Blogs I follow

IBM SmartCamp Silicon Valley

IBM Social Media - 1 hour 19 min ago
IBM SmartCamp Silicon Valley
IBM holds its latest in a series of SmartCamp competitions, where CEOs of startups aimed at making the world work better pitch their plans and get advice from venture capitalists and other business leaders. http://directorzone.cyberlink.com/video/49135 From: IBMSocialMedia Views: 3 0 ratings Time: 04:22 More in Science & Technology
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Blog Worthy Bakery

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 5:02pm

Let me set the scene.

I was sitting at my desk getting on with my work and Hollie walks by from the kitchen with a cup of tea for me.  Lovely!

Next thing I know Robin puts a big box down on my desk saying F.A.O Lydia.

I have a look inside and I find these four perfectly crafted cup cakes all the way from the London Humming Bird Bakery.

Thank you guys at the Carnaby store! A perfect accompaniment  to my brew.

I’m logging my phone off for 5 minutes while I stuff my face. Do not disturb. Thanks!

Categories: Blogs I follow

Three uses for a free Kindle book

Seth Godin's Blog - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 4:57pm

Charlie Huston used one of his books (no longer free) to get me hooked on the rest of the series. Get one free, buy three. Backwards but effective.

Another: To spread an idea you believe in (where money is not the object).

And: To create hoopla for a new book launch. Josh Bernoff is doing a freebie with his new book, just this week. (Sorry, US only--publishing rights are largely a pre-digital artifact).

When the marginal cost of the interaction is zero, the marketing opportunities of spreading an idea increase dramatically.

Categories: Blogs I follow

Water Everywhere: Balancing for Man, Fish and Vine

IBM Social Media - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 2:35pm
Water Everywhere: Balancing for Man, Fish and Vine
This is the story of an innovative new water data management system being developed by the Sonoma County Water Agency, with the help of IBM. From: IBMSocialMedia Views: 19 1 ratings Time: 04:45 More in Science & Technology
Categories: Blogs I follow

A howies wedding.

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 2:07pm

Our lovely Mark, manager of  Carnaby Street, is getting married on a beach this coming Sunday.

We have sent him and Sarah a present from everyone at howies.

It will be with you tomorrow all being well. (Along with the huge piece of cheese Lydia has sent you both)

The very best of luck for a lovely life together.

Categories: Blogs I follow

The Penny Arcade

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 1:31pm

If you’re in, around, or thinking of going to London and you feel like getting some art into your
eyes, then our good friends Jonathan Cherry and Zoë Barker are holding a joint exhibition
entitled The Penny Arcade for the next month or so.

The private view is tonight at Westbourne Grove Church.
Then from 9th September – 19th October the Artspace will be open from 9am – 5pm during weekdays

You can call the gallery on: 020 7034 0500.

Westbourne Grove Church
Westbourne Grove (corner of Ledbury Rd),
London, W11 2RW.

zoebarkerdraws.com
jonathancherry.net

Categories: Blogs I follow

new boy canoe

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 12:08pm

Our new pilot started at howies on Monday. Peter. His qualifications are cyclist and runner.

As part of his first week we took him on our canoe to work down the Teifi. We got him to meet Scott get to the boats which was pairing the man who doesn’t know how to get there with the bloke who is most likely to over sleep.

We were on the water just after 7am.

Our motley crew was Robin the warehouse manager and ruben our web geek in one canoe, Kim in operations on her sit on, David who lands the good stuff in a kayak, Mel who designs our clothes in her kayak, Peter and me in another canoe and Scott our Cardigan store manager in his own canoe.

Autumn delivered a chill clear sky with a mist over the water.

When you are right down in the Cilgeran gorge there is no noise except our chatter and paddling. It’s rare to find such peace on this planet. Especially when you commute.

Once we entered the marshes by the wildlife park the sun broke the trees and the river steamed and Peter’s feet thawed.

As we came into Cardigan there were birds by the howies store making a racket in a riverside bush that turned out to be a pair of quarrelling kingfishers.

We were eating warm freshly baked Welsh cakes by 8.30. Thanks to Fforest outdoor for the loan of the canoes.

And a warm welcome to the howies family to Peter.

Categories: Blogs I follow

Enjoyed The Ride

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 11:03am

We had a full house last night for The Ride Journal’s Wee Do talk. Lots of people…

Lots of bikes…

Lots of fun. A big thank you to everyone who came to see it, and of course the Diprose brothers (The Ride Journal creators) for a really good talk. And an extra thank you to Innocent Drinks and Pitfield Beers (we had a fair few) for keeping us hydrated.

