June 26, 2009

Entrepreneurs – Do you Know your Blind Spots

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , — jeetu @ 1:06 am

Posted at Pluggd.in

by sinha

[Guest article by Sanjay Anandaram, entrepreneur-turned-investor. A must read for entrepreneurs who believe they know-it-all.]

The CEO was a highly qualified and experienced person. He had returned to India over 3 years ago to start a company with his own funds. For family reasons, he had set up his company in a town about 100 miles from Bangalore. He was now struggling to grow beyond the initial customer or two.
Customers weren’t comfortable with doing business with a company located in that town; Payments from customers took more time than usual; it was hard to recruit talented people in the smaller town; Communication infrastructure wasn’t the best resulting in loss of efficiency and productivity. It was hard to find people in his town who were aware and knowledgeable about how things worked in national and international business. And that there was no PR firm in his city to help generate visibility for his company. In short, according to him, the reason he was struggling had everything to do with the location of his company.

Smaller the blind spot we have, the better we are able to see and hence the safer we are

In the course of the conversation, he also mentioned that his company had built a fairly unique solution for its only real customer; that his customer, a large multi-billion dollar company, was very happy with him and his company; that the customer was in a specific industry vertical that required certifications and regulatory clearances to enter; that there were several other large companies in that industry vertical; that his communication network had improved drastically in the last few months; that two of his family members were involved in senior positions in the company; that his employee attrition was almost zero; that his banker was a well-known private bank with a very large network.

So was it really true that the location of the company adversely affected its prospects or was it something else? Had he leveraged his relationship with his customer adequately – in getting more business, seeking and getting endorsements to secure other customers in the same industry? Were his family members the right people for the jobs they were performing? Had he talked with his bank to understand how money transfers were to be effected so that his account could get credited could be realized almost immediately upon receipt of the monies in India? Had he networked with industry associations and groups in his town? Had he used the internet and the web to reach out to potential prospects who could all be well targeted given the industry vertical?

Turned out that the CEO had done none of the above.

Clearly, the CEO did not really understand what it took to build a business from a sales and marketing and operations standpoint. Yet, he was quick to jump to the conclusion that the problem lay outside his company, in its location! He was uninformed, unaware and prejudiced. There’s a term for this in psychology – blind spot. And all of us have our own blind spots and that’s perfectly OK. The real issue is whether we’re doing anything to discover and address them. For this one needs to analyse the situation on multiple dimensions dispassionately; one needs to also introspect one’s own behaviours, attitudes, and actions. One needs to be open enough to seek, get and deal with feedback from others around. One must watch how others who are doing better are going about the task. Go through the process again. Doing this requires self-awareness and a genuine commitment to improvement.

As in most things in life, the answers to many questions actually lie deep within us. We either don’t ask the right questions or are afraid to ask the questions. Perhaps because our ignorance or more likely, because we’re afraid of the answer?!
Which founder-CEO wants to be confronted by answers like

“You’re perhaps the bottleneck and not the right person for the job” or “You have no clue about sales and marketing so stop pretending like you know” or “Your attitude is upsetting the morale in the company and no one wants to work here”.

Ready to discover your blind spots? What do you think?

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Entrepreneurs – Do you Know your Blind Spots

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June 25, 2009

Shared Items – June 25, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 10:27 am

Chick

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 3:43 am

Posted at Cowbirds in Love

I don’t read it so much any more, but Chick Tracts were the first webcomic I ever read.

In case you’ve never heard of it, this is the best and most popular one: Dark Dungeons.

June 24, 2009

Google Dips Its Toe Into Travel Space With City Tours

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , — jeetu @ 11:52 pm

Posted at TechCrunch

by Jason Kincaid

Google has just debuted the latest entry to its fleet of Labs products, introducing the search giant to the travel space. Dubbed City Tours, the new site can build itineraries for brief trips to locations around the globe in a matter of seconds. At this point details on the new product are fairly sparse — it looks like Google hasn’t written its customary blog post yet, but given how basic the product is it’s pretty easy to figure out how it works.

