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tallmanbusiness ¡ 1 year
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Welcoming the dawn of a new era. The AI Revolution.
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Read time: approximately 7mins-16secs-ish.
It’s New Year’s Eve. This post marks the month which saw the consumer launch of Chat GPT. Here’s an entrepreneur’s perspective.
I have been immersed in the innovation/entrepreneurial eco-system for more than two decades. Over that time we’ve seen global ups and downs in the world’s economy, some of which arguably the most severe in history. We’ve never seen so much change, transformation, and new technology.
Literally all our established orthodoxies are being challenged.
I think people are hardwired to resist change. For many, sadly that resistance worsens with age - which is a problem in an ageing society. I saw a recent video interview in which Elon Musk observed that humans don’t simply resist change, sadly “humans tend to ossify, and then die”. To which I’d respond with my observations about entrepreneurs:
Whether or not we like change, entrepreneurs have a demonstrable knack for translating change into opportunity.
Entrepreneurial success is sometimes admired, occasionally celebrated, and often envied.
Entrepreneurial talent is sometimes revered, but often mistrusted.
Entrepreneurial competence is often regarded as mythical, unacacdemic, instinctive, eccentric, and exclusive - all of which I frustratingly believe to be completely untrue.
It both saddens and maddens me that in an era of unprecedented opportunity for innovation and progress so little is understood about entrepreneurialism; how to cultivate it; how to teach it; and how to democratise the benefits of an entrepreneurial mindset so that everyone can leverage the opportunities available. Particularly the lack of entrepreneurialism, innovation, intuition, and financial literacy in the formal education and curriculum of our kids.
I think this is important:
To help counteract and pacify the genuine and legitimate concerns and anxieties I hear from people contemplating their future careers, incomes, and livelihoods. By contrast, entrepreneurs have a talent of managing uncertainty positively.
I am a passionate egalitarian. I am greatly concerned by the apparent disproportionate growth of socioeconomic inequality. I believe that an entrepreneurial mindset helps drive prosperity individually and collectively.
To maximise the potential positive impact of new technology and accelerate the mass adoption of technological advances to help people, businesses, and the planet to flourish.
My belief is that the more that entrepreneurialism is demystified and codified; the more that entrepreneurialism is understood; the more that entrepreneurialism is democratised and made inclusively accessible - the more these issues of anxiety, inequality, and ecology can be tackled.
Global issues such as the environment and the economy are debatable. Whether or not you agree with the scientific evidence regarding global warming - and whether or not you care about the consequences of this issue. Whether or not you have concerns about your future financial health and stability. From the perspective of an entrepreneur what I see is a world in which:
There are potentially more jobs than there are people.
There are jobs that the majority of people just don’t want to do. Justifiably so.
The cost of living is a significant burden for many people, (below a threshold of indulgence).
Average expectations fall significantly below average outcomes.
Inefficiency and poor productivity holds us back.
Human error accounts for significant loss of life and injury.
We are perilously close to passing ecological milestones that are irrevocable.
For years corporate corridors have been dominated with angst conversation about “Disruption”. My point is, if all we talk about is disruption, then all we will see is disruption.
What if instead all we thought about was: “Liberation” - then perhaps what we would be looking for is ways to enable ourselves to be more free to do what ever it is that we want to do.
At one point ( a while ago) there was a growing momentum in a conversation about “UBI” - Universal Basic Income. The notion that everyone could/should be paid c. $500 per month in order to live. Interestingly, my sense is to a large extent that conversation seems to have gone away (or certainly quietened). I understand the idea as a notion to provide stability; a sustainable alternative to displaced employment; a new mechanism for wealth distribution. But my whole premise is the opposite to this - my premise is not how best to distribute free cash and to remunerate idleness. My whole premise is, how best to pursue technological advancement in order to eliminate costs - for people to be free to do what they want to do.
Recent progress in nuclear fusion - the source of limitless [relatively] impact-less free energy, gives us a tantalising glimpse at a scientifically viable route to delivering such cost reduction, in terms of providing
Free energy to power our homes;
Free energy to heat our homes;
Free energy to power our cars;
Free energy to radically reduce the cost of food production.
Easy to dismiss as fantasist and fiction. Scientific breakthroughs this month in nuclear fusion mean that the industrial application of fusion power is an inevitability within the lifetime of my daughters. My view though is that this is not the most significant technological development to have arrived this month.
In preparing my book I have re-read the c. 175 posts I published over the last ten years. What’s clear, especially in the earlier posts, is the extent to which I was trying to capture the birth of the ‘digital economy’ - whatever that is, and whatever it means. Ten years later it could be debated whether the digital economy has now landed - or whether the ‘beginning’ is now over and we’re somewhere in the ‘midst’ of it. That is not important. What is important is, the public launch in December 2022 of ChatGPT - which delivers explosively the start of the ‘AI economy’.
It is a moment we should all note in our conscious memory: where and when we were when we first made aware of it - and fascinatingly, what we first nervously asked of it.
The difference between the ‘digital economy’ and the ‘AI economy’ is not semantic. Not only is the difference profound - but also, with each new economic-era the consequence, significance, and impact multiplies. In the case of AI I believe the impact will be exponentially more profound than any previous economic era.
When I first used ChatGPT it became immediately apparent to me that both conventional search (eg. Google) and established advertising models/revenue would be completely rewritten. I strongly suspect that is merely the tip of the iceberg. With CHATGPT, for the very first time, the general public gets a real-world practical AI tool that it can play with meaningfully that delivers tangible and interactive results.
The entrepreneurially minded among us will be beyond excited, motivated, and energised by the possibilities that AI now creates. Those that are more attached to an incumbent mindset will be deeply distrustful of this development and will choose instead to operate in either denial or combat (or both).
The hospitality sector. The agricultural sector. The care sector. The medical sector. All have profound shortages of labour. It seems overwhelmingly inevitable to me that the advances in technology, such as AI now need to be combined with the willing/available human capital in order to multiply the productivity and efficiency of those workers to enable them to meet the evident demand. AI can help make our existing workforce bionic. The distress in the health sector in the UK demonstrates that that need is beyond critically urgent. Whole regions of the UK today have announced ‘critical-emergency-cover only’.
I asked ChatGPT a question (as follows) - to which it replied with the six bullet points below, in less than four seconds:
Q. In using AI to deliver a conversational companion for elderly people with dementia, what safeguards need to be in place to protect vulnerable people? For example, in cold whether if an elderly person asked, should I turn-down my heating to save money - how can their safety and wellbeing be ensured and protected?
There are several safeguards that can be put in place to protect vulnerable people, such as elderly people with dementia, when using AI to deliver a conversational companion:
Clear and concise language: It is important to use clear and concise language when communicating with elderly people with dementia, as they may have difficulty understanding complex instructions or concepts.
Safety reminders: The conversational companion should be programmed to provide safety reminders, such as reminding the elderly person to stay hydrated, take their medications, and dress appropriately for the weather.
Emergency contact information: The conversational companion should be programmed to provide emergency contact information in the event that the elderly person is in need of assistance.
Limited decision-making capabilities: The conversational companion should not be programmed to make decisions on behalf of the elderly person, as this could potentially put their safety at risk. Instead, it should be programmed to provide information and recommendations for the elderly person to consider, but ultimately it is up to the person to make their own decisions.
Human supervision: It is important to have a human caregiver or family member available to provide supervision and assistance to the elderly person, as needed.
Regular review and updates: The conversational companion should be regularly reviewed and updated to ensure that it is functioning properly and providing accurate and appropriate information and recommendations.
My next question ought to be “please can you code this to work via Alexa?” - which I have no doubt it can do, but then like many of my entrepreneurial peers, I’m just trying to figure out what problem to fix first and where best to invest my limited time and capacity.
I am not eulogising that AI is the answer to all our problems and that the future is going to be amazing. I’m also not saying that entrepreneurs have all the answers and are exclusively placed to leverage this new technology.
What I am saying is, is that the launch of ChatGPT and all the other flavours of AI that follow it, is a watershed moment. A before-and-after moment. More significant than when my parents replaced our black and white television for a colour TV.
From the perspective of business - I can’t think of a single industry that won’t be affected by AI technology. Whole industries will be (and are in need of being) completely rewritten as a consequence of the new capabilities that AI enables.
Like all changes of era throughout history before us - some of us will grasp the possibility that new technology represents as a positive opportunity. Others will fare less well. When we look back through history, so far, without exception the macro economic effect of each transition of era has been overall increased prosperity.
2023 is going to be epic!
Happy New Year.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 1 year
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The 10th Anniversary of TallManBusiness blog. What I learned from ten years of blogging.
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Read time: approx. 7 mins and 31 seconds, ish.
It is the tenth Birthday of the TallManBusiness blog. I find it somewhat incredible that this month ten years ago, October 2012, I made a decision – a commitment – to write down and share my original thoughts, insights, and observations about business, entrepreneurship, and innovation – and to publish those thoughts via a blog. This blog.
A lot has happened in those ten years. For calibration, my daughters have transformed from kids aged eight and ten, to gown-ups aged eighteen and twenty. Which is utterly bonkers.
The purpose of my writing was always clear: (I apologise if this sounds really pretentious, but) the intent of the blog is that I wanted to do for entrepreneurship what Delia Smith and Jamie Oliver have done for cooking. If you want to roast a chicken, you can simply Google their recommendations to find clear instructions on how best to cook the perfect dish. You can be confident that Delia and Jamie have tested their recipes a thousand times.
My ambition for the blog is simple: to make venturing more straightforward and hopefully more prosperous. And to share lessons learned. To identify the common bear-traps; help de-risk the abundant jeopardy; encourage more entrepreneurs to get started; and to help ventures succeed.
I want to bring to life the benefits of an entrepreneurial mindset for people and for businesses both small and large.
I have enjoyed a career that is unique in the extent to which I have worked for both large corporates and small start-ups, simultaneously. My work has gifted me the privilege of an exclusive perspective from which to observe the repeat behaviours common to successful entrepreneurs. And this insight is central to all my blog posts, which are unashamedly anecdotal and unscientific.
For ten years I have delivered insight from the frontline of commerce; the traumas and tribulations of entrepreneurs; the optimistic possibilities of innovators and their innovations.
I have been venturing for two decades and have invested directly and indirectly in more than 300 ventures cumulatively. The ventures which I directly help get started have collectively raised more than half a billion pounds in capital finance. I’ve taken great care to harvest the insights that I have observed over those two decades.
I’ve also given a lot of thought to the distillation of those insights, and the codification and translation of insight into practical interventions that anyone can undertake.
My passion is to democratize entrepreneurial success. To make entrepreneurship as accessible and inclusive as possible. I believe that no-one has a monopoly on good ideas and opportunity.
If humans can learn nuclear physics, my assertion is that entrepreneurship can absolutely be both taught and learned. I believe anyone and everyone can be an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurial success is not defined by ‘nurture or nature’ (although like musicianship, some people possess a natural disposition or talent).
My purpose is: To help people and businesses flourish.
My intent is: To liberate.
That is my life’s work.
In a word ‘flourish’ is singularly the consistent theme and the driving force of all my work throughout my career. That is one of the reasons why I am so passionate about my work as EiR at Alantra UK. Flourish is central to all the amazing ventures in my portfolio.
