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Tom Peters’ ! EXCELLENCE Foodservice Equipment Distributors Association 31 March 2016/Tucson (Slides available at tompeters.com) Conrad Hilton CONRAD HILTON, at a gala celebrating his career, was called to the podium and “What were the most important lessons you learned in your long and distinguished career?” His answer … asked, “Remember to tuck the shower curtain inside the bathtub.” IS “EXECUTION STRATEGY.” —Fred Malek Software Is Eating the World “Software is eating the world.” —Marc Andreessen “Automation has become so sophisticated that on a typical passenger flight, a human pilot holds the controls for a grand total of … 3 minutes . [Pilots] have become, it’s not much of an exaggeration to say, computer operators.” Source: Nicholas Carr, “The Great Forgetting,” The Atlantic, 11.13 “[Michael Vassar/ MetaMed founder] is creating a better information system and ‘Almost all health care people get is going to be done— hopefully—by algorithms within a decade or two. new class of people to manage it. We used to rely on doctors to be experts, and we’ve crowded them into being something like factory workers, where their job is to see one patient every 8 to 11 minutes and implement a by-the-book solution. I’m talking about creating a new ‘expert profession’—medical quants, almost like hedgefund managers, who could do the high-level analytical work of directing all the information that flows into the world’s hard drives. Doctors would now be aided by Vassar’s new information experts who would be aided by advanced artificial intelligence.”—New York /0624.13 “Human level capability has not turned out to be a special stopping point from an engineering perspective. ...” Source: Illah Reza Nourbakhsh, Professor of Robotics, Carnegie Mellon, Robot Futures AlphaGo Beats Go Grandmaster “This technology is going to cut through the global economy like a hot knife through butter. It learns fast and largely on its own. It's widely applicable. It doesn't only master what it has seen, it can innovate. For example: some of the unheard of moves made by AlphaGo were considered ‘beautiful’ by the Grandmaster it beat. “Limited AGI/Artificial General Intelligence (deep learning in particular) will have the ability to do nearly any job currently being done by human beings—from lawyers to judges, nurses to doctors, driving to construction—potentially at a grandmaster's level of capability. This makes it a buzzsaw. “Very few people—and I mean very few—will be able to stay ahead of the limited AGI buzzsaw. It learns so quickly, the fate of people stranded in former factory towns gutted by ‘free trade’ is likely to be the fate of the highest paid technorati. They simply don't have the capacity to learn fast enough or be creative enough to stay ahead of it.” —John Robb/Global Guerrillas/ 03/12/16 IoT/Internet of Things IoE/The Internet of Everything M2M/Machine-to-Machine Ubiquitous computing Embedded computing Pervasive computing Industrial Internet Etc.* ** *** **** 212 BILLION connected devices by 2020—IDC **Estimated IoT market size, next decade: $14.4 trillion *** “By 2025 IoT could be applicable to $82 trillion of output or *Estimated approximately one half the global economy”—GE (GE is literally betting its existence and the future on the IoT, Bloomberg/03.2016) 100,000,000,000,000 [100 trillion] **** sensors/2030 —Michael Patrick Lynch, The Internet of Us Primary source: “The Big Switch,” Capital Insights Sensor Pills: “Proteus Digital Health is one of several pioneers in They make a silicon chip the size of a grain of sand that is embedded into a safely digested pill that is swallowed. When the chip mixes with stomach acids, the processor is powered by the body’s electricity and transmits data to a patch worn on the skin. That patch, in turn, transmits data via Bluetooth to a mobile app, which then transmits the data to a central database where a health technician can verify if a patient has taken her or his medications. sensor-based health technology. —Robert Scoble and Shel Israel, Age of Context: Mobile, Sensors, Data and the Future of Privacy China/Foxconn: 1,000,000 robots/next 3 years Source: Race AGAINST the Machine, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee “Since 1996, manufacturing employment in China itself has actually fallen 25 percent. That’s over 30,000,000 