Archive | June, 2006

Slow posting from California

Sorry about the lack of posts lately. I've been busy with a couple side projects, and this trip out to San Jose, CA to check out the Larta Venture Forum. Highlights included:

1) Cleantech panel discussion: The Cleantech Imperative: Promise or Pandora's Box?

2) A cool solar concentrator product by Practical Instruments called the Heliotube. Its the same size as a standard solar cell, significantly thinner than most concentrators, and costs less than the standard solar cell. Good Luck to these guys!

3) Keynote speaker: Tony Perkins , CEO of Always On/ Going on.

He spoke about the IM Generation, social networking, and majorly plugged his new service Going ON. Interesting Stuff, though I dont think Going On is about to de-seat MySpace as king. It could become Myspace for the west coast tech and VC scenes, though that might never reach the number of users on Myspace!

Major Points of his talk:

  • Some fairly shockingly high percentage of what people read these days is content generated by someone they know.
  • People are looking for a more personal media consumption experience.
  • Big Media, who we though was on the rise and rapidly going to merge into very few humungous entities, will now be picked apart by millions of media publishers
  • Kids these days spend lots of time maintaining their personal networks, its called a Myspace page.
  • MySpace pages, blogs, etc are all forms of personal branding.
  • When designing web applications, THING OPEN, think interoperability.
  • Paul Otellini, the Intel CEO and a person whose time is worth more than just about anyone else out there, said the single best use of his time is blogging on the internal blog for his employees.

Overall it was an interesting experience and fun introduction to the tech/VC world. Oh yeah, and I'm writing this post from the Caltrain (boy do I love EVDO) as I head to San Francisco to get a change of scenery.

Cheers

 

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CRM Violates the 3 main tenants of GTD: Part 2

Part 1 here

 

2) Having a minimal impact on your workflow

Not only do these CRM systems not have a minimal impact on your workflow, they totally and utterly recreate it and force you to completely change your workflow. Before ever using a CRM system I was creatively using an excel spreadsheet that I modified as I saw fit according to my emerging sales workflow. This spreadsheet, though eventually not powerful enough, was designed to support the workflow that naturally evolved in order to best turn prospects into customers. Even at its max capacity it felt like i was only missing a few pieces of functionality to make this a usable solution.

Enter the modern CRM system. In my previous post about the complexity of knowing where to put data as well as where to retrieve data, I spoke about how the “trust” of the system was impacted negatively. The same factors that go into not trusting a system play into heavily impacting your workflow by dramatically increasing the time it takes to get data in and out of a system. Just the time spent over deciding where to place your data within the system is enough to help forget exactly what data you wanted to store.

Beyond the “trust issue” and where to store your data there are the logistics of actually putting your data into the system. Web based CRM’s such as SugarCRM, Salesforce, and Vtiger (lets get the opensource crowd just for good measure) take entirely too many clicks to input data. It takes a few clicks to get from an “opportunity” to important notes or “cases” (tech support issues) stored in the “account”, much less to get to an activity that is within that same “opportunity”. More time is lost on logistics and less time is spent taking good notes. If you just got two important phone calls back to back, and had to log two notes in separate opportunities or accounts, the problem becomes significantly compounded and the quality of your data suffers.

Now, some of these applications are starting to take steps towards a “desktop type” of feel. Ajax and the whole Web2.0 scene could really have an impact on the user experience here, but it’s a long way off. Not only is the experience going to have to require less clicks, but the layout of these applications is going to have to reflect the workflow of each sales person or sales unit in a much more efficient manner. When I’m making a call, I want to see that persons phone number at a glance and I need to be able to get to other data about that person with the click of a mouse.

My job is to be nimble on the phone, to adapt to each potential client and effectively side step every potential objection they come up with. I want my sales process back, and I don’t want to feel like I’m looking at raw mysql tables to get it.

(I am rounding up my list of workflow tips and suggested improvements, but first I had to get all this venting out)

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CRM Violates the 3 main tenants of GTD: Part 1

1) Always fully trusting your system

First, it’s an issue of trust. A good GTD system is one that you always know where a piece of data should go. That’s why tagging has been such a big hit for me, if I don’t already have a specific category, I can just add one (though I try to do so sparingly). The flip side of knowing where to put things is being able to find your data. If you know where to put it consistently, then you will consistently be able to retrieve your data.