The purpose of the blog is not exclusively altruistic – it was also to give me:
Discipline: I never publicly declared how frequently that I would publish, but I made a commitment to myself. Privately, I set myself a goal - little did I know at the start how audacious and strenuous that target would become.
A repository: The blog has given me a thought-library in which to collect and collate all the entrepreneurial insight I have observed and amassed. And also to exorcise all those thoughts and observations that percolate in my head and put them instead into a vault to be accumulated safely.
Feedback: And by virtue of publishing, the blog enables people to give me feedback on the journey so that I can adapt and evolve my writing and my content.
In October 2012, with intense nervousness and trepidation, I pressed ‘post’ on my first article. I had no idea what would happen; whether anyone would read it; what they would think; whether or not they would like it.
The funny thing is – ten years later, I’m slightly less nervous to publish – but interestingly, those butterflies remain. You never know just what you might provoke or how people may react.
I made a commitment that I would publish a new post at least once a month. That is a commitment that I am especially proud to have delivered without compromise.
In 120 months since the first post was published, I have subsequently posted a total of 175 articles – an average of almost 1.5 posts per month.
Despite however intensely busy I may have been, I never missed a single deadline.
At the risk of sounding self-congratulatory, I am extremely proud of that accomplishment. It’s an achievement I regard as non-trivial. Not least because on average each post took me more than half a day to craft – which when multiplied by 175 adds-up to ‘a lot’.
But the man-hours are only one part of the story. In addition to the hours of labour is the burden-time in contemplation and consideration not just what to write, but what to say. And as a non-writer, how to say it.
I have worked hard to make the blog topical. The topic I choose to write about each month is invariably in response to what I see, hear, and observe happening at that time. Especially, to reflect what’s happening in the business and innovation eco-systems in which I am embedded.
In summary, what I have observed in business over the past ten years is that:
Fundamentally business is the same
However, how business is done has changed beyond recognition or prediction
In the UK we’ve witnessed faltering economy; faltering politics; austerity; referendum; Brexit; a pandemic; war; and climate change
WFH was mandated during the pandemic
And for many, Working From Home has become the norm (where ever that home happens to be)
Regarding venturing, I’d also say that over the past ten years more than ever before:
Businesses cannot afford not to be ‘digital’. There are no exceptions
The sector once referred to as ‘the tech sector’ now encompasses virtually every business that I meet. The tech sector has become universally inclusive
Since 2012 there has been a shift from ‘light-tech’ to ‘heavy-tech’ (AKA ‘deep-tech’) and significant shift to ventures that are inherently anchored in scientific innovation and/or ‘med-tech’
The exciting development is that tech is no longer the obstacle – there is an increasing realization that humanity can do what ever it wants dependent on sufficient appetite (with the exception of time-travel)
There is significantly greater understanding in venturing of what does and doesn’t work – a formula for entrepreneurial success is becoming more evident
Specifically in the UK, I’d say that there is a greater appetite than ever for customer service excellence – and yet despite this, in most examples that I can think of, corporates have gone in exactly the opposite direction in their annihilation of customer service departments / resources / capacity. Trying to engage a human within a corporate for service in the UK is futile
Wonderfully, ventures have become more purposeful
Despite the overwhelming importance of small businesses – and the number of globally significant corporates that serve them, I still can’t name a single corporate brand that is famous for its support and celebration of SME’s – it’s a massive missing, and one that I’m astonished that no-one has seized
The same absence of ownership is true across other wealthy sectors / demographies / genres – eg. I can’t think of a contemporary brand famous for its championing of the elderly, despite the shift in growth of an ageing society
A lot of ‘smart-tech’ (eg. smart-home technology) is either annoyingly unreliable or doesn’t work. I could shame-list a catalogue of brands/products that are infuriating but really what I want to highlight is that this field is still wide-open
The point is: more than ever, the incumbents have not got their markets sown-up – despite the trillions these corporates hold in reserve, none of them is too big to fall
There has never been more need of, and more opportunity for, INNOVATION – than now!
More than ever before my interest is in the innovation of ‘product’ not services
Over the past ten years I’ve learned a lot:
Despite the emergence of a ‘success formula’ for entrepreneurship, accurately predicting which ventures will succeed is still irritatingly elusive
At school I failed and retook English Language O-level at least five times (possibly six, we lost count). I’ve learned to never let earlier deficiencies determine my destiny
I’ve aged. And I’ve changed – for the better I hope
I’ve shifted my approach from one centred on ‘passion’, to one centred on ‘compassion’ – there is a massive difference (which is a topic for a post in its own right)
The posts that were most liked and read include:
The MPA
The Four D’s of Leadership Excellence
The Best Career Advice I Ever Had
And the posts that celebrated the lives of Arch Bishop Desmond Tutu and Her Majesty the Queen
I want to especially thank everyone that has positively responded to my posts and kindly commented, liked, and shared with their networks.
My biggest thanks go unreservedly to Mrs D without whose insight and inspiration this blog would not be complete. I regard Jules as co-author having contributed enormously to the richness of the content and disproportionally to its intelligence. Jules, thank you for your enormous patience, wisdom, expertise, and guidance. Jules, apologies that this is another of the ‘over-stuffed-cushions’.
Special commendation to Maddy (my youngest daughter) who took and edited many of the photos.
What next?
Never say never. I’m not going to stop blogging immediately, but I am going to stop my religious adherence to publishing every month, and move instead to publishing when I feel like it – when I feel it’s relevant or that I’ve found something that I think is important to share
I’m going to focus less on publishing blog posts and focus more on the task of translating all the content that I’ve accumulated into a coherent narrative for a book
I still have whole chapters of content rough-drafted in my head which I walk around with constantly - I’m keen to exorcise those thoughts and put these ‘missing’ chapters down on paper
I hope the blog has been helpful. I hope the blog has accelerated other peoples’ thinking. I hope to have added-value.
Enough said. For now anyway.
Thank you.
Loads of love,
Simon (a tall man, in business)
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Why mentors shouldn’t tell entrepreneurs what to do. And why entrepreneurs shouldn’t listen.
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Part 1: Thoughts for mentors: Read time: approx. 3 mins and 27 seconds, ish.
I often get requests from people asking how they can become more involved with start-ups. Also, requests for advice on how to become a Non-Exec’ Director (NED). These requests are driven by a genuine desire to ‘give-back’ and a genuine enthusiasm to help founders and their ventures to succeed.
And that’s a good thing because, without exception, I’ve yet to meet a venture whose success was not directly contributed to by external NEDs and advisors, no matter how talented the founders may be. And that’s important if founders want to accelerate their business.
The reality is that whilst starting a business can be tricky - scaling-up is much more difficult than starting-up.
As a founder and business leader, when you are in “the thick of the forest, it can be especially difficult to see the wood from the trees”.
Therefore, getting a helicopter view from an external advisor / Non-Executive Director can make all the difference between success and failure in business.
That’s why I encourage entrepreneurs and Executive business leaders to seek external input by recruiting seasoned Non-Executive Directors – and to set-up expert Advisory Boards.
Business problems are democratic – they seem to affect all business equally no matter what industry they operate in.
However, there are definite points in the scale-up journey when businesses commonly get STUCK. Usually the specific challenges and obstacles I see are correlated directly to the number of employees – for example, the distinct challenges that happen when companies hit c. 30 to 35 full time employees (FTE).
Founders need to be open minded about where best to source great advice. My guidance is, look for someone who is a few months ahead of you on their entrepreneurial/leadership journey/quest. This experience and foresight is usually way more valuable than industry specific knowledge. If you are about to hire your 30th employee, find a fellow founder who recruited their 30th FTE the previous year.
But there is a big difference between sharing wisdom based on actual lived experience versus telling people what to do.
Mentors add the most value when they deliver foresight based on the real-world hard-knocks and celebrations earned through years of actually doing business.Crucially, the most powerful advice is delivered best by asking questions (sometimes the dumber the better).
As an active investor, NED and a mentor, I take great care to avoid telling people what to do because, even if you believe that your advice is right, it is vitally important for mentors to take note that:
You cannot guarantee that the recipient heard correctly what you said.
Even if they did hear what you said, you cannot influence how they interpret it.
Even if they heard you correctly and interpreted what you said as you intended, you have no control over the quality of their execution.
Even if they execute your advice well, you have no command over how the competition will react.
And so on.
That’s at least four major factors about which the advisor has no control.
It does not matter how well intended advisor recommendations may be, advisors have very little influence over outcomes.
Perhaps more important, advisors don’t suffer the consequences of their advice to the same extent as Executives either.
Aspiring mentors should give more thought and consideration to the consequences of their interventions.
What if in-fact things do not go well?  What recourse does the entrepreneur have?  Could / should the entrepreneur be within their rights to sue the advisor to recoup their losses?
My experience is that advisors rarely consider the potential liability of their advice. And when they do, they find the prospect of mentoring far less compelling (however well intended their recommendations may be).
In my experience the best advisors:
impart wisdom in a way that helps founders and leaders to make informed decisions
they provide foresight (not hindsight)
they evidence their thoughts with relevant case-studies / past experience
good mentors ask questions rather than offering solutions / recommendations
they take care not to undermine the mentee’s confidence
they make sure that the mentee is clear that decisions are theirs to make (and that they made them)
Sometimes when people tell me about their enthusiasm to support ventures, actually what I hear is a desire to tell entrepreneurs/people what to do. For people that are keen to tell other people what to do, my recommendation is, find an alternative pastime and/or profession that satisfies that need.
Remember, whether you are formally Non-Exec Director or informally a coach/mentor – the clue is in the job title: “non-executing”. It is not your job to do your mentee’s job.
Part 2: Thoughts for founders: Read time: approx. 1 min and 38 seconds, ish.
Advice is a two-way street.  Not only should mentors take care in how they impart advice, but equally mentees should also consider when to listen. When seeking external advice, my recommendations to founders are:
Note that if your venture is pioneering a new invention, a new innovation or new technology, then perhaps there is no precedent for the challenges and obstacles that you face.
Precedent implies conformity with convention and incumbency. If your intent is to disrupt the status-quo, following the established ‘normal’ is unlikely to deliver that outcome.
Know also that entrepreneurial success is often achieved by uncompromising people that have an unconventional and non-conformist approach to a situation or opportunity.
Take care to leverage the advantages of a beginners’ mind.
Know that extraordinary results often require extraordinary interventions.  That following the average path is likely to only achieve average results.
Be prepared to make mistakes and to learn from them, fast.
Worry less about making the right choices and decisions. Worry more about how to recover faster from the decisions that you make.
Avoid relying on hope. Intervention is way more reliable than wishful thinking.  
Listen to external advisors that help improve the quality of your decision making when determining what your best shot is.
Resist the temptation to delegate difficult decisions – advisors should not decide for you.
Where possible use a ‘no regrets strategy’ – envision yourself in the future looking back on the decision you are making now and work out which option represents the least regret (not necessarily the least risk) – and ask your advisors / mentors / Non-Executive Directors for their perspective on that.
NB. Please note: Being ‘uncompromising’ and ‘unconventional’ should not be confused as permission to behave like an asshole.
When considering who you want to recruit as a mentor – my recommendation is: aim high. Don’t be frightened to reach-out to super-stars – what’s the worst that could happen – you never know, you might be pleasantly surprised by what they suggest.
