Monday, April 19, 2004

The enterprise software business has been built on a simple business model - build a new software product and sell it to companies that will pay you for the increased efficiency that the software creates for them.

But its harder and harder to get companies to pay for software today. They’ve got a lot it in place already and they are paying more and more every year to maintain it. Plus they’ve been burned by relying on small companies to deliver for them.

I don’t believe that we have come anywhere close to addressing every problem that software and information technology can solve for businesses. But I am beginning to feel that we may be reaching a saturation point in terms of what enterprises can pay for software and information technology.

What might be the best Business model ???



The Five elements of Life that define everything for me are..
1.Happiness
2.Achievement
3.Significance
4.Legacy
5.Spirit of Non-Chalance.

Happiness - When We know what we want, We should define it clearly. Flowing in the postive energy of happiness ignites creative thoughts. Being happy in the worst times is an art and not every one can learn it easliy.
Achievement - If you think you are defining standards of maximization for achieving success, you are mistaken. Comparing single self with a celebrity's success might make one feel stupid.

Significance - Significance of life is...the mankind has re-defining the upper bounds for the elastic limits of cerebral signifance. More often than not, we feel either we pray to the supreme power or volunarily accept limits.

Legacy- The richest source of data to be mined to identify the patterns. Blogs are a classic example.of Legacy information

Spirit of Non-Chalance- External changes should not bring in a significant change in an individual. Practising the non-chalance would add the Xtra dimension of thought n Xtra perspective.

Sunday, April 11, 2004

False Negatives [Source HBR ]

The history of innovation is full of examples where the eventual best use of a new product or technology was far different from the initial intended purpose of the idea. It is time that companies anticipate the need to manage false negatives in their innovation processes and respond accordingly. False Negatives???
yes . False or Pseudo Negatives...Here we go..

In the late 1980s, scientists for New York City-based drug-maker Pfizer began testing what was then known as compound UK-92,480 for the treatment of angina. Although UK-92,480 seemed promising in the lab and in animal tests, the compound showed little benefit in clinical trials in humans.

Having discovered these negative results, some firms might have thrown in the towel and moved on to other projects. But Pfizer's scientists picked up on—and decided to pursue—what they thought might be an interesting side effect. That side effect led the process of innovation in an entirely new direction—one that eventually resulted in a historic windfall for the drug maker soon after it began marketing UK-92,480 under the brand name Viagra.

Pfizer was able to develop and launch a wildly successful and profitable new drug because it effectively managed the false negatives (ultimately incorrect indications of failure) of the innovation process. Firm scientists were able to see beyond the drug's initial lack of success in treating hypertension, and, in doing so, they rescued UK-92,480 from the scrap heap of failed innovation and put it on the road to becoming one of the biggest drug introductions in history.

Most firms act as if false negatives don't exist because they don't have processes for managing them.
In their own industries, many companies might have missed similar opportunities. Although smart organizations have traditionally taken care to minimize the false positives of innovation, they have much more rarely considered the false negatives. This is because the damage created by false positives is much easier to recognize, and to quantify.

It can be both expensive and embarrassing when a project goes through the entire R&D process and turns out to be a dud, so companies commit often substantial resources to vetting new technologies through processes that aim to affirm their viability and marketability (or lack thereof). In doing so, firms reduce the chance that new products will falter in the marketplace because of false positives in the innovation process.

But the management of false negatives is much more complex. False negatives are not only often difficult to recognize, but there is also no single, sure-fire way to deal with them. Meanwhile, the downside to ignoring them is virtually impossible to predict. Nevertheless, history has shown it can be a costly mistake to miss a false negative, and there are indeed steps that companies can take to mitigate the likelihood of their development.

Spotting them, managing them
By their very nature, false negatives are tricky to spot in advance. Xerox created a number of false negatives out of its Palo Alto Research Center lab. When it didn't see the results it sought, Xerox terminated further funding for projects that we know today as Ethernet (by 3Com) and PostScript (by Adobe).

These projects were evaluated within Xerox and judged not to warrant further internal spending because the company didn't see a market for the technology. (Xerox thought of itself as The Document Company, not a software company.) Xerox lacked the necessary practices for recognizing and coping with false negatives. Of the rejected projects that started inside Xerox's labs, eleven of thirty-five were spun out to the external environment with no Xerox involvement and eventually became very valuable. In fact, their combined market capitalization is more than twice that of Xerox itself!

