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This
text is from Bill Gates Book. To function in the
digital age, we have developed a new digital infrastructure. It's like the
human nervous system. Companies need to have that same kind of nervous
system--the ability to run smoothly and efficiently, to respond quickly to
emergencies and opportunities, to quickly get valuable information to the
people in the company who need it, the ability to quickly make decisions and
interact with customers. The successful companies
of the next decade will be the ones that use digital tools to reinvent the
way they work. To make digital information flow an intrinsic part of your
company, here are 12 key steps. 1 INSIST THAT COMMUNICATION FLOW THROUGH E-MAIL I read all the e-mail
that employees send me, and I pass items on to people for action. I find
unsolicited mail an incredibly good way to stay aware of the attitudes and
issues affecting the many people who work at Microsoft. The old saying
"Knowledge is power" sometimes makes people hoard knowledge. They
believe that knowledge hoarding makes them indispensable. Power comes not
from knowledge kept but from knowledge shared. A company's values and reward
system should reflect that idea. I like good news as much
as the next person, but it also puts me in a skeptical frame of mind. I
wonder what bad news I'm not hearing. When somebody sends me an e-mail about
an account we've won, I always think, "There are a lot of accounts
nobody has sent mail about. Does that mean we've lost all of those?" A
good e-mail system ensures that bad news can travel fast, but your people
have to be willing to send you the news. You have to be consistently
receptive to bad news, and then you have to act on it. Sometimes I think my
most important job as CEO is to listen for bad news. If you don't act on it,
your people will eventually stop bringing bad news to your attention. And
that's the beginning of the end. 2 STUDY SALES DATA ONLINE TO SHARE INSIGHTS EASILY Making data digital from
the start can trigger a whole range of positive events. The Coca-Cola Co. is
collecting data directly from smart vending machines via cellular phones or
infrared signals. A PC-based restocking program at the local bottler office
analyzes the data and produces a delivery slip that tells drivers which
products and locations need to get stocked the next day. Taking advantage of
digital data at the source can even create new business opportunities. A
pilot program in Texas lets customers use a credit or debit card to pay for
Coke drinks while fueling at a gas station. Since most people who pay at the
pump don't go into the building, the digital sales system at the pump creates
a whole segment of new customers for Coke. When figures are in
electronic form, knowledge workers can study them, annotate them, look at
them in any amount of detail or in any view they want and pass them around
for collaboration. Going digital changes your business.
At McDonald's, until
recently, sales data had to be manually "touched" several times
before making its way to the people who needed it. Today McDonald's is well
on the way to installing a new information system that uses PCs and Web
technologies to tally sales at all its restaurants in real time. As soon as
you order two Happy Meals, a McDonald's marketing manager will know. Rather
than superficial or anecdotal data, the marketer will have hard, factual data
for tracking trends. What I'm describing here
is a new level of information analysis that enables knowledge workers to turn
passive data into active information--what M.I.T.'s Michael Dertouzos calls
information-as-a-verb. 4 USE DIGITAL TOOLS TO CREATE VIRTUAL TEAMS Jacques (Jac) Nasser,
president and CEO of Ford, sends e-mail to Ford employees worldwide, sharing
news--the good and the bad--with everybody. No one screens the e-mail. He
talks straight to the employees. He also reads hundreds of responses he gets
each month and assigns a member of his team to reply to any that need
follow-up. Getting people motivated
to take on responsibility is not a question of organizational structure so
much as organizational attitude. Digital tools are the best way to open the
door and add flexibility. If the right people can be working on the issues
within hours instead of days, a business obtains a huge advantage. 5 CONVERT EVERY PAPER PROCESS TO A DIGITAL PROCESS Paper consumption was
only a symptom of a bigger problem, though: administrative processes that
were too complicated and time-intensive. Using our intranet to replace paper
forms has produced striking results for us. We have reduced the number of
paper forms from more than 1,000 to a company-wide total of 60 forms. Companies talk about
rewarding initiative and keeping workers focused on business. When employees
see a company eliminate bottlenecks and time-draining routine administrative
chores from their workdays, they know the company values their time--and
wants them to use it profitably.
In the new organization,
the worker is no longer a cog in the machine but is an intelligent part of
the overall process. Having people focus on whole processes allows them to
tackle more interesting, challenging work. A one-dimensional job (a task) can
be eliminated, automated or rolled into a bigger process. General Motors launched
the Saturn Corp. back in 1985 to create not only a brand-new car from scratch
but a brand-new way of building cars and empowering workers. Teams are tight,
autonomous units. Each team has a specific function, such as building engines
or doors, and each team member is trained to do approximately 30 different
jobs in that area, so that people don't get stale from doing repetitive
tasks. Through a Web interface, the worker can retrieve data from a database,
automatically load the data into a spreadsheet and pivot through the data to
analyze it by part and type of problem. Give your workers more
sophisticated jobs along with better tools, and you'll discover that your
employees will become more responsible and bring more intelligence to their
work. One-dimensional, repetitive work is exactly what computers, robots and
other machines are best at--and what human workers are poorly suited to and
almost uniformly despise. In the digital age, you need to make knowledge
workers out of every employee possible. 7 CREATE A DIGITAL FEEDBACK LOOP Creating a new process is
a major project. You should have a specific definition of success, a specific
beginning and end in terms of time and tasks, intermediate milestones and a
budget. The best projects are those in which people have the customer
scenario clearly in mind. That's true of process projects too. Digital technology makes
it possible to develop much better processes instead of being stuck with
variations on the old paper processes that give you only incremental
improvements. You need to be flexible in the face of evolving requirements.