My final thought is: think of business mentoring like food - like all forms of nourishment, metaphorically speaking:
take care to eat a balanced diet;
don’t over-eat;
check the ‘best-before’ date – make sure it’s not past it’s ‘sell-by-date’ – if in-doubt, rely on the sniff test (avoid anything that smells off);
eat at sensible times of the day;
always read the label (avoid artificial ingredients – and check the provenance):
consume all things in moderation;
mind your manners (be grateful, even if you don’t like the taste);
don’t talk whilst eating;
and consume as much variety and diversity as possible;
go to bed hungry.
Remember, some foods are more richly nutritious than others. Choose your mentors wisely – good input can make all the difference.
Part 3: Thoughts for both mentors and mentees: Read time: approx. 1 min and 21 seconds, ish.
One of my mantras is: Great leaders don’t tell people what to do. And so it may sound contradictory, but advisors should not duck answering straight questions. But they should take care to answer direct questions with relevant examples based on experience that demonstrate the context, the consequences, and the likely outcomes – which is very different to answering with a recommendation “What you need to do is . . .”.  As an advisor your job is to enrich decision making, not to decide on your mentee’s behalf.
Both mentors and mentees BEWARE:  Advisors have the luxury of the ‘helicopter view’. It is very easy for both mentor and mentee to mistakenly confuse the benefit of that elevated perspective for actual genius.  In the words of Liam Black, it is always worth remembering: “You are not the Messiah”.  I have seen first-hand the negative consequence of when that goes wrong. Supposed genius can create dependency, intoxication and addiction that is stronger than any drug and just as toxic and destructive.
If you are an entrepreneur and/or leader I encourage you to find good mentors, advisors, and Non-Executive Directors – they have the potential to accelerate your progress exponentially.
And so, if your career has gifted you the benefit of functional-expertise and experience in any of the core business disciplines, such as finance, marketing, operations, legal, HR, sales – don’t hesitate to make that talent available to founders in need of support to help them succeed. Just don’t tell them what to do. If you are a founder and/or CEO struggling to scale-up your venture and perhaps feel STUCK, don’t hesitate to reach out to seasoned professionals who are experts in the areas which are challenging you most. Just don’t leap to act on what the tell you. Leverage your mentor’s talent and experience to inform your decisions and determine the best shots. If you find yourself in a room where the narrative sounds like: “What you need to do is . . .” either find a different narrator, or better still, find a different room.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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In honour and memory of Her Majesty the Queen on the momentous day of her funeral.
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Read time: approx. 1 minute, ish.
My Mum was the biggest fan of the Queen. They even looked similar. My Mum was an unconventional feminist, she greatly valued the standards and example that Her Majesty set. In the hard times in the 70's, Mum appreciated the North Star that the Queen represented. When the world was a bit broken, the Queen provided a much needed and reassuring sense of solidity, integrity, authority, gravitas, and tradition. 
To my patriotic Father, the Queen personified our country in a way that validated my Grandfather’s absence for the entirety of the Second World War. The Queen was more than a decade older than my parents and so as a parent she was one step ahead of their own journey with a growing family. 
The Queen outlived both my parents. Jules and I are so thrilled to have met Her Majesty. And even more so, for my Dad to see me receive my Honour directly from Her Majesty, one of the very last to be presented by the Queen. She made me laugh. 
As an entrepreneur passionate about the mass adoption of new technology to deliver positive impact and help us flourish, I can't believe all the transformation that the Queen witnessed during her lifetime. And the spectrum of Prime Ministers she met during the longevity of her reign. During my time as EiR for the Government I witnessed first hand the enormity of Her Majesty’s presence in holding Westminster to account. 
As an avid observer and commentator on leadership, in my view the Queen was a remarkable leader. Famously avoiding explicitly sharing her opinions publicly, and yet simultaneously making her feelings felt. There are many who would be wise to echo such self mastery. Globally she was the 'great' in Great Britain. 
I am sure I am not alone when reflecting in the nostalgia and memories of my parents and grandparents, the Queen is an integral part of that legacy. With fondness, pride, compassion and affection, such warm and loving memories. Thank you Your Majesty.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Mass Adoption.
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Read time: approx. 6 mins and 8 seconds, ish.
I am often asked my opinion on the difference between entrepreneurship and innovation. For me, it’s not semantic. Simply put, my belief is:
Innovation is about invention.
Entrepreneurship is about commercialisation.
There is a huge difference. Equally, there is a huge area of overlap and intersection.
I’ve also been asked whether I regard myself as either an ‘innovator’ or an ‘entrepreneur’. I have never thought of myself as either.
My first career – my early passion – was marketing. I’ve always seen myself as an agent for mass adoption.
My passion is the mass adoption of new technologies that deliver a positive impact to people, businesses, and the planet. What’s exciting is, I’m not alone.
During my career as a marketeer in the UK, I’m proud to have contributed to the mass-adoption of products and services a few times over, across a spectrum of brands, businesses, and ventures – I’ll write about those examples as case-studies when I translate these blog posts into a book (which I’ll start compiling later this year).
The term ‘mass-adoption’ is a relative term. What I mean by it is, to reach the maximum audience relevant to your product/service/sector/ambition. Some products are universally relevant – others are niche.
That last point, ambition, is perhaps the most important. If you are a fitness instructor, it is perfectly fine, acceptable, applaudable [even] to only want to recruit X number of customers. You don’t have to be as prolific and globally successful as Joe Wicks who serves hundreds of thousands of customers internationally, (Joe is one of the most talented entrepreneurs that I’ve ever had the privilege to meet).
My previous post captured my assertion that “Build it and they won’t come” – an appeal for innovators and entrepreneurs to avoid the illusion (delusion) that simply creating a product will manifest demand.
Inconveniently, building demand is invariably more difficult than building product. In venturing I’m keen for the application of effort to be more correlated to those challenges proportionately - for entrepreneurs to prioritise ‘demand-development’ over ‘product-development’. In my experience, success [and survival] depends on it – and that’s why I am so passionate about this topic.
Regarding mass-adoption - the problem is that rational logic does not work. We all know we should eat well, drink more water, and exercise more often. And yet, very few of us do.
The following examples are imperfect, but, if rational logic prevailed then the consumption of organic food should be much higher; we’d cumulatively eat less meat; and adoption of electric vehicles would be faster.
I am aware of two scientific studies that explore the failure of rational logic to affect positive changes in consumer behaviour. Propositions such as Saving Time; Saving Money; Saving the Planet – have very little (if any) impact, no matter how well they are communicated.  What the research concluded is that when uptake is dependent on behavioural change, the most powerful proposition that affects and accelerates adoption is evidencing to people that their peers are already doing it, [‘it’ being whatever the proposition happens to be].
I especially like the research study exploring how best to encourage domestic recycling, where communication leaflets that tested a variety of messages, (eg. saving the planet; saving money etc etc) failed to generate much of a response. But what did affect change was not only “this is what everyone else is doing” but specifically, placing the recycling containers on the pavement outside participants’ houses thereby broadcasting participation and conformity. There are other equivalent academic studies – one recently about switching off air-conditioning to save the planet; save money etc. which evidenced the same outcomes/findings.
No-one wants to be the one letting the side down. No-one wants to be humiliated – and not doing what others do represents a risk of leaving oneself open to criticism, possibly ridicule. Fear is a powerful motivator.
My assertion is that there is a positive force that is significantly more powerful than fear – and that is: the human compulsion to conform.
Humans are hardwired to mimic, to conform, to blend-in, to commune. This compulsion is hardwired in our NDA, in our genetics, our traditions, and our culture. It is involuntary, automatic, and subconscious. It is tribal, protectionist, and survivalist.
I believe that conformity is an animal instinct, and it is why humans have regional accents and local dialects – the purpose of which is not only to ‘belong’ it is also to disarm, to pacify, to unite, to literally broadcast: ‘I am one of you – I am like you – I am part of your community – I will preserve and contribute to our community’.
Mass adoption is often misunderstood and misdiagnosed. Comments such as “a million people can’t be wrong” is a legitimate rationale – it’s about trust. But my assertion is that whilst trust is important, trust is not contagious. My belief is that fundamentally, humans like to do what other humans do – and when leveraged entrepreneurially, conformity is highly infectious and especially viral.
Successful entrepreneurs have a talent for creating movements and creating momentum.
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is that they create the perception that ‘every-one-is-doing-it’ even before their product is fully available.
And that is why social media is so important. The practical application of social media is that the more remarkable you make your product, the more people will be compelled to remark upon it to their friends and family. Word-of-mouth was always the most powerful form of marketing. What social media provides is the opportunity to amplify and broadcast advocacy thereby multiplying its power exponentially. Social media is a tool that small businesses can leverage to their advantage, disproportionately.
Practical steps that innovators and entrepreneurs can take to affect mass-adoption – not an exhaustive list, but simply a handful of examples to help bring the opportunity to life:
MVP / Beta:  Get your product in peoples’ hands. Make your MVP digital – don’t just get ‘units’ into users’ hands, get those units producing data. Publish the insights and findings generated by that data.
Advocacy:  Get notable people to advocate your product and provide testimonies. ‘Notable’ can be either:
Celebrities
Industry experts
Unremarkable people that look and sound just like your everyday users
Network:  Engage existing customer interest groups: fanbases; forums; user-groups; charities; associations; trade-bodies – give them something to talk about – give them something that they are compelled to share with their members / peers.
Corporates:  Which corporates provide a fast-track to millions of people that you want to reach? What would compel those corporates to engage with you; to support you; to advocate your product/service? How can you contact directly the ‘Director of Innovation’ in those corporates specifically?
Build Communities:  The Most Powerful Action: if there is an absence of any consumer group connected to your cause / mission / purpose / ambition – what can you do to create and convene one and become a force for change in that space? Even if your product is B2B, what is the ultimate consumer group that has a vested interest in the success of your venture and is aligned with its purpose?
Vitally – how can you do all the above simultaneously?
To reiterate my previous recommendations:
Don’t pursue business development consecutively. Pursue interventions that drive mass adoption concurrently.
Plan for success. Don’t wait to discover how an initiative turns-out. Ask yourself, what will you do if it works well? Do that now.
Don’t focus on the money. Initial volumes are likely to be small and therefore the economics will be challenging. Investors are compelled by potential, not by the current metrics. Short-term revenue is invariably a red-herring. Instead of focusing on short-term revenue, focus instead on the identification of pathways to mass-adoption.
Evidence the potential. Evidence demand.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Build it and the WON’T come.
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Ah – the infamous Devonshire ‘hand-of-no’. The hand gesture that makes clear ‘that’s not going to happen’ and that the time for talking is over.
Business is usually a negotiation.
A common mistake made during negotiation is a misguided belief that rational logic will prevail.
If only business was that easy – entrepreneurialism would be so much more simple, so much less brutal.
It takes extraordinary willpower to go out and sell, rather than invest effort in activity you believe will help win the negotiation. This is perhaps singularly the biggest issue that catches-out more founders than any other.
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is how quickly they concentrate on ‘sales’ as the highest order priority.
More important, successful entrepreneurs dismiss all the legitimate reasons why selling would be so much easier, more abundant, less risky, more convenient, sometime further along in the journey.
Successful entrepreneurs dismiss the “I need a logo” – “I need a website” – “I need a better website” as conditions on which selling depends.