It was inspirational stuff. See you at the next one!

Categories: Blogs I follow

Marketing to the bottom of the pyramid

Seth Godin's Blog - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 10:58am

[this short essay (long blog post) is inspired by and related to this video. You can engage one without the other, but they go together.]

Part 1: The bottom is important.

Almost a third of the world's population earns $2.50 or less a day. The enormity of this disparity takes my breath away, but there's an interesting flip side to it: That's a market of more than five billion dollars a day. Add the next segment ($5 a day) and it's easy to see that every single day, the poorest people in the world spend more than ten billion dollars to live their lives.

Most of that money is spent on traditional items purchased in traditional ways. Kerosene. Rice. Basic medicines if you can afford them or if death is the only alternative. And almost all of these purchases are inefficient. There's lack of information, high costs because of a lack of choice, and most of all, a lack of innovation.

There are two significant impacts here: first, the inefficiency is a tax on the people who can least afford it. Second, the side effects of poor products are dangerous. Kerosene kills, and so does dirty water.

Part 2: The bottom is an opportunity (for both buyer or seller).

If a business can offer a better product, one that's more efficient, provides better information, increases productivity, is safer, cleaner, faster or otherwise improved, it has the ability to change the world.

Change the world? Sure. Because capitalism and markets scale. If you can make money selling someone a safer item, you'll make more. And more. Until you've sold all you can. At the same time, you've enriched the purchaser, who bought something of her own free will because it made things better.

Not only that, but engaging in the marketplace empowers the purchaser. If you've got a wagon full of rice as food aid, you can just dump it in the town square and drive away. You have all the power. But if you have to sell something in order to succeed, it moves the power from the seller to buyer. Quality and service and engagement have to continually improve or the buyer moves on.

The cell phone, for example, has revolutionized the life of billions in the developing world. If you have a cell phone, you can determine the best price for the wheat you want to sell. You can find out if the part for your tractor has come in without spending two days to walk to town to find out. And you can be alerted to weather... etc. Productivity booms. There's no way the cell phone could have taken off as quickly or efficently as a form of aid, but once someone started engaging with this market, the volume was so huge it just scaled. And the market now competes to be ever more efficient.

Part 3: It's not as easy as it looks

And here's the kicker: If you're a tenth-generation subsistence farmer, your point of view is different from someone working in an R&D lab in Palo Alto. The Moral Economy of the Peasant makes this argument quite clearly. Imagine standing in water up to your chin. The only thing you're prepared to focus on is whether or not the water is going to rise four more inches. Your penchant for risk is close to zero. One mistake and the game is over.

As a result, it's extremely difficult to sell innovation to this consumer. The line around the block to get into the Apple store is just an insane concept in this community. A promise from a marketer is meaningless, because the marketer isn't part of the town, the marketer will move away, the marketer is, of course, a liar.

Let me add one more easily overlooked point: Western-style consumers have been taught from birth the power of the package. We see the new nano or the new Porsche or the new convertible note on a venture deal and we can easily do the math: [new thing] + [me] = [happier]. We've been taught that an object can make our lives better, that a purchase can make us happier, that the color of the Tiffany's box or the ringing of a phone might/will bring us joy.

That's just not true for someone who hasn't bought a new kind consumer good in a year or two or three or maybe ever. As a result, stores in the developing world tend to be stocked with the classic, the tried and true, because people buy refills of previous purchases, not the new.

No substistence farmer walks to a store or stall saying, "I wonder what's new today? I wonder if there's a new way for me to solve my problems?" Every day, people in the West say that very thing as they engage in shopping as a hobby.

You can't simply put something new in front of a person in this market and expect them to buy it, no matter how great, no matter how well packaged, no matter how well sold.

So you see the paradox. A new product and approach and innovation could dramatically improve the life and income of a billion people, but those people have been conditioned to ignore the very tools that are a reflex of marketers that might sell it to them. Fear of loss is greater than fear of gain. Advertising is inefficient and ineffective. And the worldview of the shopper is that they're not a shopper. They're in search of refills.

The answer, it turns out, is in connecting and leading Tribes. It lies in engaging directly and experientially with individuals, not getting distribution in front of markets. Figure out how to use direct selling in just one village, and then do it in ten, and then in a hundred. The broad, mass market approach of a Western marketer is foolish because there is no mass market in places where villages are the market.

The (eventual) power of the early adopter

This gentleman is a swami, a leader in his village. He owns a d.light lantern. Why? He could fit all his worldly positions into a rollaboard, and yet he owns a solar lantern, the first man in his village to buy one.