fewer Chinese workers in that sector, by an estimated even while output soared by 70 percent. It’s not that American workers are being replaced by Chinese workers. It’s that both American and Chinese workers are being made more efficient [replaced] by automation.” —Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies 20/5 “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it. Also, the Internet and Welcome to the Age of Social Media: technology have made customers more demanding., and they expect information, answers, products, responses, and resolutions sooner than ASAP.” —John DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution “What used to be “word of mouth” is You are either creating brand ambassadors or brand terrorists doing brand assassination.” now “word of mouse.” —John DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow Conventional Business, Inspire Employees, and Change the World “The customer is in complete control of communication.” Welcome to the Age of Social Media: —John DiJulius, The Customer Service Revolution: Overthrow Conventional Business, Inspire Employees, and Change the World “We’re moving toward an age of nearly perfect information. Review sites, shopping apps on smartphones, an extended network of acquaintances available through social media, and unprecedented access to experts mean that consumers operate in a radically different, socially interactive information environment.* … Consumers tend to make better decisions and become less susceptible to context or framing manipulations. For businesses, it means marketing is changing forever.” —Itamar Simonson and Emanuel Rosen, Value: Absolute What Really Influences Customers in the Age of (Nearly) Perfect Information *Google: ZMOT/84 (ZERO Moment Of Truth) “I would rather engage in a Twitter conversation with a single customer than see our company attempt to attract the attention of millions in a coveted Super Bowl commercial. Why? Because having people discuss your brand directly with you, actually connecting one-to-one, is far more valuable—not to mention far cheaper!. … “Consumers want to discuss what they like, the companies they support, and the organizations and leaders they resent. They want a community. They want to be heard. “[I]f we engage employees, customers, and prospective customers in meaningful dialogue about their lives, challenges, interests, and concerns, we can build a community of trust, loyalty, and—possibly over time—help them become advocates and champions for the brand.” —Peter Aceto, CEO, Tangerine (from the Foreword to A World Gone Social: How Companies Must Adapt to Survive, by Ted Coine & Mark Babbit) Going “Social”: Location/Size Independent River Pools and Spas/$5M/Warsaw VA “Today, despite the fact that we’re just a little swimming most trafficked swimming pool website in the world. Five years ago, if pool company in Virginia, we have the you’d asked me and my business partners what we do, the answer would have been simple, ‘We build in-ground ‘We are the best teachers … in the world … on the subject of fiberglass swimming pools, fiberglass swimming pools.’ Now we say, and we also happen to build them.’” (Mktg: $250K-$20K) —Marcus Sheridan, in Jay Baer, Youtility: Why Smart Marketing Is About Help, Not Hype Seymour CT/ Motueka NZ/ Warsaw VA/ Fairfield OH/ Frankenmuth MI ! Rock *Larry Janesky/Seymour CT/ Basement Systems Inc.++ *Dry Basement Science ++/ 27 patents *400 dealers/6 countries *Awards+++++ *>$100,000,000 The Magicians of Motueka (PLUS) ! W.A. Coppins Ltd.* (Coppins Sea Anchors/ PSA/para sea anchors) *Textiles, 1898; thrive on —e.g., “wicked problems” U.S. Navy STLVAST (Small To Large Vehicle At Sea W. Wiggins Ltd./Wellington (specialty nylon, “Dyneema,” from DSM/Netherlands) Transfer); custom fabric from Retail Superstars: Inside the 25 Best Independent Stores in America —by George Whalin JUNGLE JIM’S INTERNATIONAL MARKET, FAIRFIELD, OH: “An adventure in ‘shoppertainment,’ 1,600 1,400 $8-$8,000 4,000 begins in the parking lot and goes on to cheeses and varieties of hot sauce—not to mention 12,000 wines priced from a bottle; all this is brought to you by vendors. Customers from every corner of the globe.” BRONNER’S CHRISTMAS WONDERLAND, FRANKENMUTH, MI, POP 5,000: 98,000 50,000 -square-foot “shop” features ornaments, 6,000 Christmas trims, and anything else you can name pertaining