Showing posts with label Harvard Business Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvard Business Review. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2019

The Most Important Lesson I learned From Harvard Business Review

Early in my career I'd been a regular reader of Harvard Business Review. The articles and insights were rewarding and the takeaways many. There was one article, however, that made an impact to such a degree that it formed one of my guiding principles as a marketing communications manager and later advertising director. The article's premise was this: small companies cannot afford to behave like big companies.

By "behave like big companies" they meant spending. When big companies sneeze they spend more money than our entire net worth. As companies (and governments) get bloated, they become bloated and wasteful in their spending. This is something little companies cannot afford.

When Microsoft bought Nokia for $7.6 billion it was the kind of goof that only a big company can make. Three years later Microsoft wrote off the the loss and 8000 jobs were terminated, but the company continues to roll along. Small companies can't be so careless.

The same with spending on new product launches. Big companies spend, according to one article I'd read last year, something like $73 million to launch a new product. What small company, whose entire revenue stream may be less than $10 or $100 million can spend this kind of money to launch products? It's silly.

Instead, small companies have to be more resourceful and think like Scotsmen. I'm a MacGregor on my mother's side, so it comes natural to be thrifty, frugal, use more prudence when spending. As a result, in both companies I served in an advertising/marketing/PR capacity, I treated the company's money the way I treated my own, always striving to get the best ROI, not being wasteful. In both cases we experienced years of double-digit growth, not through massive spending blitzes but through guerrilla tactics and non-traditional approaches to markets.

Here are two articles from Harvard Business Review related to this message:

Seven Keys to Switching from a Big Company to a Small One

A Small Business Is Not a Little Big Business

Much more can be said, but let's leave that for another time. Have a great weekend. TGIF.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Callouts: the Quiz

In magazine or book publishing, a callout is a quote or fragment of text extracted from an article that has been set apart in a larger or contrasting font. It is often used as a design element to break up a page while also serving as a mechanism for hooking a reader more deeply into the story.

What follows is a multiple choice quiz. See if you can match the callout to the magazine it was extracted from.

1. “Publishers only want to save on printing costs and lock in a path from their hard disk to your wallet.”
a. Wired
b. TNR (The New Republic)
c. Technology Review

2. The management of the human genome should not be left to powerful business players, lawyers or scientists to resolve alone.
a. Wired
b. Popular Science
c. Technology Review

3. RCA used its patent portfolio to quash competition and lay the foundation for a broadcasting monopoly.
a. Wired
b. Technology Review
c. Popular Mechanics

4. Craigslist is Firmly Stuck in 1999, Just the way Craig and Co. Like It
a. Wired
b. Technology Review
c. The New Republic

5. Entire markets have been transformed by products that trade power or fidelity for low price, flexibility, and convenience. –Erin Biba
a. Wired
b. Popular Science
c. Technology Review

6. “We’re having many fewer accidents, but the ones we do have are being caused by threats much harder to detect,” says James Pardee, the director of the FAA’s new Accident Investigation and Prevention Service.
a. Wired
b. Popular Mechanics
c. Popular Science

7. A stripper turned screenwriter pens a flick that’s taking off.
a. Wired
b. The New Republic
c. Harvard Business Review

8. As construction on the Burj Dubai began – with one floor added every three days – the client kept asking: Can it be taller? Taller still?
a. Wired
b. Popular Science
c. Harvard Business Review

9. The demo was not going well. Again.
a. Wired
b. Technology Review
c. Harvard Business Review

10. People who have mastered their emotions are able to roll with the changes. They don’t panic.
a. Wired
b. Technology Review
c. Harvard Business Review
Well, did any of the callouts make you want to read the articles? If so, here are the answers.

1: Technology Review (letters to the editor page); 2: Technology Review; 3: Technology Review; 4: Wired; 5: Wired; 6: Popular Mechanics; 7: Wired; 8: Wired; 9: Wired; 10: Harvard Business Review

In the meantime, have a great day. May your inner sun be ever rising. But if there's a temporary storm, roll with the changes and don't panic.

And if you like quizzes like this, maybe we'll do it again sometime.

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