As an active angel investor, the moment that I hear ‘sales’ being referred to as a future event, all my alarm bells start ringing.
If you want to accelerate the growth of your business and avoid expensive mistakes, the best source of foresight is asking entrepreneurs who are ahead of you in their quest – irrespective of how different your businesses might be.
When entrepreneurs are asked, ‘Do you have any regrets?’ and ‘If you were to do it all again, what would you do differently?’ the most common answers that I hear is a wish that they had started selling sooner – a regret that they could have pursued sales more aggressively earlier in the journey.
And that is exactly why when talking to new founders, the misconception which concerns me most is a belief that “build it and they will come” (ie. the notion that selling is dependent on having a finished product).
This idea represents three potential mistakes:
A belief that sales cannot commence until a tangible product has finished being built
That prospects need to see and feel tangible product in order to buy it
That simply by virtue of a product (and/or service) existing, that people will be compelled to buy it
I cannot say this strongly enough: The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is that they do not rely on tangible product (or polished product) in order to sell.
What do they rely on instead?
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is that they: 
Convert every conversation into a sale.
End every conversation with – “and how many units can I send you?”.
Worry less about pricing and economics in the early days and accept that profit/margin will be tight initially. The economics can be optimised at scale.
Are especially clear, definitive, and articulate about what problem their product / service / company solves.
Build product that is remarkable – that people are compelled to remark about it to their friends, family, and network (even if it doesn’t totally deliver against its promise completely in the ‘beta’ versions).
Get product out the door – and that the product is data-centric and quickly yields and harvests ‘data’ – data that is converted into meaningful insights that are intriguing, engaging, and compelling. They generate new data and new narratives not seen or heard before.
Entrepreneurs are often obsessed. Sometimes their success depends on it. Which is why it is easy to forgive entrepreneurs for trying to ‘convert’ everyone with their passion.
But that passion is invariably misplaced when it translates into requests for funding in order to build product before sales have been won.
Sadly, increasingly, the evidence is the exact opposite. Increasingly my concern is:
“Build it and they WON’T come.”
I have participated in the investment of more than 300 ventures (and served as cofounder to a fair few). Without exception, I’ve yet to work with a venture that managed to achieve mass-adoption without considerable effort, intervention, and cost.
My appeal to founders is simple:
Just because you find a proposition compelling, that does not mean that everyone else will share your passion and/or your taste
However logical and rational you believe your solution to be, does not mean that that logic and rational thinking will be persuasive
If purchasing your product/service requires people to change their behaviour be aware that often people will do almost anything to avoid making that change
Saving money; saving time; saving the planet, are not necessarily enough to compel people to buy – however overwhelmingly logical and rational you believe that to be
Which may sound incredibly negative, pessimistic, and gloomy. In-fact the challenge of selling; the challenge of driving adoption of your product is singularly the most important obstacle that needs to be overcome in order to achieve business success. Not only is that challenge exciting, I believe it is surmountable.
Designing and building product is never simple or trivial. However, in my experience, building product is not as challenging as building demand. Which is why I advocate prioritising the building a sales pipeline ahead of building the product.
And that’s why MVP (Minimal Viable Product) is such a vitally important stage of the validating customer demand.
Build the cheapest, quickest version of your product in order to be able to establish and test routes to market.
I often hear entrepreneurs worry about failing to meet customer expectations. Concern about over-promising and under-delivering. About causing disappointment and the potential to burn bridges. I hear founders say: “we only have one shot at this”. There’s a common belief amongst first-time innovators that products have to be perfect before shipped. I think all of those concerns are entirely legitimate.
In response to these challenges, the solution is not to build the perfect product. Success is not dependent on perfection, success is managing expectations appropriately and winning your customers forgiveness and winning their advocacy.
My advice to founders is:
Don’t think of business development as a sequential process
Anticipate success
What that means in practical terms is, if you are running a trial, anticipate that it will end well and be ready for the next steps based on that assumption, rather than waiting for the result of the trial before deciding what to do next. Pursue business development concurrently, not sequentially.
Don’t rely on building product to unlock sales.
Products rarely make sales. Humans do.
I’ll share my thoughts on how best to unlock paths to mass-adoption via a separate post.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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When is the best time to sell my business? Exiting a business in uncertain times.
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For many entrepreneurs, the common goal is the ambition to one day sell the business and in so doing materially and financially evidence that they built something of worth. For founders, successfully exiting their venture is the understandable hallelujah moment when they cash-in all the blood sweat and tears invested – hopefully for a healthy return.
Through two decades work in capital finance, including both corporate and angel investing, I can testify that the valuation of businesses is a dark art.
Simplistically a company is only ever worth what someone else is prepared to pay for it.
Equally simplistically, companies are usually valued as a multiple of either their revenue or their profit (EBITDA) – depending on the sector, age, and financial maturity of the company.
When owner-managers decide that they want to sell their business, unsurprisingly they have a keen interest to choose when the best time is to do so. Timing is a common cause of anxiety.
What elevates that anxiety exponentially is that we are living through an era of unprecedented uncertainty. Two decades of economic roller-coastering, with waves of economic crisis of historic magnitude; followed by a global pandemic; and then the conflict in Ukraine. Stock markets are volatile, public confidence is flakey, share prices are low and rumors are speculating the inevitability of ‘a crash’.
Despite all the background noise, negativity, and pessimism, clearly the best time to sell a business is when more than one buyer wants to buy it.
Competing demand drives-up price. Even in a recession.
Competing supply has the opposite effect.
Which goes to demonstrate that the fundamentals of economics really are quite simple. The balance of supply and demand – overlayed with the buyer’s prerogative to ‘do nothing’.
However, in capital finance, good money is always in search of a good home.
And whether or not the economy is growing or in recession, in almost all circumstances, a buyer can nearly always be found if the seller is prepared to compromise enough. But that’s not a situation that any founder would choose for themselves or their business. Distressed sales rarely end happily.
Context is a powerful thing. No-one has the privilege of operating in a commercial/economic vacuum. Market confidence definitely has an impact on quantity of potential buyers, their appetite to negotiate, and the availability of funds.
If a founder does not need to sell, then the obvious advice is for them to wait for happier economic times. However, whilst liquidity tends to reflect market sentiment, it is worth noting that if sellers choose to wait for a buoyant economy, they risk:
the uncertainty of how long that will take;
how well their business will fare in the interim;
and how many comparable businesses they may be competing with when they eventually do go to market.
I’ve had the misfortune to experience three severe recessions: in the 90’s (the post-80’s boom); the early 2000’s (the post-dot-com boom); and the 2008/9 financial crash (the post Lehman crisis).
My experience of previous recessions is that those who invest in the hard times tend to fair better when the economy improves.
My view is, what matters most is not so much the state of the market, but the state of the business.
Even in a recession, there will be mid-tier and large corporates, and private equity funds, that will be hungry to acquire both revenue and/or innovation.
And so, if your business is able to demonstrably evidence either market leading innovation and/or clear year-on-year sustainable financial growth, there could well be material interest in the acquisition of your venture despite the state of the market.
And that’s important because we do not know when the economy will stabilize (or whether the current state is the new normal). We don’t yet know what the true cost of the Covid pandemic will be.
Those compelled to wait for happier times – risk waiting a long time.
My hunch is that UK demand has been forcibly constrained for an inordinately long period of time. The UK has experienced recession; ‘austerity’; Brexit; Covid. At each turn my expectation was that demand would be liberated – that spending would be unblocked. And yet, just before momentum has a chance to re-establish, there comes yet another obstacle. The UK economy keeps getting constipated.
I am lucky I get to meet some remarkable entrepreneurs who are driving amazing businesses. Putting a price on such companies is difficult at the best of times. Which is why it is especially helpful to get insights from someone who helps buy and sell more businesses than anyone I’ve ever met: friend and colleague, James Chapman Andrews at Alantra offered the following insight: “The super-resilience of revenue stability adds a premium to the valuation of a business”.
Specifically, if you can maintain revenue and profitability during the extraordinary time of pandemic disruption, your business will potentially be even more compelling to acquirers and investors post-Covid.
The end of the multiple crises that we have faced is inevitable, if frustratingly difficult to predict.
Interestingly, the team at AlantraUK have just delivered their best year ever and are currently busier than they have ever been.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Are you at War or are you at Peace?
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The conflict in Ukraine recently passed its three-month anniversary. I find it astonishing that Ukraine has proven to be so resilient in such extreme and brutal circumstances. My thoughts are with those directly affected by this terrible conflict.
In business, momentum is everything. I suspect momentum is equally important in war.
Context is a powerful thing. It is hard to imagine a context more affecting and impactful than war.
Extreme circumstances enable people to do remarkable things.
In Neuro Linguistic Programming (#NLP) there is a thought that the use of war references and battle metaphors in business are inappropriate. Old expressions like: “Man the trenches”; “Last man standing”; “Pull the pin”; “Land-grab”; “Gone nuclear” no longer belong in the office and are no-longer appropriate to the sensitivities of a compassionate workforce.
That may be so. But increasingly, my perspective is focused on driving transformational change, and the absolute urgency that those changes are required. Whether that is to arrest the global issue of an ageing society; or climate change. Whether it is the explosion [sorry] of diabetes; or obesity; or the systemic need to overhaul the connectivity infrastructure on which we now depend.
New technology represents an exciting opportunity for progress. But what I know is, innovation and transformative change are hard. Brutally so.
In my experience, the successful pursuit of innovation requires a warlike attitude in order to win.
Like war, innovation creates economy – but without all the collateral damage and loss of life. Innovation has the potential to create jobs and reduce costs.
Through the technological and scientific innovation that I see via my work, we are tantalisingly close to real breakthroughs in game-changing tech that have the potential to enrich our lives.
To bring that to life with some real-world practical examples from the frontline of innovation, three ventures that are driving a positive transformational impact in the world of occupational health:
www.howz.com
www.celsiushealth.com
www.gripable.co
These ventures are pioneering digital technology that doesn’t make occupational health experts redundant, quite the opposite, this tech helps clinicians to become bionic and has the potential to transform patient outcomes too.
I believe that is worth fighting for. That’s why I am so proud to have invested in all three of these remarkable companies.
I am passionate about the mass-adoption of new technology that helps people and business to flourish. What I know is, it is difficult.
The sad truth is transformational change rarely happens through passive intervention. The greater the need, and/or the more urgent the need, the more it needs to be fought for. The correlation is direct.
Perhaps that’s why people that have the courage to innovate want to know that their colleagues:
“Are in the arena with them”
“Are by your side”
“Have got your back”
“Will help you to deliver your Best Shot”
Fighting talk indeed.
Combat experience can leave indelible marks. That’s why care and compassion are so important, especially so in the workplace. Prior experience from previous tours of duty can be invaluable in reducing casualties and accelerating progress. But sadly, sometimes that value-add gets lost in translation, miscommunication, cultural-misalignment, and misperception. It is important to acknowledge that the authentic intent of veterans is for you to avoid stepping on landmines sometimes only visible to their hardened eyes.
If we are to conquer the globally significant challenges that humanity now faces, we need to collaborate; we need to unite; we need to entrepreneur like our lives depend on it.
Entrepreneurs are activists.
Rise-up activists, your world needs you.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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It’s time . . .
