero. It’s monopoly capitalism, far away from a world of perfect competition. 
The perfect illustration of competition writ large is war. Everyone just kills everyone. There are always rationalizations for war. Often it’s been romanticized, though perhaps not so much anymore. But it makes sense: if life really is war, you should spend all your time either getting ready for it or doing it. That’s the Harvard mindset.
But what if life isn’t just war? Perhaps there’s more to it than that. Maybe you should sometimes run away. Maybe you should sheath the sword and figure out something else to do. Maybe “life is war” is just a strange lie we’re told, and competition isn’t actually as good as we assume it is.
II. Lies People Tell
The pushback to all this is that, generally speaking, life really is war. Determining how much of life is actually perfect competition versus how much is monopoly isn’t easy. We should start by evaluating the various versions of the claim that life is war. To do that, we have to be on guard against falsehood and distortion. Let’s consider the reasons why people might bend the truth about monopoly versus competition in the world of technology.
A. Avoid the DOJ
One problem is that if you have a monopoly, you probably don’t want to talk about it. Antitrust and other laws on this can be nuanced and confusing. But generally speaking, a CEO bragging about the great monopoly he’s running is an invitation to be audited, scrutinized, and criticized. There’s just no reason to do it. And if the politics problem is quite severe, there is actually strong positive incentive is to distort the truth. You don’t just not say that you are a monopoly; you shout from the rooftops that you’re not, even if you are.
The world of perfect competition is no freer from perverse incentives to lie. One truth about that world is that, as always, companies want investors. But another truth about the world of perfect competition is that investors should not invest in any companies, because no company can or will make a profit. When two truths so clash, the incentive is to distort one of them. 
So monopolies pretend they’re not monopolies while non-monopolies pretend they are. On the scale of perfect competition to monopoly, the range of where most companies fall is shrunk by their rhetoric. We perceive that there are only small differences between them. Since people have extreme pressure to lie towards convergence, the reality is probably more binary—monopoly or competitive commodity business—than we think.     
B. Market Lies
People also tell lies about markets. Really big markets tend to be very competitive. You don’t want to be a minnow in a giant pool. You want to be best in your class. So if you’re in a business that finds itself in a competitive situation, you may well fool yourself into thinking that your relevant market is much smaller than it actually is.
Suppose you want to start a restaurant in Palo Alto that will serve only British food. It will be the only such restaurant in Palo Alto. “No one else is doing it,” you might say. “We’re in a class of our own.” But is that true? What is the relevant market? Is it the market for British food? Or the restaurant market in general? Should you consider only the Palo Alto market? Or do people sometimes travel to or from Menlo Park or Mountain View to eat? These questions are hard, but the bigger problem is that your incentive is not to ask them at all. Rather, your incentive is to rhetorically shrink the market. If a bearish investor reminds you that 90% of restaurants fail within 2 years, you’ll come up with a story about how you’re different. You’ll spend time trying to convince people you’re the only game in town instead of seriously considering whether that’s true. You should wonder whether there are people who eat only British food in Palo Alto. In this example, those are the only people you have pricing power over. And it’s very possible that those people don’t exist.
In 2001, some PayPal people used to go eat on Castro Street in Mountain View. Then, like now, there were all sorts of different lunch places. Whether you wanted Indian, Thai, Vietnamese, American, or something else, you had several restaurants to choose from. And there were more choices once you picked a type. Indian restaurants, for instance, divided into South Indian vs. not, cheaper vs. fancier. Castro Street was pretty competitive. PayPal, by contrast, was at that time the only e-mail based payments company in world. It employed fewer people than the Mountain View restaurants did. Yet from a capital formation perspective, PayPal was much more valuable than all the equity of all those restaurants combined. Starting a new South Indian food restaurant on Castro Street was, and is, a hard way to make money. It’s a big, competitive market. But when you focus on your one or two differentiating factors, it’s easy to convince yourself that it’s not.
Movie pitches unfold in much the same way. Most of them are the same in that they all claim that this movie will be truly unique. This new film, investors are told, will combine various elements in entirely new ways. And that may even be true. Suppose we want to have Andrew Luck star in a cross between “Hackers” and “Jaws.” The plot summary is: college football star joins elite group of hackers to catch the shark that killed his friend. That’s definitely never been done before. We’ve had sports stars and “Hackers” and “Jaws,” but never anything at the intersection of that Venn diagram. But query whether that intersection would be any good or not.
