Showing posts with label Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Post. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Top 10 Business Intelligence Posts of 2011 from Spotfire’s Blog

Trends and Outliers, the TIBCO Spotfire's Business Intelligence Blog, published before yesterday a post with the Top 10 Business Intelligence Posts of 2011 from Spotfire’s Blog, and to my surprise, 2 guest blog posts written by me are in the list:
- 7 Business Intelligence Predictions for 2011, published in January, 2011
- 7 Hot Trends in Business Intelligence (An Update), published in April, 2011.


Thank you so much to the people of Spotfire's blog for the invitation to write guest posts. I am truly grateful.

Happy New Year!

Friday, March 25, 2011

Celebrating 3 years of blogging

My blog is completing 3 years today. I started this blog as a means to express my interests in Business Intelligence and related themes.

Thank you for reading my blog for the last three years. Your readership is really appreciated.

Below are the most popular posts (no order) in the last 3 years:

- Culture eats strategy for breakfast
- Several executives trust gut
- Does your company have a BI strategy?
- Strategies for Creating a High-Performance BI Team
- Are You Ready to Reengineer Your Decision Making?
- How to Use Twitter as a "Twool"
- Interview with Balanced Scorecard Co-Creator Dr. Robert Kaplan

All books reviews have always been well accessed, I would like to highlight:

- Profiles in Performance: Business Intelligence Journeys and the Roadmap for Change - Howard Dresner
- Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning - Thomas Davenport and Jeanne Harris
- The Balanced Scorecard - Translating Strategy Into Action - Robert Kaplan and David Norton
- The Data Warehouse Toolkit: The Complete Guide to Dimensional Modeling - Ralph Kimball and Margy Ross
- Five Key Principles of Corporate Performance Management - Bob Paladino
- Performance Dashboards: Measuring, Monitoring, and Managing Your Business - Wayne Eckerson

As you may have noticed, I'm a huge fan of Dilbert. All Dilbert's comic strip I published have been well accessed too, mainly:
- Dilbert on making decisions

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

The Global Recession and its Effect on Work Ethics


Today, Michael Krigsman published in his ZDNet's blog , a post called IT ethics and the recession, where he talks about a survey entitled The Global Recession and its Effect on Work Ethics. This survey was conducted by Cyber-Ark Software, a Security firm, and interviewed 600 workers on Wall Street, New York, Docklands, London and Amsterdam, Holland.

He said: "With a major recession in full-swing, someone had to come up with a survey covering the ethics of office workers in three countries. The punch line: a large percentage of folks surveyed would steal confidential company data in the event of layoff rumors. The results are fairly ugly, painting a negative picture of ethics in the workplace."

About the question: How far would you be prepared to go to keep your job?, more than a third of workers across the sample confirmed that they would be prepared to work 80 hours a week to keep their jobs, 25% would be prepared to take a salary cut, and 15 % of Americans chose "Blackmail my boss about his/her indiscretions at the office party".

Michael Krigsman's considerations about the survey are:
- Employers should not underestimate the level of stress the recession causes workers. Treat your folks with respect and dignity and they’re more likely to behave decently back toward you.
- Once workers learn they may be targeted for downsizing, their ethics may erode. Employers should be aware of this and enhance security accordingly.
- A small number of workers are just plain dumb. Threats of blackmail? You’ve gotta be kidding.

You can download the survey in the Cyber-Ark Software's website (registration required).

Monday, December 22, 2008

Nine Predictions for 2009 (not what you think)

Tom Asacker published a post in his blog, where he told about his article called Nine Predictions for 2009. Both post and article are interesting.

In the post, he wrote: "Someone once said that the pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity and the optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty. Which one will the challenging New Year draw out of you? Do you want to know?

Every person has both the dog of optimism and the dog of pessimism inside of them. The one you see most often is the one you feed most often. It really is that simple. I truly hope that you feed the hopeful one in 2009 - the one with the bright, shining eyes of possibility - and live a life of passion, not pretense."

About the article, you should read to take your own conclusions. How he said in the title of the post: not what you think.

Niels Bohr said (and Asacker quoted): "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future." By the way, he likes to quote people.

He also published some books, his latest book is:

A Little Less Conversation: Connecting with Customers in a Noisy World

Thursday, December 11, 2008

How to Use Twitter as a "Twool"


Everybody knows that Twitter is a fantastic tool and has been used mainly to social networking, micro-bloging and quick contacts. Last week, Guy Kawasaki wrote a good post in his blog, where he talks about how to use Twitter in a commercial manner. He said that use Twitter as a tool—specifically as a marketing tool—for his website and his book.

