Email etiquette (and annoying phrases people write in work emails)
Hope you’re well. Just looping you in to keep you informed of the latest news around some annoying email cliches. Per our last conversation, do confirm receipt of this message. Thanks in advance. Cheers!
If those starting sentences sound a little too familiar, it’s because we tried to pack as much typical email jargon that we could, and admittedly, we’re guilty of using most of this ourselves.
New research commissioned by Perkbox Insights has revealed that although we are in 2020, email is far from dead, and as a result, we continue to use clichés such as ‘just looping in…’ and ‘per my last email’ to get our point across.
The study of 1,928 employed adults revealed that the following are the 10 most annoying email clichés:
- ‘Just looping in…’ – 37%
- ‘As per my last email’ – 33%
- ‘Any updates on this?’ – 24%
- ‘Just checking in’ – 19%
- ‘Confirming receipt’ / ‘confirming that I have received this’ 16%
- ‘Per our conversation’ – 15%
- ‘Please advice’ – 8%
- ‘Thanks in advance’ – 7%
- ‘Hope you’re well’ – 6%
Evidently, we spend a lot of time checking and responding to emails. Per this study, most adults state that they spend between one-two hours of their workday checking and sending emails, 16% spend between two-three hours, while a shocking 15% spend more than five hours.
Not only do respondents check their inboxes frequently in work, but almost a third check their emails outside of work ‘every few hours’ while one in 10 also check their emails every hour.
All this time spent emailing means that many of us have clear ideas on how it should be done, for example, the majority think a ‘Hi’ is the best way to start an email.
As such, the five best greetings for work emails are listed as:
- ‘Hi’ – 49%
- ‘Good morning / afternoon’ – 48%
- ‘Hello’ – 21%
- Dear – 20%
- Happy [insert day]! eg Happy Friday! – 7%
Yet, there are many inbox greetings that don’t get such a warm welcome, the most disliked way to start an email being ‘To whom it may concern’.
Ranked below are the five worst greetings for work emails:
- No greeting – 53%
- To whom it may concern – 37%
- Hey – 28%
- Happy [Insert day]! Eg Happy Friday – 23% (this option appears on both the liked and disliked lists)
- Greetings – 22%
Now that you’ve started the email, how do you usually end it?
Top 5 best email sign-offs ranked:
- Kind regards – 69%
- ‘Thanks’ or ‘thanks again’ – 46%
- Regards – 31%
- Thanks in advance – 21%
- Best wishes – 20%
Top 10 worst email sign-offs ranked:
- Love – 57%
- No sign off – 44%
- Warmly – 31%
- Cheers – 26%
- Yours truly – 24%
- Yours faithfully – 18%
- Talk soon – 14%
- Sincerely – 12%
- Best – 12%
- All the best – 9%
Finally, looking at general email etiquette, many don’ts become apparent. In first place of things to avoid doing within a work email is ‘using capital letters for words or whole sentences’ (67%). This is followed by ‘using kisses, or ‘x’s’ (65%) and CCing people who don’t need to be involved’ (63%).
The biggest email don’ts:
- Using capital letters for whole words or sentences – 67%
- Using kisses or ‘x’ – 65%
- CCing people who don’t need to be involved – 63%
- Using slang, eg ‘OMG’ – 53%
- Using too many exclamation marks – 52%
- Sending an email without proofreading – 50%
- Sending very long emails – 29%
- Using emojis – 29%
- Not having an email signature – 23%
- Double emailing – 22%
- Using smiley faces – 22%
- Using coloured fonts – 21%
This article first appeared on Human Resources Online
Take control of vocal delivery: Be yourself and be heard
How much time do you spend thinking about your voice or how you come across as you speak? Unless you’re a professional speaker, your answer is probably zero. We think a lot about what we say and very little about how we say it.
Nevertheless, whether you’re a main stage speaker at an industry event, presenting a new idea at a quarterly board meeting or speaking at an all-hands meeting, vocal delivery is crucial for getting your message across.
In fact, I would venture to say vocal expression is as important as getting the content right. No matter how engaging your content, if you present it in a monotone — like Charlie Brown’s teacher — what you’re saying will be effectively gibberish.
While many ignore vocal delivery, the other extreme is to become hyperfocused on it, which can make you seem disingenuous or as if you’re overacting. What you want is to avoid both extremes and find that sweet spot.