Getting started is incredibly easy — just type in where you’re visiting (say, San Francisco or London), and Google will present a suggested itinerary spanning a three day trip, with around a dozen attractions per day depending on the city. From there you can change the number of days you’ll be staying (Google will show more attractions the longer you stay), and you can also manually adjust the list of places you’d like to visit. You can add a new attraction by entering its name in a text field, and Google will try to find it in its database. All attractions include a star rating, along with its hours operation and location.

For the most part adding attractions works pretty well (which is going to be key given that you can’t expect Google to predict everything you’ll want to see). It managed to find the London Eye perfectly, and it even figured out that Platform 9¾ was located at the King’s Cross Rail Station. That said, it isn’t perfect: a search for Hyde Park directed me to a nearby hostel, which I suppose would have gotten me there but probably isn’t the ideal result.

Perhaps the coolest part of the new product is the way it uses Google Maps to figure out which locations are closest to each other. Rather than simply present a list of places Google thinks you might want to check out, the site will logically order them according to where they’re located, minimizing the travel time between each.

Given its status as a Labs product this shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, but there are still a few kinks in City Tours. For one, I am apparently unable to remove events from my suggested itinerary (I’ve tried in both Firefox and Safari with the same issue). Likewise, sometimes when I click on the name of a location nothing happens. And it badly needs support for Google Transit, which can automatically route you across town using public transportiation — my London tour included a 99 minute walk that would have only been a couple minutes away had I ridden on the Tube.

In the mean time, there are plenty of other travel sites that offer similar (and in many cases, more robust) functionality than Google’s City Tours, including TC50 finalist GoPlanit, Offbeat Guides, and Zicasso.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Cream of the crop: 69 of top 100 JEE rankers pick IIT-Bombay – India – The Times of India

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 10:35 pm

Cream of the crop: 69 of top 100 JEE rankers pick IIT-Bombay

25 Jun 2009, 0535 hrs IST, Hemali Chhapia, TNN
 Print   Email   Discuss  Share  Save  Comment Text:
MUMBAI: The composition of the elitetechnological club has changed. A decade ago admission to the IIT-Kanpur ensureddemi-god treatment. Only

the brightest and the best could get past the gatesthere.

No longer. Mumbai is the new Kanpur, with Delhi and Chennaisnapping at its heels. A look at the students’ choice of institute by thetop 100 JEE rankers down the last half-a-decade reveals that preferences havechanged dramatically. A number of factors have been responsible for thereordering, from geography to gastronomy and placement records to what coachingclasses preach to students.

Of the top 100 JEE-2009 rankers,considered the elite group among engineering aspirants around the country, 69students preferred to join IIT-Bombay over any other IIT. This was followed byDelhi — where 19 of the top-100 — have been admitted. While Bombayhas been bettering its performance over the years, number of toppers going toDelhi has slipped.

“IIT-B’s decision to introduce minors in allprogrammes has seen more students wanting to come to the Powai campus,” reasonedthe institute’s JEE-2009 chairman A Pani. In 2008, the institute ushered inacademic reforms and permitted students to pick a minor course along with thecore area of specialisation. This, explained Pani, has resulted most streamsopening and closing admissions at higher ranks than previousyears.

On each IIT campus, the top 100 students are considered as therich creamy icing. Twenty years ago IIT-Kharagpur was the engineering mecca. Theoldest IIT of the country, IIT-Kharagpur did not receive a single student fromthe top hundred this year; and before that, in 2004, only three of the top 100went there.

A former JEE chairman explained, “While Bombay and Delhiwere still building themselves, Kharagpur’s students had already occupied toppositions in big companies. Students looked at Kharagpur’s illustrious alumniand rushed there. Now this has changed.”

Semi-Parametric and Non-parametric Term Weighting for Information Retrieval | Yahoo! Research

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 3:03 pm

Posted at research.yahoo.com

Semi-Parametric and Non-parametric Term Weighting for Information Retrieval

Authors:

Metzler, D.; Zaragoza, H.

