Archive for the ‘the edges’ Category

November 15, 2008

so what’s a crazy-ass cartoonist in alpine, texas going to do about dell, anyway?

edges006.jpg
[“Edges 6″. Part of The Edges Series. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
I’ve spent a lot of time in the last few days thin­king about Dell Com­pu­ters, a tech hard­ware com­pany from Round Rock, Texas. Here are some notes:
1. When I deve­lo­ped The Blue Mons­ter idea for Mic­ro­soft, a wee voice told me there was a busi­ness model in there somewhere. Some kind of post-advertising, Purpose-Idea, social-object, marketing-disruption kind of thing. Something that would scale, something one could turn into a little cot­tage industry, crea­ting TONS of value for the frac­tion of the cost of the tra­di­tio­nal adver­ti­sing agency model. Dell liked the idea, and let me have a mee­ting with them. Since then I’ve been having this little back-and-forth with them, trying to get know the com­pany bet­ter, trying to figure out an “Angle of Align­ment” with them that would hope­fully allow me to create something inte­res­ting.
2. So far it’s been a great expe­rience. Wor­king mostly with Richard and Lio­nel, they’ve been intro­du­cing me to tons of peo­ple, while I’ve been trying to get my head around the com­pany– what they do and why they do it.
3.Though I find it a bit sim­plis­tic [nor do I agree with much of it], I love this article from Fake Steve Jobs, “Why Dell Won’t Bounce Back”

Bot­tom line is this: the only inno­va­tions worth making are the ones invol­ving pro­duct ideas and pro­duct design. I mean, Duh. Right? It’s pretty obvious. What’s ama­zing to me is how few com­pa­nies actually seem to rea­lize it. To sus­tain an edge in any mar­ket you must make bet­ter pro­ducts than your com­pe­ti­tors, con­sis­tently, over and over and over again. Just making the same pro­ducts as ever­yone else but taking a little fric­tion out of the sys­tem can give you an advan­tage, but only a tem­po­rary one.

The article basi­cally lines up all the most obvious cha­llen­ges Dell faces. Like I said a while ago, I see Dell’s cha­llen­ges fall into four main cate­go­ries:

i. Evo­lu­tion of cus­to­mer ser­vice. Sure, they have a ways to go. Then again, don’t we all etc. They’ve cer­tainly come a long way since Jeff Jar­vis and the whole “Dell Hell” epi­sode, which gives me rea­sons to be cheer­ful.
ii. Design. Ten years ago, I didn’t own a com­pu­ter. I really didn’t. The com­pany I wor­ked for gave me one– a Mac desk­top. The inter­net was still rela­ti­vely still in its infancy back then, so besi­des using Word to do my job, sen­ding emails, and sur­fing the net occa­sio­nally, I didn’t really have a lot of use for it. Now I can’t ima­gine life without my lap­top.
To use a Real Estate alle­gory: When your com­pany sets you up with a tem­po­rary accom­mo­da­tion in a new town, you don’t really mind too much that it’s Embassy Sui­tes. It ser­ves a func­tion. But let’s say you’re loo­king for a new house for you and your spouse and young chil­dren to move into, your needs become A LOT more exac­ting. Not to men­tion, a lot more expen­sive in terms of both square foo­tage and decor. There’s a rea­son why com­mer­cial real estate tends to be chea­per than resi­den­tial etc.
More and more peo­ple are using their own com­pu­ters to do their work. Their “Own Homes” for their data, as it were. Dell has long been been in the “Tem­po­rary Accom­mo­da­tion” busi­ness, for other people’s data. And now as the mar­ket chan­ges, they’re having to make the move from buil­ding “Embassy Sui­tes”, to buil­ding actual “Pri­vate Dwe­llings”. There’s a con­tex­tual headshift to work through. And it won’t hap­pen over­night– it’s a big com­pany.
iii. India & China. In 2007 for the first time, Dell made more money from outside the USA than from inside it. 50.2% vs 49.8%, I believe are the figu­res. The ques­tion is not about how one get more busi­ness from the West Coast, Mac-using hips­ter crowd. The big ques­tion is, how do you get tech­no­logy into the hands of peo­ple who THIS SIMPLY WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN AN OPTION FOR, even a cou­ple of years ago?
iv. Cul­ture. To me this is the big­gest issue of the four. You can’t thrill your cus­to­mers until you thrill your­self first. Let’s face it, a big part of the Dell sch­tick is built around pro­ces­ses– sales, manu­fac­tu­ring, con­tro­lling costs and all that lovely, cor­po­rate back-office stuff. That’s fair enough, most big com­pa­nies ope­rate like this. I would very much like to know, what per­cen­tage of Dell emplo­yees feel “This is just a paycheck”, ver­sus how many feel, “Dam­mit, we’re fric­kin’ chan­ging the world here”…?

