Baby Names – Web Application

Cool site: Baby name wizard – name popularity java application

Great example of a traffic generating tool/content use to help market a product. The aplication allows visitors to view the popularity of names over time. The site provides a useful and interesting service for free and in turn get the oportunity to sell their product (a book on baby names – The Baby Name Wizard).

This is a great example of what the internet can do well – providing something of value to visitors and serving as a marketing vehicle for the organization. And by providing something interesting the site gets free publicity (such as this post).

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Private Consumer Information Stolen from ChoicePoint

Topics: Economics, Privacy, Government

According to an article on CNN.com, “tens of thousands of U.S. consumers face a greater risk of identity theft after criminals gained access to a database of personal records compiled by ChoicePoint Inc.”

“In California, the only state that requires companies to disclose security breaches, ChoicePoint sent warning letters to 30,000 to 35,000 consumers advising them to check their credit reports.”

“Chris Hoofnagle, associate director with the Electronic Privacy Information Center… This is a prime example of how they don’t and why ChoicePoint should be subject to federal privacy regulations,” He is completely right.

More information is detailed in the letter sent by EPIC to the Federal Trade Commission on 1 Feb 2005: Request for investigation into data broker products for compliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

It is a shame the government is failing to serve their role, as regulator, as necessary in a properly functioning capitalist economy. At least California has taken the minimal step of requiring the companies to notify consumers when the companies discover they have made their private information available improperly. The failure to regulate in areas with negative economic externalities causes great damage to the economy and the individuals of the society. Unfortunately the government seems uninterested in these responsibilities. For that reason citizens are subject to negative externalities that they should not have to suffer. If government leaders properly played their role as regulator.

I don’t like the idea that my private information is held by companies that continue to fail to properly protect that private information. Their right to maintain records of private information needs to be much more effectively regulated. And citizen’s should be given much more control over the flow of their private information. I wonder how much money the politicians get from those who trade in private information? I imagine, the money recieved might provide a compelling explanation for the failure to regulate properly to those who are sceptical of the pure intentions of our “representatives.”

Updated 17 Feb
Dan Gilmor has added a post on this topic – A Dossier on Your Life: Now Criminals May Have It. My comments on that post:

Unfortunately many in the United States of American have come to equate no regulations with capitalism. Government has a critical role to play in regulating the market in capitalist theory. However, many political leaders don’t understand the basic tenets of capitalism and fail to fulfil their vital role properly.

Europe is way ahead on protecting privacy rights for citizens

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Management Improvemnet Articles

Topic: Management – Library Additions

Recent additions to the Curious Cat Management Improvement Library include:

  • Six Sigma for the Little Guy by Mikel J. Harry and J. Douglas Crawford
  • What are the Measures That Matter by Art Kleiner
  • Critical Chain Scheduling and Buffer Management by Frank Patrick
  • Theory of Constraints by Sid Sytsma
  • Tom Peters Hates Quality but Loves Its Principles and Practices by John Pryor

Find links to these, and other new additions, on the Curious Cat Management Improvement New Articles Page or search for management improvement articles.

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Web Search Improvements

Topic: Internet – Improvement

I have been waiting for Google to provide a way around an obvious problem with their search results for a long time. They choose to provide results that do not display matching content when you click on the result link. Since this was such an obvious failure to meet the needs of web search customers I figured a solution would be quick.

After a time I decided I should tell them I don’t want “results” that don’t display the content when I click on the link results Google provides. So I suggested, I, and many others, would like a way of indicating we don’t want those results returned to us. It has now been more than 6 months and still nothing. I get an increasing number of these bad results. Combined with the improvement great improvement of Yahoo and MSN searches I am now willing to give them a try as my primary search and see how they preform.

In this case, I am not referring to pages where the site owner has deceived Google by providing false content to Google’s bot. For those cases, see improvement suggestion 2, below. What I am talking about are pages, such as:

Google search result link goes to this page which has no relevant content. Posted by Hello

Link to the page shown in the image.

Where Google, I have to believe, knows has the content not available from the search result they provide but hidden away behind free, or paid, registration. I can understand some people might want such items returned. I can’t imagine people would choose that as the default option but even if Google wanted that to be the default option that would be fine with me as long as they provided a way for me to only get search results that returned links that linked to a page with the content Google found to match my search. It appears Yahoo! doesn’t provide this option either. If there is a way to accomplish what I want that you know of please let me know.