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Intro: My posts reflect what’s happening in the frontline of business. Usually, they are approximately a three minute read. These are extreme circumstances. Since 24th February 2022 I have been compelled to focus my writing on the impact Putin’s aggressive invasion of Ukraine has had. There’s a new frontline - there is a lot to think about – hence this post is much longer than usual.
Business has had a lot to contend with. In the UK there’s Brexit. Globally there’s the Covid pandemic. And now the horror of war in the Ukraine.
It is quite easy to be pessimistic in such circumstances. It is difficult to process what all these seismic events mean for business. It is easy to be distracted and become preoccupied. I don’t have ‘the answer’. But I have given a lot of consideration to how the conflict in Ukraine could affect business. And so, I’m sharing these thoughts from the perspective of an entrepreneur, in the hope that they might help people process their own deliberations. To provide another perspective. This is an extra-long post because there is so much to consider. I have tried to break it down into digestible chunks.
Hope: Like a lot of entrepreneurs, I’m an activist. One of my mantras is: Hope is not a strategy. The challenge that represents is, what are the best interventions; what can we do? Interestingly, I am hopeful that there are opportunities that will come from all these challenging circumstances. I hope that the thoughts shared here are helpful.
Context is a powerful thing: Incredibly Ukraine has withstood more than nine weeks of onslaught following Russia’s invasion. I believe that this is the worst geo-political crisis in my lifetime. In business, the immediate concern is the impact that the conflict will have on trade, confidence, pricing and valuations. We are already witnessing disruption to global supply chains; rampant inflation; a cost-of-living-crisis; and stock-market devaluation. Sadly, as a consequence of Russia’s aggression, some level of global recession is inevitable.
Underlying business health: I think that the way business responded to the pandemic was frankly remarkable. I am lucky, none of the ventures in my portfolio (both corporates and early-stage) were overtly negatively impacted. But all of them, without exception, had to radically alter their operating models in order to cope and to survive. And the benefit of such business trauma is, those businesses have emerged from the pandemic leaner and keener. I’d argue that they have never been more ‘match-fit’. Even better – I’d say some businesses are ‘hungry’, with a renewed confidence. “If we can handle Covid, we can handle anything” being a prevailing attitude that I’ve seen repeatedly.
Business response to unpredictable events: The outcome of the Brexit referendum was for many people a surprise. Except for Bill Gates, no-one saw the pandemic coming. And just when we were braced for everything to return to normal, I’m not sure anyone believed that Putin would actually invade another country. Even more remarkable, that Ukraine would be able to withstand an offensive attack from an overwhelmingly superior military force. Crises are rarely convenient. I’d argue that generically businesses have done a good job in their response to these external disruptions and challenges.
Stifled: Metaphorically speaking, I think it is not unreasonable to consider business to be somewhat constipated. I remember in the heady days of 2012, with all the euphoria of the 2012 Olympics (hosted in London, my hometown) – there was a common expectation that this was going to be the dawn of a new economic boom. A watershed from the recession that was triggered by the Lehman/financial crisis of 2008. But just as things were about to get going, in 2016 the UK voted to leave the EU – the process of which caused havoc to trade, staffing, confidence, and sales. I believe demand is there – it’s just been repeatedly stifled. Constraint has become the new normal. The economy is in need of being liberated.
War: Graphic video footage from Ukraine broadcast to digital devices in our homes and pockets, brings the horror of the conflict into our everyday safe lives. What that media content demonstrates is a military inflection point: where once formidable military hardware, like tanks and ships, encased in heavy steel armour plating now look prehistoric and precariously vulnerable when laser targeted by modern missiles fired from a shoulder or remotely piloted drone. Even more profound – the media coverage demonstrates that when faced with an overwhelmingly superior military force, the most intangible of assets can prove astonishingly and remarkably the most invincible – and that asset is: the will of the people.
The power of connectivity: President Zelensky’s talent for galvanising, elevating, and amplifying the will of a nation (and beyond) is equally remarkable. That he has done so with little more than a mobile phone broadcast from a bunker is even more mesmerizing. My assertion is that what Zelensky’s achievement demonstrates is that, singularly the most powerful weapon on earth at this time is: uninterruptable connectivity and the power to communicate. Equally important is the freedom to communicate. No wonder Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter.
The urgent need of an upgrade: What the war in Ukraine also demonstrates is the urgency that all countries now need to exponentially upgrade the infrastructure on which modern civility has become dependent. All of it. Especially connectivity. Connectivity now needs to be truly uninterruptable. Connectivity needs to deliver greater speed. Greater capacity. Greater security. More robust resilience. And wider penetration, coverage, and inclusivity. Connectivity that is so omnipresent that it is uninterruptable. Not marginally. Not incrementally. But fundamentally. Radically. A total overhaul from satellite to subterranea. Software and hardware. More securely encrypted. With a paradigm shift in data compression. This is not simply an issue of enabling employees to work-from-home a little bit more reliably. It is a matter of national growth, prosperity, resilience, and national security.
The big reboot:
The technology on which we depend is now in need of a reboot. In the language native to the mobile phone industry in which I used to work, “congratulations, you are now eligible for an upgrade!” – only this time it’s the network not the handset that needs updating.
The war in Ukraine demonstrates the extent to which relatively passive and invisible infrastructure can be weaponised. We have a choice whether to choose to leverage infrastructure defensively for our protection, or whether we choose not to invest in it and thereby leave ourselves vulnerable to infrastructure being exploited offensively against us. It was ever thus, but what’s different now is our increasing dependence on these core technologies which multiplies the threat they represent.
Ominously, also what’s different is the appetite of crazy political leaders to sanction such disruption.
If you think that I have over-stated the need regarding connectivity, then I would respond with the observation that connectivity is only one of the primary infrastructures that is in need of radical overhaul. In addition, I would add:
The resilience of energy supply. And vitally, the independence of our energy supply. It’s not simply that we need to reduce our collective dependence on fossil fuels to reduce carbon emissions – we urgently need to be more self-sufficient locally and nationally. Specifically we need to be less reliant on imported gas.
Industrial supply chain management – and re-on-shoring key commodities and capabilities.
Domestic supply chain management – as the start of the pandemic powerfully demonstrated, heaven help us if Tesco run out of loo roll again. I’m not joking.
How and why this is relevant to businesses: I am not an economist. But from the perspective of an entrepreneur and an investor, my assertion is that if the concerns highlighted in this post are addressed, the bi-product of the investment necessary will be the mother-of-all-economic-bounces. I’m not exaggerating. Many billions (trillions even) now need to be invested – and that will have massive positive consequences for the economy; for employment; and for business valuations. That’s not the overly positive optimism of an evangelical entrepreneur keen to “talk-up-the-market”. It is the real-world observation of a pragmatist. I am passionate about the future of our kids. Whilst the context for this post are a terrifying set of circumstances, the opposite is equally true – the opportunity to create a technological infrastructure on which future generations can depend, and that helps them flourish, is exciting. We need to not ‘hope’ for things to get better; or rely on hope that things ‘turn-out-alright’. We need to invest in the infrastructure that will help keep safe all that we treasure.
What can we do? Like a lot of entrepreneurs, I am a pragmatist. I believe in positive intervention not optimistic wishful thinking. However, at an individual level, realistically there is very little that we can do. It is not simply that the order of magnitude described here is overwhelming both for individuals and also for the incumbent corporates that serve us. It is because the key assets on which connectivity depends, are exclusively owned, managed, and licensed by the Government. ‘Spectrum’ through which we receive radio, television, and mobile phone services (through the air) being just one such example. The expansion of satellite capability and coverage is equally heavily governed and regulated too.
The trillion-dollar question: The need for infrastructural and technological transformation has never been clearer. The order of magnitude has never been greater. The consequences have never been more significant. The urgency is abundantly evident. The exam question is: will governments be compelled to make the investment necessary? Sadly, my instinct is that governments are unlikely to invest pre-emptively – that they will only intervene when the consequence of service interruption becomes critical.
The Biggest Economic Bounce in History: Yes we may well be sliding into a recession – but it is of little consequence relative to the enormity of the scale of investment and innovation now urgently needed. If Governments invest appropriately, then not only will society benefit from the advantages that such an upgrade will deliver, but also that investment will create a new era of employment, capability, and commercial possibility. To which the exam question is: but how will we afford it? I’d argue the answer is obvious: how can we afford not to? The potential threat and the potential economic consequence of not having this capability will frankly make the cost of the pandemic look relatively cheap. This is something that we should all be worried about – and not wait for an unpredictable dictator to exploit. Therefore, the business-case to justify the investment is fundamentally anchored in national resilience and national security – and that ought to be compelling on its own merit. That’s before the needs of climate change are added, which exponentially multiply and compound both the need, the urgency, and the Return On Investment. If ever there was a ‘no-brainer’, this is it.
Best Shot: As a Chair and a Non-Executive Director my job is to help Exec’s to identify and deliver their ‘best shot’. The extreme circumstances of climate change, a global pandemic, plus the war in Ukraine create the need for a fundamental rethink. I believe that an exponential upgrade of our key technology infrastructure is our collective Best Shot.
It’s time:
To invest.
To upgrade.
To prepare.
To multiply resilience.
To re-establish infrastructural independence.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Don’t avoid enemies - avoid the people that make them.
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Russia’s aggressive invasion of Ukraine is rapidly becoming as momentous in human history as any previous event in Russia’s and Europe’s history. As significant as World War 2.
We live in fear of the very real danger that this unwanted conflict could escalate still further.
I’m convinced that the issue is not Russia. Or Russians. The problem is the lack of democracy in Russia.
Democracies are far from perfect. But my assertion is, in democracies what you get are differences of opinion. Differences that should be embraced, possibly even celebrated.
In dictatorships what you get are enemies. Dictators will do anything to maintain their regimes and sustain their wealth and power.
As a commentator on business and leadership, my thought is that this observation is as true in the running of companies as it is apparent to the running of countries.
I’ve had the misfortune to work with people who are perfectly comfortable (even enjoy) declaring their ‘hatred’ of colleagues. People who make enemies. My belief is that a mindset capable of making enemies has no place in the modern workplace.
The positive news is, contemporary leadership excellence is now totally committed to diversity and inclusion. It is not a nice-to-have option – inclusivity is fundamental to optimum strategic thinking and execution. What inclusivity means in practical application is the acceptance that people might go about things differently to the way you do, and that this has the potential to exponentially improve outcomes when this virtue is harvested appropriately.
Entrepreneurial enthusiasm is often mischaracterised as ‘hot-headedness’, uncompromising, and excessively passionate. Sometimes those stereotypes are legitimate. Business success demands huge effort, which is difficult to invest in something that you don’t care about. But in addition to conviction and persistence, the repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is their openness to try unusual ways to achieve desired outcomes. Ways that are not native to incumbents too entrenched to change – ways that are commonly resisted and even ridiculed.
Innovation is hard. It is especially difficult to pursue change democratically. I’m not advocating that businesses should be run as democracies that are overly dependent on majority consensus and over participation in deliberation and referendums. A topical risk within current corporates is the institutionalisation of ‘group-think’. 
But what this international conflict highlights more than ever before is the need of:
Transparency
Authenticity
Compassion
Listening
Which all seem in short supply to aggressors seemingly intent on persecuting a bloody campaign in the Ukraine.
