The Macrosite for News, Analysis and Opinion about the Future of the Internet
Comments
Current display:       newest comments first       chronological order   threaded
< Previous   Page 2 of 8   Next >
Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Thursday January 31, 2013 2:52:39 PM
no ratings

So jealous, Kim! My sister met him when she attended a Virgin-SomethingOrOther event in North Carolina a few years ago. She did get me a t-shirt though. 

Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Thursday January 31, 2013 2:48:17 PM
no ratings

It's a role he grew very comfortable with over the years.  He was not always so extroverted.

I went to one of his birthday parties at his London house, and don't even remember seeing him (yes, there were a lot of guests).

 

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Thursday January 31, 2013 1:08:44 PM
no ratings

Yes, @Waqas, you are right that hard work are vital. You can't just be clever on social media, that's for sure! When everyone's looking at you and some are waiting for you to take a mis-step, it's even more important to ensure you're working hard, surrounding yourself with high-calber people, and listening to the right partners, colleagues, and advisors. 

WaqasAltaf
IQ Crew
Thursday January 31, 2013 12:54:46 PM
no ratings

@ Alison

Branson is surely an example and a trend setter so as to how an organization's leader should be. Glamour in his personality and the way Virgin brands itself are both something closely in comparison. Nonetheless, besides his personality and all the glamour that glows with it, his hard work and strategy are something to be truly appreciated.

WaqasAltaf
IQ Crew
Thursday January 31, 2013 12:50:08 PM
no ratings

@ kq4ym

It definitely makes us envious. Did'nt we work hard enough to get such fringe benefits and great office environments. Surley we did. Just that the skill the Google guys have is a bit scarce in supply in the labour market.

Stuff like slides are just publicity stunts. What employees really care about is material benefits such as cars, working hours, impressive remuneration, etc.

Brian Newby
IQ Crew
Thursday January 31, 2013 9:06:32 AM
no ratings

Kim, I'm not sure about when the era really ended, but I agree with your point.

But leaders set the tone and often others in the company adopt similar characteristics.  Here in Kansas, Bill Self is one of the most successful college basketball coaches in the country.  Many of his assistants have adopted the same speech patterns and vocabulary, even his accent, to the point that if one is interviewed on the radio, it's hard to tell immediately if it's Bill Self or one of them.

Tim Cook, to me, seems to emulate Steve Jobs in the same way.  If Apple is later viewed as declining after Jobs left, I think that would be an unfair point because Tim Cook, again to an outsider, seems to have kept everything going in Jobs-like fashion.

So, to your point, maybe that happened years ago and we're just seeing a different face.  It could be that the Jobs era won't end for a few more years until the company is basically purged of old-timers at senior levels.  It's an interesting thought that a CEO can have a lasting effect on a company's culture.  That can be good and bad, of course, but interesting nonetheless.

Brian Newby
IQ Crew
Thursday January 31, 2013 8:58:54 AM
no ratings

Mitch, I was only harkening back to 1997, when Steve Jobs came.  Only Mac purists thought he would succeed and their advice was to focus more on schools, make the hardware more colorful, that kind of thing.

Then, there were the haters, really, like Michael Dell, who suggested Jobs scrap the whole company.

I know it's trendy to applaud Steve Jobs and I'm really doing that, but what I admire at the time is that NO ONE said, "you know, Steve, why don't you leverage your Hollywood connections to create a supreme music store that will make downloading music and eventually movies mainstream, and while your at it, create a little funky music player without a display, and you'll become the most valuable company in the world."

One of my favorite authors is Gary Hamel because he pushes the concept of "Getting to the Future First," which means, define your future and achieve it before your competitors reach theirs.  He lost me a bit later when he claimed that anybody with any sense could have seen Enron's collapse a mile away.  Really?  He didn't.

If you were someone in 1997 who thought Apple had it going on, I believe you because you are a smart successful techie and an editor of this site full of thought leaders :-), but there are plenty of other people who fall to revisionist history.  In fact, you deserve to be exalted because you were probably scoffed at often in 1997.

I liked the whole story at the time because what I thought Apple did is brought back the single, as I've posted already.  That was cool to me and I felt it saved downloading of music.  I remember telling my kids that the prize at the time was iTunes, not the iPod.  I still stand by that.   (I'm not much of a socializer, so I was neither scoffed nor praised; my poor family is the only group to hear my old timer rants).

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 30, 2013 5:35:18 PM
no ratings

Branson also has the ability to market himself well. I've never met him, unfortunately, but he was one of the earliest CEOs to brand himself as part of his companies and vice versa (at least one of the earliest I can recall). Virgin, the company, and Branson, the man, are intertwined -- which will be bad if/when he ever wants to sell the company, isn't really who he says he is/acts, or when he dies. But in the meantime he's built a company that mirrors his public image, whose advertising and marketing directly correlate with his persona, and he is a whiz with social media as a direct result of that ease and that integration. 

Mitch Wagner
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 30, 2013 5:25:59 PM
no ratings

Clearly, I need to learn more about Richard Branson. 

Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 30, 2013 5:24:18 PM
no ratings

Branson started out by selling LP records by mail.  Simple idea, but it caught on.  He certainly has the entrepreneurial knack, but it's also important to be in the right place at the right time.

If Mike Oldfield had taken Tubular Bells to a different record label, or it hadn't ended up on The Exorcist soundtrack, the money to expand Virgin's business would have had to come from somewhere else.

