Browsing Tag

harley davidson

The Lost Years? Lessons Learned From Microsoft

Kurt Eichenwald, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, has investigated what he calls Microsoft’s Lost Decade—a period of lackluster performance and diminished profitability. He lays blame squarely at the feet of a cannibalistic corporate culture.  The story is getting lots of attention, particularly as it relates to the controversial management practice of “stack ranking.”

Microsoft’s CEO, Steve Ballmer, went to Forbes to reply.  His response (Lost decade? What lost decade?) is full of enthusiasm for Windows 8, Bing (currently #2 in the search engine marketplace, trailing Google by only 51.2%!) and the Surface, Microsoft’s computer/tablet hybrid designed to showcase the power of Windows 8.

Which one of them is right?

Let’s start by talking about this Lost Decade thing.  To begin with, how do we decide which years are lost? Microsoft hasn’t been knocking anyone’s socks off with their innovation or sales numbers. (Eichenwald is quick to point out that the revenue from the iPhone far exceeds the revenues generated by all Microsoft products combined.) But Ballmer isn’t wrong when he points out that invention and innovation take time, refinement, and resources. Those years aren’t lost, Ballmer argues. They’ve been quietly necessary.

Harley-Davidson isn’t known for being a particularly quiet company, but they’ve had their share of lost years. During the infamous AMF era, the now-iconic company was in a death-spiral. Quality had tanked, customer satisfaction was a thing of the past, and the brand was headed toward oblivion until a group of dedicated individuals took action to save the company from within. It was a hard time for the brand, a time where they were neither innovative or productive. Yet they’ve recovered, and today are the dominant motorcycle manufacturer in the domestic market.

The Vital Role of Culture

It’s important to note that internal cultural changes played a pivotal role in Harley-Davidson’s revitalization. It turns out to be pretty essential that people build products they’re proud of. Understanding the intrinsic motivations of your work force—those unconscious psychological forces that lead your employees to choose your organization as their employer—is an essential step in effecting meaningful organizational change.

And that brings us back to Kurt Eichenwald.  He’s focused on the problems within Microsoft’s internal culture. The mechanism by which employees expect to be recognized and rewarded for their contributions to the brand’s success has been fundamentally broken, he argues, by the stacked ranking system.  It’s not unlike grading on the curve: 10% of your people are star performers, 70% are your average folks, and the bottom 20% aren’t cutting the mustard.  They need remedial education or they need to be replaced.

Rather than creating an atmosphere of collaboration and innovation, this methodology fosters fear, anxiety, and individual competition.  The focus is not on being the top 10%, it’s on avoiding being regarded as part of that bottom 20%.  Where the employee’s attention is focused is where the company will inevitably go.  You can make a ship so safe it sinks.

What does this mean for Microsoft?  The decade past may not be lost, entirely, but dangerous lessons have been learned inside of that corporate culture.  If Microsoft wants the innovation, creativity, and spark that they’ll need to remain relevant, much less competitive, in today’s tech market, changes need to be made.  Understanding and recognizing what motivates people to do their best work for you, their most creative, higher-order thinking, is a good place to start. The shift toward a more humanistic corporate culture is where it begins.  Who knows where it will end?

Social Media and the Power of Public Knowledge

We’re starting to hear the rumbles, here and there, from businesses of every type and every size. Social media, the marketing tool that was supposed to deliver amazing results, doesn’t seem to work very well for some companies. They say effort invested isn’t providing anything much in the way of meaningful results.

The first response seems to be platform flight. Facing Facebook failure, organizations decide to move on. They decide to focus on Twitter, and if that doesn’t pan out, they move onto Pinterest, perhaps, or Instagram.  It’s the digital equivalent of the African Savanna, where the herds are traveling ever onward, perpetually in search of a water hole that will quench their burning thirst.

It’s not a bad strategy, if you’re an elephant.

If, however, you are a company that wants to build meaningful relationships with your customers in a profitable and enduring fashion, it’s a disaster.

So what’s going wrong here?  It’s a simple problem. We’re focusing too much attention on the media aspect of social media, and not nearly enough on the social end of the equation.

Understanding Social Media: The Power of Public Knowledge

Let’s start this whole conversation by saying this: it’s not Facebook’s fault you’re not connecting with your customers. It’s not Twitter’s fault, nor Pinterest’s fault, nor even Instagram’s fault. All of these social media platforms do exactly what they say they’re going to do: provide a fairly easy-to-use way to share your content easily with anyone who wants to listen to it.  If nobody’s listening, it’s not the communications vehicle that’s the problem. It’s the message.

In other words, don’t blame the radio if nobody dances when your band’s song plays. The people have proven that they’re willing to dance — if the music has the right beat. When a song comes on that they like, they dance.

If you want to use social media effectively as a marketing tool, you have to understand, on a fundamental, humanistic level, what causes people to participate in online conversations. Why does someone join Facebook in the first place? What drives them to post their thoughts and feelings? What encourages them to like a company page, to comment on that page, and to share the content they see there with others?

Steven Pinker has some great answers. We encourage you to watch this video — it’ll take about 10 minutes of your life, but it’s 10 minutes that will make you a better marketer. Of particular interest is the bit on public knowledge.  It starts at about minute 8.

Watch that, and then think about the Arab Spring revolutions that rocked the Middle East. Pinker points out that it’s the phenomenon of public knowledge that sparks community action. What we learned from the Arab Spring is that social media is an ideal vehicle for creating public knowledge.

Knowing that someone else has the same knowledge you do, and is experiencing similar emotions as a result of that knowledge, is an extremely empowering and motivating experience. Dominant organizations have learned the lessons of Arab Spring, strategically using their social media presence to create the experience of public knowledge within their target audience.

Harley Davidson is doing this on Facebook with their Harley Davidson Worldride Campaign. Go to their page and check it out. During a two-day event, where Harley riders are “taking over the world,” fans are encouraged to log in and share how many miles they’ve ridden. So far, the results have been astronomical — the total miles would bring you to the moon and back!

This is public knowledge in action. Riders are sharing their distances, true, but they’re also sharing their experiences. They want to tell what a good time they’ve had. Hearing about other people’s good times on the bike motivates those who haven’t gone riding lately to get the hog fired up so they too can participate. Even the people who can’t go are logging in to share their support, explain why they can’t participate, and offer encouragement to those who are riding.

Real world activity can, with the proper, strategic encouragement, drive social media activity, which in turn can drive real world activity. That’s the power of public knowledge. It transforms governments, it builds brands, and it is the only thing that’s been proven to change the world. If your organization isn’t tapping into the power of public knowledge now is a good time to start. Give it a shot before you give up on your latest social media endeavor. You’ll be glad you did.