He did a list, focus on the concept of using Twitter in a commercial manner. Below is a summary of his list:

- Forget the “influentials.” You must buy into the theory that products and services reach critical mass because mere mortals spread the word for you. This defies the common wisdom that a handful of “influentials” shape what the rest of us try and what we adopt.
- Defocus your efforts. The goal is to get to masses of people because you don’t know who can and will help you.
- Get as many followers as you can.
- Monitor what people are saying about you, your company, and your product - using the search features of Twitter, or you use a product like Tweetdeck to create a search. You can also use Twilert.com to receive email notification of search results much like Google Alerts.
- Ask for help. Don’t be shy about asking people on Twitter to spread the word for you. If they like what you do, they will. If they don’t, they won’t. It’s as simple and transparent as that. If you don’t ask, you don’t get.
- Make it easy to tweet on your behalf. Twitterfeed is a service where any RSS feed can automatically appear as your own tweets. Bloggers do this, for example, so that their blog posts automatically appear as their tweets.
- Create an email list. One issue with 450 people tweeting 140,000 followers: if people followed some of the same 450 people, they got duplicate announcements.
- Make it easy to “post to Twitter.” One day I met with Rashmi Sinha, the CEO of Slideshare. We got to talking about how she increased her traffic, and she told me that a “Post to Twitter” link was the most effective mechanism.
- Offer advice deals to Twitter users. You can Twitter to offer special deals to your followers—for example, check out what Amazon does by clicking here and what Whole Foods does by clicking here.
- Tell the complainers where to go. Some people will disagree with this use of Twitter. Don’t let this worry you because at some point everyone pisses off someone on Twitter. Therefore, letting a vocal few limit your use of Twitter is a big mistake. If they don’t like what you’re doing, tell them to stop following you: end of discussion. And rest assured that “Twitter spam” is an oxymoron because following you is completely opt-in.

He finished with: "This is how to use Twitter as a tool. I hope the Twitter community helps you as much as it has helped Alltop and me. With some effort, you may come to view Twitter as I do: the best new marketing twool of this century. Tweet long and prosper."

I completely agree with him, Twitter is an excellent tool, and can be used for various purposes, and increasingly appear other ways to use it.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

The Top 27: Twenty-seven Practical Ideas That Will Transform Every Organization by Tom Peters


Tom Peters posted in his website on 12/04, a nice list of ideas called The Top 27: Twenty-seven Practical Ideas That Will Transform Every Organization. Read and enjoy.

1. Learn to thrive in unstable times—our lot (and our opportunity) for the foreseeable future.

2. Only putting people first wins in the long haul, good times and especially tough times. (No "cultural differences" on that one! Colombia = Germany = the USA.)

3. MBWA/Managing By Wandering Around. Stay in touch!

4. Call a customer today!

5. Train! Train! Train! (Growing people outperform stagnant people in terms of attitude and output—by a wide margin.)

6. "Putting people first" means making everyone successful at work (and at home).

7. Make "we care" a/the company motto—a moneymaker as well as a source of pride.

8. All around the world, women are an undervalued asset.

9. Diversity is a winning strategy, and not for reasons of social justice: The more different perspectives around the table, the better the thinking.

10. Take a person in another function to lunch; friendships, lots of, are the best antidote to bad cross-functional task accomplishments. (Lousy cross-functional communication stops companies and armies alike.)

11. Transparency in all we do.

12. Create an "Innovation Machine" (even in tough times). (Hint: Trying more stuff than the other guy is Tactic #1.)

13. We always underestimate the Innovation Advantage when 100% of people see themselves as "innovators." (Hint: They are if only you'd bother to ask "What can we do better?")

14. Get the darned Basics right—always Competitive Advantage #1. (Be relentless!)

15. Great Execution beats great strategy—99% of the time. (Make that 100% of the time.)

16. A "bias for action" is a "bias for success." (Great hockey player Wayne Gretzky: "You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.")

17. No mistakes, no progress! (A lot of fast mistakes, a lot of fast progress.) (Australian businessman Phil Daniels: "Reward excellent failures. Punish mediocre successes.")

18. Sometimes "little stuff" is more powerful than "big stuff" when it comes to change.

19. Keep it simple! (Making "it" "simple" is hard work! And pays off!)

20. Remember the "eternal truths" of leadership—constants over the centuries. (They say Nelson Mandela's greatest asset was a great smile—you couldn't say no to him, even his jailors couldn't.)

21. Walk the talk. ("You must be the change you wish to see in the world."—Gandhi)

22. When it comes to leadership, character and people skills beat technical skills. (Emotional Intelligence beats, or at least ties, school intelligence.)

23. It's always "the little things" when it comes to "people stuff." (Learn to say "thank you" with great regularity. Learn to apologize when you're wrong. Learn the Big Four words: "What do you think?" Learn to listen—it can be learned with lots and lots of practice.)

