Monday, 27 April 2009
Everything’s different now...
Two things in particular struck me within the first few days of being back. The first is that quality of food in the UK is now excellent; at least as good as that in other countries if not better. The choice is huge and the prices are very reasonable (especially compared to Paris). This observation applies to both raw food supplies for home consumption and also to catered food in restaurants and bars. Ten or twenty years ago the UK was a laughing stock when it came to food. Today, it would be easy to argue that the food in London is better than any other large city in the world in terms of choice and value.
The second big change I have noticed since my return is how the skyline of the average suburban street has changed (does my neighbourhood of Richmond Upon Thames count as average?). It seems that almost everyone has converted their loft into useable living space. I was amazed at just how many extensions and conversions have been carried out in less than 10 years. The huge growth in property prices has forced everyone to make use of every inch of space and has also allowed them to borrow money to fund the developments. If you didn’t live through this change and adjust your perception over time, it hits you hard and the new view makes you think of England as being crowded.
I am sure there will be lots of other changes I will notice over the coming weeks but these stand out for me after just a few days in my new home.
Friday, 17 April 2009
Why do I hang onto things?
For example, I have about 900 CD’s that I burned onto my PC some years back. I play all my music from my PC or my iPod and I don’t actually have a dedicated CD player anymore (although the DVD can play them of course), and yet I still drag them around with me. I also have about 500 books, some of which I have had well over a quarter of a century and I spent most of the day yesterday packing these into boxes and moaning about it to my friends on Facebook.
So, if I play music off my PC and iPod and if I have a backlog of new books to read that stop me reading my old books for a second time, why do I lug these things around the world with me repeatedly?
In the case of the CD’s I defend myself with the argument that I like the sleeve booklet and enjoy looking through the packaging to read all the lyrics and thank-you notes and that if I lost the contents of my PC then I would need them again. Both arguments are complete rubbish of course; I never look at the sleeve notes and my PC is fully backed-up.
When it comes to the books I suppose there is a bit of a stronger defence in that it is more difficult to back up a book and that it is traditional to keep a library of one’s reading collection. However, I know for a fact that I will never read the vast majority of my collection again; some are simply the wrong genre and others were rubbish the first time I read them and they are unlikely to improve with a second visit. When I was a teenager I read a lot of science fiction and these days I struggle to get past the first page of a sci-fi book, so really there is no excuse and they need to go.
So the question is; why am I so attached to these large collections of things I am highly unlikely to ever use again? In both cases I could probably turn them into money if I put a bit of time into selling them.
I hate to admit it but I think I am a hoarder. It is only the fact that I have moved house every couple of years that has stopped me having a yard full of lumps of wood and bits of metal that “I never know when I might need”, and a garage full of broken electrical items that “will come in useful one day”. It is only the fact that my better half has a sense of fashion that stops me keeping clothes from 20 years ago on the basis I will wear them again when I walk the dog around a muddy field on a rainy day. (The fact that we don’t have a dog is irrelevant).
If you know of a tablet I can take to cure me of my hoarding then send me the details. In the meantime I am off to pack up the last of my books before we move...
Thursday, 16 April 2009
What happened to old fashioned service standards?
Without fail, a few days later, a smart looking letter would arrive back, thanking me for my interest in the company and the position and advising me when the company would start the review process, and letting me know when they would next be in touch.
Over the last few weeks I have seen a few jobs listed in places like the Sunday Times or online on various job boards and I’ve taken time to craft a letter and send it off. These days the word processor is not such a mystery and the application is sent by email. In many cases, the company actually use automatic content scanners to review CV’s and extract the contents into the format they like to hold it in.
However, with very exceptions (you know who you are but I will mention Calibre 1 and VMware who were exceptional) no one has even acknowledged receipt of my application. In almost every instance my application, even when sent to a named individual, has simply disappeared into a black hole.
What is wrong with HR departments and recruitment companies these days? Don’t they realise that applying for a new job is a very big thing for most people? We need to know you received the application and it was readable. We need to know when you are likely to start short listing people.
In most cases I have been applying for fairly senior jobs in reasonably large, professional organizations. I am assuming these positions are important for the hiring company and they want to set the right impression and be seen as a great company that treats its staff and customers in a way that shows they care. Simply ignoring people who have expressed an interest in working for the company just doesn’t set the right tone!
Even a basic auto-responder that sends out a standard response acknowledging receipt is better than nothing.
That’s my rant for the day. (And there goes any opportunity I had of getting another job!)
Thursday, 9 April 2009
A trip back in time...
Digital Signage is a relatively new marketing technique (also called DOOH - Digital Out Of Home). Basically, marketing messages can now be delivered to remote displays located anywhere – on streets, on building walls, in stores and so on. Marketers have been showing their adverts to people waiting in Post Office queues for years but modern Digital Signage goes far beyond the simple display of television adverts on screens located in waiting rooms.
Firstly, digital signage can be interactive. For example, images can be projected onto the inside of the glass in a shop window and then a viewer standing on the other side (in the street) can touch the glass to interact with the image, maybe to zoom in on something or to get more information or to view the image from a different angle.