This is something that is always overlooked in the design phase of any data tracking system. Its not a matter of having a place to store every little piece of data, its about having a place that makes you confident, after investing the time and energy to enter the data, that you will be able to retrieve it later when that data is needed.

I will repeat: Without being completely confident that you will be able to retrieve the data the next time you need it, you will always be reluctant to invest the time needed to take the high quality notes most valuable in a CRM system!

CRM systems (the majority of my experience has been with SugarCRM and Salesforce violate this rule to the utmost extreme, though they do it in a more abstract and complex way. Yes, there is a specific spot for an individuals contact information. Yes, there is a specific spot for you to store information about a company or Account. In fact, there are an unnecessarily large amount of specific data fields to store fairly unnecessary pieces of specific data.

The problem lies with the less clearly defined pieces of information you want to keep track of in the daily process of being a sales person. This data tends to be specific to each company, product, and sometimes down to the specific salesperson. There are notes those that you want to keep about your prospective clients, there are different notes that you want to keep about your existing clients, and there are all kinds of meta-data you want to keep that’s not specific to either, but are definitely relevant to you moving people through the sales process and CLOSING DEALS.

This information, in both SugarCRM and Salesforce, can be stored in a variety of locations. To keep things simple, lets just start with the obvious big three; contacts, accounts, opportunities. Each time I’ve identified a piece of information I have to track, I then need to figure out which of these locations to use. Not much guidance is provided by the companies who provide these applications, and most sales managers don’t understand the intricacies and importance of creating a workflow that will be used consistently throughout the group (especially if there’s to be any collaboration).

In many occasions I’ve found myself on the phone with a client, rapidly gathering high quality information, only to be thwarted by these CRM systems. I have to decide what section to put the notes in, which in itself takes entirely too many clicks of a mouse, then only to know in the back of my mind, that I am never going to find this information ever again.

Which leads us to the next part; retrieving data from the system. The easiest example is to look at how these CRM systems track “activities” for an account, contact, or opportunity. Each activity is its own entry that can be a task, a call, an email, a fax, a meeting, etc, etc. I still never know which one is which when it comes to inputting the data, but the worst part is finding your activity after the fact. What you end up with is a long list of all these activities, with no easy way to filter them or to get to all the contents of the activity. Even after creating a variety of custom views/reports I was not able to see my data in the way I wanted to, and this is under no time constraints or stress. Now add a screaming customer on the end of the line, and try to find data on the spot. It’s a mess.

After 3 or 4 months of using Salesforce.com I’ve finally started to come up with a few best practices that work well for my exact situation, but the process has been slow and very much by trial and error. I am still reluctant to spend too much time inputting data, because I am not convinced that I will ever see that data again, at all, much less when I need it most.

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Workflow: finding an apartment in NYC part II

This is just a simple outline of the workflow I'm building in order to find an apartment. Having it outlined will help me see each step and where I can make efficiency gains.

  • Find prospects through internet services (craigstlist , housing maps , etc)
    • Use RSS feed filters to do some of the work for you by seeking keywords
  • Email those prospects
    • Make sure your are keeping track of which e-mails correspond to which apartment postings
  • Track e-mail and phone responses from posters
    • In first interaction with poster, ask them the first round of questions (questionnaire #1 to be determined)
    • Potentially e-mail yourself at "note" containing the detailed information gathered withing the same gmail thread
  • Map out the location, and associate that with the data collected so far
  • Go Visit
    • Take pictures of location
    • Round Two of Questions (questionnaire #2 questions to be determined)
  • Post findings to shared site (maybe a wiki, or basecamp )
  • Collaboratively discuss, debate and decide.

 

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Why I Blog Too

I agree with Mike's points in "Why I Blog " on his blog at www.amountaintop.com . I just started blogging, and I’m liking the stats a bit too much. I need to stick to my guns, and not install any other kind of metrics till I get the hang of things and am content with the quality of my content.

