Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Buffett to Invest $5 Billion in Goldman

Has Warren Buffett just called the bottom of the market?  His stunning $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs and recent reports that he may be buying more shares of Wells Fargo at a time the financial markets are in turmoil suggests that he has.  It reflects "one of the biggest expressions of confidence in the financial system since the credit crisis intensified early this month." according to the Wall Street Journal.  


Berkshire Hathaway's $5 billion investment in Goldman may put the firm on a sounder footing, but Warren Buffett once again got a sweet deal.   Characteristically, Mr. Buffett's investment gives him an attractive income stream, downside protection and the strong chance of big gains.

Are you keeping up with market changes and leading your management team to innovate?  Click here to learn more about improving innovation in your company.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Innovation is a Team Sport

Indifference, hostility, and isolation are among the major obstacles to a healthy innovation environment

BusinessWeek said it well. "In most companies, just about all the cards are stacked against the nurturing of innovation, especially the kinds of new ideas and disruptive innovations that generally lead to major changes in the marketplace and within the business.

Following are some of the behaviors observed in companies throughout the years that have convinced us how difficult it is to create an environment in which innovation can flourish.

Indifference

While just about every CEO and senior executive of a company pays lip service to innovation, many do not really mean it. They mouth the words—it would be politically incorrect not to embrace innovation—but they do little beyond that.

That's not because they are not good, smart, and highly competent people. It's just that innovation is not a part of their DNA. The majority of executives make it to top positions by being very good operational managers: meeting sales objectives, improving products and services to keep up with competitors, supporting existing customers and acquiring new ones, managing mergers and acquisitions, achieving the required financial results quarter after quarter, and so on. These management jobs are very tough and getting tougher, given our rapidly changing, fiercely competitive, global business environment. Being a good manager takes very hard work, attention to detail, and organizational discipline.

But as executives rise up in the organization, other skills become increasingly important. They need to transition from being a manager to being a leader.

Management is about business results and processes. Leadership is about people. The key quality you need in good leadership is passion—the urgency to attack and solve the complex problems that all organizations face. To do so, you need to be surrounded by highly talented people, and you need to find a way to transmit your passion to them, so they will buy into your vision of the future, perform at the highest possible levels, and come up with innovative solutions to the challenges of achieving the vision.

When skies are blue, a company might be able to cruise along with top managers who are indifferent leaders. Such managers are typically executing tactical, incremental strategies where the critical ingredients are good, disciplined management as well as operational excellence. But once the skies begin to darken, as they inevitably do, such managers will get into deep trouble, and often end up taking a business down with them. Their most talented innovators and strategists, those whose skills are now badly needed to help set the business on the proper course, have either long departed or become so disenchanted that they have nothing left to give.

Hostility

In general, managers who do not actively encourage new ideas and innovations in their organizations do so because of indifference. They will typically listen politely to your new idea, provide some encouragement, and offer good advice. If they are being honest, they will tell you they barely have the time, energy, and budget to help much beyond a pat on the back now and then.

But some managers go beyond indifference. Their initial reaction to any new idea is negative, if not downright hostile. This is particularly true if the idea comes from someone outside their own organization.

Some of them also exhibit characteristics that many of us would associate with being a bully. Typically, the corporate bullies I have met have achieved their high management positions because, despite their poor interpersonal skills, they are very good at other parts of the job. Sometimes, they are excellent innovators themselves, but given their autocratic tendencies, innovation for them is a one-man or one-woman show. They tend to be poor team players: Collaborative innovation is not for them.

Such hostile behavior is hugely detrimental to a healthy innovation environment. People championing new ideas, especially if they are potentially disruptive new ideas, are going against the grain of what the business is currently doing. Rejection is painful, especially coming from people in positions of authority. Senior managers can nurture those new ideas through positive words and actions, or they can stop them on their tracks by being overly negative and combative.

Isolation

I strongly believe innovation is a team sport. The 2004 National Innovation Initiative report observed that innovation "is multidisciplinary and technologically complex. It arises from the intersections of different fields or spheres of activity." That is why it often takes a group of people who are not only highly talented but who bring together diverse skills and points of view in order to successfully tackle the kinds of complex problems we face in the 21st century.

But perhaps even more important, a collaborative approach to innovation helps provide the energy and emotional support that new ideas need in their very early stages. New ideas are almost always rough and ill-formed at first. In my experience, nothing works better than bouncing ideas off other, supportive people. This back-and-forth dialog is crucial in helping to shape the idea into something more concrete, understandable, and actionable. Then it is more ready to face the tougher challenges and criticisms from line management and others in the organization.

That is why isolating people in organizational silos is one of the biggest obstacles to innovation. Companies that are serious about innovation do everything possible to break down silos and encourage communication and collaboration across the organization and beyond.

Fostering innovation is very hard, especially if the innovation is disruptive in nature. A spirit of innovation and collaboration does not come naturally to an organization. For such a spirit to take hold, it must become an integral part of the company's culture. None of this is easy, but it is what a company must do if it truly wants to create a healthy environment in which innovation can flourish.

Inspired by BusinessWeek and Irving Wladawsky-Berger, who retired from IBM last year after a 37-year career at the company. He is presently working on technology and innovation with IBM and Citigroup, and is a visiting professor at MIT and Imperial College.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

U.S. May Consider Setting Up Agency to Buy Bad Debt

House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass) Says U.S. May Consider Setting Up Agency to Buy Bad Debt Bloomberg (09/16/08); Rowley, James

Some investors, including Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of Newport Beach, California-based
Pacific Investment Management Co., are calling for the government to play a bigger role in resolving the credit crunch. Worldwide, financial institutions have reported more than $500 billion in losses and writedowns stemming from the collapse of the subprime-mortgage market.

House Republican leader
John Boehner today said creating an agency to buy distressed debt is ``probably not the answer.'' According to House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., the nation's ongoing financial woes are likely to force Congress and the White House to seriously consider whether the federal government should purchase distressed debt and mortgages.

The lawmaker says the next step may be to create an agency like the Resolution Trust Corp., which took over the assets of failed savings and loan associations nearly 20 years ago, to get financial markets "out of the box." Frank insists that such an intervention would occur "only if it's coupled with tough regulation in the future" and only if there is "a realization that the market not only got into this fix but can't get itself out." Around the globe, financial institutions have recorded more than $500 billion in losses and write downs resulting from the collapse of the subprime-mortgage market.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aem9rlTuEM9g&refer=us

As the markets change, you need to respond to the changing needs of customers. Does your team innovate to take creativity from the meeting room to the marketplace? click here.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Warren Buffett on Fannie, Freddie, the Economy & Politics

To learn how you can keep pace with the markets using innovation and creativity, click here.



As the markets change, you need to respond to the changing needs of customers. Does your team innovate to take creativity from the meeting room to the marketplace? click here.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Social Media entering the "Castles of Corporate America"

My friend Shel Israel's points about Social Media (SM): It isn't about whether Twitter or Facebook succeeds, it is about embracing SM and using it and the warehouse of tools (and in my opionion the real-time data that it generates). SM tools can be mashed together in new combinations to solve problems and facilitate global conversations. SM is now beginning to make its way into "...the castles of Corporate America..." The days of a manager defining a single way on every desktop to get things done is being challenged by the mix of these tools and the beneficial collaboration they create, sometimes in very unexpected ways. SM will be adopted or companies will be left behind in the innovation race, just as societies that adopted the tools in the Iron Age often experienced coincident changes such as differing agricultural practices, religious beliefs and artistic styles.

Case in point: One of our clients was attempting to retire a number of 'legacy' computer systems and have just one. This is ambitious, risky, and most importantly does not acknowledge the inherent heterogeneous nature of globally diversified companies. Federated systems combined with ways of enabling corporate conversations using SM will be a better approach, combined with data mash up tools. The company expects improved adaptability, innovation, and better corporate conversations.

See an excerpt of Shel's video blog below.




To learn how you can build more innovation into your company using Social Media and leadership strategies, click here.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Innovation from Apple Keeps Competitors on their Toes before Holidays

Apple announced new, innovative improvements to iTunes and iPod Nano and iPod Classic just in time for the holiday season. The innovations are designed to re-ignite growth in this category. New software for the iPod touch has been announced as well as a new price point. New industrial design includes new features (8) which includes "genious," a way to intelligently create playlists based on discovery of songs in your iTunes library.

Click below on the video for an update.



For more information on how to increase innovation and creativity in your company, click here.

What Impact on Your Business does this suggest: Higher Intelligence Associated with Delayed Gratification

Yale University research reports that Most people prefer to have their rewards immediately, rather than have to wait for them, but would what if the rewards of the future are greater than the rewards available now - would you be prepared to wait? What if you were offered £20 now, or you could wait and have £100 in six months time - what would you choose? Being able wait for more valuable rewards is associated with higher intelligence, and now researchers believe they have found a region of the brain that is involved in both intelligence and what psychologists call "delay discounting" - the inability to resist the temptation of a smaller reward in lieu of recieving a larger reward at a later date. Discounting future rewards too much is a form of impulsivity, and an important way in which we can neglect to exert self-control.

Previous research suggests that higher intelligence is related to better self-control, but the reasons for this link are unknown. Psychologists Noah A. Shamosh and Jeremy R. Gray, from Yale University, and their colleagues, were interested in testing the idea that certain brain regions supporting short-term memory play a critical role in this relationship.

The results show that participants with the greatest activation in the brain region known as the anterior prefrontal cortex also scored the highest on intelligence tests and exhibited the best self-control during the financial reward test. This was the only brain region to show this relation. The results appear in the September issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

How to Improve Creativity & Innovation

True Innovation is about using creativity to bring new ideas to market to create value for companies and customers. How do companies continue to build value in a market where budgets and headcount may be shrinking? No World Borders presents a webinar on Innovation and Portfolio Management - Deciding what to cut and what to Keep. Innovative Leader book image

To View webinar materials, click a link:


Limited Time Booking Opportunity


Paul Sloane, a published author in innovation will be available for Leadership Strategy coaching sessions and Innovation Workshops on October 8th and 10th. Paul has advised Accenture, American Express, ARM, British Telecom, EADS, London Stock Exchange, Lloyds of London, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Orange, Price Waterhouse Coopers, Reckitt Benckiser, and Shell.

Please click the button below to reserve before bookings are closed!

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