 The takeaway is that it’s important to identify how these rhetorical narratives work. Non-monopolies always narrow their market. Monopolies insist they’re in a huge market. In logical operator terms, non-monopolies tell intersection stories: British food ∩ restaurant ∩ Palo Alto. Hometown hero ∩ hackers ∩ sharks. Monopolies, by contrast, tell union stories about tiny fishes in big markets. Any narrative that carries the subtext of “we’re not the monopoly the government is looking for” will do.
C. Market Share Lies
There are all kinds of ways to frame markets differently. Some ways are much better than others. Asking what is the truth about a given market—and reaching as close to an objective answer as possible—is crucially important. If you’re making a mobile app, you need to determine whether your market is apps on the iPhone, of which there are several hundred thousand, or whether there’s a good way to define or create a very different, smaller market. But one must stay on guard against the sources of bias in this process.
Let’s drill down on search engine market share. The big question of whether Google is a monopoly or not depends on what market it’s in. If you say that Google is a search engine, you would conclude that it has 66.4% of the search market. Microsoft and Yahoo have 15.3% and 13.8%, respectively. Using the Herfindahl-Hirschman index, you would conclude that Google is a monopoly since 66% squared is well over 0.25.
But suppose you say that Google is an advertising company, not a search company. That changes things. U.S. search advertising is a $16b market. U.S. online advertising is a $31b market. U.S. advertising generally is a $144b market. And global advertising is a $412b market. So you would conclude that, even if Google dominated the $16b U.S. search advertising market, it would have less than 4% of the global advertising market. Now, Google looks less like a monopoly and more like a small player in a very competitive world.
Or you could say that Google is tech company. Yes, Google does search and advertising. But they also do robotic cars. They’re doing TV. Google Plus is trying to compete with Facebook. And Google is trying to take on the entire phone industry with its Android phone. Consumer tech is a $964b market. So if we decide that Google as a tech company, we must view it in a different context entirely.
It’s not surprising that this is Google’s narrative. Monopolies and companies worried about being perceived as such tell a union story. Defining their market as a union of a whole bunch of markets makes them a rhetorical small fish in a big pond. In practice, the narrative sounds like this quotation from Eric Schmidt:
“The Internet is incredibly competitive, and new forms of accessing information are being utilized every day.”
The subtext is: we have to run hard to stay in the same place. We aren’t that big. We may get defeated or destroyed at any time. In this sense we’re no different than the pizzeria in downtown Palo Alto.
D. Cash and Competition
One important data point is how much cash a company has on its balance sheets. Apple has about $98b (and is growing by about $30b each year). Microsoft has $52b. Google has $45b. Amazon has $10b. In a perfectly competitive world, you would have to take all that cash and reinvest it in order to stay where you are. If you’re able to grow at $30b/year, you have to question whether things are really that competitive. Consider gross margins for a moment. Gross margins are the amount of profit you get for every incremental unit in marginal revenues. Apple’s gross margins are around 40%. Google’s are about 65%. Microsoft’s are around 75%. Amazon’s are 14%. But even $0.14 profit on a marginal dollar of revenue is huge, particularly for a retailer; grocery stores are probably at something like 2% gross margins.
But in perfect competition, marginal revenues equal marginal costs. So high margins for big companies suggest that two or more businesses might be combined: a core monopoly business (search, for Google), and then a bunch of other various efforts (robotic cars, TV, etc.). Cash builds up because it turns out that it doesn’t cost all that much to run the monopoly piece, and it doesn’t make sense to pump it into all the side projects. In a competitive world, you would have to be funding a lot more side projects to stay even. In a monopoly world, you should pour less into side projects, unless politics demand that the cash be spread around. Amazon currently needs to reinvest just 3% of its profits. It has to keep running to stay ahead, but it’s more easy jog than intense sprint.
III. How To Own a Market
For a company to own its market, it must have some combination of brand, scale cost advantages, network effects, or proprietary technology. Of these elements, brand is probably the hardest to pin down. One way to think about brand is as a classic code word for monopoly. But getting more specific than that is hard. Whatever a brand is, it means that people do not see products as interchangeable and are thus willing to pay more. Take Pepsi and Coke, for example. Most people have a fairly strong preference for one or the other. Both companies generate huge cash flows because consumers, it turns out, aren’t very indifferent at all. They buy into one of the two brands. Brand is a tricky concept for investors to understand and identify in advance. But what’s understood is that if you manage to build a brand, you build a monopoly.