Improvements I would like to see:

  1. Ability to restrict results so only those links that will display the content are returned.
  2. Ability to restrict sites from the search results in my preferences (Google doesn’t seem to be able to restrict certain obvious spam names databases from results, so let me do so myself. It would be best if there could be filter lists that are maintained by various communities that I could choose to apply. I can imagine there are technical hurdles to overcome to make this a reality).
  3. Ability to restrict types of results by file type in my preference (such as power point or pdf files). I would like to be able to have more obvious indications when the file is one of those types. Again I can appreciate this might not be what everyone wants. I have no problem with the current default option remaining, I would just like the ability to set my preferences and have those used for my search results.
  4. Easier way to have results restricted to certain sites (including site lists). It would be nice the search engine could retain a list of sites I have used in the past and let me select from those. Also I would like to be able to select multiple sites. And I would like to have groups of sites (site lists – so I could just select, for example, the “management improvement” sites) and the search results would be filtered only for those have included in my list of management sites.
  5. With the ability to filter results list above, an appropriate interface to make such options easy to use on the search result page. The current preference page works ok, for its purpose of setting long term preferences. It is not very good for one time search changes and certainly would not work well for quickly manipulating the results based on the options shown above. I would imagine smart, talented people could design a toolbar that would meet this need well.
Posted in Customer focus, Google | 1 Comment

Theory of Knowledge

Deming’s Management System, as expressed in his book: The New Economics has four interdependent parts:

  • Appreciation for a System (systems thinking)
  • Knowledge about Variation (see: variation definition)
  • Theory of Knowledge
  • Psychology (the human element of management systems)

Quotes on the Theory of Knowledge portion from The New Economics by W. Edwards Deming.

  • Management is Prediction. The theory of knowledge that management in any form is prediction” (Page 101)
  • Knowledge is built upon theory… Rational prediction requires theory and build knowledge through systematic revision and comparison of theory based on comparison of prediction with observation.” (Page 102).

It took me many years to appreciate the importance of prediction and theory to aid in learning and improvement. When managing many fail to predict when attempting to test improvement ideas through what should be experiments (often they are just changes without verification the change produced a desired effect, any learning or study of the results of the change). Without prediction learning is much less (if there is any at all) than it would be with such prediction.

In addition, when it is understood that management is based on prediction then the impact of the other 3 areas of the system of profound knowledge are clearer.

By exploring the basis for the prediction one must understand the theory they are operating with to make the prediction. Most often managers fail to develop a theory that allows them to predict. They fail to predict the results of an attempt to improve (PDSA), they fail to analyze the results of that improvement experiment, they fail to learn about the system that they are managing (since they fail to predict and then learn) and therefore cannot refine their theory based on their learning. When failing to do these things it is a surprise that learning is very ineffective? And without learning how can effective improvement be expected?

With, even a fairly simple understanding of the theory of knowledge the effectiveness of management improvement efforts are greatly increased. This topic is difficult for most to understand, I recommend reading chapter four of the New Economics. And I recommend returning to that chapter periodically as you apply management improvement techniques and learn and grow as a manager.

More from the Curious Cat Management Glossary: Theory of Knowledge

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Designing a New Organization

re: What about Designing New Organizations? [the broken link has been removed]

Guidance for “designing a new organisation and not for analysis of an existing one?” (edited)

I would add Russell Ackoff to the top of the list of those to consult. Start with his book Re-Creating the Corporation and continue to quite a few of his other books. After Ackoff, I would look to Deming and Senge. Other interesting folks would be Dee Hock, Brian Joiner, Peter Scholtes, Robert Rodin…

Few truly think about designing a new organization. Most people are interested in how to improve their existing organization. Therefore, it follows most people interesting in having an effect in the real world have focused on how to help those who are looking to be helped. Ackoff has done a huge amount of work in idealized design and thinking about the big ideas that can drive dramatic change. His ideas are exceptional. He even offers a plan for modeling the idealized organization and then a plan for how to transform the organization based on practical ideas that are feasible in the real world.

Deming’s ideas are very difficult to fit into most existing organizations easily because they require so many changes in the traditional style of management. However in designing a new organization from scratch you can adopt many of the ideas from the beginning. Free, Perfect and Now, by Robert Rodin, is a great book showing the adoption of these ideas by a company. When the leader is convinced it is possible to transform an existing company.

For a manufacturing organization I would look to Lean ideas (Toyota and Womack). Lean thinking is, of course, valuable to any organization but especially so in manufacturing.

You can find more on the ideas of those I list above through the Curious Cat Management Improvement Library.

John Hunter

Posted in Management, Systems thinking | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Management Improvement Articles

Topic: Management – Library Additions

Recent additions to the Curious Cat Management Improvement Library include:

  • Creating Sustainable Competitive Advantage: The Toyota Philosophy and Its Effects by M. Reza Vaghefi
  • Designing Useful Metrics by Esther Derby
  • Transforming The Systems Movement by Russell L. Ackoff
  • Got Six Sigma on the Brain by Dirk Dusharme
  • On the Nature of Organization by Jamshid Gharajedaghi

Find links to these, and other new additions, on the Curious Cat Management Improvement New Articles Page or search for management improvement articles.

