5 Fav Business and Strategy Post –August 21st

by

Post image for 5 Fav Business and Strategy Post –August 21st


photo by soto­sorot

As always my area of focus is the busi­ness man­age­ment and strat­egy arena while the sub­ject mat­ters will be insights, analy­sis of cur­rent events, or inter­views of interest.


While I’m not going into depth about the finds, I do encour­age you check them out if they sound inter­est­ing. The photo in the post is my favorite for the week from Flickr.

This week’s findings:
Stitch­ing together the Cus­tomer Devel­op­ment process and the Busi­ness Model Can­vas to books that are on my Fall 2010 hit list. I couldn’t sum­ma­rize the pur­pose of this post bet­ter than Alexan­der Oster­walder who wrote “In a nut­shell, this post shall help entre­pre­neurs and intrapre­neurs develop bet­ter busi­ness mod­els by design­ing and explor­ing mul­ti­ple alter­na­tives, closely lis­ten­ing to cus­tomers and con­tin­u­ously adapt­ing their early mod­els until they find the right busi­ness model to scale.”

This post exam­ines a sim­ple ques­tion: Can the tra­di­tional busi­ness strat­egy process, which is rooted in deduc­tive think­ing and select­ing among pre­de­ter­mined alter­na­tives, be even bet­ter if it adopts even more design think­ing? The prob­lem as Peter Froberg of the Freemium Blog sees it is that our envi­ron­ment changes faster than we antic­i­pate, thus there is a need for meth­ods that can gen­er­ate new alter­na­tives instead of just choos­ing between estab­lished options. Meth­ods that cre­ate a deep and holis­tic under­stand­ing. Have any thoughts? If so let Peter know.

Crisp, clear break­down of the dif­fer­ent busi­ness frame­works the drive the media / enter­tain­ment com­plex. Good quick read if you want to under­stand the com­plex­ity of the media business.

Even after eight year in the trenches (adjunct at FIT and NJIT) it’s always good to be reminded of what my focus should be and need to have your style be rel­e­vant. Steve Blank’s advice ask your­self the following:
  • What would you want to know?
  • What did you dis­like when you were taught?
  • What sto­ries would you tell to make it under­stand­able?
  • What would keep you inter­ested and engaged?”
My time in the class has had a def­i­nite pos­i­tive impact on my busi­ness con­ver­sa­tional skills – inter­nal sell­ing, part­ner­ship devel­op­ment, and net­work rela­tion­ship. How does sell­ing play in rela­tion­ships? See directly below.

Chris Bro­gan reaches back to Stephen R. Covey’s 7 Habits of Highly Effec­tive Peo­ple to talk about atten­tion as cur­rency, and the idea that there are mul­ti­ple types of currency. Dr. Covey talks about the emo­tional bank account, and about the need to keep putting in cur­rent deposits, because peo­ple tend to dis­count past expe­ri­ences as they age thus as great as they may have been they never count as much, or go as far as more recent expe­ri­ences. If you’re inter­ested in learn­ing more about dif­fer­ent types a cur­rency and their rel­a­tive value I sug­gest check­ing out Keith Ferrazzi’s book Who’s Got Your Back.
 

Previous post:

Next post: