Corporate retreat?
Company Ferrari?
Picasso for the boardroom?
If you're like the small-to-medium-sized companies cited in a just-released IDG_Enterprise survey, you'll be spending that amount over the next 12 months on data.
Surprised?
by Kirk Enright, on Sep 22, 2015 8:30:00 AM
Corporate retreat?
Company Ferrari?
Picasso for the boardroom?
If you're like the small-to-medium-sized companies cited in a just-released IDG_Enterprise survey, you'll be spending that amount over the next 12 months on data.
Surprised?
by Kirk Enright, on Sep 17, 2015 8:42:00 AM
by Kirk Enright, on Sep 10, 2015 11:02:06 AM
by Kirk Enright, on Sep 3, 2015 9:30:00 AM
For the longest time, you could pretty much describe any CFO with a word or two from that list.
Not anymore.
Increasingly, CFOs — especially those making a name for themselves — are redefining their role, moving beyond traditional responsibilities like number-crunching and bill-paying to set and control strategy.
Why?
This quote in The Los Angeles Times from Sergio Monsalve, a partner with Norwest Venture Partners, neatly sums it up:
"The world is moving to caring a lot about two things: money and data," Monsalve says. "There's only one person in the company who touches both in an intimate way, and that happens to be the CFO.”
by Kirk Enright, on Sep 2, 2015 6:30:00 AM
Software as a Service (SaaS) is exploding, projected to become a $50.8B market by 2018.
by Kirk Enright, on Aug 28, 2015 8:50:00 AM
By now, everyone's heard the news that Ashley Madison, the "dating site for married people," was hacked and its entire user database was posted online.
Divorce lawyers are scrambling and finger-waivers are noting bold-faced names like reality TV star Josh Duggar, Florida State Attorney Jeff Ashton and YouTube evangelist Sam Radar.
Entrepreneurs?
Most are wondering what Ashley Madison's business model can teach them.
by Kirk Enright, on Aug 27, 2015 8:30:00 AM
by Kirk Enright, on Aug 18, 2015 7:30:00 AM
As you would expect, we believe in learning form data.
To that end, we're testing four landing pages using Twitter and Adwords and sharing the results. (The way we see it, any insights that help you, help us, too, by generating goodwill.)
As you'll see if youre curious, each page covers our core offering — a strategic management & planning tool that shows companies how they're doing compared to peers and peak performers and where they should be doing better — but has a slightly different hook.
Options:
by Kirk Enright, on Aug 13, 2015 11:46:00 AM
Here's why we ask:
Interest in our Strategic Management & Planning tool has grown steadily since we launched, yet there are still plenty of solid prospects who watch a video, read a blog post, or listen to an in-person sales pitch and say "We don't really need that."
First, we have to acknowledge that some degree of skepticism is to be expected because even though we think our tool helps companies improve their growth, value and profitability by becoming more competitive, we're not giving it away free, leaving some to wonder if there's a catch.
(There isn't.)
What's interesting is that when we talk through these objections, we find they almost always trace back to the same thing: an almost gut-level susupicion of what data will make people do.
It's like there's a fear that hardcore performance data is some kind of demonic force, or mutant zombie virus that will instantly seize control of anyone it comes in contact with:
An exaggeration? Yes.
But it makes the point: data doesn't replace common sense.
Or reason.
Or logic.
(Or whatever you call it when you do something you know isn't great, or even sometimes good, but represents a kind of lowest-common-denominator compromise that solves more problems than it creates and makes key stakeholders happy.)
by Kirk Enright, on Aug 4, 2015 6:00:00 AM