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Price Discrimination in the Internet Age

Re: Boing Boing post – Why HP’s region coding excuse is bogus

There is a simple method for large multi-national companies to use to protect against currency fluctuation. They can use foreign exchange futures to do so. Companies do this all the time (some also chose not to for their own business reasons). “Foreign Exchange is the largest of the global financial markets. Daily trading volume in the currency markets is estimated to be 1.1 US trillion dollars.” – Smith Barney Citigroup [broken link removed]. Some companies choose to speculate on the direction they believe exchange rates will go (either directly, or by not hedging when they believe rates will move in their favor and hedging when they predict doing so will benefit them).

In fact the United States government gives beneficial tax treatment (60% of profits are classified as long term capital gains, regardless of the holding period, thus reducing the taxes owed) to profits from “futures” trading. The reasoning is that creating a market for companies to hedge their risks is so important we must provide tax benefits to create a market for this activity. Some may think that the special tax advantages are more likely due to large payments from lobbyists to those who write the tax code than the merits of such tax law. In fact I may be one of them. Farmers often use futures contracts (on, for example, wheat or corn) in much the same way that companies can use future currency contracts to hedge their risks. That point is mentioned by the lobbyists, I would imagine.

The argument that you need to cripple products by geographic area to cope with currency fluctuations is false. It might be that a company wants to practice Price Discrimination (definition from US Federal Trade Commission [broken link removed] or from the Digital Economist [broken link removed] ) to charge more where they can get more and less where they can get less. In the view of such a company, the internet, and other factors, have made it increasingly easy for people to buy in the low cost region and resell the items in the region where the company wants to charge higher prices. If you want to keep practicing price discrimination as a company you have to erect barriers to the free trade of your products by your customers.

Reimporting drugs is another clear example where companies try to use price discrimination – to charge US consumers more than Canadian consumers. Drug companies have successfully created legal road blocks to those trying to get around the geographic price discrimination. However, since lately those responsible for enforcing those laws have not been very eager to do so you can imagine the drug companies would like a drug that only worked in the country it was purchased. Another example of price discrimination are the regional versions of Windows.

I happen to believe companies should have the right to practice price discrimination. And in fact they should have the right to make products that have replacement parts that have been crippled to work only in products sold in specific countries. I would rather deal with companies that were trying to provide me more value not less. So I would be reluctant to buy from companies that practice such anti-consumer behavior. And luckily the internet and blogs are making it very difficult for companies to hind such practices. My guess is once attention is focused on such practices some companies will take advantage of such behavior by pledging “to do no evil.” And those companies will gain customers. The process will be quite a bit more confusing in the real world but that is how things will play out in the long run.

Hedging Currency Fluctuations:

Posted in Customer focus, Economics, Management | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Operational Excellence

In, the post Is Operational Excellence Dead? the argument is made that operational excellence is dead as a differentiator of companies. “All of the emphasis on outsourcing to low labor cost countries seems to imply that organizations no longer consider their operations strategic.” I would state that, in fact, the opposite is true.

Leading companies, for years, have focused on continual improvement. Toyota is the best known example. They drove the adoption of just in time inventory and then other lean practices. Dell, Southwest, Amazon and Walmart are further examples of companies that have focused on operational excellence.

Dell has continually improved their operational performance and has been growing dramatically (both by expanding the market and by taking market share from their competitors). Dell’s advantage is almost solely in operational excellence. They are not know for product innovation or traditional customer service (compared to say IBM or Hewlett Packard). They have redefined customer expectations in a way that works very well for them. When Dell’s competitors try to compete by combining forces (such as Hewlett Packard buying Compaq) they continued to lose market share. I would say they lost market share almost exclusively due to Dell’s incredible focus on improving the performance of their operations.

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Posted in Management, Manufacturing, Process improvement, quote | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

USA Health Care Costs reach 15.3% of GDP – the highest percentage ever

re: Health Care Spending In The United States Slows For The First Time In Seven Years

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (part of the United States Department of Health and Human Services) issued a report (the press release states that report will appear in the Jan/Feb edition of Health Affairs but does not provide a link so the link is my guess of where the report will appear) and a news release putting a positive spin on the data.

“Spending growth for prescription drugs decelerated significantly to 10.7 percent, down from 14.9 percent in 2002.” So we only increased spending on prescription drugs by 10.7 percent? I guess that could be seen as positive? To me though increasing expenditures by 10.2 percent seems more like of a problem than a success, though I can’t argue it is less of a problem than the year before. My last post was on prescription drug prices in the USA.
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Posted in Economics, Health care, Popular, quote | Tagged , , , , , , | 7 Comments