I’ve always argued that success in business is relatively easy to materialise if you’re prepared to be an uncompromising b*stard. What’s challenging is delivering business success with kindness and compassion. This is where you’ll find your advantage and your competitive edge. Resorting to aggression, confrontation, humiliation are clear indicators of leadership malfunction.
In business, even the competition is not your ‘enemy’. Few companies can build and grow a sector on their own – multiple players bring with them multiple forces of investment to persuade buyers to buy. Your job is not to annihilate rivals – your job is to provide a service that is better than your customer’s alternative options. For businesses ambitious to scale-up, the real enemy is your customers’ prerogative to do nothing.
Out-witting your enemy requires extraordinary performance, resilience, and determination. As such, enemies can be a force of motivation and energy that drive performance. The good news is, we don’t need actual real enemies – it is perfectly possible to create the performance benefit with our imagination if we stop and think. It’s best not to make enemies.
Embracing collaboration, diversity, and inclusivity is good business.
Avoid haters and enemy makers.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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This is War. An entrepreneurial fight for the future of our kids.
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Read time: approx. 2 mins and 59 seconds, ish.
I am overwhelmed with worry for our kids.
On day four of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, as Russian tanks roll across the Ukrainian sovereign state – my assertion is: we need to rethink, redefine, reorientate, and recalibrate ambition.
For as long as there have been humans, there have been parents. As long as there have been parents, people have striven to impress theirs – to make their mums and dads proud.
It’s important. It validates our lives. And more importantly, it validates our parent’s lives. Hopefully so much so that when they pass before us, they can depart in peace knowing that all is well in the world, that their lives made a positive difference, and that their kids will live-on prosperously and happily.
My Dad’s recent passing has left me orphaned at 54.
I’m sure that he was very proud of his kids.
The crashing realization is – it doesn’t matter.
What will out-survive my Dad – and what will out-survive me – is not what my Dad thought – but what my kids think. And relatively, that is vastly more important.
It’s not our parents we should be trying to impress. It is our kids.
The delight of parental applause is something that we never grow out of. [I miss it]. It is easily won - parental recognition simply requires ‘showing off’. But that same approach can create all manner of unintended consequences when applied to our youngsters.
The method and approach of impressing our descendants needs to be radically different to the approach of impressing our ancestors.
Excessive materialism may impress kids – but it may also create inappropriate expectations and a sense of entitlement which rather than enhancing their opportunities can undermine confidence, inhibit striving, and cultivate disillusionment.
Mental health issues have never been more dominant than now. My concern is that older generations in relation to their juniors are literally ‘doing-their-heads-in’.
Kids need encouragement, not role-models whose success they regard as unachievable; not elders who inflict their will for their own gratification.
My assertion is that the cohort of kids graduating school, college, and university at this time, have it harder than any previous cohort in history.
From my teenage daughter’s perspective, they have inherited:
A planet in urgent need of restoration
Capitalism that is in need of reinvention
Political leadership deficient in integrity and talent
A shortage of housing
An ageing society that is under-pensioned
Revolutionary technological change
Brexit that they didn’t want
A global pandemic that has no precedent
The cost of Covid which is unimaginable
An implosion of employment prospects and corporate careers
A massively disrupted education
Unachievable grade expectations
And now war.
Just when you could be forgiven for thinking that it couldn’t possibly get worse – thanks to Putin, it just did.
The brutal reality is, it could get worse – and terrifyingly, catastrophically so. And for those with the mathematical capability to calculate it, the risk of that possibility just multiplied exponentially.
Children and young people are at serious and material risk of considering their situation to be hopeless.
And so, to all the grown-ups reading this – whether or not you do or don’t have kids – please invest effort, urgently, in embracing this cohort of young talent.
Their concerns are entirely legitimate. However, from the perspective of an entrepreneur I’d say:
There has never been more opportunity than now
That technology is on the verge of delivering real breakthroughs in energy and medicine which will massively liberate how we live and work and create all manner of prosperity
That the megatrend on the growth and distribution of wealth is so strong that its continuance is inevitable
That there has never been more freedom to be who and what you want to be
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is their talent for seeing and realizing opportunity unseen by others. Never before has that competency been more important than now.
For those overwhelmed by all the negative news, we need to help them to see the unprecedented positive opportunities that now exist. This is war. Literally – hope and lives depend on it.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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The Best Career Advice I Ever Had.
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Approx. read time 2 mins and 23 seconds, ish.
When I was 13 years old, in preparation for choosing which subjects I’d study at school, my Mum told me to “go have a chat with your Dad for some career advice”.
To say I was reluctant is an understatement.
My Dad was a florist, and together with Mum they owned and ran a local flower shop - a business that they successfully journeyed for over 35 years to their retirement.
It was 1980, and the UK economy was exploding.  It’s an era now famous for conspicuous consumption, big hair, and even bigger shoulder pads.
I had yet to discover my love of marketing and advertising which became my first career.
Like all young men [back then] I aspired to own a Porsche and/or a Lamborghini (Countach obviously).
In my head, I was looking for guidance on whether JP Morgan was preferable to Morgan Stanley. Or why Goldman Sachs was better than pursuing a career in law. Or whether I should be a ‘stock-broker’ (whatever one of those was).
And so, with unbridled arrogance, and utmost disrespect, I could not see what value a florist could possibly add in determining such lofty aspirations and considerations.
But at my mother’s request, I went and found Dad who as usual was in the garage working on the restoration of his classic car.  Nonchalantly I interrupted him to ask for his career guidance.
Momentarily Dad paused, and without hardly looking up he softly said:
 “Well, I suppose you need to decide if you would like work inside. Or outside.”
 And there it was. Bam! Mind-blown. 
I had assumed that even if we weren’t going to talk about specific companies, then at least we’d discuss possible vocations, industries, or sectors. It had never occurred to me that there is a whole other paradigm of possibility and opportunity that is even more fundamental and even more significant to consider and explore.
It’s a conversation that I will never forget and often revisit and reflect upon.
In a pre-digital era, those simple ideas of ‘inside’ vs ‘outside’ could not have been more juxtaposed. It represented and confronted all the preconceptions of ‘trade’ vs ‘profession’ – ‘manual’ vs ‘office’ – and all the prejudices, misjudgments, and stereotypes dominant at that time. Sadly, many of those old snobbish prejudices are still very much alive today, despite the successes of entrepreneurs such as Joe Wicks, the Body Coach (to name one of many such examples).
“Inside or outside” – it’s such a simple question – and yet despite being profoundly uncomplicated, the consequences of those two different paths could not be more significant. As relevant today as forty years ago – arguably if not more so.
I suppose in the current context there are so many modern equivalents. For example:
¡       Employed vs self-employed
¡       Vocational vs academic
¡       Local vs global
¡       Co-located vs remote
And so on . . .
The reason I reflect on that career conversation as frequently as I do is not because I doubt the path I chose. I find it useful to reaffirm the choices that I have made – safe in the knowledge that, moving forward, it’s my prerogative (luxury even) to be able to change my mind.  
Reaffirmation helps multiply conviction. The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is the power and consistency of their conviction. Strength of conviction is an entrepreneurial super-power.
Conviction is also fundamental to leadership excellence.
The exam question is: what are the equivalent “inside or outside” options that are relevant to your career choices?
And once you have decided – know that:
a)     You can always change your mind
b)     You may find a way to navigate getting the best of both worlds
c)     Your chances of success multiply if you invest in your decision wholeheartedly
 Inside or outside?
What’s your equivalent?
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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The power of Purposefulness.
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Approx. read time 1 min and 49 seconds, ish.
In tribute to Arch Bishop Desmond Tutu who I had the privilege to meet in July 2009.  In the early days of One Water – Duncan Goose, Julie Devonshire (and their partners) were invited to a special reception at Number 10 in acknowledgement of One Water’s contribution to providing clean water in Africa.
Desmond was funny. He was irreverent. He was saucy. He immediately put us at ease. Tutu was kind. And gentle. Desmond was wonderful and so encouraging. 
The Arch Bishop was then asked to give a speech in which he shared his harrowing experience of Apartheid.
Tutu literally cried as he spoke about people dying whilst ‘drinking tea’ (brutally beaten to death whilst incarcerated, the official report siting incidents as innocently as “fell off a chair”).
And then Arch Bishop Desmond Tutu paused, regained his composure – and said:
“When we had Apartheid it was easy. We all knew what we wanted to be free from.
Now we don’t have Apartheid it is hard. We now need to choose what we want to be free for”.
Tutu – driven by purpose – fantastically inspiring - a great leader.
And that’s important because it is easy to confuse leadership competence with seniority.
The harsh reality is that sometimes in-fact these characteristics are inversely correlated.
Sadly we’ve all experienced bosses promoted despite their lack of leadership ability.
Being a brilliant leader has nothing to do with being ‘the boss’ – or any of the job titles native to the office but that are meaningless in the world outside of work.  
Desmond is an example of a person whose purpose, positive contribution and leadership will be forever remembered – and whose achievement is not in any way related to hierarchy or seniority.
And that’s important as a new megatrend has become increasingly apparent – the “mass quit” – significant numbers of people resigning. A new union is becoming established and it doesn’t require a membership or a subscription – it’s a band of like-minded comrades increasingly intolerant of crap bosses.
I think humanity is at a vital inflection point. Many of us are not alone in contemplating who we are; what we enjoy; what we want to invest our time, energy and effort in.
At a time when we have never been more in need of great leadership and inspiration, what we are experiencing is the opposite.
Despite Desmond’s first-hand experience of challenging the brutality of Apartheid, you can’t imagine how astonishing it was to hear him describe it as “easy” – and how inventive, original and inspiring his thoughts regarding the next chapter that he had committed himself to. What better person to take-on the even bigger challenge of rebuilding a post-Apartheid Africa.  What bigger purpose?
The world is in need of more Tutu’s.
It is easy to site purposefulness as a key attribute common to successful entrepreneurs – but actually, perhaps it is way more than that. Perhaps purposefulness is fundamental to life’s contentment.
God bless you Desmond. 7th Oct 1931 – 26th Dec 2021.
Photo taken 14th July 2009. Post published 28th Dec 2021.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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Take care to acknowledge those that inspire you.
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Approx. read time 55 seconds, ish.
About my father, my brother commented: “He made me the man I am”. That thought is certainly true for me, perhaps even more so.
I know that Dad knew. It has been so terribly difficult to watch Dad’s Alzheimer’s cruelly eviscerate that thought and with it his connection to the benefit of its comfort.
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is their active pursuit of self-development and specifically their capacity to change. In business, (perhaps in life too), human resistance to change and adaptation is in my belief humanity’s biggest weakness, tragedy, and most frequent cause of grief and friction.
Who we choose to hangout with has a disproportionate influence on who we are and how we behave.
Taking the time to consider who inspires us most therefore is a worthwhile contemplation. It is useful in identifying the blocks of character and behaviour that define us, the understanding of which is fundamental to working out the competencies, compromise, and compassion that we aspire to acquire.
Take care to acknowledge the inspiration that you have been gifted by others – perhaps it’s what defines you and importantly, who you want to be.
My father was a profound inspiration to me. In acknowledging his contribution, here is the eulogy I delivered for Dad last Wednesday. I hope it brings a smile. (Approx. read time 3 mins 24 seconds, ish).