to Christmas. …” Source: George Whalin, Retail Superstars: Inside the 25 Best Independent Stores in America “BE THE BEST. IT’S THE ONLY MARKET THAT’S NOT CROWDED.” From: Retail Superstars: Inside the 25 Best Independent Stores in America, George Whalin Hidden Champions* of the 21st Century: Success Secrets of Unknown World Market Leaders/ Hermann Simon (*1, 2, or 3 in world market; <$4B; low public awareness) 80% Baader (Iceland/ fish-processing systems) Gallagher (NZ/electric fences) W.E.T. (heated car seat tech) Gerriets (theater curtains and stage equipment) Electro-Nite (sensors for the steel industry) Essel Propack (India/tooth paste tubes) SGS (product auditing and certification) DELO (specialty adhesives) Amorim (Portugal/cork products) EOS (laser sintering) Beluga (heavy-lift shipping) Omicron (tunnel-grid microscopy) Universo (wristwatch hands) Dickson Constant (technical textiles) O.C. Tanner (employee recognition/$400M) Hoeganaes (powder metallurgy supplies) Michael Raynor and Mumtaz Ahmed: THE THREE RULES: How Exceptional Companies Think*: 1. Better before cheaper. 2. Revenue before cost. 3. There are no other rules. (*From a database of over 25,000 companies from hundreds of industries covering 45 years, they uncovered 344 companies that qualified as statistically “exceptional.”) Jeff Colvin, Fortune: “The Economy Is Scary … But Smart Companies Can Dominate”: They manage for VALUE—not for EPS. They get RADICALLY CUSTOMER-CENTRIC. THEY KEEP DEVELOPING HUMAN CAPITAL. “ ‘Commodity’ is a state of mind. ANYTHING can be DRAMATICALLY differentiated.” Bo Burlingham, Small Giants: Companies That Choose to Be Great Instead of Big) P S U S to UP “Rolls-Royce now earns MORE from tasks such as managing clients’ overall procurement strategies and maintaining aerospace engines it sells than it does from making them.” —Economist PS UPS U to “Big Brown’s New Bag: UPS Aims to Be the Traffic Manager for Corporate America” —Headline/BW “UPS wants to take over the sweet spot in the endless loop of goods, information and capital that all the packages [it moves] represent.” —ecompany.com “It’s all about SOLUTIONS. We talk with customers about how to run better, stronger, cheaper supply chains. We have 1,000 engineers who work with customers …” —Bob Stoffel, UPS senior exec UPS = United Problem Solvers* *Service mark “THE GIANT STALKING BIG OIL: Schlumberger How Is Rewriting the Rules of the Energy Game.”: “IPM [INTEGRATED PROJECT MANAGEMENT] strays from [Schlumberger’s] traditional role as a service provider and moves deeper into areas once dominated by the majors.” —BusinessWeek I. LAN Installation Co. II. GEEK SQUAD. (3% local market share) (30% local market share with name change.) III. Acquired by Best Buy. IV. FLAGSHIP OF BEST BUY’s WHOLESALE “SOLUTIONS” STRATEGY MAKEOVER. 1. What are you INCREDIBLY GOOD at? (And what are you ordinary at? BE BRUTAL.) 2. What are you “BEST IN THE WORLD” at? (The “River Pools and Spas Rule”) 3. Is your services package “WILDLY IMAGINATIVE”? (And growing constantly via TGRs, etc.?) 4. What share of profit comes from what share of customers? (The “>100%+ RULE”) (The “Tom Sturgess Rule”) (Prune???) 5. What is your customer/vendor visitation schedule (The “Lou Gerstner/1-year rule”) 6. Is your staff “INSANELY WELL TRAINED”? 18 Seconds “The doctor interrupts after …* *Source: Jerome Groopman, How Doctors Think 18 … 18 … seconds! Suggested Core Value #1: “We are Effective Listeners—we treat Listening EXCELLENCE as the Centerpiece of our Commitment to Respect and Engagement and Profitability and Growth.” “PEOPLE BEFORE STRATEGY” “PEOPLE BEFORE STRATEGY” —Lead article, Harvard Business Review. July-August 2015, by Ram Charan, Dominic Barton, and Dennis Carey “You have to treat your employees like customers.” —Herb Kelleher, upon being asked his “secret to success” Source: Joe Nocera, NYT, “Parting Words of an Airline Pioneer,” on the occasion of Herb Kelleher’s retirement after 37 years at Southwest Airlines (SWA’s pilots union took out a full-page ad in USA Today thanking HK for all he had done) ; across the way in Dallas, American Airlines’ pilots were picketing AA’s Annual Meeting) 1996-2014/Twelve companies have been among the “100 best to work for” in the USA every year, for all 16 years of the list’s existence; along the way, they’ve added/ 341,567 new jobs, or job growth of +172%: Publix