Many organizations today are in the same situation as Xerox. Effectively, most firms act as if false negatives do not exist because they don't have processes for managing them. A more valuable approach would be to acknowledge the risk of measurement errors in evaluating early-stage projects, and then develop practices for addressing those errors.

So, what processes might cope with false negatives?

Review all canceled projects. An effective starting point is to review all canceled projects a second time, perhaps six to twelve months after they have been terminated. Has anything changed, either within the project itself or within the larger environment, that might cause reconsideration of the earlier choice? This is only a starting point, and by itself is unlikely to be sufficient because this process does nothing to advance learning within the project in the interim.

Other processes seek to create new information after the initial negative decision, which might enable a fuller examination of the latent value within a project.

Expose projects to outsiders. If a project isn't moving ahead inside the company, maybe someone outside the company can think of something to do with it. IBM took an approach along these lines with a particular software project that had been kicking around in its labs for some time but did not seem to have any further potential. Once the project was sidelined, IBM decided to publish it on its AlphaWorks Web site, where outsiders could examine and download various IBM software. Soon thereafter, IBM managers noticed that this particular piece of software code was being downloaded at a rate ten times that of other code posted at the site. To IBM's credit, this surprising level of external interest triggered an internal reconsideration of the software code. We know it today as the XML (Extensible Markup Language) parser, and it is a core feature in IBM's next-generation WebSphere software to manage Internet services.

Seek external licenses. Through external licensing, projects that aren't being used internally might unlock additional revenues on the outside. Procter & Gamble follows this path as part of its “Connect and Develop” strategy. According to P&G policy, any technology that is not being used by one of its businesses within three years of its patent date is automatically made available for license to others—including competitors. This may have an additional side benefit: P&G businesses now know that if they don't use a technology, they might lose it to a competitor instead. This likely forces a more careful consideration of new P&G technologies when they become available.

Spin technologies off. Lucent created its New Ventures Group (NVG) with the mandate to launch new ventures that would commercialize technologies judged not to be valuable internally within Bell Labs. The NVG team looked for promising technologies that weren't getting to market through Lucent's own businesses. When they identified a promising technology, that technology was first offered back to Lucent's businesses. Only those projects that were turned down by the businesses were then pursued as new ventures. As with P&G, Lucent's businesses had to make their decisions more carefully, because if they didn't choose to use a technology, they might lose it to a new venture instead.

NVG initiated thirty-five ventures out of Bell Labs from 1996 through 2001. Many of these went out of business; a few became valuable; and three of them were later reacquired by Lucent, just two or three years after the Lucent business had chosen not to use the technology internally.

How did Lucent businesses miss the value of these technologies? It was not an error in judgment by the businesses, in my view. Instead, it was a measurement error, resulting from the inevitable uncertainties of assessing early-stage technologies.

Nevertheless, having three out of thirty-five projects turn out to be “positives” is not a bad track record for Lucent's businesses. If Lucent had not had NVG as part of its process, though, the information created by these ventures once they got started would never have emerged. These projects might have remained buried within Bell Labs indefinitely.


Seek external VC partners. Venture capitalists offer another interesting option for ideas that have been rejected internally. VCs are adept at crafting business models for emerging technologies, and they can experiment with nascent technologies in emerging markets far more effectively than can most large organizations. This approach also offers several options for the company where the idea originated: It can participate as an investor, as a customer, as a supplier, or simply as an interested bystander. If and when some real value has been created, then the company can potentially step in by licensing the technology or acquiring the new venture company.

If you can't predict, learn how to react
When commercializing a new technology requires the resolution of both technical and market uncertainty, one cannot expect to be able to anticipate the best path forward from the very beginning. You simply don't know all the possibilities in advance. Not only is it unknown, it is unknowable.

No amount of planning and research can reveal the facts because they simply don't exist yet. And measurement errors are inescapable in such situations. Rather than ignoring them, companies should initiate processes to cope with these errors. This increases their chances of finding a highly valued use for the technology.

The history of innovation is full of examples where the eventual best use of a new product or technology was far different from the initial intended purpose of the idea. It is time that companies anticipate the need to manage false negatives in their innovation processes and respond accordingly
Business Oppurtunities
India's mobile-using population is now @ 31.4 million (with the new population of 1.43 Millions of new users joining the bandwagon in Feb-2004).The mobile usage ranges across the hierarchies of the Social Pyramid. The base of the pyramid is exponentially adding the mobile users. The base is formed by the poor people of India. Intrestingly the tech revolution is being embraced by the populi( a newly coined word for kinds of population) of the pyramid's base. In Kerala, the women are using the PCs for the Fish Shoal information (Accessing the Satelite images and reports) and are directing their husbands where to fish. The husbands are using the real-time information and after getting the big-catch, are using the mobile phones to get the best price markets and heading towards them to make good money.

