Categories
Uncategorized

Marc Benioff says “The enemy of my enemy is my friend. That makes Google my best friend.”

An article of interest on CRM Buyer.com from Rich Tehrani of Customer Interaction Solutions. He asked Marc Benioff of Salesforce.com “what he thought about all of the consolidation in the market…”


Marc Benioff said that “organic growth is slowing in the client-server space and these companies must consolidate to survive.”


And that “The enemy of my enemy is my friend. That makes Google my best friend.”


Watching parts of “The Godfather” trilogy this morning whilst making the family breakfast, I thought of the Michael Coreleone’s line, when talking about maintaining the appearance of a close friendship with someone who actually isn’t: “Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.”


Makes you think. 😉


Off to the Bellevue Art Fair today — have a great Sunday.

Categories
Uncategorized

Article: PC World on Best Products for Streaming Audio and Video

In MSN Tech & Gadgets (love that subsite) there’s an informative post from by PC World columnist Lincoln Spector on the “Best Products for Streaming Audio and Video With Ease.” 



“Want to watch your movies in the bedroom or listen to your albums in the kitchen? We identify which devices do the best job of streaming PC-based video and audio all over your home.


“It’s easier than ever to liberate your collection of audio, video, and photo files from the confines of a PC–so you can enjoy it at the level of comfort and quality that your home theater setup provides. Streaming media players, also known as digital media receivers, connect to your TV and surround-sound speakers and, via an interface on your television, let you stream multimedia files from networked PCs, hard disks, and (in some cases) the Internet.”

 PC World evaluates seven current digital media adapters:


Also of interest from the article:



Tags: ,

Categories
Uncategorized

What’s I’ve Read (a brief list) 062907

A brief list of things I’ve read lately… more summer reading lists to come…


Microsoft’s lessons from the desktop (CNET)


This is part three of a four-day series examining the state and future of Web security. Pete Boden wants people at Microsoft to think like criminals. That’s why the company held its first “Blue Hat” meeting in 2005…


HP VP Seeks Right Balance on Support Staffing (ComputerWorld)


Ann Livermore, executive vice president of Hewlett-Packard Co.’s technology solutions group, spoke with Computerworld this week about a range of issues, including concerns voiced by users and HP business partners about the performance of a customer servic


Data Robotics, Inc. Drobo – CNET Reviews.com


Drobo Reviews. Hard Drives Reviews by CNET.


Google Is Watching You (BusinessWeek)


Digital privacy advocate and secret smoker Kevin Bankston was outed on Google’s Street View. So, what else does the Internet know about us? by Catherine Holahan


Staying Paranoid At Toyota (BusinessWeek)


Fearful of “big-company disease,” the No. 1 carmaker keeps scrambling to retool itself. July 2, 2007


Children Of The Web (BusinessWeek)


THE FUTURE OF TECH — GLOBAL YOUTH Web Games That Cast A Wider Net How the second-generation Internet is spawning a global youth culture–and what business can do to cash in. JULY 2, 2007


Hack Attack: Turn your Windows Mobile phone into an iPhone – Lifehacker


If your clunky old Windows Mobile phone is just sitting around collecting iPhone jealousy dust, you can either scrounge together 500 leafy Sacagaweas, or you can customize your Windows Mobile phone to emulate several of the iPhone’s more interesting features…


Groklaw – Microsoft’s Windows Marketplace: “Ubuntu is perfect!” — Eek!


“Microsoft has a site for downloads of various software products, not just their own. It’s called Windows Marketplace. Yesterday, for a brief shining moment, you and 10,000 or so other people could and did download Ubuntu Linux from a link on that page —


Clayton Christensen’s Innovation Brain (BusinessWeek)


The landscape has changed in the 10 years since The Innovator’s Dilemma, but it’s still the seminal work on disruption. by Jena McGregor, June 15, 2007

Categories
Uncategorized

Customer Satisfaction: Fedex considers how businesses can “revolutionise the customer experience”

The Financial Express in India has an interesting article by Jacques Creeten, vice-president of FedEx India, on how customer satisfaction is difficulty  to pin down, and that “retaining consumer loyalty sounds easier than it actually is.”

“Every business leader knows the importance of their customers, especially in today’s competitive marketplace. But how to retain those customers, and generate genuine long-term customer loyalty, remains a significant business challenge. A recent marketing survey found that 84% of satisfied customers would “jump ship” for a better deal if the opportunity arose. With markets becoming increasingly commoditised, customer retention has become a critical part of business strategy.

“Increasingly, companies need to ask themselves: “What reasons can I give this customer to stay, even if my competitor offers a cheaper price?” The key lies in providing a service that will win the hearts and minds of customers and keep them loyal to brands and products. Companies need to go one step further, and ensure that they are consistently providing an outstanding customer experience.”

Empowering people and streamlining processes are the two key tasks cited by the author that can have a significant impact on improving their customer’s satisfaction. He goes on to say that maintaining a single point of contact for customers makes for a good, cohesive experience. 

That’s good, and I found it in practice today.