Scale cost advantages, network effects, and proprietary technology are more easily understood. Scale advantages come into play where there are high fixed costs and low marginal costs. Amazon has serious scale advantages in the online world. Wal-Mart enjoys them in the retail world. They get more efficient as they get bigger. There are all kinds of different network effects, but the gist of them is that the nature of a product locks people into a particular business. Similarly, there are many different versions of proprietary technology, but the key theme is that it exists where, for some reason or other, no one else can use the technology you develop.
Apple—probably the greatest tech monopoly today—has all these things. It has complex combination of proprietary technology. By building both the hardware and the software, it basically owns the entire value chain. With legions of people working at Foxconn, it has serious scale cost advantages. Countless developers building on Apple platform and millions of repeat customers interacting with the Apple ecosystem provide the network effects that lock people in. And Apple’s brand is not only some combination of all of these, but also something extra that’s hard to define. If another company made an otherwise identical product, it would have to be priced less than the Apple version. Even beyond Apple’s other advantages, the brand allows for greater monetization.
IV. Creating Your Market
There are three steps to creating a truly valuable tech company. First, you want to find, create, or discover a new market. Second, you monopolize that market. Then you figure out how to expand that monopoly over time. 
A. Choosing the Right Market
The Goldilocks principle is key in choosing the initial market; that market should not be too small or too large. It should be just right. Too small a market means no customers, which is a problem. This was the problem with PayPal’s original idea of beaming money on palm pilots. No one else was doing it, which was good. But no one really needed it done, which was bad.
Markets that are too big are bad for all the reasons discussed above; it’s hard to get a handle on them and they are usually too competitive to make money.
Finding the right market is not a rhetorical exercise. We are no longer talking about tweaking words to trick ourselves or persuade investors. Creating your market has nothing to do with framing stories about intersections or unions. What is essential is to figure out the objective truth of the market.
B. Monopoly and Scaling
If there is no compelling narrative of what the market is and how it can scale, you haven’t yet found or created the right market. A plan to scale is crucial. A classic example is the Edison Gower-Bell Telephone Company. Alexander Graham Bell developed the telephone, and with it, a new market. Initially, that market was very small; only a few people were involved in it. It was very easy to be the only one doing things in such a small, early market. They expanded. They kept expanding. The market became durable. Network effects began to operate. It quickly became very hard for others to break in.
The best kind of business is thus one where you can tell a compelling story about the future. The stories will all be different, but they take the same form: find a small target market, become the best in the world at serving it, take over immediately adjacent markets, widen the aperture of what you’re doing, and capture more and more. Once the operation is quite large, some combination of network effects, technology, scale advantages, or even brand should make it very hard for others to follow. That is the recipe for building valuable businesses.
Probably every single tech company ever has fit some version of this pattern. Of course, putting together a completely accurate narrative of your company’s future requires nothing less than figuring out the entire future of the world, which isn’t likely to happen. But not being able to get the future exactly right doesn’t mean you don’t have to think about it. And the more you think about it, the better your narrative and better your chances of building a valuable company.
C. Some Examples 
Amazon started very small. Initially, it was just going to be an online bookstore. Granted, becoming the best bookstore in the world, i.e. having all books in catalogue, is not a trivial thing to do. But the scale was very manageable. What is amazing about Amazon was that and how they were able to gradually scale from bookstore to the world’s general store. This was part of the founding vision from the outset. The Amazon name was brilliant; the incredible diversity of life in the Amazon reflected the initial goal of cataloging every book in the world. But the elasticity in the name let it scale seamlessly. At a different scale, the Amazon’s diversity also stood for every thing in the world.
eBay also started small. The idea was to build a platform and prepare for the unexpected. The first unexpected thing was the popularity of Pez dispensers. eBay became the single place where people who were into collecting all the various kinds of Pez dispensers could get them. Then came beanie babies. eBay soon became the only place in world where you could quickly get any particular beanie baby you wanted. Creating a marketplace for auctions lent itself to natural monopoly. Marketplaces are full of buyers and sellers. If you’re buying, you go where the most sellers are. And if you’re selling, you go to where the buyers are. This is why most companies list on just one stock exchange; to create liquidity, all buyers and sellers should be concentrated in the same place. And eBay was able to expand its marketplace to cover a surprisingly large number of verticals.
