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May 9, 2003
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Interesting to compare
the reaction of politicians and citizens of the US to Santorum's anti-gay
rant, with the reaction of their Canadian counterparts to
yesterday's anti-gay rant
by Canadian Conservative MP Elsie Wayne. Wayne was shocked and unrepentent
as members of her own party unanimously and vigorously distanced themselves
from her fairly tame (by Santorum standards) suggestion that gays should
stay in the closet ("go live together and shut up about it", and suggested
she be removed from her Conservative Party post (which expires in three weeks
anyway). So far no one - no other MP, no religious group, no conservative
association - has offered so much as a word of support for Wayne.
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10:21:58 PM
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Fast Company's Seth Godin is writing
about
purple cows
. What's a purple cow? Something that is remarkable, worth talking
about, worth paying attention to, something that stands out compared to "perfectly
competent, even undeniably excellent cows". Here's an example that Schindler
Elevator came up with:
When you approach their new elevators, you key in
your floor on a centralized control panel. In return, the panel tells you
which elevator is going to take you to your floor. With this simple presort,
Schindler Elevator Corporation has managed to turn every elevator into an
express. Your elevator takes you immediately to the 12th floor and races back
to the lobby. This means that buildings can be taller, they need fewer elevators
for a given density of people, the wait is shorter, and the building can
use precious space for people rather than for elevators. A huge win, implemented
at a remarkably low cost.
Matt Mower
of Curiouser and Curiouser thinks Knowledge Management (KM) needs
a purple cow, a product, concept or innovation as remarkable in its way as
Schindler's presorting elevator. He suggests KM is moribund, and says "the
whole field of KM is dominated by the idea of being good enough". Matt
is talking specifically about KM products, but what he says is true
of the whole, newly-boring field of KM. Five years ago, six of the top ten
best-selling business books were about KM, and the field was hot:
today none of them are. KM gurus are blaming the economy, the unfortunate
name "knowledge management", and each other for the sad state of the discipline.
But the simple truth is, nothing remarkable and implementable has emerged
in KM in years.
If a purple KM cow could revive the discipline before it goes the way of
TQM and BPR, where could we find one? Seth suggests ten ways to raise a purple
cow:
- Find the customer group that's most profitable, or most
likely to influence other customers. Figure out how to develop for, advertise
to, or reward either group.
- Launch a product that does nothing but appeal to, and
let you dominate, one underserved market niche.
- Create two teams: the inventors and the milkers. Put
them in separate buildings. Hold a formal ceremony when you move a product
from one group to the other. Celebrate them both, and rotate people around.
- Get the email addresses of the 20% of your customer
base that loves what you do, and make something extraordinary for them.
- Remarkable isn't always about changing your #1 product.
It can be the way you answer the phone, launch a new brand, or price a product.
- Test the limits. Ask what it would take to be the cheapest,
the fastest, the easiest, the most efficient, the most
x.
- Think of the smallest conceivable market and describe
a product that overwhelms it with its remarkability. Go from there.
- Find things that are "just not done" in your industry,
and then go ahead and do them.
- Ask, "Why not?" Almost everything you don't do has
no good reason for it.
- Ask what would happen if you simply told the absolute
truth inside your company and to your customers?
Think about the different aspects of KM in your organization: intranets,
extranets, communities of practice, external database purchases, research,
push/pull distribution. Think about the internal and external customer segments
for each aspect, and how the ten ways above might apply to create a product,
a process, or a tool for one or more segments that is really remarkable.
I've pulled together a few possible purple KM cows from discussion with a
couple of front-line KM practitioners. I'll share them here next Friday.
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12:23:46 AM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:44:26 PM. |
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