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25 July 2005

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Managing Expectations

Nooface.com

Rinse and Repeat

Summer Gadget Guide

InnovationWizard

Ten Ways to Kill Design

Macromedia integrates Breeze and Captivate

Scrolling and Scrollbars

Internet Penetration: Critical Mass, Then What?

Do-it-yourself Information Online


 

Managing Expectations

by Naomi Karten

From Book News, Inc.
The author is a speaker and seminar leader with experience in technical and customer support and management, and with a background in psychology. She interweaves anecdotes with spelled-out guidelines on such topics as guarding against conflicting messages, keeping jargon to a minimum, listening persuasively, gathering information, and understanding the customer's context.
Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
 

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Resistance is Futile

Over the past month the chief technology officer (CTO) of a Fortune 1000 company rejected a proposed performance support solution to a business problem out-of-hand and sight-unseen, claiming confidently that the solution would "add a layer of complexity to my environment." What is so remarkable about the statement is that the business case presented for the solution projected a net revenue increase of $18million in the first year and more subsequently with the performance support intervention. The calculations included all required IT support, maintenance, desktop and infrastructure requirements, ongoing help desk support, SME support and ongoing support from the business process owner. The solution focused on a set of tools used by key salespeople in the organization that were designed to expedite business transactions. Measurements showed conclusively that some minor performance support strategies would substantially improve the process and, in particular, increase the rate of business closure.

The proposed performance support solution in this case used technology and techniques from among several of the latest and greatest tools that have been recognized over the past several years by EPSScentral's annual PCD Awards (see www.epsscentral.info/knowledgebase/awardssamples). I could have understood (but not condoned) this CTO's response ten years ago, when service-oriented architecture, web services and message agents either did not exist or were disruptive, innovative and bleeding-edge. But that is no longer the case. Such tools facilitate rapid development of performance-centered solutions to problem environments without having to deal with native source code, without disturbing fragile and clunky old platforms - and they typically foster rapid solution development, maintenance and evolution.

Typical measurements show decreases in development and maintenance efforts by up to 85%. More importantly, key metrics for users/performers show decreases in time-to-competency of up to 90%, reductions in training by over 80% and general decreases in total-cost-of-ownership of over 80%. And, like the example above demonstrates, it is not all about savings. It is about net revenue increases in millions of dollars. If, for example, a group of sales people can deliver and turn around proposals so that business is closed more rapidly at the same or greater close rate, then it is time to stand up and take notice. Did we see a net increase of $18Million, considering all performance-support costs and without squandering the investment in the initial system? Sounds like a good business decision to me.

In this and many other cases, those immersed in legitimate quagmires of technology challenges fail to see the clear business value and regard performance support solutions as only one more piece of technology in an already challenging mix. If you haven't noticed, CTOs have been chewed up and spit out at an extremely rapid rate since the dotcom bust. They have generally become very conservative, protective and territorial about their domains. The real tragedy, however, is when other chief executives hand the business keys over to IT in ignorance of the root causes.

I am reminded of Geoffrey Moore's book Crossing the Chasm - the classic "high-tech-product marketing 101" text that talks about innovation in terms of early adopters, early majority, late majority and so forth. The concern of the IT or business executive who has internalized Moore's thesis is that performance support solutions and the technologies that enable them are the stuff of "early adopters" and thus represent much risk on may levels. They think, for example, that there is not a large installed base, that the underlying technologies are untested on an enterprise scale, and that it is only a few lovers of high-tech toys in their organizations who are their champions. I submit that this point of view with respect to most classes of performance support development tools today is no longer valid.

Take a look at BriteSoft (www.britesoftcorp.com) and Above All Software (www.aboveallsoftware.com) in the category of SOA (service oriented architecture); consider Xegy (www.xegy.com), Instancy (www.instancy.com) and ProCarta (www.procarta.com) for developing knowledge ecosystems with performance-centered interfaces. We have seen nothing short of a revolution in the tools for developing software simulations and documentation through capture technology such that they are now commodities, including Firefly (www.knowledgeplanet.com), Captivate (www.macromedia.com), Epiplex SimDoc (www.epiance.com), Datango (www.datango.com) and more. And specialty tools for enabling performance in web-based applications that foster rapid development of integrated but non-intrusive (with respect to source code) coaches, such as ActiveGuide (www.rocketools.com) and 2Work!EPSS (www.thinksmartps.com) have become commonplace.