4. Some­body at Dell once desc­ri­bed his emplo­yer as “Ordi­nary peo­ple doing extraor­di­nary things.” Though my granny always told me that it’s good to remain hum­ble, and to a large extent, I do agree with that sen­ti­ment, I did scratch my head a wee bit at that one. Does Mic­ro­soft see them­sel­ves as “ordi­nary”? Does Apple? I doubt that they do.
5. Though it’s still early days, I think Michael Dell coming back from reti­re­ment to cap­tain the com­pany [like Steve Jobs did at Apple] is a big deal. I think the effects are only just begin­ning to show them­sel­ves. Per­so­nally, I’m glad to have him there.
6. Part of my moti­va­tion for wor­king with Dell is sim­ple patrio­tism. For 20 million Texans to pros­per long-term, we need large, world-class crea­tive powerhou­ses. Same as every other state in the Union, same with every other nation on Earth. We’ve done the effi­ciency thing for three hun­dred years, and have got­ten quite good at it. Like I said in my talk at Star­tu­pEm­pire the other day, the future of wealth is now all about “Crea­ti­vity”. Embrace it, or die.
7. They’re called PCs, they’re not called BCs. They’re called per­so­nal com­pu­ters, not busi­ness com­pu­ters. That being said, the demands of an affluent, crea­tive Ame­ri­can are dif­fe­rent from the needs of an IT mana­ger in a large wid­get fac­tory. As the lines that sepa­rate busi­ness and per­so­nal get ever more blurry, I see all major com­pu­ter com­pa­nies [inc­lu­ding Gosh! Yes! Apple!] strug­gle to bridge the gap.
8. I asked some­body at Dell what she thought made the com­pany so spe­cial, what sepa­ra­ted it from the others. “Basi­cally, we’re tena­cious sons-of-bitches,” she said. Good ans­wer! As I spoke to more and more Dell folk during my many visits to their Round Rock cam­pus in the last 6 months, this “tena­city” star­ted to become easier and easier to sense. I find that encou­ra­ging.
9. The Edges car­toon series came directly out of my tal­king with Dell. They spent the last 20 years “pushing the edges” of manu­fac­tu­ring, supply, dis­tri­bu­tion and pri­cing [and the world, frankly, would be a lot poo­rer had they not done so]. Where else can they push out­wards? Design? Cus­to­mer Ser­vice? I have no idea. Only they can ans­wer that. [Note to Dell Emplo­yees: If you can shed any light on this ques­tion, I want to talk to you. Please feel free to ping me at gapingvoid@gmail.com, Thanks.]
10. “Live on the edges or not at all” are pretty empty words, unless you can actually live by them. Har­der than it looks. Maybe “Live on The Edges” is the right choice of words to arti­cu­late Dell’s Purpose-Idea, maybe it isn’t. At the very least, it’ll start a con­ver­sa­tion inter­nally, maybe exter­nally as well. I don’t really care at the moment. All I’m trying to do is get my head one step clo­ser to unders­tan­ding the collec­tive drive of the com­pany. And I don’t mind fai­ling a few times in order to get there.
11. Trying to create a “Blue Mons­ter” for any com­pany, be it Mic­ro­soft, Dell, or whoe­ver, is basi­cally an act of futi­lity. That’s what makes it inte­res­ting. That’s what makes it poten­tially power­ful. That’s what makes me love doing it.
[Backs­tory: “Blue Mons­ter: Why Social Objects Are The Future Of Mar­ke­ting”]
[Writ­ten at Harry’s Tinaja, Alpine, Texas.]

September 5, 2008

the “digital nomads” thing heats up for hugh macleod

edges005.jpg
[“Edges 5″. Part of “The Edges” Series. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Rea­ding this piece about Dell’s new mini-computer, half­way through the PR sch­piel I YET AGAIN came across them using the term, “Digi­tal Nomad”.