3 tips for nailing vocal delivery
First, what makes vocal delivery effective? In general, vocal delivery is all about injecting variety into your speech, both to grab the attention of your audience and to convey meaning. The key is to add variety in a way that feels comfortable and naturally highlights your passion for the topic.
Here are three simple tips for nailing vocal delivery:
1. Speak conversationally
We all naturally vary the pace and animation of our speech when we’re having an ordinary, everyday conversation. Recall the last time you struck up a conversation with a friend. Perhaps you had good news to share. You expressed so much in your delivery that your friend was instantly aware of your excitement. If you can learn to look at every speaking opportunity as a conversation, strong vocal delivery will come more easily.
2. Think the thought
I like to call this the superpower that will allow you to be yourself whether you’re speaking in front of three, 300 or 3,000 people. Thinking the thought means staying in the moment. Instead of sounding like you’re rattling off some talking points or a script you’ve memorized, when you’re thinking the thought, you’re fully present with what you are saying.
To practice this, all you have to do is think about what you are saying as you say it. It’s that simple. If you stay present, in the moment, you will slow your pace and tune. Being in the moment also means you can adjust what you’re saying if you sense your audience drifting or feeling lost. Remember: When you stay connected to your content, your audience will stay connected as well.
3. Lean into your personality
This third tip is important to avoid the pitfalls of being hyperfocused on delivery. Often leaders feel they can’t be themselves when they’re speaking. But infusing your personality into the content of your speech or presentation will increase comprehension and add emotion.
When you allow the variety to come from your passion, your curiosity and your commitment to the topic, you will nail vocal delivery. Again, speak conversationally and a lot of what you need to be effective will fall into place with ease.
The 5 P’s of vocal delivery
To dig a bit deeper into what vocal expressiveness looks like, you can inject variety using four qualities in particular: power, pace, pitch and pause. I’ve previously discussed the 4 P’s but here’s a summary of the five qualities I now consider to be attention worthy.
The foundation of strong vocal delivery is the 5 P’s:
- Power: how loud or soft (including a whisper) you speak
- Pace: how fast or slowly you speak
- Pitch: how you use your voice to communicate emotion
- Pause: how you use a quiet moment either for emphasis or to allow listeners to absorb what you are saying
- Prosody: how you apply intonation, tone, stress and rhythm to your message (think vocal inflection)
As you prepare for your next speaking opportunity (which could even be the meeting you’re leading after lunch today), consider the 5 P’s. If you’re using a script, outline or any other type of written notes, feel free to mark it up. That’s right, you’re allowed to use a cheat sheet for this! Use colored markers, underline, write exclamation points, write “pause” or “SLOWDOWN” — whatever markings make sense for you.
Turning your natural delivery into an asset
I want to leave you with a story to illustrate the points above. I recently worked with a seasoned speaker, Susan, to prepare for a big event. Susan projects strength, confidence and poise. She is the kind of person you meet and immediately recognize as someone who really knows her stuff. She doesn’t have to prove it; you just know it.
As senior vice president and corporate general counsel, Susan was no stranger to speaking to an audience. But speaking in front of 3,000 stakeholders, on a stage the size you would see on Broadway, with three screens serving as teleprompters and images being projected on two screens the size of jumbotrons – that was a whole new level for her. Yup, the stakes were high!
Several weeks prior to the event, we were rehearsing and realized one big thing was going to prevent her from connecting with the audience. You guessed it: vocal delivery. Susan was speaking at the speed cars race around the track during the Indy 500.
Naturally, we agreed she should slowdown. When she did, however, another aspect of her delivery changed, too. When her pace slowed, her volume also decreased. Who would have guessed these two things (pace and power) were connected? Well, Susan had a good sense of humor, and we both howled with laughter when we discovered this connection!
The takeaway here: As you work to lean into turning your natural delivery from a liability to an asset, be aware of the unintended consequences of the adjustments you make. If you’re like Susan and tend to speak fast, it will take concentration to slow down. Concentrating on your pace could then cause you to lose focus on another aspect of your delivery, power or pitch, for instance, unless you are watching out for it.
These tips and tricks should help you nail your vocal delivery the next time you give a high stakes presentation. But why not start practicing today?
Here’s my challenge to you: Consider the 5 P’s throughout your day whenever you have a conversation. Whether talking to your colleagues, customers, or the barista at your favorite coffee shop, be aware of your power, pace, pitch, pauses and prosody. Awareness is the first step to finding that sweet spot and nailing your vocal delivery.
This article first appeared on SmartBrief
China GDP grows 6.1% in 2019, slowest rate in 29 years
Sliding birthrate, tariffs and weak manufacturing investment remain a drag.
China’s gross domestic product grew at the slowest pace in 29 years in 2019, as weaker exports, investment and consumer spending weighed on the economy.
The 6.1% expansion marked a slowdown from the 6.6% growth seen the previous year, the National Bureau of Statistics said Friday. Growth in the last quarter of 2019 equaled the 6.0% logged in the July-September period.
The bureau said China will remain vigilant of mounting downward pressure from a global economic slowdown and domestic structural issues. The downward trend will not be helped by a sliding birthrate, rising unemployment and problems in the banking sector.
The 0.5 percentage point decline in the growth rate from the previous year is the biggest since a 1.7 point year-on-year slowdown in 2012. The rate of growth in 2019 was lower than the median 6.2% expansion forecast by economists surveyed by Nikkei, but within the 6% to 6.5% range set by the government.
“Economic activity picked up last month, helping to avert a further slowdown last quarter,” Julian Evans-Pritchard and Martin Rasmussen wrote in an emailed note. “External headwinds should ease further in the coming quarters thanks to the ‘Phase One’ trade deal and a recovery in global growth. But we think this will be offset by a renewed slowdown in domestic demand, triggering further monetary easing.”
Total retail sales of consumer goods including e-commerce slowed to 8%, from 9% in 2018, while fixed-asset investment including infrastructure and factory construction decreased to 5.4% from 5.9%.
Final quarter growth holding steady reflects the effect of fiscal stimulus, and respite from the trade war cease fire, said Zhu Chaoping of J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
China also unveiled data on Friday showing the nation’s population growth rate (births minus deaths) falling to 3.34 per thousand in 2019 — the lowest since 1961, and down from 3.81 the previous year. The decline in the fertility rate in an aging society is another headwind for economic growth.
The moderation in full-year growth reflected lower demand for Chinese goods, which has been dampened by the trade war with the U.S., and weaker global electronics orders, according to Rajiv Biswas, Asia chief economist at IHS Markit.
Exports for the year totaled $2.498 trillion, up 0.5% — much slower growth than in 2018, largely due to a drop in shipments to the U.S.
Demand for key Chinese exports such as cellphones and PCs was sluggish. Exports of products subject to higher U.S. tariffs, such as furniture and textiles, also slumped
Despite a “phase-one” deal reached between Beijing and Washington on Wednesday, which will see the U.S. lower tariffs on $120 billion of Chinese goods in return for Beijing buying $40 billion worth of American farm goods, economists remained downbeat on China’s growth outlook this year.
“While businesses and investors can afford to breath a sign of relief, after a difficult 2019, we still see risks to the China outlook as mainly weighted to the downside, given the fragile nature of the trade truce and the risks that still stalk China’s financial markets,” according to Tom Rafferty at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
More than 20 economists surveyed by Nikkei forecast a median 5.9% expansion in 2020, with many expressing concern about local governments’ worsening fiscal positions and lackluster manufacturing investment.
“The pace of growth is expected to edge lower to below 6%, as ongoing structural reforms in the Chinese economy and the continued impact of [the] remaining U.S. tariffs of 25% on $250 billion of Chinese products remain a slight drag on the growth outlook,” said Biswas.
More fiscal stimulus could be on the way, as the government said during a high-level economic work meeting last month that it will prioritize “stability” to mitigate rising domestic risks.
“Consumer spending has yet to pick up the baton from investment as an engine of growth,” said Diana Choyleva, chief economist at Enodo Economics.
But the truce in the trade war with Washington may bring some temporary relief for business confidence, according to Fitch Ratings, which on Friday raised its outlook for GDP growth in 2020 to 5.9%, up 0.2 percentage points.
This article first appeared on Nikkei Asian Review
5 Steps to Nurturing the Client-Agency Relationship
One of the key ingredients to an internet marketing campaign’s success is a healthy client-agency relationship, and that relationship needs attention just like any other.
If you’re not getting the most out of your agency, or if you’re an agency confused by the needs of your clients, these tips for communication should help direct you back to success.
1. Set Clear Expectations
What is your purpose for choosing this partnership? What do you want to accomplish? In a romantic relationship, if your partner wants a casual fling and you want commitment, chances are it isn’t going to last. Similarly, a client shouldn’t choose to work with an agency that won’t be committed to their goals and invested in learning their brand. Know how you will benefit from each other, and set clear, actionable goals that the two of you can agree to work toward hand in hand.