In virtually every application that we have seen of such technologies there is no sense of increased complexity in the IT environment. To be sure, the knee-jerk is just that, but reality is quite a different matter. Those responsible for large-scale enterprise environments with all of their challenges are relieved by how such performance support tools ease their burdens around meeting business requirements. Increased IT complexity? Hardly. The design bases of these tools ensure that this is not the case, at the very least.

So look around, IT executives. There is a brave new world of products and techniques that address the most compelling business needs in the context of today's technology challenges. They are supported by significant case studies. They are in production today. These tools are not just for early adopters and risk takers. They are mainstream and responsive, to the extent that some are now commodities. You can push back all you want, ignoring the fact that performance support brings order to chaos, as you protect your conventional, conservative thinking and fiefdoms.

But in end, we are confident that you will discover that resistance is futile.

Regards,

Gary Dickelman


  • Nooface.com
  • Nooface has a new look and continues to report on innovation for the post-PC interface.

    Take a look at Nooface.com ...
  • Rinse and Repeat
  • A delicious reminder of how to diffuse innovation. Remember Clayton Christensen, Geoffrey Moore and Everett Rogers?

    An article by Lucas Conley

    Read more from fastcompany.com ...
  • Summer Gadget Guide
  • Treos and iPODs and Blackberries (oh, my!)

    An article by the Fast Company Staff

    Read more from fastcompany.com ...
  • InnovationWizard
  • The InnovationWizard is here!

    "The InnovationWizard is the result of eleven years of study, research and synthesizing the "best of the best." Now you can have it all ... tools, techniques, process models, articles, book reviews, reports ... all in one place. Link it to your intranet ... or distribute items one at a time through your email campaign. Drop specific tools into your training programs or use the process models as part of your internal initiatives. All the information in the InnovationWizard is yours to use ... forever ... royalty free!"

    Read more from thinksmart.com ...
  • Ten Ways to Kill Design
  • "When design pilot projects fail, it endangers everyone's willingness to adopt design methods. Over the course of doing hundreds of design projects and teaching our methods to more than a thousand people, we've seen that several reasons for failure keep showing up. A discussion of these reasons follows, along with some solutions to consider. Let's start with the easiest ones and work our way up."

    A study by Kim Goodwin

    Read more from cooper.com ...
  • Macromedia integrates Breeze and Captivate
  • "Macromedia, Inc. announced the close integration of its e-learning products Macromedia Breeze and Macromedia Captivate 1.01, enabling "one-click publishing and full tracking of engaging interactive training simulations within Breeze virtual classes and self-paced training courses."

    Read more from ltimagazine.com ...
  • Scrolling and Scrollbars
  • Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox, July 11, 2005:

    Despite posing well-known risks, websites continue to feature poorly designed scrollbars. Among the ongoing problems that result are frustrated users, accessibility challenges, and missed content.

    Read more from useit.com ...
  • Internet Penetration: Critical Mass, Then What?
  • "According to recent reports, Internet growth has stalled. In the U.S., the number of people online is still increasing, but very slowly. In addition, the amount of time spent with the medium has also reached a plateau."

    An article by David Cohen

    Read more from clickz.com ...
  • Do-it-yourself Information Online
  • "Some 55% of adult internet users have looked for "how-to," "do-it-yourself" or repair information online and roughly 1 in 20 internet users - about 7 million people -- search for help on a typical day. The prevalence of this activity is yet another example of the many ways online Americans use the internet to gather practical information for their everyday lives."

    A study by Mary Madden

    Read more from pewinternet.org ...
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    Created by rdickelman
    Last modified 2005-10-09 12:36 PM
     
     

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