You should have a crisp decision process to evaluate change, including a
provision for re-evaluating your original project goals. 8 USE DIGITAL SYSTEMS TO ROUTE CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS
IMMEDIATELY I recommend the following
approach: 1. Focus on your most
unhappy customers. 2. Use technology to gather
rich information on their unhappy experiences with your product and to find
out what they want you to put into the product. 3. Use technology to
drive the news to the right people in a hurry. If you do these three
things, you'll turn those draining bad news experiences into an exhilarating
process of improving your product or service. Unhappy customers are always a
concern. They're also your greatest opportunity. Companies that invest
early in digital nervous systems to capture, analyze and capitalize on
customer input will differentiate themselves from competition. You should
examine customer complaints more often than company financials. And your
digital systems should help you convert bad news to improved products and
services. 9 USE DIGITAL COMMUNICATION TO REDEFINE THE BOUNDARIES For Microsoft,
outsourcing has been a way to temper the expansion of our work force and
reduce management overhead, but it hasn't stopped the growth of our work
force. The Web work style, in which each contributor or company organizes
itself optimally, enables us to extend our electronic web of partnerships
and--I hope--keeps us from growing big in the wrong areas and becoming
ineffective through too much overhead. As a business manager,
you need to take a hard look at your core competencies. Revisit the areas of
your company that aren't directly involved in those competencies, and
consider whether Web technologies can enable you to spin off those tasks. Let
another company take over the management responsibilities for that work, and
use modern communications technology to work closely with the people--now
partners instead of employees--doing the work. In the Web work style,
employees can push the freedom the Web provides to its limits. 10 TRANSFORM EVERY BUSINESS PROCESS INTO JUST-IN-TIME
DELIVERY In some industries, the
issue is not so much faster time to market as it is maintaining time to
market in the face of astronomically rising complexity. Intel, for instance,
has consistently had a 90-day production cycle for its chips, which power
most PCs. Intel expects to maintain this 90-day production rate despite the
increasing complexity of the microprocessor. Ultimately the most
important "speed" issue for companies is cultural. It's changing
the perceptions within a company about the rapidity with which everybody has
to move. Everybody must realize that if you don't meet customer demand
quickly enough, without sacrificing quality, a competitor will. 11 USE DIGITAL DELIVERY TO ELIMINATE THE MIDDLE MAN If you're a middleman,
the Internet's promise of cheaper prices and faster service can
"disintermediate" you, eliminate your role of assisting the
transaction between the producer and the consumer. If the Internet is about
to disintermediate you, one tack is to use the Internet to get back into the
action. That's what Egghead.com
(formerly Egghead), a major retail software chain, did after struggling for
several years. Egghead closed all of its physical stores nationwide in 1998
and set up shop exclusively on the Internet. Egghead now offers a number of
new online programs that take advantage of the Internet, such as electronic
auctions for about 50 different categories of hardware and software and for
reconditioned computers. It puts special liquidation prices on systems available
on its website and sends out a weekly e-mail "Hot List" with
exclusive offers available only to e-mail subscribers. For the majority of
products, which are available through many outlets, consumers will be the
greatest beneficiaries. For unique products and services, sellers will find
more potential customers and may command higher prices. The more consumers
adopt the Web life-style, the closer the economy will move toward Adam
Smith's perfect market in all areas of commerce. 12 USE DIGITAL TOOLS TO HELP CUSTOMERS SOLVE PROBLEMS
FOR THEMSELVES Dell was one of the first
major companies to move to e-commerce. A global computer supplier with more
than $18 billion in revenue, Dell began selling its products online in
mid-1996. The company's online business quickly rose from $1 million a week
to $1 million a day. Soon it jumped to $3 million a day, then $5 million.
It's now risen to $14 million. Michael Dell
characterizes the business today as "different combinations of
face-to-face, ear-to-ear and keyboard-to-keyboard. Each has its place. The
Internet doesn't replace people. It makes them more efficient. By moving
routine interactions to the Web and enabling customers to do some things for
themselves, we've freed up our salespeople to do more meaningful things with customers."
Smart companies will
combine Internet services and personal contact in programs that give their
customers the benefits of both kinds of interaction. You want to move pure
transactions to the Internet, use online communication for information sharing
and routine communication, and reserve face-to-face interaction for the
activities that add the most value. As I said in The Road
Ahead, we always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two
years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next 10. Don't let
yourself be lulled into inaction. You know you have built
an excellent digital nervous system when information flows through your
organization as quickly and naturally as thought in a human being and when
you can use technology to marshal and coordinate teams of people as quickly
as you can focus an individual on an issue. It's business at the speed of
thought.
END From
Business @ The Speed of Thought: Using a Digital Nervous System, by Bill
Gates. (C) 1999 by William H. Gates, III. To be published this month by
Warner Books, USA. |
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