Source:

International Conference on the Theory of Information Retrieval (ICTIR) (2009)

Abstract:

Most of the previous research on term weighting for information retrieval has focused on developing specialized parametric term weighting functions. Examples include TF.IDF vector-space formulations, BM25, and language modeling weighting. Each of these term weighting functions takes on a specific parametric form. While these weighting functions have proven to be highly effective, they impose strict constraints on the functional form of the term weights. Such constraints may possibly degrade retrieval effectiveness. In this paper we propose two new classes of term weighting schemes that we call semi-parametric and non-parametric weighting. These weighting schemes make fewer assumptions about the underlying term weights and allow the data to speak for itself. We argue that these robust weighting schemes have the potential to be significantly more effective compared to existing parametric schemes, especially with the growing amount of training data becoming available.

Download:

Official Google Blog: Announcing the AdSense for Mobile Applications beta

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 2:59 pm

Announcing the AdSense for Mobile Applications beta

6/24/2009 10:27:00 AM

You don’t have to be a mobile expert to see how smartphones are revolutionizing our daily lives. Lower prices, faster network speeds and unlimited data plans mean that people often reach for their cell phone rather than their computer when they are seeking information. As a result, mobile applications have become more and more popular, helping people find music, make restaurant reservations or check bank balances — all on their phone.

We want to contribute to the growth of these mobile applications, which is why we’re happy to announce our beta launch of AdSense for Mobile Applications. After all, advertisers are looking for ways to reach potential customers when they are engaged with mobile content, and application developers are looking for ways to show the best ads to their users. We have already had a successful trial of this service with a small number of partners, and are excited that we can now offer this solution to a broader group.

AdSense for Mobile Applications allows developers to earn revenue by displaying text and image ads in their iPhone and Android applications. For our beta launch, we’ve created a site where developers can learn more about the AdSense for Mobile Applications program, see answers to frequently asked questions and sign up to participate in our beta. Advertisers can also learn about the benefits of advertising in mobile applications.

We’re excited to open up this beta to more developers, and look forward to offering new features for our mobile advertisers and publishers in upcoming releases. We also want to say a big thank you to the partners who worked with us on the trial stages of this project including Backgrounds, Sega, Shazam, Urbanspoon and more.

Check out this short video of Howard Steinberg, Director of Business Development at Urbanspoon, discussing his experience with AdSense for Mobile Applications.

Posted by Susan Wojcicki, Vice President, Product Management

Shared Items – June 24, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 2:29 pm

Shared Items – June 24, 2009

Filed under: shared — jeetu @ 2:29 pm

Amazon fires warning shot at California over sales tax bill – TechFlash: Seattle’s Technology News Source

Filed under: Misc — jeetu @ 11:41 am

Posted at www.techflash.com

Amazon fires warning shot at California over sales tax bill

By Eric Engleman on June 23, 2009 at 8:40 PM PDT

Economy  e-commerce  Amazon.com


This is beginning to look like a game of Whack-a-mole. As cash-strapped states across the country consider legislation that would force online retailers like Amazon.com to collect sales tax, Amazon is doing its best to snuff out those efforts before they take root. The latest example is California. Amazon sent a letter Monday to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and key California lawmakers (pdf, 2 pages) warning that if tax legislation there passes, Amazon “would have little choice” but to end its relationship with California affiliates.

The California letter follows similar Amazon warnings to Hawaii, North Carolina, Maryland, and Minnesota. Many states are looking to follow the lead of New York, which passed a law establishing that online retailers like Amazon have a physical presence in the state through their relationship with locally based affiliates — and are thus required to collect sales tax on items shipped to state residents. Affiliates link to Amazon products in exchange for a cut of sales, and are an important part of Amazon’s ecommerce model. Amazon has challenged the New York law, so far unsuccessfully.

For states facing budget shortfalls in the recession, the idea of making online retailers collect sales tax has an obvious appeal (many states require sales taxes on online sales, but residents often don’t pay them). For Amazon, which currently collects sales tax in only a handful of states — mostly where it has a physical presence through offices or warehouses — the New York-style legislative efforts represent a big threat. They could turn off bargain-hunting shoppers not accustomed to paying sales tax on online orders.

Amazon, in its letter to California, argues that the New York-style tax legislation there is “unconstitutional because it ultimately would require sellers with no physical presence in California to collect sales tax merely on the basis of contracts with California advertisers.” The ecommerce giant has shown support for the Streamlined Sales Tax Project, a nearly decade-old campaign to simplify and coordinate sales tax laws across the states.

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