Also, digital signage is starting to become “intelligent” and many displays now include sensors that use some sophisticated software to gain an understanding of who is looking at the display. If the software detects that the viewer is male (or predominantly male in the case of multiple viewers) it will select male relevant content to show on the display. A good example would be a car showroom where images of a car may be being shown on a wall display. If the display detects that a woman is watching, it will start showing family and safety related content. However, if a male is watching, it will show more performance related content. Digital signage brings together almost every part of a company’s marketing activity such as their online web based content and puts it in the heart of a store or on the street. Instead of just showing adverts, the content can educate or entertain and really engage with the viewer.
So, why did such 21st century wizardry take me back in time? Well, the exhibition I was attending reminded me of the computer industry 20 years ago. The exhibition hall was packed with companies offering various components of the solution, each with the expectation that the prospects wandering around the hall would know what they needed and would be prepared to put it all together.
Some years ago, the computer industry sold its products to people that really understood how it all worked and how it all went together. The marketing was all aimed at the tech savvy buyer and was highly technical, feature driven and complicated. Can you image buying a car by deciding which engine you want and I don’t just mean what size, I mean would you like an engine from manufacturer A, B or C and then deciding what size you wanted. Then you would choose your transmission system supplier, your chassis supplier and so on and you’d hope all this stuff worked together. You’d either be a highly skilled mechanic who could build the finished car yourself or you would need to employ the services of a specialist company that would put all the component parts together for you.
Even though car manufacturers themselves make only a small part of the vehicle these days and rely on component suppliers to provide them with everything from spark plugs and batteries, switches and tyres, they still deliver you a complete finished product that you can simply drive away from the showroom without needing to do anything more than sign the hand-over form.
These days, you can buy many computer systems in a similar way. A large manufacturer sources components from the likes of Intel and Microsoft and they deliver a system that is just about ready to go in just a few minutes with the systems pre-configured as ordered and all the software pre-installed.
Well, the digital signage industry is nowhere near as advanced. In order for a large retailer to start using digital signage in their stores they need to be experts in so many technologies and marketing techniques that it is not difficult to understand why such a powerful technology is struggling to gain real momentum.
I am not even sure it is a technology sale. Having spoken to some of the confused and dazed delegates at the event it was clear that what they wanted to do was have a marketing conversation about how to convert window shoppers into in-store buyers or how help customers understand complex products without employing an army of highly trained shop assistants. They were not in the least bit interested in discussing which cabling topology or wireless standard to adopt or which display mounting arrangement worked best with large format plasma displays.
My friend’s stand (Rocket Communications) was offering an end-to-end service that included content design and it was like an oasis in the middle of a hi-tech battle ground. Marketing folks wandering around looking for a way to up-sell cosmetics in the concessions area of their department store suddenly found themselves talking to people that understood marketing and who wanted to discuss messaging and all the things they worked on every day. They would engage with us for a while and talk to humans in plain English before they had to step off the stand and head back into the world of speeds and feeds and digital multi channel encoders with HD signal splitters and signal repeaters.
Once the digital signage industry starts talking to its customers in a language they understand and offering solutions they can actually use, without needing to recruit a translator, I think we will all be amazed at how clever some of the solutions are and how much more interesting they can make a trip to the shops.
Friday, 3 April 2009
A strange thing happened to me today...
Someone called me to see how I was doing. I know, that doesn't seem so strange but think about it for a few seconds. How often these days do people use the telephone to call you up for nothing other than to see how you are? I'm not talking about a business call or your weekly scheduled call with your mum, I mean the out-of-the-blue call from someone you are not close to.
Just 10 years ago it probably happened quite frequently but these days, there are so many other ways to communicate that people seem to have stopped using the telephone.
The caller in question is a very senior executive at a large media company in London (he's a busy guy). We have done some business together over the last few years and had a beer together at a corporate hospitality event but our relationship has always been a business relationship. Imagine how surprised I was then to receive a call from him asking how I was. That just doesn't happen very often these days does it? Nowadays people twitter or blog or email or text or Facebook. Anything but pick up the phone.
I was expecting some ulterior motive, maybe he needed a favour or request for help but no, he just wanted to see how the job hunt was coming along and if he could help.
I have always liked the chap in question and found him to be a good person to work with in business. He knows his stuff, he does the things he says he will and he always gets the job done. But now I know he actually likes me enough to pick the phone up and see how I am, even though I am not in a position to give him any business right now, means a lot to me. If he is prepared to look out for me when I can't spend money with him, imagine the service I'll get when I return as a customer! That simple phone call has moved our relationship forward no end and built a huge amount of loyalty.
Another angle I take from this is aimed at all those sales people out there using all those new fangled tools to keep in touch with their prospects and clients. Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, MSM, Messenger, email, blogs and texts are all great but they are all limited. Nothing beats a good old fashioned chat with your contact. Pick up the phone and talk to people, you'd be surprised where a conversation can lead you. Better still, visit people once in a while. You'd be shocked at the difference real face-to-face contact makes vs. the sanitised electronic communications most of us use 99% of the time.
Yet another angle is; what happened to the rest of my 'mates'? Where are you when I need you? Call me!
And finally; I have been hunting for a packing and moving company and I have been receiving email quotes. Only one company has taken the time to follow up with a phone call to check I had received the email and ask if I needed anything else. The caller engaged me in a conversation, wormed a few questions out of me and started a conversation. I built up a bit of trust and she moved her company to the top of my list of potential movers. It works!