Getting into the customer’s head – Part 1

This is a guest posting from Antony Aiwada, CEO of StartLeap

How a fifth grader’s business insight could have saved a tycoon 10's of millions of dollars.

I recently volunteered to teach my son’s fifth grade class a class on entrepreneurship entitled – Bizworld. The class is the brainchild of Tim Draper – a partner with DFJ. Tim came up with the idea to teach his daughter’s class about entrepreneurship. Later, he founded Bizworld.org, as he realized that most schools do an OK job teaching kids about math and sciences but fall short on teaching the basics of business and entrepreneurship. I think this a laudable objective – as I believe entrepreneurial skills will become increasingly valuable in the future – particularly as traditional math and science skills become commodities...

In a typical Bizworld class, a class is divided into competing teams – startups -  who vie to achieve the highest valuation. Every team has to go through the lifecycle of a startup – including creating a product, raising money, coming up with a marketing campaign and selling the product.

Not only was Bizworld great fun for the fifth graders, they also gained great business insights. This realization hit me as my kids and I were visiting a local family theme park – Bonfante Gardens. The park was created by a local celebrity – Michael Bonfante who sold his supermarket chain and spent 20 years and $100M creating the theme park. My kids and I were strolling down the park on a beautiful Saturday. I was surprised to find the park largely empty. Where were the lines? Where were the crowds?

Looking at my bored kids, I asked my younger son: “Don’t you like Bonfante Gardens?” “It’s OK” I continued: ”what about the rides in this beautiful landscape? You know Mr. Bonfante had to transplant 10,000 trees to create this beautiful place.” My son concluded: “I like it 10% as much as Great America” – a local cheesy theme park with stomach turning wild rides.

My older son – the fifth grader - chimed in: “Perhaps Mr. Bonfante should have attended a BizWorld Class. He would have realized who the customer really is and what they really want. The real customer is us – the kids!” Wow, now that is a statement coming from a fifth grader telling a tycoon how to run a business.

A key lesson my son and his classmates learned powerfully in Bizwold is the importance of understanding who the customer is and focusing on their needs. While many of the bizworld teams focused on creating – what they thought were great products - and sophisticated commercials. The winning team, created simple but colorful products, and their commercial - a raunchy/slapstick commercial - was a great hit with the customers -  2nd graders. 

In other words, had Mr. Bonfante focused on understanding who the customer is and what their needs are, he would have realized that:

1) the real customers are the kids and not the parents
2) kids do not care about 10s of millions of dollars spent on transplanting trees
3) Parents will not take their kids to a park that their kids perceive as boring!

Now this is a great lesson for all entrepreneurs young and old.

Most companies introducing a new product – including several I have worked with - have a vague idea as to who the customer really is – particularly in the enterprise. This is often the case in a Sales and Marketing 2.0 environment where most of the sales are likely to happen on the web with little or no human contact. Yet unless the customer(s) are well defined and their needs are clearly understood, sales and marketing efforts are unlikely to succeed.

Part II of this article will discuss “How to get into the customer’s head in enterprise 2.0”.

By Antony Awaidal. Antony is the CEO of StartLeap which helps companies innovate in their sales and marketing and jumpstart their sales.

America's core strength

Ray Bradbury published a poem, America in yesterday's Wall St. Journal.  (In case the link expires, the poem is below.)

                               

This poem resonates with me.  I spent a long period overseas, and chose to come back to stay in the US.  This country remains the land of opportunity, and has managed so far to keep this amazing attribute, and to be a destination for strivers from across the world.

                               

My sincere hope is that we succeed in maintaining this core of what we are as a people and a country.

                               
                                                               

America
By RAY BRADBURY
May 17, 2006; Page A18

                               

We are the dream that other people dream.
The land where other people land
When late at night
They think on flight
And, flying, here arrive
Where we fools dumbly thrive ourselves.

Refuse to see
We be what all the world would like to be.
Because we hive within this scheme
The obvious dream is blind to us.
We do not mind the miracle we are,
So stop our mouths with curses.
While all the world rehearses
Coming here to stay.
We busily make plans to go away.

How dumb! newcomers cry, arrived from Chad.
You're mad! Iraqis shout,
We'd sell our souls if we could be you.
How come you cannot see the way we see you?
You tread a freedom forest as you please.
But, damn! you miss the forest for the trees.
Ten thousand wanderers a week
Engulf your shore,
You wonder what their shouting's for,
And why so glad?

Run warm those souls: America is bad?
Sit down, stare in their faces, see!
You be the hoped-for thing a hopeless world would be.
In tides of immigrants that this year flow
You still remain the beckoning hearth they'd know.
In midnight beds with blueprint, plan and scheme
You are the dream that other people dream.

Mr. Bradbury is the author of "Fahrenheit 451" and numerous other books.

Mac Deja Vu

What a trip down memory lane!  A "vintage Macintosh" collector has built a web Mac interface/simulation that is a replica of System 7 - circa 1991.  It boots and acts just like one of my prior Macs (which I've still got up in the attic - just can't seem to throw it away, unlike the various Windows machines I had in the interim, before returning to the Mac fold with my current PowerBook). 

