DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7323

Apple’s Enterprise Problem [SN]

0

This is a Short Note from my LinkedIn update.

Apple is a great firm that figured out how to monetize hardware with highly differentiated and exclusive software. To enjoy the Apple universe, you must use Apple physical product. Apple executed that in the consumer world. But as it moves into enterprises and other domains like cars, clinics, homes etc, Apple strategy will hurt it. In enterprises, after the era of IBM, no one wants to be tethered to hardware and software. Why use Siri which requires Apple hardware when Alexa is agnostic of hardware?

You can control the individuals (the consumer market) but in enterprises, the variants are many. No single company can model that. Nearly every car company is testing Android for car infotainment. Samsung will be a natural partner to them. With no access to iOS, Apple loses.

I do think it will be challenging for Apple to succeed in the enterprise with its strategy of keeping iOS out of reach. We are in the era of post-production and it must have a balance to drive new sources of growth with iOS

How I Innovate and a Key Phase of My Product Development

5

I lead the design of my company’s products. From Zenvus to other products we deliver to clients, I drive the technical strategy. During my doctoral degree in the Johns Hopkins University, I built things. And as a Global Lead ASIC Design Engineer with Analog Devices Corp, I launched products. In Carnegie Mellon University, the elements were perfected.

I am an Igbo man (from Nigeria). We like containers. We like products. That is our tradition. I like to own  things, and that was the drive into entrepreneurship: to build for myself, my family, and my stakeholders. We are doing well.

Now that I run my shop, I use the first rule: the best ideas are never published by industry veterans in any journal. And when published, it is more of a marketing dossier because you get an idea of the breakthrough but you hardly get any value. It is an illusion to think any company can publish a complete product design with capacity to generate billions of dollars in revenue. That will never happen unless they re-register as charities.

So in Fasmicro Group, I have a strategy in our product engineering: I read journals but I also buy many products and we tear them down. It is very shameful but that is the state we are now. Simply, I borrow ideas, or clearly I copy.

I copy and I do that making sure we comply with all laws and IP rights. I do not have millions of dollars to setup R&D labs with scale to compete with the best. Good enough most of the challenging ideas, when solved, are not patented. All you need is to figure out how they have solved some challenging design problems. You do this from the level of firmware, components choice and all the way to chipsets and systems. Right there, you will see how they are handling issues you are facing.

Please note that innovation does not mean you have to reinvent the wheel. Brilliance can come when you understand what the best designers are doing and learn from products they have made. But do so legally.

A Teardown for Product Design Insights

Below is a teardown to help understand what leading companies are doing on mobile {blank} as we work on a key phase of a product. We have “wasted” four new tablets and continue to work to understand many elements. It is very interesting when you see what is going on. I will leave that out because that is my business IP. Can you see the Apple “A6” chip near MediaTek chipset? This is powered by Android. But do not hold your breath – very exciting.

The Perils of Communal Competitive Strategy

2

As a young banker in Lagos, I wrote a report that one of the reasons responsible for collapse of many small businesses in eastern Nigeria was communal mutual poverty. I have observed that many of the entrepreneurs started well, but as soon as they become fairly successful, family and extended family system would cripple them. As more people depend on their supports, they would eat into their working capitals and will eventually collapse.

It happens very often as most of the men, presently unemployed in many villages, have managed growth companies at one time in their lives. They were sent by their parents for apprenticeships in the cities and after serving their masters, they were assisted to start their own companies. As soon as they begin, the communal power of African family system will come upon them.

More family members will move into their houses and unintentional activities that will destroy their businesses and eventually bring them back to poverty accelerated. It seems that you cannot have these rich men in a system where many are poor. They are dragged down until the day the businesses collapse and they return poor to the village.

I concluded that report by noting that entrepreneurs from stable and supporting families succeed on average over those whose families would depend on them disproportionately. My motivation was to help banks understand the risk profiles of business loan applicants. It was not a technical report; it was just one on a free time which no one actually used.

The African Insurance and Managing Communal Mutual Poverty

What I have described above may seen extremely challenging for a non-African. But it turns out that we insure ourselves in Africa through helping families including extended families.The little boy you help pay his school fees becomes an insurance policy for one’s old age, since few save for retirement. That is the same reason why parents put all they have to make sure their children get the best, so that at older age, they will take care of them.

Most entrepreneurs struggle with balancing family support and business growth

For entrepreneurs, the first wisdom is knowing the balance. While you must support others, it is always a good idea to pay yourself a defined salary. That salary becomes the only source you can tap to assist family members. This provides guidance making sure you never dip into working capital for the business.

For example, depending on the size of your business, you can pay yourself N300,000 per month. No matter the level of support required from you, have the discipline as if you are to be working in a bank or a company, you cannot just walk into the accountant and ask for money to help people. Push yourself to stay within that spending limit. (Sure, there could be moments you may need to take small loan from your company to deal with personal issues, but do that with wisdom as though you are an employee, and not an owner of that firm). If you have that level of discipline, you will be successful in your business.

