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Casual Articles - Business Logic; Bad Logic, Poor Business
Entrepreneurs - You Might Want to Drop Out of College Young entrepreneurs and business owners are often times faced with the choice of which road to take. On one hand, there is the more conservative route of staying in college and getting a degree. On the other hand, many have thriving businesses that are making more money than their degree will ever get for them. Is college simply a hindrance? Or is it a valuable resource that should be continued at all costs. Many college business owners don't even realize they have the choice of dropping out. Knowing this option is there could be vital to the success of their future business. If you are i Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement Autodesk Gaining in 3D-Adobe? We see and read fallacies in logic every day. I am sure that there is a chance that even in this august newspaper there has been the odd fallacy in logic which escaped the eagle eyes of the editors. In this very column, I am sure that at times I have made an error in logic even though I pride myself in being logical.Autodesk buys Alias, a privately held developer of three-dimensional graphics technology, for $182 million in cash. Toronto-based Alias posted revenues of $83 million for the year ended June 30. Its customers include car makers BMW and General Motors Corp. and game maker Nintendo. Alias is a leader in the Industrial Design Tool category, and also has offerings in 3D Animation / Entertainment Graphics Tools, where it competes with Autodesk.Just about a year back, Alias was spun out of SGI by Accel-KKR in a deal valued at $57.5 Million (1X revenue; 7X net income).Good deal for Fallacies in logic in a journal or newspaper or a conversation between people creates frustration and perhaps heated discussion. Fallacies in logic in business create a bad business. A simple fallacy that occurs when market research is poorly interpreted is to argue from selected observation. Data from a handful of people is interpreted as being representative of a whole population. This happens frequently when the boss has a pet theory about the market, commissions some market research and concentrates their argument on the few pieces of data which support their argument. The impact of business decisions being made from selected observations is to put the marketing campaign or the entire company at a risk equivalent to deciding by "gut feel". Some leaders have a great gut feel for their business and the businesses thrive on it. Most of us, however, actually need information to make logical decisions. In one organisation I have seen good market research which was carried out annually for ten years demonstrating clearly that the single channel strategy of the organisation was causing a decline in volumes of an average of 7.5% per annum as other channels blossomed. It also contained some data which showed that the new channels had a lower sell out price. The argument was that the lower sell out price would reduce profit whilst the lower volume from the single channel strategy was ignored. Only the information which justified the status quo was ever used out of the data. Another fallacy common in business is internal contradiction. This clearly occurs with the topic of company values. That is, we have company values but leaders do not have to portray them. It also occurs with strategy and tactics. For example, the statement, "Our strategy is to grow the market through an aggressive marketing and sales campaign and to dominate the new market we create" on page five of a corporate plan, followed on page ten with no increase in advertising costs, marketing costs or sales costs and no other plan to increase productivity of sales either. Growing the market aggressively without some increase in sales costs or sales productivity is not believable. Another favourite of mine is argument by slogan. The most common one I hear is "best practice". The CEO announces "We are adopting best practice in the area of corporate governance; therefore we need to increase the remuneration of the directors". What in the world did that mean? There is no way to understand specifically what best practice means and whether it has any relevance to the director's remuneration. Best practice is very hard to actually achieve. It is difficult between different organisations in different environments to define processes in a similar enough way to make it worthwhile to go the next step and define KPIs measured the same way to begin to compare results to see who has best practice. Even if the foregoing is achieved, it is incredibly difficult to take one practice from one business culture and place it in another. Instead, it is a lot easier to argue by slogan. Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement a Influence of IT in Textile Business ew pieces of data which support their argument.Textile Supply Chain has been highly influenced by four important features of Information Technology; these features are: Information integration, Planning synchronisation, Workflow coordination and new business models. It is also come across that these IT applications facilitate the execution of several theories of supply chain management, like constant refilling, vendor administered refilling, planned postponement etc.Taken in order, the first three stages stand for ascending degrees of harmony and balanced interaction among supply chain members ending up into completely new tech The impact of business decisions being made from selected observations is to put the marketing campaign or the entire company at a risk equivalent to deciding by "gut feel". Some leaders have a great gut feel for their business and the businesses thrive on it. Most of us, however, actually need information to make logical decisions. In one organisation I have seen good market research which was carried out annually for ten years demonstrating clearly that the single channel strategy of the organisation was causing a decline in volumes of an average of 7.5% per annum as other channels blossomed. It also contained some data which showed that the new channels had a lower sell out price. The argument was that the lower sell out price would reduce profit whilst the lower volume from the single channel strategy was ignored. Only the information which justified the status quo was ever used out of the data. Another fallacy common in business is internal contradiction. This clearly occurs with the topic of company values. That is, we have company values but leaders do not have to portray them. It also occurs with strategy and tactics. For example, the statement, "Our strategy is to grow the market through an aggressive marketing and sales campaign and to dominate the new market we create" on page five of a corporate plan, followed on page ten with no increase in advertising costs, marketing costs or