What actions do you expect from each other? In meetings together or in your own places of business, each of you may have different expectations of how the other should interact with you. Share the times and ways you prefer to be contacted, if you’re particular, and any marketing “pet peeves.” These are important things to discuss with each other from the onset of the relationship.
2. Have Frequent Contact
Be available. Any relationship needs to be nurtured through contact, or it slowly fizzles out. At Imagebox, our employees have set hours in the office every weekday to make sure we are available to address any client concerns. Even if communication doesn’t have to happen daily, it is still beneficial to touch base at least bi-weekly or monthly. Having open lines of communication is key to a successful relationship.
Make sure everyone is happy and stays happy. This one is more on the agency, but clients aren’t exempt. Check to make sure that you as an agency are meeting expectations. You want to treat each client so they think they are your only client. On the other hand, clients should be aware that they are not the only client and try to be respectful of the agency’s time.
3. Educate Each Other
Clients don’t necessarily know every function of an agency. It’s the agency’s job to share their expertise and gain the trust of the client through transparent communication and explanations of processes along the way (without using industry jargon). Tell the client what’s working and why, but also tell them what’s not working and be honest about what you’ll need to do to improve it.
Agencies will never know your business as well as you do. Take time to educate your agency about your industry, your audience and your current brand so they can use the information to YOUR advantage. Client participation makes a huge impact on the quality of campaign materials produced, so get involved.
4. Listen
Sometimes you say the same thing, in different ways. If you take time to follow the first three steps, hopefully you’re avoiding most misunderstandings. But they still happen. Agencies should start listening to their clients so they can effectively measure their KPIs, not just the things they did that month.
Understand, then be understood. Instead of trying to get your point across, listen carefully and try to understand the other person. Habit 5 in the book “7 Habits of Highly Successful People,” by Stephen R. Covey, is to seek first to understand, then to be understood. When you listen before you respond, you will then be able to better address the actual needs of your client or agency.
5. Give Feedback
Give things a chance to improve. Verbal affirmation is essential as you progress in any relationship. Let your agency know if they’re meeting expectations or if you need more from them. Maybe something can be done to improve things before you cancel your account, and your relationship could be stronger than ever. If not, that’s when you know it’s time to move on.
In turn, agencies should tell clients what they need improved. Suggesting more client involvement is never a bad idea, especially when you frame it to highlight the benefit that would have on their campaign.
The overarching theme through all of these points is communication. Make a point to have a substantive conversation every time you talk to each other, and client-agency relationships as well as marketing campaigns should flourish!
This article first appeared on ImageBox
10 Things Successful Leaders Never Tolerate
Successful leadership is the product of several factors. Skill and education play a part, but one of the most important hallmarks of great leaders is the standards they uphold.
That means building good habits of action and thought, and drawing a firm line at things that are unacceptable. It’s about what they do, but it’s also about what they’ll never take part in or allow in their team.
Here are some top examples:
1. Inertia. The reality of leadership is this that yesterday’s results become today’s status quo. Leaders need to constantly be moving forward and prepared to seize opportunities. Inaction is incompatible with strong leadership.
2. Poor communication. The best leaders put communication at the heart of their leadership. Their communication is timely, clear, and appropriate, and they expect the same of those around them—because communication is a two-way street.
3. Mediocrity. Successful leaders are ordinary people who aspire to the extraordinary. They’re constantly looking to break through expectations—their own and other people’s—and they’re never interested in hearing “good enough.”
4. Ambivalence. Successful leaders don’t have the time or patience for indecision. They understand that to achieve success, you must put aside fear and doubt, pick a course and stick to it. Their decisions are grounded in knowledge and strategic thought, but they don’t waffle or create subcommittees to examine every detail first.
5. Toxic relationships. Successful leaders don’t waste their valuable time and energy on negative relationships. They set boundaries, distance themselves from negativity and redirect their focus firmly on the positive. Positivity is fuel for progress.
6. Dishonesty. Successful leaders understand that dishonesty destroys reputations and, ultimately, success. If you can’t be counted on to be honest, what kind of leader are you?
7. Disrespect. Successful leaders treat every person they encounter with respect. They earn respect, in part, because of their willingness to show respect to others, and they don’t allow anyone around them to be treated disrespectfully or to be disrespectful.