But eBay ran into problems in 2004, when it became apparent that that auction model didn’t extend well to everything. That core monopoly business turned out to be an auction marketplace for somewhat unique products, like coins and stamps, for which there was intense demand but limited supply. The auction model was much less successful for commodity-like products, which companies like Amazon, Overstock, and Buy.com dealt in. eBay still turned out to be a great monopoly business. It’s just a smaller one than people thought it would be in 2004.
LinkedIn has 61 million users in the U.S. and 150 million worldwide. The idea was that it would be a network for everyone. The reality is that it’s largely just used for headhunting. Some have proposed a unique long/short strategy utilizing that insight: short the companies where lots of people are joining LinkedIn to post résumés and look for jobs, and go long the companies who are suspiciously quiet on LinkedIn. The big question about LinkedIn is whether the business network is the same as the social network. LinkedIn’s narrative is that the business network is fundamentally discrete. If that’s true, it will probably own that market for a long time.
Twitter is a classic example of starting with a small, niche product. The idea was simply that anyone can become a microbroadcaster. It works even if you just do it with a small number of people. But as it scales you basically build a new media distribution center. The big question about Twitter is whether it will ever make any money. That’s not an easy question to answer.  But if you ask the future tech questions—Do you have a technological advantage? Do you have a moat? Can people replicate this?—Twitter seems safe. If Twitter’s market is the market for sending messages of 140 characters or less, it would be incredibly hard to replicate it.  Sure, you can copy it. But you can’t replicate it. Indeed, it’s almost impossible to imagine a technological future where you can compete with Twitter.  Move to 141 characters and you break SMS compatibility. Go down to 139 and you’re just missing a character.  So while monetization is an open question, Twitter’s robustness and durability are hard to beat.
Zynga is another interesting case. Mark Pincus has wisely said that, “Not having clear goal at outset leads to death by a thousand compromises.” Zynga executed very well from the beginning. They started doing social games like Farmville.    They aggressively copied what worked, scaled, figured out how to monetize these games—how to get enough users to pay for in-game perks—better than anyone else did. Their success with monetization drove the viral loop and allowed them to get more customers quickly.
The question about Zynga is how durable it is. Is it a creative or non-creative business? Zynga wants the narrative to be that it’s not a creative or a design company. If it is, the problem is that coming up with new great games is hard. Zynga would basically just be game version of a Hollywood studio whose fortunes can rise or fall with the seasons. Instead, Zynga wants the narrative to be about hardcore psychometric sauce. It’s a better company if it’s figured out how psychological and mathematical laws give it permanent monopoly advantages. Zynga wants, perhaps needs, to be able to truthfully say, “we know how to make people buy more sheep, and therefore we are a permanent monopoly.” 
Groupon also started small and scaled up aggressively. The questions for Groupon is what is the relevant market and how can they own it. Groupon insists it’s a brand; it’s penetrated to all these cities, and people look to it, not others, for deals. The anti-Groupon angle is that it has no proprietary technology and no network effects. If the branding isn’t as strong as Groupon says it is, it will face lots of challenges in the long term.
All these companies are different, but the pattern is the same: start with a small, specific market, scale up, and always have an account of how robust you are going forward. The best way to fail is to invert this recipe by starting big and shrinking. Pets.com, Webvan, and Kozmo.com made this mistake. There are many modes of failure. But not being honest about objective market conditions is a sort of failure paradigm. You can’t succeed by believing your own rhetoric over reality except by luck.
V. Tech Frontiers
There is always some room to operate in existing markets. Instead of creating a new market, you could “disrupt” existing industries. But the disruptive tech story is possibly overdone. Disruptive companies tend not to succeed. Disruptive kids get sent to principal’s office. Look at Napster. Napster was certainly disruptiveprobably too disruptive. It broke too many rules and people weren’t ready for it. Take the name itself: Napster. It sounds disruptive. But what kinds of things can one “nap”? Music and kids. Yikes. Much better than to disrupt is to find a frontier and go for it.
