Showing posts with label iPod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPod. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Time for a new VC pitch: This is not a Pipe!

The modern version of this painting is "This is not a computer" by Apple.


"This is not a Computer"

For far too long, budding entrepreneurs have been asked to explain their ideas in the context and vocabulary of existing success stories- "YouTube is FlickR for videos", "RFID is barcodes without line of sight", etc. Even though I am the first to admit that it aids in communicating the idea to a novice, but it also hampers original thinking and ideas. You just have to look to Enterprise 2.0 (Web2.0 for the Enterprise) to see how the simplicity of the communication does not always map to a real product or service.

EBay was not simply Sotheby's on the internet. And Yahoo! was not just Yellow Pages on the internet. In order to create revolutionary new products, you sometimes have to think from scratch and not be limited by existing vocabulary or memes.

Several technology giants today are struggling with slowing earnings and revenue growth- they can all do well to learn the lessons of iPod (and Motorola RazR):
  1. Invest in bold new ideas: Releasing yet another incrementally improved version of an OS is not breakthrough innovation.
  2. Be willing to let go what it means to be a "computer company": IBM learned this the hard way in 1980s. You want to be the innovation company, the ideas company, the good customer service company and not necessarily be tied down to a particular product or manner of delivery.
  3. Small teams: Only small teams with a passionate few people can come up with new products and services. As a rule of thumb, any team that cannot fit in your corner office is too big.
  4. Big companies can innovate: It is easier as you grow to be a large company with billions of dollars in revenue to fall into the Innovator's Dilemma- what is right for the most profitable businesses can lead to the wrong long term consequences. Adopt one of many solutions to this well studied problem- new DNA, acquisitions, intrapreneurship, spin-in structures- to foster innovation.
What do you think? Are the large companies doomed to follow rather than lead? Have you or anyone you know tried to innovate within a large company?

Update: Sharad has posted an excellent response to this on his blog at Lack of Innovation... and suggested two alternate paths to innovation.
I believe that a big company can foster innovation one of two ways. It can either emulate an entrepreneurial company much like what Apple has done in recent years. Or it can leverage its size to follow the Toyota and Honda’s Kaizen method of breakthrough innovation. Right now, unfortunately, most IT companies are doing neither.
How do you see it?

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

iBanana released; Chiquita sued by Dole


Bananas at work: Creative Commons license by vidrio


Today, Chiquita's world-famous marketing wizard Steve Jobless anounced a USB capable, Bluetooth enabled iBanana. Dole had long ago trademarked the name iBanana for a Banana tree that is powered by wireless electricity and claimed that eventually convergence of wirless electricity and Bluetooth will create confusion in the minds of customers. Dole is suing Chiquita for the potential infringement. Bob Dole was not available for comment. Shakira and Britney Spears refused to provide exact location of Bob Dole claiming "We have not seen him since the Pepsi Ad"

Meanwhile, the shares of i maker Intel that power i and other vowels crept up even as speculation was rife that the i may be replaced by a consonant v due to pricing constraints. Intel has launched a $200 million ad campaign aimed at thwarting AMD's a that claims to be first amongst vowels. Intel's marketing manager claimed that i was first in Roman numerals signifying the number 1 and then hastened to add "..and also 1,2,3 all are i's- i, ii, iii" Watch out competition!




Gratuitous iPhone shot mandated by Apple mafia for all bloggers.