8. Fear. Leaders are human, and no one is without fear. But the best leaders understand that to succeed, they must tackle their fears and move through them to succeed. They feel their fear and keep going.
9. Negativity. Successful leaders avoid negativity because they know it can only hold them back. Nothing good comes from being negative; negativity only breeds more negativity.
10. Lack of integrity. Successful leaders understand the importance of integrity. Anyone around them who lacks integrity compromises their work, their team and their leadership. They lead with character in everything they do, and they expect others to do the same.
There are many more things successful leaders don’t tolerate—this list is just a few of the most important. Let it remind you to keep your tolerance low when it comes to compromising who you are and who you can become.
Lead from within: To build a successful career and life as a leader, know where you draw the line on anything that can harm your leadership and your team.
This article first appeared on Lolly Daskal
Tips for Taming Terrible Teammates
Some co-workers seem to take pleasure in seething, shouting or sharing snide comments. You might think their main goal is to make teamwork unpleasant and difficult, but the truth is that they may not mean much of anything by their bad behavior.
Use these tips to identify and tame four troublesome types:
Mr Angry.
He knows that he’s right, so he’s never willing to back down. Teammates hesitate to confront him, because he usually bites off dissenters’ heads. That leads to resentment and frustration. Strategy: Listen to his complaints and then assure him of your support. Look for quick, practical ways to use some of Mr. Angry’s energy to improve things.
Ms. Resentful.
Her behavior may be less showy than Mr. Angry’s, but it is just as deadly. Teammates will quickly tire of her “I know better” comments and her sense of superiority. Strategy: Share ideas with her before you act. If you offer her a chance to provide input, she may feel better supported and valued, and she is more likely to feel ownership of the solution.
Mr. Apathy.
He acts as if nothing he does makes a difference, so teammates hesitate to involve him. That leads to his being ignored and excluded, which in turn damages his morale and limits his productivity. Strategy: Encourage involvement by giving small, achievable assignments. Explain how vital each task is to the team’s larger goals. Remember that apathy comes from within, so encourage him to build a sense of personal pride based on realistic progress.
Ms. Useless.
You want to write her off as a lost cause, but you should remember that everyone can add something to your team. The trick is helping each member see her own personal value and strengths. Strategy: Rotate work assignments to aid her in finding a strength or area of interest. Offer frequent positive—but realistic—feedback that encourages her to do more next time.
This article first appeared here
Do you know where your budget is?
Businesses that can’t see where their resources are going are flying blind. To respond to the unexpected, managers need new capabilities that show where they are and how much room they have to maneuver.
What if, this afternoon, a major crisis hit your business—a major customer announces that it’s terminating its contract, a new mega-competitor enters your market, or an earthquake cuts off access to a critical supplier? Would you know where to find the resources you need to switch from plan A to plan B?
Or maybe the news is good: you can see that sales are skyrocketing in one of your markets, where you now have a unique marketing opportunity. Do you know where the extra funds should come from?
Even though these events are just a part of doing business, too often the answer is “no.”
What you probably have instead are hierarchies of high-level categories. For instance, your internal reports will give you a few line items covering personnel expenses; add them up and in theory you know what you’re spending on people costs. Scratch the surface, though, and you may find contractor and temporary-labor costs hiding everywhere from IT or marketing and sales to professional services—or the perpetual favorite category, “miscellaneous.” In organizations we have analyzed, these types of misallocations add up to equal 20 percent or more of the officially-recognized personnel costs.
To get a sense of the scope of the problem, we asked 30 senior executives across a wide range of functions at large organizations about their perceptions of spend visibility (see sidebar, “Note on the research”). More than half of the surveyed leaders said that they were dissatisfied with their level of visibility into general and administrative spending.
The reality is that it’s never been more essential to ensure that your business’s money is going where its strategy is. But the survey suggests that there can be a significant gap between how an organization thinks it spends its money and how it actually does.
A chronic mismatch has consequences. Think of just one example: How can any business succeed at digital transformation if it can’t see what it’s currently spending on IT? And even if it manages to achieve that clarity once, can it do so again—systematically, month after month, and in a standardized, centralized way?
The human side of the data problem
At best, most corporate centers nowadays can access only aggregated data, sometimes a month or even a quarter out of date, about what has already been spent within organizational hierarchies and budget categories that may have made sense at one time, but no longer do. None of that data will translate to specific returns on investment. And the process itself will be painful, with finance and operators speaking two different languages.