Whole Foods Wegmans Nordstrom Cisco Systems Marriott REI Goldman Sachs Four Seasons SAS Institute W.L. Gore TDIndustries Source: Fortune/ “The 100 Best Companies to Work For”/0315.15 “Shyp, a company that picks up, packages, and ships items for its users, made a similar transition to hiring employees for some roles in July. In a blogpost, Shyp CEO Kevin Gibbon explained that the change was "an investment in a longer-term relationship with our couriers, which we believe will ultimately create the best experience for our customers." –Sarah Kessler, Fast Company, 0329.16, “Why A New Generation Of On-Demand Businesses Rejected The Uber Model” (“The idea that an ‘Uber for X’ model could fit any service proved arrogant, especially for customer-service focused startups.”) Training = Investment #1 (The “6/2/3 Rule”/Ask the general & boomer captain.) THE FOUR MOST IMPORTANT WORDS IN ANY ORGANIZATION “WHAT DO YOU THINK?” ARE … Source: courtesy Dave Wheeler, posted at tompeters.com “Employees who don't feel significant rarely make significant contributions.” —Mark Sanborn CEO Doug Conant 30,000 handwritten ‘Thank sent you’ notes to employees during the 10 years he ran Campbell Soup. [approx 10/day] Source: Bloomberg BusinessWeek “It may sound radical, unconventional, and bordering on being a crazy business idea. However— as ridiculous as it sounds—joy is the core belief of our workplace. Joy is the reason my company, Menlo Innovations, a customer software design and development firm in Ann Arbor, exists. It defines what we do and how we do it. It is the single shared belief of our entire team.” Joy, Inc.: How We Built a Workplace People Love —Richard Sheridan, …………..… TGR > TGW Customers describing their service experience as “superior”: 8% Companies describing the service experience they provide as “superior”: 80% Bain & Company survey of 362 companies —Source: , reported in John DiJulius, What's the Secret to Providing a World-class Customer Experience? “May I clean your glasses, sir?” Get ’Em Away From the ATM and Into the Branches: 7X. 7:30A-8:00P. Fri/12A. 7:30AM = 7:15AM. 8:00PM = 8:15PM. (+2,000,000 dog biscuits) Source: Vernon Hill, Fans, Not Customers (the story of Commerce Bank, the folks who revolutionized East Coast retail banking) “Courtesies of a small and trivial character are the ones which strike deepest in the grateful and appreciating heart.” —Henry Clay TGRs L( (on steroids): )BTs ery Big carts = Source: Walmart Las Vegas Casino/2X: slightly curved “When Friedman the right angle of an entrance corridor to one property, he was ‘amazed at the magnitude of change in pedestrian behavior’—the percentage who one-third to nearly two-thirds.” entered increased from —Natasha Dow Schull, Addiction By Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas With a new and forthcoming policy on apologies … Toro, the lawn mower folks, reduced the average cost of settling a claim $115,000 in 1991 to $35,000 in 2008 … and the company hasn’t been to trial in the last15 years! from ………….. WTTMSW WHOEVER TRIES THE MOST STUFF WINS “EXPERIMENT FEARLESSLY” TACTIC #1 Source: BusinessWeek, “Type A Organization Strategies: How to Hit a Moving Target”— “RELENTLESS TRIAL AND ERROR” Source: Wall Street Journal, cornerstone of effective approach to “rebalancing” company portfolios in the face of changing and uncertain global economic conditions Kevin Roberts’ Credo 1. Ready. Fire! Aim. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. If it ain’t broke ... Break it! Hire crazies. Ask dumb questions. Pursue failure. Lead, follow ... or get out of the way! Spread confusion. Ditch your office. Read odd stuff. 10. AVOID MODERATION! “INSANELY GREAT” STEVE JOBS “RADICALLY THRILLING” BMW “ASTONISH ME” SERGEI DIAGHLEV, TO A LEAD DANCER “BUILD SOMETHING GREAT” HIROSHI YAMAUCHI, NINTENDO, TO A SENIOR GAME DESIGNER “MAKE IT IMMORTAL” DAVID OGILVY, TO A COPYWRITER. 1. What are you INCREDIBLY GOOD at? (And what are you ordinary at? BE BRUTAL.) 2. What are you “BEST IN THE WORLD” at? (The “River Pools and Spas Rule”) 3. Is your services package “WILDLY IMAGINATIVE”? (And growing constantly via TGRs, etc.?) 4. What share of profit comes from what share of customers? (The “>100%+ RULE”) (The “Tom Sturgess Rule”) (Prune???) 5. What is your customer/vendor visitation schedule (The “Lou Gerstner/1-year rule”) 6. Is your staff “INSANELY WELL TRAINED”?