The reasons:

-Â Â Â I blog because I want to practice writing
-   I blog because I spend lots of time figuring things out, and I’d love to pass that hard work on to others.
-Â Â Â I blog because collectively we can find better solutions in shorter amounts of time to the little daily problems that drive me mad.
-Â Â Â I blog because I would like to observe my ideas as they evolve over time, and I think they will evolve faster and more creatively in front of an audience.

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Review: Booq Bag

Upon starting a new job in a new city and receiving a new laptop, I was faced with a very important decision. How to carry my laptop.

I went to New York's dearest Tekserve in order to scour the bags for the perfect one. I had a few important criteria that went into purchasing the bag in the first place:

  1. must be backpack style (because of my bad back and lots of walking in the city
  2. needed to look professional (the office was paying for it)
  3. and it had to have lots of convenient pockets for my gadgets in gizmos

The booq boa.XM (2005 I think) was the only professional looking backpack of the bunch, so I bought it and was on my way. After several weeks of use, I started to notice a series of inconveniences that would prevent me from recommending this bag to anyone else, and may even force me to change bags.

Inconveniences:

  1. The "laptop storage pouch" was entirely too wide for my laptop or any other laptop mad this decade. I noticed that while walking I could feel the laptop bouncing back and forth on my back (this occurs even with the laptop in a sleeve).
  2. None of the zippers open all the way down to the bottom of the bag, so you can never really open it all the way up to get to your goods.
  3. On the top of the bag there is a "media pouch" with a hole in the top for headphones to pass through. I chose to use this as my sunglass storage pouch. With the way the pouch is angled at the top and on the inside of the main compartment, when I have glasses stored there I can barely access the rest of that compartment.
  4. The whole curved design, though good for looks, doesn't really make things all that accessible.

Now, in defense of booq, I've looked at their website , and it seems that they've updated the boa.XM bag for the 2006 model . One of the pictures shows the zippers opening all the way and the compartments being much more accessible. Should I ever want to spend another $159 on a bag, I will take a look at this one.

Proof is in the pictures:

  1. The "laptop storage pouch" was entirely too wide for my laptop or any other laptop mad this decade. I noticed that while walking I could feel the laptop bouncing back and forth on my back (this occurs even with the laptop in a sleeve).
    picture of booq bag with too much space in the laptop pouch
  2. None of the zippers open all the way down to the bottom of the bag, so you can never really open it all the way up to get to your goods.
  3. On the top of the bag there is a "media pouch" with a hole in the top for headphones to pass through. I chose to use this as my sunglass storage pouch. With the way the pouch is angled at the top and on the inside of the main compartment, when I have glasses stored there I can barely access the rest of that compartment.
  4. The whole curved design, though good for looks, doesn't really make things all that accessible.

Other pics:

 

 

 

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Followup: Using @%#!(*&) to fight alphabetitus

I mentioned this briefly in my post about keysuite and contact tagging , but I wanted to emphasize this trick/practice on its own .

Someone somewhere in the world of user interface design decided that all lists should be in alphabetical order. This goes for folders windows, folders in outlook, categories in palm, tags in rojo , and labels in gmail . That was just to name a few.

When these lists get long, and stretch off the page, what happens when your most often accessed folder or tag begins with a ‘w’ or ‘z’? Well, you’re out of luck, and you have to scroll down the window each time to get to it.

My objection is that the Alphabetical order is placing these tags and folders based on rules other than your workflow.

To take back the order of list/tags/folders in your life, you need to look to special characters (!@#$%^&*_+). The characters when placed at the beginning of the word can overrided its alphabetical sorting, and move it to the top of a list.

A classic example for me is that I will put a ‘!’ in front of the most important folders so that they show up in the top:

• Rojo – I tag the feeds I read daily as “! Daily” rather than “Daily”
• gmail – I use the lable “! Todo” rather than “Todo” to label e-mails that require a task to be done.
• My GTD setup – I have a category tagged as “! Today” so that I can go through all my other contexts and add the “! Today” tag to the Next Actions that need to get done today (Keysuite allows for tasks to have multiple tags)

Hope that wasn’t super obvious! I used this concept years ago to put my folders in order in Windows. The most important got a lower number. Simple but effective, and it had the added benefit of making navigating with keyboard shortcuts easier.