15th December 2021.
Dad
He’s gone.  It’s the end of an era.
Peter had two siblings – a brother, Keith, and sister, Jane, who he both adored.
Dad loved his brother for his manliness; sheer physical presence; gravitas; no-nonsense – and wit. Dad was so fond of his brother.
Dad loved his sister for her grace; acuity; and also her wit – Dad regarded and treated Aunty Jane like royalty.  
Peter thought the world of Keith and Jane. War time babies, the memories of which lived with Dad perhaps more vividly given that he arrived first.
Despite being the eldest, Uncle Keith and then Aunty Jane both passed before Peter and so Dad’s passing brings that generation of our family to close. And like our cousins, makes us three, Keith, Amanda and me, orphans too.
We are now one step removed from the family’s relationship with Gran and Percy – who are so much an inspiration for our lives – and Dad’s life especially – and who we remember dearly.  It was Gran and Percy’s business at the nursery that Dad eventually grew into – and with his parent’s encouragement, our Mum and Dad acquired the flower shop in Weybridge. The Devonshire Flower House.
Although this is a sad day – Dad would have wanted us to smile.  When we were here for Percy, we left to the tune of English Country Garden as a light-hearted reference to Grandad Percy’s passion for gardening.
Like all generations, Dad’s generation has its own language – “wood in the hole” [door] “cake hole” [mouth] “toad in the hole” [one of Mum’s signature dishes]. It’s a generation for whom expressions like ‘big knob’ meant someone important – just one of the names given by my parents to the categories of customer at the shop.  We will be forever grateful to Mum and Dad for the commercial acumen that we acquired in the shop.
Dad was keen on words.  He and Gran were especially proud that he had won a place at Grammar School. Peter always was an especially bright man. And a talented and gifted artist.
Peter was a statesman.  He had manners.  He was respectful.
However, despite Dad’s desire to command our house his statesmanship was systemically undermined, not by his childrens’ bad behaviour but by his wife. Whenever Dad tried to assert his authority, like a scene from Fawlty Towers, Mum found his frustration infectiously funny. The angrier Dad got, the more Mum’s shoulders would jog up and down, until eventually she would break into uncontrollable laughter.
Dad would eventually realize the futility of his tantrums and would console himself either with more gardening or more car restoration.
Dad was a special man. A kind man. We enjoyed his creativity; delighted in his humour; and were inspired by his compassion.
Dad tried to teach us a new word every week. He was very efficacious.  He gave us the gift of words.  He taught me the meaning of being articulate.  
Dad never swore.  When I was about ten years old Mum and Dad sat me down and Dad said:
“Son, swearing is the mark of an inarticulate man. I never swear. I just don’t understand why you swear so much.” In his unique form exasperation Dad exclaimed: “Where did you get it from?”
And I said:
“F***ed if I know Dad”.
Mum’s laughter probably rescued me.
Instead of being full of anger Dad’s eyes were full of freedom. I wasn’t taking a liberty. I was being gifted it.
Peter was a man of many passions:
Flowers
Gardening
Golf
Classic cars
Flying
Sailing
Running three marathons
Peter was a quiet man. A gentle man. A much-loved man.
Dad always knew what he wanted. And invariably he always got it.  In the 1950’s Peter was introduced to Andrea by his cousin Joyce and Aunty Jane.  They courted; soon married – with Ray as his best man by his side, that day and remarkably for more than sixty years thereafter.
Keith arrived in 1961 – and Amanda two years later.
My arrival took many more years of planning.  Some might say, a surprise.
When I think of Dad, I smile and reminisce about his heyday – in the 70’s and 80’s – the big Rover V8, or the new blue Ford Cortina – windows down, singing along to Maggie May played too loud on the radio.  Flamboyant shirts.  Slim. Fit. Smiling.
Dad had a wonderful sense of humour. Which he consistently lost somewhere between Dartmouth and Exeter on our annual holiday pilgrimage to Devon.
Dad was the driver. Mum was the inattentive navigator -  fag on the go, wrestling with over-sized maps and road-atlases.  Metaphorically speaking, Mum was Dad’s satnav. Overall, in life he did well by her guidance.  Except on the fast approach to roundabouts and T-junctions which always caused a descending avalanche of stress as we hurtled towards the decision point: “Andrea there are only two exits, one on the left and one of the right. Left. Right. Which one – oh I’ve taken the wrong bloody exit now . . .”
Mum was Dad’s north star. Somewhat lost without her, it is reassuring that they have found each other again.
Peter and Andy made a great team; made a lovely family; and built a great little business. The Devonshire Flower House and Dormer Cottage, their two homes are the cornerstones and foundation of our lives.
The flower shop was for many years a thriving business.
Dad loved flowers.
It was the customers he found irritating.
That and Grandad Percy - the infamous delivery driver – who he loved – nurturing Percy into his old age.
Mum loved customers - and especially writing their messages on cards pinned to Dad’s bouquets.
It was a brilliant partnership.
And now Dad is with Mum – the love of his life.  Married for over fifty years. Mum’s tragic accident resulting from such an innocent fall brought the two of them together closest at the most important time of their relationship.  They showed us all the meaning of love – a gift that I am sure Peter’s grandchildren and great grandchildren will take with them forever.
Having phoned some of Dad’s old friends to share the news of his passing – I was overwhelmed with the fondness to which they each said: “We will always remember Peter”.
Peter made such a massive contribution to the whole family - with his tireless work ethic, his character, and his compassion. Now it’s over to us to carry on and multiply his legacy.
Peter – Dad – Uncle Peter – Grandad – Great Grandad - you are forever in our hearts.
We all loved him dearly.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 2 years
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When is ‘good’ good enough? Knowing when to stop.
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Five dilemmas that cause Entrepreneurs to get STUCK.
Approx. read time 5 mins and 7 seconds, ish.
My last two posts introduced the five dilemmas that I commonly see inflicting the most stress on founders. Those two posts explored the first two conundrums in more depth.
Continuing with the theme of ‘stopping’, I have chosen to unpack the final three conundrums in this one extended post because all three are inter-related:
Conundrum 3: Competition – If there is no competition, should I proceed further?
Conundrum 4: Customer Centricity – If customers don’t get my proposition, should I quit?
Conundrum 5: Being Better – When is good, good-enough?
In each case, the exam question is: When should I STOP? (Or in the minds of successful entrepreneurs, ‘when should I pivot?’).
Conundrum 3: Competition.
An assertion common amongst investors is: If you can’t name your competitors, then perhaps your market does not yet exist. (ie. declining the opportunity to invest).
And so, for entrepreneurs and innovators, regarding Competitors - the exam question is:
How do I pioneer a new innovation if investors won’t invest in it – should I stop before I incur irrecoverable costs?
Competition is not necessarily a bad thing. Competitors help to build markets and help stimulate demand.
The challenge with some new innovations is that there is no identifiable competitor.
But if it is true that investors will only invest in propositions that have established demand, how does anything new ever get funded?
Via my work at Ploughshare the good news is that there is no shortage of great ideas for new inventions.
The equally good news via my work in capital finance with AlantraUK, the capital finance market has rarely been more buoyant.
And so, if there are plenty of ideas and also plenty of finance available to fund them – then why is funding such a common obstacle?
The problem is not the quantity or quality of ideas.  The problem is not the availability of funding.
The problem is demonstrating that an idea / a venture / an innovation is eligible for funding.  The problem is compelling investors to invest.
And this is a problem that needs to be solved urgently because in my opinion, the world has never been in more need of breakthrough innovation than now.  And tantalisingly, technology is no longer humanity’s biggest obstacle.
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is not simply that they secure funding – it is their competency to validate their ideas / innovations / ventures such that investors are compelled to finance their journey.
How?  Five techniques to learn from successful entrepreneurs:
Behave, think, and operate like a venture.  Even if you end-up licensing your technology, the commercial outcome will be more prosperous if it looks, smells, and feels like a venture.
Be clear, succinct, and definitive in describing the problem your venture solves.
Get your tech into the hands of people and start producing, collating, harvesting, and analysing data.  This is via an MVP (Minimal Viable Product) prototype / app / website that validates that your solution is better than what went before.  It doesn’t need to be pretty.  It doesn’t even need to be popular.  But it does need to work.
As per the tech-transfer report published by Octopus Ventures “evidence one hundred conversations”.  Talk to and document 100 conversations with named people who are fundamental to the mass adoption of your product.  Who you choose to speak to is absolutely vital to whether or not your investor pitch will compel investors to invest.  If you choose the wrong people it will evidence that you are not focused on the right routes to market and that will convince investors to not invest.
Build a community.  Whether that’s face-to-face or via social media – evidence that you have an engaged audience that are remarking about your venture / following your venture / advocating your venture – and show that you know how to scale that community.
These five points effectively validate your technology; validate your proposition; validate your commercial opportunity; validate your investability.  Validation is the best antidote to the challenge of not having competitors.
My assertion is, the ability to validate is singularly the most important competency in business at this time.  Which is why scientists are so well placed to liberate innovation because their vocation is inherently evidence based.
Conundrum 4: Customer Centricity.
But what if customers don’t get it? Should I stop?
My assertion is: The success of innovation is dependent on customer insight – the successful identification and elimination of friction.
However, in the words of Henry Ford: “If I’d asked them, customers would have asked for a quicker horse”.
And so, for entrepreneurs and innovators, regarding Customer Centricity - the exam question is:
How do you put the customer at the heart of innovation, if you’re not allowed to ask the customer what they think of new propositions?
My case-study is iPhone.  Prior to the UK launch of iPhone, I asked business customers what they thought of the key aspects of the iPhone proposition.  The response was unforgivingly negative in the context of UK business user behaviour in 2007:  “Why would I want email on my mobile device – I go out of the office in order to avoid email”.  Prior to launch the subsequent success of iPhone was not nearly as inevitable as it is retrospectively regarded today.
The problem is not market research.  The problem is, you can’t meaningfully ask customers what they think of a proposition that is not native to them – because they don’t know how to evaluate it effectively.
The innovation that interests me most is at the transformative / game-changing / pioneeringly-inventive end of the spectrum.  The problem with pioneering innovation is that [by definition] it has no precedent.
Worse still, innovation often demands customers to change their established/habitual behaviour – and people inherently hate change.
In my experience as a marketeer, singularly, the one thing that drives mass-adoption more than anything else is peer behaviour.  People are most influenced by the behaviour of their peers.
Which creates a real ‘Catch22’ – how do you achieve mass-adoption if mass-adoption is dependent on (erm) mass-adoption? The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is their ability to create pathways to mass-adoption.
How?  Five techniques to learn from successful entrepreneurs:
Create collaborations and partnerships that provide access to large numbers of people – for example, via corporates; via social media; via charities; via user-groups
Demonstrate empathetically that your product / service is a better way to get things done – that it is a better way to mitigate your customers concerns, anxieties, frustrations, and friction
Recruit advocates – people who are so enthused by what you are doing that they are compelled to endorse it; write testimonials; remark positively to their peers
Demonstrate all the above via your website including the use of video
Make it look like ‘everyone is doing it’
Conundrum 5: Being Better.
But what that highlights is the need for your product to offer customers a better solution than the alternative options available to them.
My mantra is that your job as an innovator and entrepreneur is not to be the first, or the best – your job is to Be BETTER.