sales costs and no other plan to increase productivity of sales either. Growing the market aggressively without some increase in sales costs or sales productivity is not believable. Another favourite of mine is argument by slogan. The most common one I hear is "best practice". The CEO announces "We are adopting best practice in the area of corporate governance; therefore we need to increase the remuneration of the directors". What in the world did that mean? There is no way to understand specifically what best practice means and whether it has any relevance to the director's remuneration. Best practice is very hard to actually achieve. It is difficult between different organisations in different environments to define processes in a similar enough way to make it worthwhile to go the next step and define KPIs measured the same way to begin to compare results to see who has best practice. Even if the foregoing is achieved, it is incredibly difficult to take one practice from one business culture and place it in another. Instead, it is a lot easier to argue by slogan. Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement 3 Reasons To Hire From Outside Your Industry e channel strategy was ignored. Only the information which justified the status quo was ever used out of the data.While at times it may prove comfortable and convenient to hire from within your current industry, often the best candidate for the job comes from outside your “comfort zone”. How can that be? As a recruiter focused on a highly regulated and competitive industry experiencing significant growth nationwide, here are 3 reasons to hire from outside your industry:1. Deeper Talent Pools:We function inside a very narrow industry segment yet the companies serve a broad and diverse customer base. The technology used in our industry is not state of the art. Very few companies, from Another fallacy common in business is internal contradiction. This clearly occurs with the topic of company values. That is, we have company values but leaders do not have to portray them. It also occurs with strategy and tactics. For example, the statement, "Our strategy is to grow the market through an aggressive marketing and sales campaign and to dominate the new market we create" on page five of a corporate plan, followed on page ten with no increase in advertising costs, marketing costs or sales costs and no other plan to increase productivity of sales either. Growing the market aggressively without some increase in sales costs or sales productivity is not believable. Another favourite of mine is argument by slogan. The most common one I hear is "best practice". The CEO announces "We are adopting best practice in the area of corporate governance; therefore we need to increase the remuneration of the directors". What in the world did that mean? There is no way to understand specifically what best practice means and whether it has any relevance to the director's remuneration. Best practice is very hard to actually achieve. It is difficult between different organisations in different environments to define processes in a similar enough way to make it worthwhile to go the next step and define KPIs measured the same way to begin to compare results to see who has best practice. Even if the foregoing is achieved, it is incredibly difficult to take one practice from one business culture and place it in another. Instead, it is a lot easier to argue by slogan. Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement TQM Implementation Project Part 7b – How to Overcome Trend Charting and Control Chart Problem . The most common one I hear is "best practice". The CEO announces "We are adopting best practice in the area of corporate governance; therefore we need to increase the remuneration of the directors". What in the world did that mean? There is no way to understand specifically what best practice means and whether it has any relevance to the director's remuneration.The CONTROL Phase in implementing an improvement project is most neglected step but critical step. It is done to ensure corrective actions or short or long term solution put in placed are effective and able to yield expected results. It cannot be over emphasized the importance of CONTROL.Just to recap, tools used in the CONTROL Phase are listed below.In this issue, I will cover the tools in bold:Trend Charting | Control Chart | Documentation | Audit | On-job training | Re-certificationIssues in Tren Best practice is very hard to actually achieve. It is difficult between different organisations in different environments to define processes in a similar enough way to make it worthwhile to go the next step and define KPIs measured the same way to begin to compare results to see who has best practice. Even if the foregoing is achieved, it is incredibly difficult to take one practice from one business culture and place it in another. Instead, it is a lot easier to argue by slogan. Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement Get the Most from Your Investment Business expos can be an excellent marketing investment and an outstanding way to build your business. On the other hand, if not treated as an integral part of your marketing strategy, they can become a huge waste of time, money and energy.To gain the most from your investment develop a plan for before, during and after show preparation.Determine goals and outcomes. Decide why you are at a show before you are there. Are you there to increase sales, have a presence in the marketplace, introduce new products, and/or enhance or solidify your image? Unfortunately, many companies Another favourite is the monthly reports which hit the CEO's desk and declare that sales were down this month because a segment of our market did not buy as much. Statements like these abound in monthly and annual reports begging the question, "Why did they not buy as much?" Sadly, the begged question is rarely answered. Worse still, too frequently, it is not challenged by the CEO for the poor piece of analysis with rotten logic that it is. Of course, the time honoured fallacy of logic in business is the appeal to widespread belief or the "Bandwagon argument". For example, "Everybody else thought the internet was going to be the only way to sell, so we had to spend millions on it too." Another bandwagon argument example I see which troubles me more is that every organisation HAS to have a vision statement, a mission statement and a set of values to have a decent strategy. This is not true. I could run an equally fallacious argument the other way. From my observations, those organisations which spend a lot of time on vision and mission usually have no actual strategy. Doing business or running a public service entity is tough work for CEOs. That is why they get paid well. What they don't need are self inflicted problems through tolerance of bad business logic.
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