Legacy ERP systems, often cobbled together from years of acquisitions, won’t be much help. The data they generate usually isn’t standardized enough for timely business-intelligence reporting, and they’re too inflexible to support rapid resource reallocation. Highly skilled human beings—always a scarce commodity—can make up for the systems’ shortcomings when there’s a crisis and resources simply must be found. But for the average manager, the usual practice is simply to start from the previous year’s budget and adjust up or down—effectively locking people in to decisions made (many) years ago. Not surprisingly, for many categories of spending, executives say they don’t know what the “bare minimum” is.
As a result, your organization may not quite be flying blind, but you may feel a lot more like Amelia Earhart in 1937 than today’s airline pilot in a glass-cockpit jet. And it’s not just a question of buying the new jet. Even a pilot as skilled as Amelia Earhart would need to learn how to use the new technology effectively— and do so well before the plane hits turbulence.
That’s where human judgment becomes critical. When implemented well, technology enables more humans to engage in better judgment, while also creating a budget structure that’s much more modular so they can act on their judgment more quickly and accurately.
Build tools that build people
Today, even in high-performing organizations, most managers and executives are too busy to engage deeply in internal financial reporting. The exceptions tend to be prized specialists sent on missions to find hidden pockets of money or sort out financial problems after they occur. Their skills are too advanced (and expensive) to scale well across a whole enterprise.
A few organizations have enhanced transparency and rigor by investing heavily in large financial-reporting departments. The talent requirements are lower under such a structure, but the sheer number of people involved means the cost still adds up. And, unlike the have-calculator-will-travel financial sharpshooters, the size of these organizations means they aren’t exactly nimble: learning new skills takes much longer when spread among a larger unit.
How can a business create more sharpshooters without breaking the bank? By building a capability that equips ordinary people with sharpshooter-quality insights.
The result doesn’t just increase the supply of accounting superheroes; it creates better conversations that deepen collaboration between experts throughout the organization, so that they collectively engage in better judgement.
To do that, organizations engage three elements that reinforce one another:
- better systems that serve as a single source of truth
- thoughtful and clear benchmarking of key performance indicators (KPIs) to identify where the biggest opportunities lie, and
- most important of all, a structured set of conversations to support the changes over the long term.
One system, one truth
The weaknesses of typical ERP systems are well known; moreover, a Fortune-100 conglomerate can easily end up with dozens of them. The resulting complexity and inconsistency create what is perhaps the single highest barrier between organizations and the detailed financial data that would let them make faster, better-informed decisions. Indeed, just in the finance function, research has found that people often spend only 20 percent of their time on strategic activities—leaving 80 percent devoted to low-value tasks such as collecting, filtering, and formatting data into reports.
Better IT is part of the answer. Today’s cloud technology allows for a simpler solution that vacuums up millions of transaction-level details into a single source of truth, revealing previously unimaginable detail. But without careful design, “unimaginable detail” turns into “unmanageable detail.”
What organizations need is a reliable way to structure their data so that it drives genuine insights and better decisions.
In a sense, it’s taking the knowledge that rests inside the heads of the most senior, experienced finance experts and making it available—and, more importantly, improvable—by anyone in the organization.
In practice, that means ensuring that the single source of truth is intuitive, simple to use, and widely accessible, so that everyone can contribute to making the data it produces more reliable. “Intuitive” means creating clear category rules that minimize ambiguity and overlap, so that (for example) cleaning contracts are always categorized under “building services” rather than “contractors” or “miscellaneous.” “Simplicity” means the system itself should be user-friendly, requiring minimal training for anyone with budgetary authority. And “widely accessible” covers not just who can use the system, but which data they can see: no more hoarding of information by self-appointed gatekeepers in individual business units or functions.
At a North American manufacturing conglomerate, the results from this type of investment weren’t just financial—they changed the way the entire business was managed. Now that almost anyone could access the data, a senior IT official could quickly see that some of the spending in other cost centers seemed to be IT-related. In a meeting of the C-suite executives, he began asking the product-development team about some of projects whose spending was being detailed for the first time. As they began explaining, he realized that the technologies they were building already existed in the IT department.
A benchmark for comparison
A universally usable and accessible system enables the second critical factor: rapid, thorough tracking and communication of KPIs across a wide range of both financial inputs and performance outputs. The combination quickly reveals significant opportunities not just to reduce cost, but also to increase effectiveness throughout the company by reallocating resources to more-productive uses.