For him, at least this one time, he liked the way it felt to be seen as a leader, to go first, to do an experiment. Perhaps his followers contributed enough that the purchase didn't feel risky. Perhaps the person he bought it from was a friend or was somehow trusted. It doesn't really matter, other than understanding that he's rare.

After he got the lantern, he set it up in front of his house. Every night for six months, his followers would meet on his front yard to talk, to connect and yes, to wonder how long it would be before the lantern would burn out. Six months later, the jury is still out.

One day, months or years from now, the lantern will be seen as obvious and trusted and a safe purchase. But it won't happen as fast as it would happen in Buffalo or Paris. The imperative is simple: find the early adopters, embrace them, adore them, support them, don't go away, don't let them down. And then be patient yet persistent. Mass market acceptance is rare. Viral connections based on experience are the only reliable way to spread new ideas in communities that aren't traditionally focused on the cult of the new.

This raises the bar for customer service and exceptional longevity, value and design. It means that the only way to successfully engage this market is with relentless focus on the conversations that tribe leaders and early adopters choose to have with their peers. All the tools of the Western mass market are useless here.

Just because it is going to take longer than it should doesn't mean we should walk away. There are big opportunities here, for all of us. It's going to take some time, but it's worth it. [More info: Acumen]

Categories: Blogs I follow

Lydia loves

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 10:37am

Lydia loves the sloucher tee,  its our new super soft and silky merino t-shirt.

You see its not just merino, it has merino knitted on the ouside and Modal on the inside next to your skin.

The Modal feels like silk and has very similar properties to merino, antibacterial, moisture wicking and temperature regulating.

Its made from beech trees and the whole manufacturing process of the fibre is fantastic, its very clean with no harmful waste products, it doesn’t use tons of water like the old fashioned cellulosic fibre, the trees are grown sustainably and the final fibre is biodegradable.

So if you have sensitive skin and find the merino itchy, this could be for you.

Lydia said she isn’t going to take it off, good job its merino modal and non smelly.

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Soul Music: Send in the Clowns

Speechification - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 9:43am

A new series of Soul Music has just started, with upcoming episodes of the emotive music programme looking at a wide range of subjects, such as next week's focus on the Czech anthem Ma Vlast by Bedrich Smetana. It starts however with this lovely exploration of Stephen Sondheim's Send In The Clowns. You can cover a lot of ground in half an hour. [MP3]

Categories: Blogs I follow

Life Cycles

Howies - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 9:18am

This is not a bike film, it’s a film about a bike.

Found this nice little trailer via @robwelsh – Find out more about the film here.

Categories: Blogs I follow

Water Everywhere: A Balance for Man, Fish and Vine

IBM Social Media - Wed, 08/09/2010 - 3:56am
Water Everywhere: A Balance for Man, Fish and Vine
This is the story of an innovative water data management system that's being adopted by the Sonoma County Water Agency, with the help of IBM. From: IBMSocialMedia Views: 7 1 ratings Time: 04:45 More in Science & Technology
Categories: Blogs I follow

RealSkills with Dan

Howies - Tue, 07/09/2010 - 4:36pm

howies team rider Dan Yeomans just dropped me an email with news that he’s offering 2 for 1 on his RealSkills hardtail course this weekend.

So take a friend and you’ll both pay half price.  Lunch and drinks included.

Dan is a qualified CTC Mountain Bike Instructor and has raced UCI World Cup 4x for 5 years and has featured on the front cover of Dirt magazine, so we’re more than happy to recommend his courses to anyone who’s looking to raise their skill level on the bike.

It should be a great weekend. Click here to find out more.

Categories: Blogs I follow

If you want to learn to do marketing...

Seth Godin's Blog - Tue, 07/09/2010 - 2:16pm

then do marketing.

You can learn finance and accounting and media buying from a book. But the best way to truly learn how to do marketing is to market.

You don't have to quit your job and you don't need your boss's permission. There are plenty of ways to get started.

If you see a band you like coming to town, figure out how to promote them and sell some tickets (posters? google ads? PR?). Don't ask, just do it.

If you find a book you truly love, buy 30 and figure out how to sell them all (to strangers).

If you're 12, go door to door selling fresh fruit--and figure out what stories work and which don't.

Set up an online business. Get a candidate you believe in elected to the school board.

The best way to learn marketing is to do it.

[And Chris Guillebeau's new book turns this simple idea into a plan for life--Kindle link for outside the US].

