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    What is this Sea Change?
    Good Morning Silicon Valley reports that the recently leaked Press Release is actually confidential Microsoft memo.“The next sea change” in computing -- software as a service -- has arrived, Gates writes, and Microsoft must embrace it or lose ground to the advertising-supported Internet businesses being developed by Google, Yahoo and Salesforce.com.In the Web 1.0 Dotcom days, a concept had emerged called B-to-B-to-C, as a successor to B-to-B and B-to-C. As
    uation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to ge

    Your Database is Your Most Important Marketing Tool
    For most small businesses, a database is the most important marketing tool. The following article discusses how to really keep track of a good database, how to systematize or automate a database marketing campaign and how to get a good prospect or mailing list.For small businesses, a database can be the most important marketing tool. It doesn’t matter if contacts are kept in Outlook, ACT, Goldmine, QuickBooks, Excel or another program; what matters most is that i
    Most companies have only one chance to win, but leaders have two. If a leader misses an opportunity to attack itself, the company can often recover by copying the competitive move. But the leader must move rapidly before the attacker gets established.

    Many leaders refuse to block because their egos get in the way. Even worse, they knock the competitor’s development until it’s too late to save the situation.

    Blocking works well for a leader because of the nature of the battleground. Remember, the war takes place inside the mind of the prospect. It takes time for an attacker to make an impression in the mind. Usually, there’s time enough for the leader to cover.

    The U.S. automobile industry illustrates this principle well. Says John DeLorean in the book on a Clear Day You Can See General Motors: “Even though ford was superior to General Motors in product innovation during the time. I was with GM and Chrysler surpassed it in technical innovation, neither firm made substantial cuts into GM’s half of the market.”

    “Gm had not produced a significant, major automotive innovation since the hydramatic automatic transmission (1939) and the hard-top body style (1949),” continues DeLorean, “Ford pioneered in practically every major new market while Chrysler produced the significant technical innovations, such as power steering, power brakes, electric windows and the alternator.”

    But who gets the credit for engineering excellence? General Motors, of course.

    It’s the flip side of the “truth will out” fallacy. The prospect also assumes that truth will out. Therefore, the prospect reasons that the market leader must have truth on its side, that is, the GM product is superior.

    There is also the psychological pressure that benefits the leader. In a famous experiment by Solomon Asch of the University of Pennsylvania, many people were willing to go against the evidence of their own senses in order to go along with the majority.

    When asked to match the length of a set of lines and confronted with a group that had been carefully briefed to give unanimously wrong answers, 37 percent of the subjects submitted to the misleading group opinion and also gave the wrong answers.

    The power of the majority was indicated by the typical reaction in the Asch experiment: “To me it seems I’m right, but my reason tells me I’m wrong, because I doubt that so many people could be wrong and I alone right.”

    The fact is, many people pay more attention to the opinion of others than they do to their own. If everyone else is laughing in the theater, you assume the movie is not funny. (That’s why they put the laugh tracks on the TV situation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to get

    The Higher You Go
    The higher you go, the cooler it becomes. Really? Let us begin from first principles. This is a maxim we learnt in geography about the weather. Having come a long way in our professions and careers, can we really say it has been cooler over the years as we ascended the corporate ladder? Even at that,, how can we sensibly apply the Higher You Go principle in the way we work, and the way we live?Has it certainly been cooler for you over the years as you climbed high
    cover.

    The U.S. automobile industry illustrates this principle well. Says John DeLorean in the book on a Clear Day You Can See General Motors: “Even though ford was superior to General Motors in product innovation during the time. I was with GM and Chrysler surpassed it in technical innovation, neither firm made substantial cuts into GM’s half of the market.”

    “Gm had not produced a significant, major automotive innovation since the hydramatic automatic transmission (1939) and the hard-top body style (1949),” continues DeLorean, “Ford pioneered in practically every major new market while Chrysler produced the significant technical innovations, such as power steering, power brakes, electric windows and the alternator.”

    But who gets the credit for engineering excellence? General Motors, of course.

    It’s the flip side of the “truth will out” fallacy. The prospect also assumes that truth will out. Therefore, the prospect reasons that the market leader must have truth on its side, that is, the GM product is superior.

    There is also the psychological pressure that benefits the leader. In a famous experiment by Solomon Asch of the University of Pennsylvania, many people were willing to go against the evidence of their own senses in order to go along with the majority.