This sort of benchmarking revealed significant opportunities for the conglomerate. The company had long aligned its sales representatives to overall volume and sales trends for its products, which showed little growth. A new data-tracking system revealed that sales through newer channels were growing quickly even as incumbent channels stagnated or fell. That very basic insight allowed managers to reallocate sales-rep time so that they could capture more of the growth—raising sales while also boosting bonuses for the sales team.
By including nuanced measurements of impact in their benchmarks, companies can better understand even complex areas of spending, as in marketing—home of the famous complaint that although everyone knows half of the budget is wasted, no one knows which half.
Once companies can compare variables such as sales-growth rates, non-working marketing costs, and return on investment by campaign, they get a much better idea of which marketing activities are making a difference. One US-based manufacturer found that for several of its mature product lines, managers were paying for new campaigns even though previous campaigns showed surprisingly little spending on working media. With benchmark ratios in place, managers learned to question how they were allocating their budgets so that fewer, better-targeted campaigns could achieve higher impact.
Enabling conversations
The final step is to institutionalize a constant cycle of questioning in which leaders, managers, and their reports continually reexamine what they’re spending money on, how much they’re spending, and why—and whether changes are needed.
These dialogues become crucial channel for finding ways to use resources more effectively. Current technologies make the process much less resource-intensive than it once was: at a multinational wholesaler company with more than 100 business units, preparations for budget-challenge sessions— in which senior managers challenge one another’s budget numbers—take only minutes, rather than the weeks of spreadsheet hell they would have required five or ten years ago.
Near-instantaneous visibility into cost drivers in the budget now allows variances to be quickly identified and corrected. Challenge sessions have become extremely effective as variances are automatically flagged by the system and discussions can focus on underlying drivers of excessive spend in the category. Overall, this automated challenging process has yielded more than $50 million to be reinvested into better business priorities.
The lasting effect has been to help change the way managers think about their budgets. Rather than just report results as they are, they engage in real questioning: how could we get even more out of our investments? What could we do to respond faster to opportunities?
Building budget transparency therefore builds decision transparency, making managers and leaders at every level of the organization more effective. Over time, the habits it instills can help an organization prepare for even greater resource-driven insights, such as through zero-basing current activities. It starts by recognizing that while technology may help break through longtime budgetary logjams, the real opportunity comes when people are able to use that technology to its fullest potential.
This article first appeared on McKinsey.
From Alibaba to Zynga: 40 Of The Best VC Bets Of All Time And What We Can Learn From Them
These venture bets on startups that “returned the fund,” making firms and careers, were the result of research, strong convictions, and patient follow-through. Here are the stories behind the biggest VC home runs of all time.
In venture capital, returns follow the Pareto principle — 80% of the wins come from 20% of the deals.
Great venture capitalists invest knowing they’re going to take a lot of losses in order to hit those wins.
Chris Dixon of top venture firm Andreessen Horowitz has referred to this as the “Babe Ruth effect,” in reference to the legendary 1920s-era baseball player. Babe Ruth would strike out a lot, but also made slugging records.
Likewise, VCs swing hard, and occasionally hit a home run. Those wins often make up for all the losses and then some — they “return the fund.”
Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures recently wrote that for his fund, this translates to needing at least two $1B exits per fund:
“If you do the math around our goal of returning the fund with our high impact companies, you will notice that we need these companies to exit at a billion dollars or more,” he wrote. “Exit is the important word. Getting valued at a billion or more does nothing for our model.”
CB Insights analyzed 40 of the biggest VC hits of all time to learn more about what those home runs have in common.
To do so, they pulled data and information from web archives, books, S-1s, founder interviews, the CB Insights platform, and more.
For each company, they dove into the remarkable numbers they posted before their IPOs and acquisitions, the driving factors behind their growth, and the roles of their most significant investors. Below, they will show the analysis on each specific case.
Note: Unless specifically stated, the “returns” discussed in the sections below are calculated based on the nominal value of the company at IPO or at acquisition. Earn-outs (such as those that apply to, for example, Stemcentrx) and lockups are not factored into those calculations.
The following compaines are analysed:
- Groupon
- Cerent
- Snap
- King Digital Entertainment
- UCWeb
- Alibaba
- JD.com
- Delivery Hero
- Zayo
- Mobileye
- Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC)
- Meitu
- Zynga
- Lending Club
- Genentech
- Stemcentrx
- Workday
- Rocket Internet
- Qudian
- Acerta Pharma
- Nexon
- Zalando
- Ucar Group
- Webvan
- Qualtrics
- Mercari
- NIO
- Meituan Dianping
- Xiaomi
- Pinduoduo
- Ele.me
- Adyen
- GitHub
- Flipkart
- Spotify
- Dropbox
Programmatic for taxis just got interesting!
