July 31, 2011

Catastrophic Playstation breach: Inventory of what you may have lost

Here's a run
down on what personal info may now be in the "enemy's" hands after the PlayStation hack.



Bookmark php Ottawa woman gives voice to Yemeni protestors under fire

Posted by: pybadyfyto at 12:42 PM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 40 words, total size 1 kb.

July 30, 2011

Words of wisdom: Some things change with time, others don’t

By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette

There is a German proverb that states, “An old error is always more popular than a new truth.”

This is often evident in the business of getting technology to market, particularly among nascent entrepreneurs and startup management teams who are coming into the process of commercialization well-versed in the engineering of a product but not so much in the fundamentals of business planning, customer engagement and market development.

Today and next week we will look at the nuts and bolts of making a venture succeed with practical bits of business advice that have emerged from our various interviews for this series.

Today we will emphasize business best practices. We will not be giving these points an exhaustive treatment, but we do want to hear your thoughts and opinions in the Comments section below.

If it made sense then, it makes even more sense now

When we interviewed  Denzil Doyle, we asked if he thought it worthwhile to update the key bits of advice he gives entrepreneurs in his bookMaking Technology Happen, considering that its last edition was published a decade ago. His response? “Some things withstand the test of time.” We will begin with two of his fundamental commandments for startups:

Write a business plan – a new ventures business plan. This is a roadmap for how the company will evolve and to attract potential investors. It differs from a business plan for a going concern in that it will have little, if any, historical data from which to make revenue projections and other forecasts. It is, therefore, based on no shortage of assumptions. As , one of those potential investors, observed in his guest post many weeks back,  that articulates when and how investors will see a return on their investment.

Have a clear product-migration strategy. “Any new venture which starts out with only one product in its portfolio is probably doomed … follow-on products should be clearly visible at the outset,” Doyle writes. A product-migration strategy is crucial to keep the market engaged with compelling new products as older products mature. Further to this, “the first product or service should be followed up very quickly with two others, one with a lower price and lower functionality and the other with a higher price and higher functionality.” But each of these products should be a “total product” that offers a complete solution to a customer’s needs.

‘The democratization of innovation’ In last week’s post, we featured comment from ’s  on the democratization of innovation, which she said has three components:

  • The collapsing cost of product building
  • The ability to rapidly test business models with quick market engagement
  • The use of lean startup methodologies, which allow startups to go through more iterations of their product with less cash.

, general partner at  and co-founder of the , also spoke with us about how these trends have accelerated the process of commercializing technology. It has become easier to quickly get the product and market fit right, and it is all the more crucial that startups do so. To turn these new market realities to their advantage, entrepreneurs must be willing to learn quickly, fail rapidly, and regroup without delay. This requires that they be “honest and objective about where they are with their product,” Lee said.

, a partner at Montreal-based , furthers this point by saying, “Your success is not based on your core ideas, it is based on how fast you can respond and reiterate the feedback coming back from your market.” Entrepreneurs must “get their heads out of the sand to see what competitors are doing, what is happening in the market, and where there are dead ends and emerging opportunities.”

, managing partner of  and co-founder of the C100, said startups with products or services focused on larger enterprise customers must consider the value and benefits they will derive from their first customers in addition to revenue. His advice? Go for “customers who are going to push you the hardest to develop a globally competitive product.” He has found that Canadian firms in particular make the mistake of picking a Canadian customer as their first. The issue here is that Canadian customers are often “more conservative and tend not to be early adopters … they don’t have a world view when they select innovative technology” when compared to large enterprises south of the border.

Weren’t we supposed to launch v1.0 by now? , CEO of  and one of our U.K.-based , said startups often have a poor understanding of just what is a “product launch” versus a beta test of their technology. Startups must be able to distinguish between the two. In his experience, entrepreneurs often underestimate when they are truly launched and lose sight of version 1.0 of their product.

“My guidance is to very clearly state what v1.0 of the technology is and just deliver that,” he said. “Companies always see new ways for how their technology can be developed, what new capability can be added in, but then are frustrated by delayed market entry. They are actually working on v1.3 when they haven’t put out v1.0 yet. Don’t burn your cash and don’t waste your time, or anyone else’s.”

Newman also finds that startups often “don’t think about the post sales support infrastructure sufficiently to scale the company. This is where growth is hindered or delayed … sprinters must hand off to the middle-distance runners,” who he defines as “a good middle-management team that thrives on delivering continuity and quality.”

Next week, we will revisit the people factor and the challenges that are often posed by that person in the mirror.

This is the ninth article in a continuing series that examines the state of the ecosystem necessary to successfully bring technology to market. Based on dozens of interviews with entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors, business leaders, academics, tech-transfer experts and policy makers, this series looks at what is working and what can be improved in the go-to-market ecosystem in the United States, Canada and Britain. We invite your feedback.