24. The "obvious" may be obvious, but "getting the obvious done" is harder said than done.

25. Time micro-management is the only real "control" variable we have. (You = Your calendar. Calendars never lie.)

26. All managers have a professional obligation to their communities and their country as well as to the company and profit and themselves. (Forgetting this got the Americans into deep trouble.)

27. EXCELLENCE. ALWAYS. (What else?)

Friday, November 28, 2008

Management exercise


The Sascom voices, a blog of SAS, published a couple of weeks ago an interesting post called Management exercise -- DO try this at home, by Faye Merrideth, where she talks about executive coaching.

She recommended a management book, What Got You Here Won’t Get You There, written by Marshall Goldsmith. You also can see a video with Goldsmith's lecture to employees at Google. Both book and video are very nice.


About the Goldsmith’s book, she showed the list of twenty annoying habits that hold great people back from the top:

1. Winning too much: Goldsmith notes that the hypercompetitive need to best others "underlies nearly every other behavioral problem."

2. Adding too much value: This happens when you can't stop yourself from tinkering with your colleagues' or subordinates' already viable ideas. "It is extremely difficult," Goldsmith observes, "for successful people to listen to other people tell them something that they already know without communicating somehow that (a) 'we already knew that' and (b) 'we know a better way.'" The fallacy of this sort of behavior is that, while it may slightly improve an idea, it drastically reduces the other person's commitment to it.

3. Passing judgment: "It's not appropriate to pass judgment when we specifically ask people to voice their opinions ... even if you ask a question and agree with the answer." Goldsmith recommends "hiring" a friend to bill you $10 for each episode of needless judgment.

4. Making destructive comments: We are all tempted to be mean from time to time. But when we feel the urge to criticize, we should realize that gratuitous negative comments can harm our working relationships."The question is not, 'Is it true?' but rather, 'Is it worth it?'" This is another habit Goldsmith recommends breaking via monetary fines. Sound expensive?

5. Starting with "No," "But," or "However." Almost all of us do this, and most of us are totally unaware of it. But Goldsmith says if you watch out for it, "you'll see how people inflict these words on others to gain or consolidate power. You'll also see how intensely people resent it, consciously or not, and how it stifles rather than opens up discussion." This is another habit that may take fines to break.

6. Telling the world how smart we are: "This is another variation on our need to win."

7. Speaking when angry: See number four.

8. Negativity, or "Let me explain why that won't work": Goldsmith calls this "pure unadulterated negativity under the guise of being helpful."

9. Withholding information: This one is all about power. Goldsmith focuses on ways even the best-intentioned people do this all the time. "We do this when we are too busy to get back to someone with valuable information. We do this when we forget to include someone in our discussions or meetings. We do this when we delegate a task to our subordinates but don't take the time to show them exactly how we want the task done."

10. Failing to give recognition: "This is a sibling of withholding information."

11. Claiming credit we don't deserve: To catch ourselves doing this, Goldsmith recommends listing all the times we mentally congratulate ourselves in a given day, and then reviewing the list to see if we really deserved all the credit we gave ourselves.

12. Making excuses: We do this both bluntly (by blaming our failings on the traffic or something else outside ourselves) and subtly (with self-deprecating comments about our inherent tendency to be late or to lose our temper that send the message, "That's just the way I am").

13. Clinging to the past: "Understanding the past is perfectly admissible if your issue is accepting the past. But if your issue is changing the future, understanding will not take you there." Goldsmith notes that quite often we dwell on the past because it allows us to blame others for things that have gone wrong in our lives.

14. Playing favorites: This behavior creates suck-ups; rewarding suck-ups creates hollow leaders.

15. Refusing to express regret: "When you say, 'I'm sorry,' you turn people into your allies, even your partners."

16. Not listening: This behavior says, "I don't care about you," "I don't understand you," "You're wrong" and "You're wasting my time."

17. Failing to express gratitude: "Gratitude is not a limited resource, nor is it costly. It is abundant as air. We breathe it in but forget to exhale." Goldsmith advises breaking the habit of failing to say thank you by saying it -- to as many people as we can, over and over again.

18. Punishing the messenger: This habit is a nasty hybrid of 10, 11, 19, 4, 16, 17, with a strong dose of anger added in.

19. Passing the buck: "This is the behavioral flaw by which we judge our leaders -- as important a negative attribute as positive qualities such as brainpower and resourcefulness."

20. An excessive need to be "me": Making a "virtue of our flaws" because they express who we are amounts to misplaced loyalty -- and can be "one of the toughest obstacles to making positive long-term change in our behavior."