A new digital unit #UberOOH brings location-targeted ads to car-top screens:
- Uber is bringing digital screens to its drivers in three pilot cities: Atlanta, Dallas, and Phoenix
- Initial trial will run through April, then the program will likely expand to more cities
- Drivers won’t receive a cut of ad revenue, but will receive $300 to install the display units and then $100 per week when driving for more than 20 hours with the displays installed
- Uber OOH promises 1,000 cars, 180 million monthly impressions and “millions of miles” of ad exposures
- Promises precise geotargeting by neighborhood and to offer a “performance reports”
- Ads can be purchased programmatically and will dynamically change based on the location and time of day – a big difference from traditional OOH
- There are plans to expand the program to demand-side partners Zeta Global and Amobee in Q3.
Uber partened with Adomni who, it is reported, will lead ad sales and marketing on the project – https://www.adomni.com/uber
3 Ways to Avoid Decision Quicksand
We often get sucked into trivial decisions. Here are 3 ways to avoid this painful phenomenon.
Have you ever agonized over which restaurant entrée to order? Which shade of white to paint the kitchen? Which flight to purchase?
If so, you’re not alone. You’ve been caught in something my colleague and I call “Decision Quicksand.” Not only does it lead to wasted time, it also makes people unhappy and less satisfied with choice.
It starts simply enough. You’re choosing a vacation destination or a restaurant to go for dinner. You’re relaxed, happy, and ready to knock it out. It’s a decision, sure, but a pretty trivial one. You think you’ll quickly pick something and move on. Five minutes at the most.
But then you begin comparing options. The Italian place has great food, but didn’t someone say that new Greek place was worth checking out? And what about that Sushi place you like? It’s close by, but you had to wait a while last time to be seated. So you go back-and-forth. You compare each dimension one by one, weighing the benefits of each.
Soon you’re starting to get frustrated. Each option has positives and negatives. Both seem good in some ways and bad in others. Suddenly a choice that seemed relatively unimportant starts to feel more weighty and consequential. What if you get it wrong? Will the meal be terrible? Will you wish you went somewhere else?
Before you know it you’ve spent 45 minutes scanning menus online…and your stomach is starting to grumble. You’re struggling and struggling but the harder you work the more you get sucked in. You’re trapped and you can’t seem to find a way out.
If something like this has happened to you, don’t worry. It doesn’t mean you are bad at decision making. Decision quicksand happens to everyone. The reason it happens is less about you and more about the situation.
We expect important decisions, like whether to switch jobs or buy a house, to be difficult. After all, they’re important. They require, and deserve, careful deliberation and weighing of alternatives.
We don’t expect the same difficulty, however, for less important decisions. Which entrée to choose? Which flight to pick? That should be easy! Just pick and go. Like a walk in the park.
But unimportant decisions frequently end up being more difficult than we expect. Often there are many options to sift through, or conflicting tradeoffs on different dimensions. And this unexpected difficulty leads us to think that the decision must be more important than we originally thought. If the decision is this difficult it MUST be worth my time and effort.
So we devote more energy to the decision, collect more information, and sink deeper into the quicksand. We start spending more and more effort and the decision comes to seem more and more important. We’ve spent an hour on a trivial decision and we can’t figure out a way to escape.
Want to avoid the quicksand? Here are 3 simple ways out:
1. Pre-Commit: Decide how much time you want to spend in advance. I’m going to pick a flight in 10 minutes, period. And set a timer. Once it goes off, you have to choose whichever option you were looking at last.
2. Take A Break: Decision quicksand leads us to be so narrowly focused on a choice that we think the world revolves around that decision. But few choices are that important. Stepping away for a few minutes and doing something else will provide some needed perspective and help you see whether a particular decision is really worth the effort.
3. Satisfice: People often maximize, trying to find the best possible option. But in many cases, any of the options would make you quite satisfied. You’d have a wonderful time in either Disney World or Hawaii. So stop deliberating and move on with your life. Flip a coin. Either option is great.
Next time you find yourself hopelessly stuck in an unimportant decision, stop struggling for a moment and take a step back. What you thought was a big deal probably isn’t.
This article appeared on Thrive Global.