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Review: Booq Bag for work

Upon starting a new job in a new city and receiving a new laptop, I was faced with a very important decision. How to carry my laptop.

I went to New York's dearest Tekserve in order to scour the bags for the perfect one. I had a few important criteria that went into purchasing the bag in the first place:

  1. must be backpack style (because of my bad back and lots of walking in the city
  2. needed to look professional (the office was paying for it)
  3. and it had to have lots of convenient pockets for my gadgets in gizmos

The booq was the only professional looking backpack of the bunch, so I bought it and was on my way. After several weeks of use, I started to notice a series of inconveniences that would prevent me from recommending this bag to anyone else, and may even force me to change bags.

Inconveniences:

  1. The "laptop storage pouch" was entirely too wide for my laptop or any other laptop mad this decade. I noticed that while walking I could feel the laptop bouncing back and forth on my back (this occurs even with the laptop in a sleeve).
  2. None of the zippers open all the way down to the bottom of the bag, so you can never really open it all the way up to get to your goods.
  3. On the top of the bag there is a "media pouch" with a hole in the top for headphones to pass through. I chose to use this as my sunglass storage pouch. With the way the pouch is angled at the top and on the inside of the main compartment, when I have glasses stored there I can barely access the rest of that compartment.
  4. The whole curved design, though good for looks, doesn't really make things all that accessible.

Now, in defense of booq, I've looked at their website , and it seems that they've updated the bag for the 2006 model . One of the pictures shows the zippers opening all the way and the compartments being much more accessible. Should I ever want to spend another $159 on a bag, I will take a look at this one.

 

 

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Workflow: finding an apartment in NYC

After moving to the city a few months ago and going through a mad dash to find only a 3 month sublet (that would hold me over till I found a more permanent place), I decided before I repeat the process I need to have an efficient workflow in place.

To start, lets outline the previous system. The tools used where the following:

- Craiglist (there is a ton of turn over, and a large volume of rentals go through this site)
- Housing Maps (craigslist/google maps mashup)
- Google Maps
- Gmail (e-mail was the preferred method of “first contact” for most posters)
- Pen and paper (to take notes on each of the properties)

The problems with the first system:

1) If you use a “craiglist” e-mail to contact someone, and they reply with their personal e-mail address, then you have no idea who that person is or which craigslist apartment posting they correspond with.
2) Craigslist is not searchable by specific geographic location (until the Housing maps mashup came along), and it also does not require posters to be all that precise (as in address) in their location.
3) Craiglist also does not include a field for people to elaborate on the length of the apartment rental. Even if you manage to narrow down a list of apartments in the right area its quite possible that they are only renting a room at $1000 per week for 2 weeks. Convenient.
4) The Housing Maps site does not seem to have as many posts as craigslist does. I have not been able to research where it draws its data from, but I’m assuming its only from posts that provide exact addresses.
5) There is no place within this system of apps to store the meta-data you collect from each apartment poster, through e-mail or phone calls.

The conclusion I came to after a couple days of using this system is that it’s all about the numbers. For you to get a decent amount of contacts that meet your criteria you really have to send out e-mails en-mass. Though this is horribly inefficient for you from a tracking perspective and for the apartment posters to get back to all the people inquiring, it was the only way to be sure that I was getting a steady source of apartments to go visit.

The solution(s) I found along the way:

1) I made sure to reference the post on craigslist that I was inquiring about, and to include the link to that post in the e-mail. Chance are that they were just going to hit reply, and I could find the corresponding post there within. I did run into some formatting issues with gmail, which caused me to loose those links. No explanation was found

This means that I’m heading into my second encounter without having made many improvements on my system. My blood pressure can not handle a repeat of the “all out e-mail and google maps bonanza” that was coupled with sprinting across the city using subways and buses to try to be the first person to a particular apartment.