The simulation even includes one of my favorite time-sinks - Tetris!

Hat tip once again to Tim Oren!

Thoughtful post on attention

With all the brouhaha about attention, it was great to read this posting of a quote from Buddha (via Dharma Net) on Anne Zelenka's blog.  This deserves to be read slowly, a few times.

In ordinary life, if mindfulness, or attention, is directed to any object, it is rarely sustained long enough for the purpose of careful and factual observation. Generally it is followed immediately by emotional reaction, discriminative thought, reflection, or purposeful action. In a life and thought governed by the Buddha's teaching too, mindfulness (sati) is mostly linked with clear comprehension (sampajañña) of the right purpose or suitability of an action, and other considerations. Thus again it is not viewed in itself. But to tap the actual and potential power of mindfulness it is necessary to understand and deliberately cultivate it in its basic, unalloyed form, which we shall call bare attention.

It's useful to try to remember from time to time that paying attention is hard, it is not fleeting.

Hat tip to Tim Oren, who I believe is the first blogger I started reading...

Kudos to New Mexico! (and Michele)

On March 2, Gov. Richardson of New Mexico signed into law a bill mandating that all voting in the state will use a single method - paper ballots.  His quote at the ceremony: 

"We believe that all voices deserve to be heard, and when it comes to elections, that all votes deserve to be counted."

This occurrence was  widely covered, the AP's  coverage was picked up in numerous newspapers and online outlets.

We've posted previously on this topic - it's near to our hearts.  Nexus Partners was involved in an open voting project a few years ago, and we're real proud to see one of our team playing a role in helping to ensure that every vote is counted in New Mexico.  Well done, Michele and Voter Action New Mexico!

Startup spirit

I had the good fortune to be at a client's offices today when they rang the bell - the "we closed another major sale!" bell. 

This is a very successful company, with about 50 people on staff now.  It's a great feeling to be around a group like this, especially when they're celebrating a success as they were today.  The entire company gathered near the foosball table (yes, they still have foosball tables here in Silicon Valley), and cheered the salesperson who was on the speakerphone calling in from Dallas.

Everyone went back to work right away (there's so much to do!), and you could feel the energy and excitement continue the rest of the day.

Back on the Air...

It's been a while since I've posted to this blog.  OK, it's been a looong while.

No excuses, but some catching up (and explaining) is in order.  David Hornick has the best post on why he went off-line for a period, my explanation is neither as poetic nor as convincing.

When I started Notes from the Nexus I chose not to post on topics anywhere near politics or religion.  I have also chosen not to post on any topics that came close to Nexus Partners' clients' businesses (this last one is under consideration - I'd enjoy hearing from others their thoughts here).  In addition, I have come to a humbling realization that blogging, like all writing, is hard.  Harder than I thought.

Subsequent to my last posting I took on the role of adjunct professor at USF's School of Business and Administration.   I'd previously written about their International Business Plan Competition, and was thrilled to be asked to teach in their Entrepreneurship Department.  Needless to say, while the effort required to teach was well worth it (there is a great community of students at USF), I did get off the track of posting on a nearly regular basis.

Then came a wonderful, family filled summer.  We made our annual trek to Big Sur, where we stayed (again) at Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park.  For those of you from California, I strongly urge you to spend time there.  For out of staters, you should visit Big Sur, even if only for a day or two!  There are two places in California we make sure to visit at least yearly, Big Sur and Yosemite.  This summer we also went to Gold Country, spending time in Columbia State Park, which is nearly the same as when the '49ers were digging there.  And we had a fun week in San Diego, where the kids attended SeaWorld day camp.

The autumn season began with a flurry of client activity, which has not abated. In fact, I would argue that the economy in Silicon Valley is back - with a vengeance.  We have been busy non-stop since the end of summer.

Anyway, for those of you out there reading these posts, Notes from the Nexus is back on the air.  And we're planning on working hard to stay on the air this time!

Volvo Milestone

My trusty Volvo 850 hit a milestone last night, just had to share it:

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(Click on the image for a larger image.)

And of course, the car is 11 years old!

How to treat customers

A good read on how to treat customers was recently posted on Bankstocks.com, a website with "independent insights on the financial industry."  This post, by David M Martin, Chief Training Consultant, NCBS goes well beyond financial services - it's applicable to all businesses.  All of his examples, in fact, are from the airline industry. 

I like one of David's final remarks:  "Customers have a tendency to become like the kind of customers you treat them."  Treat them well, they'll be good customers.  Treat them poorly

Thanks to Scott Loftesness for pointing out this post!

New new media

There is a bubbling of new new media.  Blogs, tags, moblogs, podcasts...  Once again, not being driven at all by the "old media."

A friend and fellow blogger, John Furrier, has launched a great new website: Podtech.  He's posting a series of interviews as podcasts.  So far he's posted interviews with Dean Drako and Zach Levow, the cofounders of Barracuda Networks, and with Amr Awadallah, the founder of VivaSmart/Aptivia (acquired by Yahoo! in 2000 - where Amr is now a Senior Engineer in addition to being a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford).

John has more fantastic interviewees lined up, looking forward to hearing these upcoming podcasts.

Part of the new new media?  Stay tuned...

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