With Globalization,shrinking the world from Size-small to Size-tiny, the tech-revolution is razing like a wild fire. The business oppurtunities of Mobiile markets are good bet to invest in. I strongly feel, the fortune lies at the bottom of the Pyramid.There is a massive growth in the density at the bottom of the pyramid .Investing in business for this Strata would have a strong return on Investment.

Saturday, April 10, 2004

e-Business and SoA

I started writing a Paper on Service Oriented Architecture and Realities of it. Being an e-Business domain professional, no matter which architecture or technology I talk about, my li'l brain always visualises the applications from the e-Domains.My Paper is not proceeding any further as I am being haunted by the question that Most of the B2B applications are Event Driven rather than Service Oriented. So there is a power shift in my zooming ahead and as usual I am reflecting my thoughts on my blog jus to make sure I dont miss my piece of cerebrum.

Recognizing that most B2B interactions are more event-driven than service-oriented because they have traditionally been — and will continue to be — one-way interactions between applications with separate Logical Units of Work. Event-driven architecture and service-oriented architecture have many similarities. Both support distributed applications that go beyond conventional architectures, both use a modular design based on reusable business components, and both may be enabled through Web services. Architects and developers must understand the business requirements and process models to determine whether SOA, EDA or some combination of them is right for each aspect of each new business process. This is where I am right now....Thinking n thinking...........

Business Opportunities

India's mobile-using population is now @ 31.4 million (with the new population of 1.43 Millions of new users joining the bandwagon in Feb-2004).The mobile usage ranges across the hierarchies of the Social Pyramid. The base of the pyramid is exponentially adding the mobile users. The base is formed by the poor people of India. Intrestingly the tech revolution is being embraced by the populi( a newly coined word for kinds of population) of the pyramid's base. In Kerala, the women are using the PCs for the Fish Shoal information (Accessing the Satelite images and reports) and are directing their husbands where to fish. The husbands are using the real-time information and after getting the big-catch, are using the mobile phones to get the best price markets and heading towards them to make good money.

With Globalization,shrinking the world from Size-small to Size-tiny, the tech-revolution is razing like a wild fire. The business oppurtunities of Mobiile markets are good bet to invest in. I strongly feel, the fortune lies at the bottom of the Pyramid.There is a massive growth in the density at the bottom of the pyramid .Investing in business for this Strata would have a strong return on Investment.

Wednesday, April 07, 2004

I was having a talk about the new domains Google(My extension of Memory) is spreading into with a frnd of mine. It was exciting to know the new ventures google is getting into....With MS in the race, we need to wait n watch who mooves the cheese ...I am trying to be more disciplined as a software engineer(the most commonly abused/misused word). Going through the PPP work shop,following the Personal software Process, Lemme jot what ever the grey matter(My hair started turning grey (Launchpad(My Alterego says Ah! Nothing new buddy, Same old wine of class 6th))) says the following stuff on Google

Will Google's new free e-mail system, Gmail, be just the first of many things we'll see in a new Google Desktop? If so, Microsoft could have a lot more to worry about than just Web search.

Today, plenty of people download mail to desktop-based e-mail programs. But Google might convince some of them to take up its e-mail storage offer.

After all, even if you do have a great way to search through desktop-based e-mail, you might like the idea that all your mail is backed up, stored offsite, and easily searchable from anywhere.

Now, take things a step further. Imagine next year Google provides users with 5, 10, or more gigabytes storage space for personal files.

Got a ton of text documents, spreadsheets, and other material? Push it to us, Google would say. We'll store it, index it, and make it easy to retrieve what you want. Google already indexes this type of material across the Web and has done so for ages.

As broadband expands, such an idea becomes increasingly more feasible. With it, the notion that Microsoft might trump Google with desktop lock-in becomes less of an issue.


Again my regulatr pattern of analyzing the business oppurtunity in the fore said stuff..
There is an interesting opportunity for Indian broadband companies - think like Google on the platform side, and combine with thin clients (akin to handsets) for users to build an end-to-end alternate computing platform the the mass market (today's non-users) in India. There are 40 million home users waiting and growing...
Time to tap my thinking into practical implementation plans !!
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The Devil's workshop back at the PPP assignment and will jot the crazy thoughts next time it strikes a chord..