My system needs to be efficient (relatively quick to enter data) and mobile, with all meta-data stored in one location. To a certain extent, if it tied into my Treo, that would be great. When I’m “out in the field” chasing apartments and I get calls from posters, it would be nice to know which post they corresponded with. One last requirement, is that its fairly accessible over the web. I am going to have roommates, and it would be good to collaborate in this process.

I welcome any feedback, tips, prayers in the meantime.

Apps that might be able to make this an easier process:

- frappr or flagr for mapping?
- Dabbledb , or some other web-based spreadsheet/database for tracking metadata
- dokuwiki for tracking notes, and maybe even pics ?

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BLAG: blogging links & articles

I've found my self in several situations over the last 6 months where I needed a clean workflow to collaboratively gather and store links and articles with several different people on a specific project. Most often these projects where ideas for startup companies, and the people involved wanted to start researching a specific field or they just wanted to start gathering information about all the different fields that would go into making this idea come to life.

Right away I thought that the entry point into the workflow system would be a bookmarking service such as del.icio.us , furl , spurl , blinklist , etc. This lead me on a wild digression trying to research every piece of functionality that these services had to offer, and then comparing them all. Needless to say I never really got anywhere. At some point a stumbled across the Roximatic Social Bookmark Review which offered a fairly comprehensive though always a bit out of date perspective on a large portion of the social bookmarking services.

For the sake of moving forward I decided to just go with the standard, delicious, which seemed to do a great job of saving links and retrieving them later. Where delicious fell short was storing articles. I’ve separated the two (links and articles) because links would be to things such as a company website, a forum, or blogs, while articles where limks to a specific piece of text that needs to be preserved. When archiving articles I turned to furl, spurl, and simpy. Of course I didn’t have the time or energy to make a fully informed decisions so I stuck with furl mostly because it looked like it did 75% of what I wanted to do, and it was the first one I discovered.

Now that I could click on one button for links, and another for articles I needed to find a way to share these with the other people on my particular project. Each service offers several different methods of sharing, but what seemed to make the most sense to me was to use RSS feeds. This was the first big lack of functionality that I encountered. I wanted to create a private rss feed of my private posts (at the time delicious didn’t allow for private bookmarks, but have since added that feature) in a certain category. I didn’t need it to be super secure, but I just didn’t want that RSS feed available to the general public. I have yet to find a workaround for this piece of the BLAG workflow.

The next easiest step from here would be to get each person in the project to subscribe to all the other people in the project, thus sharing all their links and articles relating to one topic. This seemed kind of rough around the edges, so what I started doing was using the rss feed reader module in Drupal to combine all these rss feeds into a blog, with an individual post for each link or article. The most obvious benefit being that you could see these links/articles coming in and then just click into the comments section to begin a dialogue with the whole group on a specific topic. The blog would track all the content being collected as well as all of the conversations inspired by that content. With some good search functionality you have a very smart way to do research for staring new companies!

This BLAG workflow is probably being done by someone out there, and I’ve just been too lazy to find it. To be honest theres probably a very simple solution right in front of me, so I welcome any comments, tips, howtos, etc.

Pieces of the puzzle that I have yet to find even basic solutions to:

  1. How to do this for multiple projects in parallel. Since each project wants its own set of tags, it makes sense to have a different account in Furl or Del.icio.us to do this or to just use tags to create seperation. The end goal here would be to provide a simple interface for someone to easily “capture” a link or article from the browser and have it sent to the right BLAG with the minimum amount of clicks or typing.
  2. How to get straight from the BLAG post “generated” by Furl’s RSS feed to the archived copy of the article should the article have moved or been taken down.
  3. Exactly how Furl and delicious (or whichever service you use) decides to pass categories/tags through the RSS feed on to the BLAG, and whether or not those tags can the be used to assign tags with your content management system (in my case, Drupal)
  4. A way to create “private” rss feeds from the bookmarking services into the BLAG. I was a bit caught off guard, though in retrospect it was a complete oversight on my part, to notice that my social bookmarking pages were showing up in google searches for my user name. My boss asked to know more about all the articles that I had tagged with the name of his company, at this point I knew I needed a bit more anonymity.
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