Today, whilst calling my mobile phone carrier, AT&T (was Cingular), I was happy that they handed me off only once during the call to get additional, more detailed support, using a ‘warm transfer’ where the original customer service agent made sure that the second picked up where she left off. There is nothing I enjoy less than being transferred from one agent to the next, told that I will hear a series of click, clucks and tones during the transfer, only to be sent into customer service phone oblivion and hear the dial tone once again. And then dread having to start the entire process over again.

“To deliver quick and simple engagement with customers, companies need to ensure that their first point of contact can answer all their questions, resolve all their problems and see the company from their perspective.”

Creeten’s suggests that there are four things that businesses need to get right:

1. Education: make sure that the employees are not only trained in the basics, they should also receive dedicated training “to teach the skills and behaviour patterns needed to meet and exceed customers’ expectations.”

Like when to do something that will avoid an expensive call back. The Zune customer service team did this for me when I called in noting that I had a bad sync cable: I was off the phone in less than five minutes and a few days later I had my new cable. As I’ve said before, the customer on the line is a future repeat customer and ultimately your best advertising. It takes a lot less to keep a good customer than acquire a new one.

I call this finesse on education jump through hoops. HP jumped thru hoops for me when I called in with a customer service issue and has earned my repeat business. One of our new home PCs is a new HP Pavilion Slimline with a slick widescreen monitor that I wrote about previously (more on our new PC, a CNET Editor’s Choice, in a future post). 

2. Communication: “employees [should] share success stories and client wins as well as customer and employee feedback, strategies and ideas for improving customer experience.”

Absolutely, and share then not only with each other in the customer service bay, but do so with the people making the products or providing the actual service. At Microsoft, our CSS teams do this through regular reviews with the product groups at Red Zone meetings, where we discuss the top support issues that come in from customers. For an example, see this webcast, “Resolving Systems Management Server ‘Red Zone’ Support Issues” on Microsoft Systems Management Server (SMS) 2003.

3. Listening: “feedback from the coalface is the only way that management can gain a complete understanding of how to improve customer service.”

I must admit, ‘coalface’ was a new one on my that had me searching the rarely used dictionary and pushed me online… But he’s right: we have to constantly improve and one of the best ways we can do this is to listen and respond to our customer’s feedback and suggestions. I agree with the author that “listening also creates a sense of empowerment in employees.” It also makes the issue more real. 

4. Recognition: “a strong rewards programme is vital to ensure employees deliver positive, memorable experiences to customers. Organisations should judiciously use financial and non-financial rewards that will enhance customer service.”

At Microsoft, every employee outlines their Commitments (you can read more about the concept and process here in this IT-Showcase article). Commitments (capital c) are what I previously referred to as ‘managing objectives’ or ‘annual goals’ in my SiValley life. Every employee includes these in their annual review and they can form the basis for a part of how employees are rewarded.

And incentives are provided to our leadership via the SPSA program (see the Microsoft annual proxy report for 2006 for more), “designed to focus our top leaders on shared business goals to guide our long-term growth and address our biggest challenges by rewarding participants based on growth in customer satisfaction, unit volumes of our Windows products, usage of our developer tools, and desktop application deployment over a multi-year performance period.”

That’s right: growth in customer satisfaction is tied to rewards.

OK, enough on all this.

I’ll add another point…

5. Know your customers and anticipate their basic service needs. And in the recent experience above (with AT&T Wireless Services), it doesn’t involve a live person, but relies on the everyone’s favourite new technology that firms are racing to master: interactive voice response (IVR) technology.

When I first dialed the AT&T’s new 800 line, I expected to get the same level of service I had with Cingular. I surprised that they did not have an option to “press or say” numbers. Consider how many people call while driving (I called via my hands-free speaker phone, thank you, initiating the call prior to pulling out of park). I pulled over, spent far too much time navigating the selections once again, and then was met with a five minute hold time. I believe that Cingular offered IVR options when you dialed into their main support or customer query lines, and rolled automatically to an agent if you did not enter the expected information.

Tags: Microsoft, loyalty, Customer Satisfaction, Customer Service.

Categories
Uncategorized

There’s a good chance your next computer will be a notebook

Unless you are buying a workstation-class comuer for development or high-end use (video gaming, video editing), chances are that your next computer will be a notebook. And for most consumer purchasers, this seems to be even more likely.


The industry analyst isuppli reports this week that they estimate that PC shipments will rise worldwide in 2007 given the demand for notebook computers this year.



“Following stronger-than-anticipated shipments of notebook computers in the first quarter, iSuppli Corp. has upgraded its 2007 PC shipment forecast. iSuppli predicts global PC shipments will rise to 264 million units in 2007, up 11.2 percent from 239 million in 2006. The previous forecast envisioned 10.7 percent growth for the year.”


iSuppli said that notebooks should make up nearly 40% of all new computer shipments this year.


My completely unscientific straw poll over the last few weeks of neighbours and friends found that nearly all of them are thinking about getting a notebook computer as their next PC. The exception? Customers considering a new PC that has Media Center capabilities (such as with Windows XP Media Center Edition or Windows Vista Home Premium) complete with a TV tuner card.


The numbers break out about two-thirds of people are looking for a new notebook with a dual core processor, and the bulk of the rest looking for a quiet, family room or home office PC that provides TV DVR and entertainment content management.


Almost none of the consumers I’ve spoken with said that they were looking for a new computer without these capabilities. 


Tags: , , , , notebooks.