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Maddy Wood

5 Weird Habits That Make People Successful And Awesome | Fast Company - 0 views

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    5 Weird Habits That Make People Successful And Awesome
Maddy Wood

The $1.3 Trillion Price Of Not Tweeting At Work | Fast Company - 0 views

  • Among CEOs of the world’s Fortune 500 companies, a mere 20 have Twitter accounts.
  • As social media spreads around the globe, one enclave has proven stubbornly resistant: the boardroom.
  • A new report from McKinsey Global Institute, however, makes the business case for social media a little easier to sell. According to an analysis of 4,200 companies by the business consulting giant, social technologies stand to unlock from $900 billion to $1.3 trillion in value. At the high end, that approaches Australia’s annual GDP. How’s that for a bottom line?
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  • Two-thirds of the value unlocked by social media rests in “improved communications and collaboration within and across enterprises,”
  • Far from a distraction, in other words, social media proves a surprising boon to productivity.
  • Social technologies have the potential to free up expertise trapped in departmental silos. High-skill workers can now be tapped company-wide. Managers can find out “which employees have the deepest knowledge in certain subjects, or who last contributed to a project and how to get in touch with them quickly,” says New York Times tech reporter Quentin Hardy.
  • the report suggest that tools like Yammer are the tip of the iceberg. Right now, only five percent of all communications and content use in the U.S. happens on social networks, mainly in the form of content sharing and online socializing. But McKinsey analysts point out that almost any human interaction in the workplace can be "socialized"--endowed with the speed, scale, and disruptive economics of the Internet.
  • echoed of late from the most authoritative of places: Wall Street
  • Google, Microsoft, Salesforce, Adobe, and even Ellison’s own Oracle--have spent upward of $2.5 billion snatching up social media tools to add to their enterprise suites. Even Twitter-phobic CEOs may have a hard time ignoring that business case.
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    A new report from McKinsey Global Institute makes the business case for social media a little easier to sell. According to an analysis of 4,200 companies by the business consulting giant, social technologies stand to unlock from $900 billion to $1.3 trillion in value. At the high end, that approaches Australia's annual GDP. How's that for a bottom line?
bethgranter

37signals Earns Millions Each Year. Its CEO's Model? His Cleaning Lady | Fast Company - 0 views

  • Ricardo Semler, author of the book Maverick. He said that only two things grow for the sake of growth: businesses and tumors.
  • Jason Fried is a founder and CEO of 37signals, a software company based in Chicago. Fried also treats 37signals as something of a laboratory for innovative workplace practices--such as a recent experiment in shortening the summer workweek to just four days.
  • If you’re a short-term thinker you’d think so, but we’re long-term thinkers. We’re about being in business for the long haul and keeping the team together over the long haul. I would never trade a short-term burst for a long-term decline in morale. That happens a lot in the tech business: They burn people out and get someone else. I like the people who work here too much. I don’t want them to burn out. Lots of startups burn people out with 60, 70, 80 hours of work per week. They know that both the people or the company will flame out or be bought or whatever, and they don’t care, they just burn their resources. It’s like drilling for as much oil as you possibly can. You can look at people the same way.
Jason Ryan

Experimentation Is The New Planning | Fast Company | Business + Innovation - 1 views

  • Let’s be honest: You have no idea what’s going to happen to your industry. That’s why you build your organization into an engine of possibility.
  • Management theorist Henry Mintzberg makes a distinction between deliberate and emergent strategy. Deliberate strategy relies on senior leaders to set goals and develop plans and strategies to achieve them. Emergent strategy is a strategy that emerges from all over the company, over time, as the environment changes and the organization shifts and adapts to apply its strengths to a changing reality.
  • Emergent strategy is an organic approach to growth that lets companies learn and continually develop new strategies over time based on an ongoing culture of hypothesis and experimentation.
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  • Diversity breeds creativity--ecosystems are richest where habitats and species overlap. With more connections and diversity comes more creativity: diverse communities are more interesting, more provocative, and more stimulating.
  • In 2005, Google set a formula for distributing its engineering efforts: 70-20-10. Seventy percent of Google’s resources are devoted to improving search and advertising, Google’s primary source of revenue and profits. Twenty percent is allotted as free time for people to pursue projects of their own choosing. And ten percent is invested in scaling up the most promising ideas that emerge from the 20% time, the wild cards that could develop into whole new lines of business.
  • Jack Welch, GE: “Size either liberates or paralyzes. We tried every day to remember that the benefit of size was that it allowed us to take more swings.”
  • Eric Schmidt, Google: “Our goal is to have more at-bats per unit of time and effort than anyone else in the world.”
  • Jeff Bezos, Amazon: “You need to set up and organize so that you can do as many experiments per unit of time as possible.”
  • The more things you try, the better your chances of discovering something valuable.
  • For emergent strategy to be successful, there must be enough autonomy, freedom, and slack in the system for people and resources to connect in a peer-to-peer way, like they do in Silicon Valle
  • Employees at Mailchimp, an email marketing company with about 100 employees, decide on new features and services in a similar way. If someone has an idea, they attempt to recruit another person to help them work on a prototype or to help convince others. At Mailchimp, people get excited by good ideas, and they are trusted, so they have the autonomy to follow their instincts. To be recruited, a person must consider it more interesting or useful than the things they are already working on. Like the ants, recruitment turns to escalating commitment over time as more people are recruited to the project. When enough people are recruited, a team is formed and commits to seeing the project through to completion. In this way, ideas compete for resources and the best ideas end up bearing fruit.
Alex Vaidya

Facebook's New, Entirely Social Ads Will Recreate Marketing | Fast Company - 0 views

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    Facebook now rising brands posts in the sponsored section. Annoyingly it shows which of your friends like the brand and will add their profile pic, not sure how I feel about advertising brands like that without opt-in,.
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