    When asked to match the length of a set of lines and confronted with a group that had been carefully briefed to give unanimously wrong answers, 37 percent of the subjects submitted to the misleading group opinion and also gave the wrong answers.

    The power of the majority was indicated by the typical reaction in the Asch experiment: “To me it seems I’m right, but my reason tells me I’m wrong, because I doubt that so many people could be wrong and I alone right.”

    The fact is, many people pay more attention to the opinion of others than they do to their own. If everyone else is laughing in the theater, you assume the movie is not funny. (That’s why they put the laugh tracks on the TV situation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to ge

    My Accountant Changed My QuickBooks File and Now I Feel Lost - What Should I Do?
    The ProblemAt one of the accounting forums I visit, quickbooksgroup.com, somebody wrote to explain a problem she was having in her QuickBooks file. After some posts back and forth with her, I saw that it boiled down to some changes her accountant made to the file - procedural changes which seemed unnecessary to me, and which happened without the file owner's permission or understanding. I told her:"Send the file back [to your accountant] and expla
    wer steering, power brakes, electric windows and the alternator.”

    But who gets the credit for engineering excellence? General Motors, of course.

    It’s the flip side of the “truth will out” fallacy. The prospect also assumes that truth will out. Therefore, the prospect reasons that the market leader must have truth on its side, that is, the GM product is superior.

    There is also the psychological pressure that benefits the leader. In a famous experiment by Solomon Asch of the University of Pennsylvania, many people were willing to go against the evidence of their own senses in order to go along with the majority.

    When asked to match the length of a set of lines and confronted with a group that had been carefully briefed to give unanimously wrong answers, 37 percent of the subjects submitted to the misleading group opinion and also gave the wrong answers.

    The power of the majority was indicated by the typical reaction in the Asch experiment: “To me it seems I’m right, but my reason tells me I’m wrong, because I doubt that so many people could be wrong and I alone right.”

    The fact is, many people pay more attention to the opinion of others than they do to their own. If everyone else is laughing in the theater, you assume the movie is not funny. (That’s why they put the laugh tracks on the TV situation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to ge

    Jewellery Impressions In The World Of Fashion Jewellery
    In today’s world of conscious people, fashion Jewelry is playing a remarkable role in giving vivacity to one’s attitude. Starting from clothes, a woman is also quite choosy in the selection of Jewellery she wears. The more attractive the Jewellery is, the more easier it will be for her to choose them. Jewelry is not only a status symbol as many people invest their life long savings on the Jewelry, they carry a set of jewels years after years, generation after generati
    of a set of lines and confronted with a group that had been carefully briefed to give unanimously wrong answers, 37 percent of the subjects submitted to the misleading group opinion and also gave the wrong answers.

    The power of the majority was indicated by the typical reaction in the Asch experiment: “To me it seems I’m right, but my reason tells me I’m wrong, because I doubt that so many people could be wrong and I alone right.”

    The fact is, many people pay more attention to the opinion of others than they do to their own. If everyone else is laughing in the theater, you assume the movie is not funny. (That’s why they put the laugh tracks on the TV situation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to ge

    IT Marketing: Using Your Elevator Pitch
    Elevator pitches are effective, quick ways of practicing your IT marketing daily. They key is to say something memorable and quick, and to use it whenever appropriate. In this article, you learn how to make your elevator speech stand out for effective IT marketing.For example, you get in the elevator on the 20th floor and you see a man or woman that is very well-dressed. This person looks like an executive who could potentially be a good customer of yours. You're
    uation comedies.)

    Should a leader cover all bets or just the ones that are most likely to succeed? Obviously there’s no point in covering downright silly ideas, but who’s to judge? When the first Volkswagen Beetle arrived, it looked strange indeed. “The three most overrated things in America,” went a typical Detroit joke, “are Southern cooking, home sex, and foreign cars.”

    Many companies have lived to regret instant putdowns like this. So today the watchword is more likely to be: “Let’s monitor the situation and see what happens.”

    But that can be a dangerous tactic for a leader. Too often what happens too fast? All of a sudden, it’s too late to get into the new ball game.

    Currently, disposables represent about 40 percent of the razor blade market. If Gillette had waited and let Bic dominate this market segment, Gillette’s position would be much weaker today.

    It’s safer to over cover than to undercover. The stainless steel blade introduced by Wilkinson Sword never went anywhere, but Gillette covered anyway. The small cost was worth it. Call it insurance if you wish.

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