The Risk of Herding in Business Strategy

The same analogy above applies in many modern industries. Companies increasingly congregate in their competitive strategies. They tend to do similar things in order to self preserve themselves. In the era of Yahoo and AOL, they provided similar services. Cell phone companies provide services and pricing models that are largely the same. Everyone wants to eat from the same pot and let the help offer assured preservation or total destruction whichever flips.

Even the network televisions are not spared this effect. From casinos to airline industry, we can see an ordered communality across industries. They mutually agreed, though never admitting it, to move in features, services and prices alike. The airline industry was notorious for it about fifteen years ago. In most developing markets where Internet has not penetrated deep enough, the media empires move in tandem on their stories, prices and distribution networks.

I call this communal competitive strategy because it simply means that these firms in their respective industries form communal ties and agree to provide services that will preserve them with lesser disruption to their industries. They may not band together because that could be illegal but the outcome shows they watch one another. Many have called this win-win strategy. It has also been seen as co-opetition where, especially in banks, they cooperate though competing against one other in other to keep the industry healthy.

Unfortunately, just as communal mutual poverty ends up badly; communal competitive strategy (CCS) is doomed in this age. The 21st century is not the one where industries can drive the consumers. Technology disrupts our needs a lot faster and makes it possible that trends arrive and fade quicker. This is in line with my argument that focusing on customer needs is a recipe for disaster; rather, firms must focus on meeting the perception of customers. That means going to offer services and products you envision they need and not asking at the moment. The idea is that very soon, the trends will make them to need them. It is like developing iPod or iPhone when few thought they were unnecessary, but when they arrived, we all liked them.

As social media, technology and globalization make consumers more informed, firms must resist the urge to follow competitors into CCS. I understand how difficult it would be to be unique or possibly a loner when something is working for everyone in the industry, and someone is asking you to follow a different plan. Banks destroyed their industry when most of the big ones got into subprime mortgage loans. In most cases, the defense from these banks was making those loans was an industry norm.

The old Ford Motors, Chrysler and GM followed a pattern- making big gas-hungry vehicles. They were all herding one another and the competition was defined on pushing more SUVs in the market. The 360-degree understanding of your market and the need of seeing the perception of consumers based on the environments which included climate movement, oil price projections and other factors played minor roles in their strategies. They were happy to communally compete, it was working, and none was ready to become a loner, even when data proved the necessity.

Breaking Industry Herding

So what must firms do to avoid the trap of CCS? They must move away from the competitive mutuality, where necessary. Google disrupted the search industry when it emerged because Yahoo, MSN and AOL were basically doing the same. I recalled that the highest email storage one could get those days was 8MG; Google provided 1GB. In airline industry, we have seen Raynair and other budget carriers in Europe disrupted the industry by offering competitive prices and taking market shares from the national carriers. We all know what happened to the US big auto companies when the Asia companies built models that appealed to customers.

Innovation provides the elements to avoid herding because innovation process means you are moving from the common way of doing things. The common way of doing things is usually what everyone does. The principle of innovation is fundamental in a firm creating differentiation and that is a key way to avoid herding.

All Together

Largely, competitive herding is totally bad. However, if an organization relies on that it will not survive for long. Most new entrants usually focus on attacking those models and when they do, you will be affected. This means you must have a strategy that is different from your competitors. You have to become like McDonald that invested in Chipotle Mexican Grill. While the model of Big Mac was under attack by policies, they covered themselves with Chipotle. Similarly, Pepsi has since evolved from purely a soda firm. If you focus on attacking the soda business, you will not get Pepsi. They got out of the soda war with Coke and reinvented.

Avoid the CCS trap and when everyone in the competition is giving customers more, you may go sole and refuse to give. And in cases where they are taking, give the customers more. Herding with your competitors is not a guarantee that you will survive. It simply means that your industry is vulnerable because your singular model can easily be attached by an outsider.

Nigeria’s Top Mobile Man And Father of Africa’s Apple

0

He is the man behind Africa’s Apple – the Tecno Mobile. He brought the firm to Nigeria, perfected a product vision. Tecno found success. In this piece I explain how Nnamdi Ezeigbo has mastered the game of mobile in Nigeria. I explain smiling curve and the accumulation of capability and what is driving his success. He is everywhere but yet invisible because you may not see him on Tecno launch events. But yet, do not worry because  most Tecno products go through Slot System which he controls. He has a great seat and he knows when to come as Infinix phones. He is the real mobile man in Nigeria and he is scaling brilliance with his partners.

Making Nigeria A Global Center of Bitcoin/ Blockchain Dapps

0
Bitcoin [source: coindesk]

In this piece, I explain why Nigeria should work to become a global center for regulated cryptocurrency/blockchain apps. Since the leading nations like U.S. and Germany have refused to regulate these new technologies, Nigeria has an opportunity to lead and enjoy the benefits inherent in them. Whether the world likes it or now, bitcoin or its incarnate under the architecture of blockchain is certain to be part of future commerce. The earlier we understand that and make it legal, the better.