Categories: Blogs I follow

Bike info for tonights ‘Wee Do’

Howies - Tue, 07/09/2010 - 1:44pm

hello to everyone who is planning to come along to tonight’s talk, if you are needing a place to park your bikes then could you get down a little earlier approx 7:15pm?  just so we can find places to squeeze them all in.

thanks,

see you later on!

Categories: Blogs I follow

Design with intent

Seth Godin's Blog - Mon, 06/09/2010 - 7:02pm

Neat idea, free PDF... will differently (definitely) make you think. HT to Lucas.

Categories: Blogs I follow

Whatever happened to labor?

Seth Godin's Blog - Mon, 06/09/2010 - 6:07pm

Not Labor with a capital L, as in organized labor unions. I mean labor as in skilled workers solving interesting problems. I mean craftspeople who use their hands, their backs and their heads to do important work.

Labor was a key part of the manufacturing revolution. Industrialists needed smart, dedicated, trained laborers to solve interesting problems. Putting things together took more than pressing a few buttons, it took initiative and skill and care. Labor improvised.

It took thirteen years to build the Brooklyn Bridge and more than twenty-five laborers died during its construction. There was not a systematic manual to follow. The people who built it largely figured it out as they went.

The Singer sewing machine, one of the most complex devices of its century, had each piece fitted by hand by skilled laborers.

Sometime after this, once Henry Ford ironed out that whole assembly line thing, things changed. Factories got far more complex and there was less room for improvisation as things scaled.

The boss said, "do what I say. Exactly what I say."

Amazingly, labor said something similar. They said to the boss, "tell us exactly what to do." In many cases, work rules were instituted, flexibility went away and labor insisted on doing exactly what they had agreed to do, no more, no less. At the time, this probably felt like power. Now we know what a mistake it was.

In a world where labor does exactly what it's told to do, it will be devalued. Obedience is easily replaced, and thus one worker is as good as another. And devalued labor will be replaced by machines or cheaper alternatives. We say we want insightful and brilliant teachers, but then we insist they do their labor precisely according to a manual invented by a committee...

Companies that race to the bottom in terms of the skill or cost of their labor end up with nothing but low margins. The few companies that are able to race to the top, that can challenge workers to bring their whole selves--their human selves--to work, on the other hand, can earn stability and growth and margins. Improvisation still matters if you set out to solve interesting problems.

The future of labor isn't in less education, less OSHA and more power to the boss. The future of labor belongs to enlightened, passionate people on both sides of the plant, people who want to do work that matters.

That's what Labor Day is about, not the end of a month on the beach.

Categories: Blogs I follow

When councils listen…

Howies - Mon, 06/09/2010 - 5:56pm

When councils listen, you get a skatepark like this one in Cardiff Bay.
A football-pitch-sized nirvana of glass smooth concrete and interesting lines.
You know, stuff that skaters actually want to skate.
(not some waste of money playground company garbage that will rarely get used).
So well done to Cardiff City Council. .
Well done for listening to the end-user.
Well done for building it with such care and finesse.
Well done for giving up such prime real estate.
and well done for thinking different, you’ve built something great.

And the skateboarders salute you for it.

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I’ll be at IBM Start this week (and next!)

Greenmonk - Mon, 06/09/2010 - 5:10pm

Photo credit Tom Raftery (me!)

IBM are hosting a 9 day Sustainability Summit at Start in the UK this week (and next obviously!).

Start is an initiative inspired by the Prince of Wales Charities Foundation to help people “lead more sustainable lives and to show what a more energy efficient, cleaner and healthier future could look like”.

IBM are leading the business part of the Summit and they have a great line-up of topics:

  1. Day 1 – Smarter Cities for a Sustainable Future
  2. Day 2 – Smarter Energy for a Sustainable Future
  3. Day 3 – Smarter Transport for a Sustainable Future
  4. Day 4 – People and Skills for a Sustainable Future
  5. Day 5 – Start Young for a Sustainable Future
  6. Day 6 – Smarter Supply Chains for a Sustainable Future
  7. Day 7 - Finance and Sustainability
  8. Day 8 – Smarter Analytics for a Sustainable Future
  9. Day 9 – Smarter Business for a Sustainable Future

I’m not going to be able to attend days 4-6 but am really looking forward to the other sessions – sustainability geekery heaven!

I’ll have camera equipment with me and although the sessions themselves are being held under Chatham House Rules, I’ll be sure to nab interviews with as many of the attendees as I can!

You will be able to follow the non-Chatham House Rules talks on Twitter using the hashtag #ibmstart starting on Wednesday this week (Sept 8th) and continuing on until Thursday next week (Sept 16th).

Categories: Blogs I follow