But where is the frontier in technology? How should we begin to think about it? Here is one possible framework. Picture the world as being covered by ponds, lakes, and oceans. You’re in a boat, in a body of water. But it’s extremely foggy, so you don’t know how far it is to the other side. You don’t know whether you’re in a pond, a lake, or an ocean.
If you’re in a pond, you might expect the crossing to take about an hour. So if you’ve been out a whole day, you’re either in a lake or an ocean. If you’ve been out for a year, you’re crossing an ocean. The longer journey, the longer your expected remaining journey. It’s true that you’re getting closer to reaching the other side as time goes on. But here, time passing is also indicative that you still have quite a ways to go.
So where are the places where technology is happening? Where is there room for the journey to continue?  The frontier is a promising place, but also a very uncertain one. You can imagine a tech market where nothing is happening for a long time, things suddenly start to happen, and then it all stops. The tech frontier is temporal, not geographical. It’s when things are happening.
Consider the automotive industry. Trying to build a car company in the 19th century was a bad idea. It was too early. But it’s far too late to build a traditional car company today. Car companiessome 300 of them, a few of which are still around—were built in 20th century. The time to build a car company was the time when car technology was being created—not before, and not after.
We should ask ourselves whether the right time to enter a tech industry is early on, as conventional wisdom suggests. The best time to enter may be much later than that. It can’t be too late, since you still need room to do something. But you want to enter the field when you can make the last great development, after which the drawbridge goes up and you have permanent capture. You want to pick the right time, go long on tech, succeed, and then short tech.
Microsoft is probably the last operating system company. It was also an early one, but there’s a sense in which it will be the last as well. Google, the narrative goes, is the last search engine company; it wrought a quantum improvement in search with its shift to an algorithmic approach, and that can’t be much improved on. What about bioinformatics? A lot seems to be happening there. But whether it’s too early to jump in is hard to know. The field seems very promising. But it’s difficult to get a sense of where it will likely be in 15 or 20 years. Since the goal is to build companies that will still be around in 2020, you want to avoid a field where things are moving too quickly. You want to avoid being an innovative but non-profitable disk drive company from the ‘80s.
Some markets are like the automotive market. Should you start a new lithium battery company? Probably not. The time for that may have passed. Innovation may be too slow. The technology may be too set by now.
But sometimes seemingly terminal markets aren’t. Look at aerospace. SpaceX thinks it can cut space launch costs by 70-90%. That would be incredibly valuable. If nothing has happened in an industry for a long time, and you come along and dramatically improve something important, chances are that no one else will come and do that again, to you. 
Artificial Intelligence is probably an underrated field. People are burned out on it, largely because it has been overrated and overstated for many decades. Few people think AI is or will soon be real at this point. But progress is increasingly relentless. AI performance in chess is increasing. Computers will probably beat humans in Go in 4 or 5 years. AI is probably a good place to look on the tech frontier. The challenge is that no one knows how far it will go.
Mobile Internet deserves some mention. The question is whether there’s a gold rush in mobile. An important subquestion is whether, given a gold rush, you’d rather be a gold digger or the guy selling shovels to gold diggers. But Google and Apple are selling the shovels. And there may not be that much gold left to find. The worry is that the market is just too big. Too many companies are competing. As discussed above, there are various rhetorical tricks one can use to whittle down the market size and make any given company seem way more unique. Maybe you can create a mobile company that owns a valuable niche. Maybe you can find some gold. But that’s worth being skeptical about.
VI. Frontiers and People
One way to tell whether you’ve found a good frontier is to answer the question “Why should the 20th employee join your company?” If you have a great answer, you’re on the right track. If not, you’re not. The problem is the question is deceptively easy sounding.
So what makes for a good answer? First, let’s put the question in context. You must recognize that your indirect competition for good employees is companies like Google. So the more pointed version of the question is: “Why would the 20thengineer join your company when they could go to Google instead and get more money and prestige?” 
The right answer has to be that you’re creating some sort of monopoly business. Early businesses are driven by the quality of the people involved with them. To attract the best people, you need a compelling monopoly story. To the extent you’re competing with Google for talent, you must understand that Google is a great monopoly business. You probably should not compete with them at their core monopoly business of search. But in terms of hiring, you simply can’t compete with a great monopoly business unless you have a powerful narrative that has you becoming a great monopoly business too.
This raises the question that we’ll discuss next week: kinds of people do you want to take with you as you head off into the frontier?
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...