Give Canada’s Privacy Commissioner the teeth it deserves

Give Canada’s Privacy Commissioner the teeth it deserves

Canada’s Privacy Commissioner, Jennifer Stoddart, called for her role as privacy watch dog to be given sharper teeth on Wednesday at Canada 3.0 in Stratford, Ont.

Stoddart is asking for the ability to issue stiff monetary penalties against companies that allow for customers’ data to slip through their fingers and into the hands of cyber-criminals. She’s also asking for the law to require the reporting of data breaches as soon as they occur.

Brian Jackson, Associate Editor of ITBusiness.ca

The commissioner’s request is reasonable and should be granted as soon as Parliament has opportunity to revisit Canada’s private-sector privacy legislation. Such powers are already enjoyed by Stoddart’s peers around the world – in Europe for example, where France issued a fine to Google over the accidental collection of unprotected while Canada was only able to conduct an investigation and make recommendations to Google.

Related story:

By comparison, even Stoddart’s provincial counterparts can flex more muscle when dealing with privacy breaches.

It’s not like privacy watch dogs haven’t given corporations dealing with personal information fair warning. Almost exactly one year ago, Stoddart worked with several of her European peers to warn Google that “showing willful disregard for privacy in online services” would not be tolerated. The rebuke followed Google’s , a social networking service that made some previously private Gmail information public.

In an Internet culture where more than half of Canadians are using , which has a at best, and even more use Google services, Canada needs a strong regulator to protect the privacy of its citizens. A recent class-action lawsuit launched by a Toronto law firm against Sony for its PlayStation Network breach, and another one launched last year on behalf of Canadians , shows that the legal system is already trying to compensate for the gaps in Canada’s privacy enforcement.

Related resource:

But even successful lawsuits won’t change the fact that millions of Canadians have had their personal details leaked to strangers through .

Canada’s privacy watch dog has been barking long and loud, it’s time we let it bite.

July 29, 2011

The ITBusiness.ca story we’re still waiting to tell

The ITBusiness.ca story we’re still waiting to tell

By Shane Schick

Enough with the nostalgia already.

Yes, we are celebrating this week, and yes, I am incredibly proud of the stories we’ve told in that time, but there’s plenty of elements in our coverage already that will have us looking back on the biggest news events, the site’s origins and the evolving nature of online journalism. I want to take a moment instead to look forward 10 years.

Shane Schick

Not so that I can make any predictions – I’m notoriously wrong when I do that – but to talk about the one big thing that didn’t happen over the last decade. Despite all the mergers, breakthrough products and unexpected innovations, the biggest problem facing SMBs has not been resolved. They’re still mired in legacy IT issues.

This should be more surprising than it is. One of the most remarkable but relatively ignored trends in the last 10 years has been the slow migration of technology product and service companies from their traditional top-tier enterprise accounts to firms with 500 employees or less. Or 100 employees or less. Or less than 10. The Internet removed many of the barriers to entry in many markets and produced an incredible impact on world economies that we now call globalization, but it also meant that even what we used to call “mom and pop” companies could compete with much larger entities.

Related:

Helping SMBs become more competitive, however, hasn’t been a smooth journey for most vendors. Even at what they consider bargain-basement prices, SMBs have been averse to significant IT spending, and much more careful to avoid risk than larger organizations. (They have probably been wise in this respect; the last decade has also been marked by two recessions, the last one far worse than the first.) In almost every category, however, from databases and accounting packages to enterprise resource planning and customer relationship management, vendors have launched SMB-friendly (often termed “express”) versions of their products.

By now, you would think there would be more SMBs up and running on these tools than the majority who continue to stick band-aid solutions on aging hardware and software. We hear this time and again in many of the stories we do. If the IT industry is all about progress, shouldn’t we have made more headway here in the time since ITBusiness.ca was founded?

There’s also little to suggest that much will change in the next 10 years, but here are a few suggestions that might help. Perhaps a group of savvy CEOs will create a grassroots level pan-Canadian association that will voice the IT concerns of SMBs. Vendors could eventually come up with a way to plug into to reasonably priced cloud services as easily as Facebook Connect allows consumers to sign into other Web sites.

Or maybe we just need somebody to provide ongoing guidance and support for SMBs with relevant examples of those who have demonstrated a way to move beyond legacy in as pain-free a way as possible. And by “somebody,” of course, I am referring to ITBusiness.ca.

Here’s to another decade.