< Previous   Page 2 of 8   Next >


The ThinkerNet does not reflect the views of TechWeb. The ThinkerNet is an informal means of communication to members and visitors of the Internet Evolution site. Individual authors are chosen by Internet Evolution to blog. Neither Internet Evolution nor TechWeb assume responsibility for comments, claims, or opinions made by authors and ThinkerNet bloggers. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.
a moderated blogosphere of internet experts
George Taylor
Has China stolen a march on the West, developing an Internet architecture that is not only based on IPv6, but is also inherently secure from both internal and external attack?
Ron Miller
Ron Miller   5/17/2013   18 comments
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.
Alan Reiter
Alan Reiter   5/16/2013   30 comments
The apartment and house sharing service, Airbnb, now requires members to verify their identities by demonstrating a presence on the web, and by either scanning a government ID or entering detailed personal details. Other enterprises should take a close look at Airbnb's verification policies.
Harry Hawk
Harry Hawk   5/15/2013   20 comments
Facebook advertising is a lightning rod. It seems neither brands nor consumers are 100 percent happy about the social media site's policies, placement, or procedures. But the real controversy about Facebook ads and promotions is over whether they work.
IETV: the thinkerNet on film
5
of
Paul J. Fleuranges
Digital Signage Keeps NYC Subway Straphangers on Track

5|6|13   |   3:51   |   No comments


New York's Metropolitan Transit Authority is conducting a pilot test of digital kiosks to guide subway users to where they want to go more efficiently and at lower cost.
Kim Davis
Fast Forward to the Future

4|23|13   |   2:29   |   20 comments


A look back at tech writing in the 90s makes us wonder where enterprise IT will be 20 years from now.
Mitch Wagner
Google Launches Its Most Depressing Service Yet

4|15|13   |   2:59   |   10 comments


Google's new Inactive Account Manager lets you control how Google disposes of your accounts when you die.
Second Shooter
Argument Over Top-Level Domains Is 'Stupid'

4|11|13   |   2:07   |   3 comments


The whole Amazon.reader debate is a double-stupid. It's stupid to think that there's any e-book buyer who doesn't know Amazon's URL, and it was stupider to let ICANN launch the whole free-form TLD initiative to start with.
Kim Davis
Ladies, Your Tablet Awaits

3|21|13   |   2:22   |   37 comments


ePad Femme is the world’s first tablet “made exclusively for women.”
Wisdom of the Big Chair
NFC Moves Into the Mainstream

3|20|13   |   2:16   |   No comments


While NFC's original goal was to enhance mobile commerce applications, it is finding its way into a number of other uses, which is creating both opportunity as well as challenges for IT departments.
Wisdom of the Big Chair
Integrating Security Into Your Cloud Contract

3|19|13   |   3:35   |   No comments


Enterprises would like to move to cloud computing but are hesitant because they are concerned about providers’ ability to secure company data. Here are some tips that help to ensure that if breaches occur, the business is not left holding the bag.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Collects Customer Information

3|18|13   |   1:15   |   No comments


Edmunds separates customers into segments based on the info it collects on its site and from partners, and uses that to push out custom content, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Uses Analytics to Customize Site

3|14|13   |   0:47   |   No comments


The automotive website uses propensity modeling to target ads and customer registration forms, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
Second Shooter
Locked Handsets Aren't the Problem – Subsidies Are the Problem

3|13|13   |   2:09   |   10 comments


Subsidized handsets, rather than locked handsets, should be the focus of regulators. We're not getting good deals, not fostering innovation, and weakening our power as buyers.
an IBM information resource
sponsored content
big blue blog
Todd Watson
Todd Watson   5/17/2013   1 comment
It's been 17 years since I've visited the city of Dublin, but I still have some very distinct impressions from my one and only visit.
an IBM information resource
sponsored content
Expert Integrated Systems: Changing the Experience & Economics of IT
In this e-book, we take an in-depth look at these expert integrated systems -- what they are, how they work, and how they have the potential to help CIOs achieve dramatic savings while restoring IT's role as business innovator.

READ THIS eBOOK
your weekly update of news, analysis, and
opinion from Internet Evolution - FREE!

REGISTER HERE
Wanted! Site Moderators
Internet Evolution is looking for a handful of readers to help moderate the message boards on our site – as well as engaging in high-IQ conversation with the industry mavens on our thinkerNet blogosphere. The job comes with various perks, bags of kudos, and GIANT bragging rights. Interested?

Please email: moderators@internetevolution.com
Internet Evolution – not for thickies
Keep Critical Data With a Knowledge Management System
Taimoor Zubair
Fortune 500 companies lose at least
$31.5 billion a year by failing to share knowledge. A Knowledge Management System (KMS) can help companies significantly reduce these costs.

CLICK FOR MORE
IT Suffers From Obama Admin's Jekyll & Hyde Approach to Privacy Rights
Ron Miller
Recently, the Obama administration has been of two minds where privacy rights are concerned. On one hand, you have an administration that vowed to
veto CISPA and mandated open data for government websites. On the other hand, you have an increasingly out-of-control Department of Justice on a fishing expedition at AP and demanding legislation to let the FBI wiretap private, encrypted communications and levy fines if a company fails to comply.

CLICK FOR MORE
Websites Should Consider Tougher ID Verification Policies
Alan Reiter
The apartment and house sharing service,
Airbnb, now requires members to verify their identities by demonstrating a presence on the web, and by either scanning a government ID or entering detailed personal details. Other enterprises should take a close look at Airbnb's verification policies.

CLICK FOR MORE