And so, regarding Being BETTER - the exam question is:
When is ‘good’ good enough?
How can you be better than the competition but avoid over polishing the product and proposition to the point of delaying launch and wasting effort that delivers a poor return on investment?
The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is their self-discipline and will power in resisting the temptation to over-develop and over-invest in their product proposition.
How?  Seven techniques to learn from successful entrepreneurs:
Make sure that you can succinctly make clear how and why your product is better.
Better than what?  Don’t think of your competition as being companies that do something similar to what your company does.  Think instead of competition as being anything that is an alternative option to what you have to offer – including the option to do nothing.
Don’t design exclusively in your own self-image – don’t assume that just because you love what you have built that everyone else will share your affection.
Don’t ask people what they think of your product – find ways to test ‘selling’ it.
Irrespective of what people might be prepared to pay, get your product in the hands of customers, and get their feedback; usage data; testimonials – and ideally their positive advocacy.
Compile data and evidence that demonstrates to potential investors that your product and solution is better than the alternatives.  Data that quantifies the advantage that your solution offers – faster; cheaper; more durable; more consistent; more intelligent; more compelling.
Don’t worry if the early versions are ugly (or not pretty).  Beautifying your product is something that can easily be resolved when you have more money/resources.  Making an ugly product more appealing is often relatively easy to resolve.  But getting an ineffective product to become more efficient is often very challenging to resolve (if it were easy, why wouldn’t someone have done it before?).
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 3 years
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Avoiding burnout. Knowing when to stop.
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Five dilemmas that cause Entrepreneurs to get STUCK.
Conundrum 2: Discretionary Effort – When is it OK to stop ‘going-the-extra-mile’?
Approx. read time 4 mins and 10 seconds, ish.
My last blog introduced the five dilemmas that I commonly see inflicting the most stress on founders.  That post went on to explore in detail the first of those dilemmas: When to give up.
Continuing with the theme of ‘stopping’, this post unpacks the second of those entrepreneurial conundrums – Discretionary Effort and the risk of burnout.
My assertion is: The economics of business are so challenging that success often depends on the power of discretionary effort - founders and their employees going above-and-beyond the call of duty.  Businesses that succeed often do so because the team doesn’t hesitate in ‘going-the-extra-mile’.  Limiting business operations to ‘9-to-5’ doesn’t seem to work for game-changers.
And that is why purposefulness is so vitally important – if founders are going to infect their employees with a shared compulsion to invest discretionary effort, then it had better be for a cause that is worth it.
But business success is worthless if it destroys people in the process.
The signs of fatigue and exhaustion are usually very apparent – as per my previous post: ‘In business, haggard is not a good look’.
But that creates a very difficult challenge regarding Discretionary Effort. The exam question is:
How do you avoid hard workers simply burning out? A challenge that is equally relevant to founders as well as the people that they employ.
Great leaders have a talent for defining outcomes and destinations in a powerfully compelling way that multiplies motivation, effort, and endeavour. Equally great leaders impart empowerment, trust and authority that liberates and enables their team to deliver.
The best leaders go one-stage further. They include the welfare, well-being, and the good condition of their team as unconditionally essential to the realisation of their ambition.
Great leaders don’t achieve success at the expense of their workforce.
To that end, they help the team to preserve themselves and sustain their energy.
One invaluable lesson that I learned from the remarkable business coach, Ian Howell, is that business productivity invariably focuses exclusively on ‘high performance’.  Ian’s perspective is, that an equal focus must be given to the ‘excellence of rest’ – a concept well understood in elite sports.
There are empirical metrics that quantify the state of a business’s human capital – and they include:
Staff satisfaction surveys – especially the question ‘proud to work here’
Absenteeism
Attrition / tenure / staff-turnover rates
Contemporary leaders add to these internal metrics an external perspective, for example, on-line reviews and rankings on websites such as Glassdoor.
The good news is that the solution to overwork is invariably quite simple: Employ more people.
The challenge in early-stage ventures, however, is the inconvenience that the acquisition of more resource (and capacity) usually has to lag behind the acquisition of customers – for the simple reason of financial affordability.  In most cases there is an uncomfortable imbalance: first you have to win the customers, then you have to hire the talent. And it is that difficult tension that can cause disproportionate fatigue and exhaustion. Often it is too financially risky to employ people before sales volume is sufficient to sustain it.
I have always believed that talent acquisition is a powerful validation of a business’s potential. It is especially thrilling when talented people proactively approach a company to enquire about vacancies because fundamentally “I think what you’re doing is really cool and I would love to join your team”.
And so, the best leaders build a pipeline of talent that can be leveraged when demand outpaces current capacity.
The arrival of new hires and fresh talent is exhilarating and rejuvenating.
It is important to recognise that the issue of burnout is two sided - it is as much about ‘demand’ as it is about ‘supply’ - often too much focus is given to a team’s capacity to serve, and not enough attention is invested in managing customer demand. The repeat behaviour common to successful entrepreneurs is not only how they motivate their staff, but also how they manage their customers’ expectations. Fundamental to the challenge of sustaining extraordinary effort is the need to proactively manage customer behaviour and interaction.  Your customers need to have a realistic expectation of what your team is actually able to deliver.  I have first-hand experience where customers fundamentally needed to be carefully re-educated in order to align with commercial reality.
Equally important is opening omni-channel routes for customers to engage with your company.
But the most vital strategy to mitigate the impact of burnout is to design service delivery to literally eliminate the reason for customers to need to speak with someone in your company in the first place. The role of technology is to make your staff bionic – multiplying their productivity, efficiency, and satisfaction. The role of technology is to anticipate and get ahead of your customers’ needs.
When you are drowning with too much work to do, it can be especially difficult to see what’s best to arrest the situation.  That’s why external advisors and Non-Executive Directors can be so remarkably insightful and helpful.  Much has been written about ‘who not how’ (who do you know that can help solve the problem in front of you). Don’t hesitate or be too proud to ask for help. It never fails to amaze me how generous people are in response to an earnest question.
The good news is, solving the challenge of how best to reduce demand is invariably quite uncomplicated – putting up prices is an obvious lever with which to manage demand.
Regarding the sustainability of your team’s dedication, conscientiousness, hard work and endeavour, the most important thing to remember is: Focus on recognising and rewarding outcomes – not just hard work.
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tallmanbusiness ¡ 3 years
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Knowing when to STOP. Five dilemmas of an entrepreneur.
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Read time for the intro – less than one minute.
There are a million reasons why starting and growing a business is especially difficult.
But there are five dilemmas that commonly cause entrepreneurs the most stress and anxiety. Five dilemmas that cause entrepreneurs to get STUCK.
Understandably, everyone wants to avoid failure and the risk of wasting time and/or money.  Humans fear humiliation.  People want to avoid investing in futile endeavour.
Although the five dilemmas are very different, the common denominator is the risk of futility. The challenge in each case is: Knowing when to stop.
Conundrum 1: Persistence – When should I give up?
Conundrum 2: Discretionary Effort – When is it OK to stop ‘going-the-extra-mile’?
Conundrum 3: Competition – If there is no competition, should I proceed further?
Conundrum 4: Customer Centricity – If customers don’t get my proposition, should I quit?
Conundrum 5: Being Better – When is good, good-enough?
In each case, the exam question is: When should I STOP? (Or in the minds of successful entrepreneurs, ‘when should I pivot?’).
Conundrum 1: Persistence – When should I give up?
Approx. read time 3 mins and 29 seconds, ish.
My assertion is: Singularly the most important instinct on which entrepreneurial success depends is Persistence:  The capacity, conviction, determination, and belief to try-and-try-again – to have one-more-go.
Regarding Persistence - the exam question is:
How do you know when to stop, when to call it a day?
It is tempting to answer that question by saying ‘five more attempts’ – the point of which is to demonstrate that to try to put a number on persistence is ridiculous.  When to quit is a judgement call – and not one that is easily quantified.
Sadly, the harsh reality is that entrepreneurs in early-stage ventures rarely get to make the decision for themselves about when to stop because, unfortunately, often the decision is made for them. Three examples of that brutal scenario include:
Investors choosing not to invest, (or invest more), the consequence is of which is that the venture exhausts its funding and is thereby forced to cease trading.
Equally devasting is founder ill-health.  Sickness can hit anyone at any time. However, when founders fall ill it is not uncommon that the stresses and strains of running and growing a venture can have a disproportionate impact on health, welfare, and recovery.
Failure to gain market traction.  Sales simply not materialising fast enough or in sufficient volume.
However, to my mind these examples are symptoms, not causes.  They don’t inevitably mean ‘the end’.  Against what appear to be impossible / insurmountable odds, some founders still make it – their ventures eventually flourish.
It is important to note:
Investors are not always right.
People and ventures recover.
Sales blockages can become unblocked.
And so, if I had to characterise the difference between those ventures that make it, and those that don’t, the difference is: Conviction and Competence.
If founders are uncompromisingly persistent and if they have enough conviction and have access to the right competencies, they will somehow always find a way around the obstacles thrown at them.  Successful founders will find an alternative source of funding. Successful founders will remedy their competency and capacity issues, (even if they themselves must stand aside for a while). Successful founders pivot and/or find alternative distribution channels that deliver sales.
It is incumbent on founders to:
Secure the solvency and sustainable funding for their venture.
Take care of themselves and their team.
Generate sales.
But before the absolute catastrophic failure of a business, how do you know when enough is enough?
In my experience, I have yet to encounter a challenge in business that is not surmountable when broken-down sufficiently. Therefore, it is important for founders, entrepreneurs, and business leaders to tune-in to their own state of resilience, ambition, and appetite because this is the most important measure that determines whether to continue, or not. Key signals to watch-out for are:
If you are unable to figure-out how to complete the task of breaking problems down.
And/or you are unable (or unwilling) to seek and secure external advice on how to break the challenges down.
And/or, when the problem is broken-down that you either lack the competency to complete the task; and/or you lack the motivation and conviction to complete the task.
For those looking for a way to quantify and measure the game-over moment, I apologise, my measure is qualitative not quantitative. It is at the point where the founder gives-in; can’t be bothered; suffers acute fatigue; falls out of love with their venture – that is the time to seriously think about closing the door for the last time.
And that is one of the reasons why investors choose to invest in people more than they invest in ideas.  The viability of a venture depends more on the people running it, than it depends on the quality of the idea. Ideas can be fixed – people are more tricky to remedy.
For corporates – the equivalent is equally true. Repeatedly I have witnessed corporates humiliate themselves by sacrificing a new proposition because “the initial launch failed”. The corporate wrongly concluded that there is no appetite for the proposition. In most cases I have disagreed with their analysis. I think the failed launch simply demonstrated a lack of marketing competence. And more importantly, a lack of conviction in the senior leadership team to have another go.
The good news is:  Talent endures.  Good people always rebound.
The most important thing to note is:  You can’t keep a good person down.  
I’ll write separate posts to share insight about how best to overcome the remaining four dilemmas of an entrepreneur:
Conundrum 2: Discretionary Effort – When is it OK to stop ‘going-the-extra-mile’?
Conundrum 3: Competition – If there is no competition, should I proceed further?
Conundrum 4: Customer Centricity – If customers don’t get my proposition, should I quit?
Conundrum 5: Being Better – When is good, good-enough?
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