Shane Schick is the founder of ITBusiness.ca, and now the editor-in-chief of IT World Canada

July 10, 2011

Rogers sim card rogers Words of wisdom: Another look in the mirror

Words of wisdom: Another look in the mirror

By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette

 

As we have said before,  that will stretch the boundaries of what they know and challenge what they believe is attainable. They must be willing to seek the outside counsel and feedback that will reveal the weaknesses in themselves, their teams, their technology and their rogers sim card rogers paths to market.

It’s difficult to overcome a weakness if you haven’t recognized and acknowledged it.

We conclude our Words of Wisdom string today by looking once again at the human factor and the right stuff that individual entrepreneurs and management teams need to succeed. There is no denying that the greatness of an organization is defined by its people. But how do you ensure that you are making the right hires?

Hire good people

In his book, Making Technology Happen,  Denzil Doyle talks at length about proven practices and processes for getting technology to market. However, he also urges rogers sim card rogers that thought be given to the people part of the equation.

Hiring people “is the mistake that virtually everyone makes (by) not taking the time to do it right,” he writes. On the other hand, “most presidents and managers make the hiring process too complex.”

In Doyle’s view, the “right hire,” in addition to obvious role-related skills and experience, has:

  • A high energy level
  • A high mental capacity
  • An abundance of common sense
  • An ability to communicate

What’s his advice to make the hiring process less painful and more streamlined? Draw up a list of the functions required for a given role. Then rate the candidate’s ability to perform each function against each of the four variables above, say, on a scale of one to 10.

“A candidate who does not rate a decent score in rogers sim card rogers a very large percentage of the intersections between the job functions and the four essential ingredients is likely not the person for the job,” Doyle writes. “The same is true if scores are notably lower in one or more of the four columns even though one of them might have exceptional ratings.”

Here’s an exercise in devil’s advocacy for you: carry out this process on your existing team of company founders and executives. It might be painful, but it may reveal weaknesses that are best dealt with sooner rather than later.

How ‘round’ are you?

, executive VP at , has worked with entrepreneurs of all stripes, including those who are trying to make the often-painful transition from simply developing technology to mastering the sales and marketing skills needed to commercialize it.

For him, it is a balance between basic skills, such as strong written and oral communications, and personality. He always looks for people who are well-rounded and possess those characteristics that have been collectively referred to by others, such as , as emotional intelligence. This is a measure of one’s self confidence, self-awareness and ability to navigate periods of stress and emotional turmoil, all of which has a direct bearing on one’s likelihood of achieving business success.

“You have to be a well-centred individual,” Fisher said. “If I am a highly insecure individual and I need you to stroke my ego, then that’s likely going to cause all kinds of problems downstream. I’m not saying rogers sim card rogers those people don’t become successful business people … but nine times out of 10, people who are not centred in their own personality create all sorts of wasted baggage.”

This ability to communicate and present well is also important to Ronald Weissman, chair of the Software Special Industry Group at , when he is looking at a startup.

“In today’s climate, when companies actually try not to buy from startups, you have RISK painted on your forehead,” he said. “It’s tough to go it alone and establish credibility. A big part of my evaluation of a startup is if the management team is capable of establishing partnerships with larger companies who can achieve market penetration.”

At the coal face

It should come as no surprise that work ethic also ranked high on the list for Fisher and others.

“The harder I work, the luckier I get.” For , CEO of , this marks the “let’s get it done” attitude that characterizes an entrepreneur with the right stuff. “I see a huge correlation between company’s success and how hard people work,” he said. “It’s a lot of hours for a long time, that’s the biggest determinant of success.”

, CEO of , has personally proven this point in spades.

Despite being a busy single mother with a full-time business, she set out to lever the insight and expertise developed over a 20-year career in strategic marketing communications into an educational resource for professional development and training. The Ingenium team, with a substantial amount of goodwill and in-kind support from friends and allies, set to work, determined to bootstrap their new venture, , without seeking a term sheet that would have diluted ownership. After six years of effort, the new venture launched last year.

“The sheer tenacity and the focus required was a major challenge since the project had to run alongside our regular work and business development,” Kealey said. “Stitching this together into something coherent with an end goal in mind was a very significant challenge.”

“Most of the development work I did on this was between 5 and 7 a.m. before I got my kids up to get ready for school; that’s obviously not everyone’s cup of tea.”

What’s your cup of tea? What kind of sacrifice and personal growth has it taken for you to get your technology to market?

This is the 10th article in a continuing series that examines the state of the ecosystem necessary to successfully bring technology to market. Based on dozens of interviews with entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors, business leaders, academics, tech-transfer experts and policy makers, this series looks at what is working and what can be improved in the go-to-market ecosystem in the United States, Canada and Britain. We invite your feedback.

<< Page 1 of 1 >>
33kb generated in CPU 0.0334, elapsed 0.1541 seconds.
32 queries taking 0.1312 seconds, 78 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.