With a star­ting weight of 2.28 lbs.[i], digi­tal nomads will value the Ins­pi­ron Mini’s dura­ble design, with sea­led key­board and relia­ble solid state drive (SSD) memory sto­rage. A bright 8.9‑inch glossy LED dis­play (1024x600) pre­sents most web pages with no left-right scro­lling, and the key­pads are large and easy to navigate.

About the same time that I first star­ted seeing this term being used a lot from them, their Digi­tal Nomads blog appea­red on the scene. So I gues­sed something was up. I figu­red the blog is not just some crazy side pro­ject from some rene­gade Dell emplo­yees, this fits in to a much lar­ger cor­po­rate stra­tegy. Like I said in a recent blog post:

The Digi­tal Nomads blog is what I call “indi­rect mar­ke­ting”. Peo­ple aren’t sup­po­sed to read it and go, “My, what a lovely blog. I think I’ll go out and buy me a cou­ple of brand new Dell lap­tops”. This is more of an “Align­ment” play. In other words, by “alig­ning” them­sel­ves more with the digital-nomad crowd, they hope it’ll help them in time to create pro­ducts that are more com­pe­lling and rele­vant to them. If you were in the com­pu­ter busi­ness, you’d want to have the same align­ment. “The Porous Mem­brane” etc. The good news is, Align­ment plays can be extre­mely effec­tive. The bad news is, they take FOREVER to gather momentum.

So the last time I was in Round Rock visi­ting their bright & shiny offi­ces, I asked around. My hunch seems to have been pro­ved correct. This is the align­ment they’re going after. I was also delight­fully sur­pri­sed to learn that they have no inten­tion of tra­de­mar­king, or attemp­ting to tra­de­mark the phrase, “Digi­tal Nomad”. They want to be alig­ned with it; they don’t want to “own” it. A small dis­tinc­tion, but a note­worthy one. To try to own it would rob the idea of all its mea­ning and power.
Yeah, I know, “Digi­tal Nomad” is not the only term one can use to desc­ribe a web-enabled wor­ker. There are others. There are also dif­fe­ren­ces of opi­nion as to what “Digi­tal Nomad” actually means. Are we tal­king mere tele-commuters, or is there some even big­ger socio­lo­gi­cal trend going on? Depends who you ask. I’ve been a blog­ger and a digi­tal nomad long enough to know how blurry the edges get some­ti­mes. Rather than worry about THE defi­ni­tive seman­tics, frankly, I’d rather worry about how to use this brave new world in order to make money, more quickly and easily than the gene­ra­tion before me.
In conc­lu­sion: Dell wants to align itself with the “Digi­tal Nomad” crowd. Groovy. If I were them I’d do the same.
OK, fine. So now the next ques­tion is, what needs to hap­pen to make all this more likely? Do they carry on doing what they’ve always done, or is there some FUNDAMENTAL change in their cul­ture going to be requi­red? And if so, how costly and pain­ful will that be for their peo­ple, their cus­to­mers and their sha­rehol­ders? I’m not saying they’re neces­sa­rily doing anything wrong so far, I’m just curious, that’s all. Change is the only cons­tant etc.
[ON A MORE PERSONAL NOTE:] Over the last few weeks I’ve been having a grand ol’ time get­ting to know the com­pany bet­ter. So far it’s been an inte­res­ting expe­rience. I’ve met some really smart, pas­sio­nate peo­ple. The only pro­blem for me ini­tially has been, they’re a big com­pany; it’s hard for some­body new on the scene to know where to look to find the inte­res­ting sto­ries going on. Design? Tech? Mar­ke­ting? Ope­ra­tions? Finance? Who’s making the sec­ret sauce?
But then again, I’ve been a digi­tal nomad for most of the last decade. So sud­denly, with their Digital-Nomad-Alignment sch­tick, I see a gla­ringly obvious fit bet­ween my inte­rests and theirs. Pro­blem sol­ved. Easy. Rock on.

September 2, 2008

desert rats

edges004.jpg
[“Edges 4″. Part of “The Edges” Series. Click on image to enlarge etc. Yes, I was thin­king about Mic­ro­soft when I drew that etc etc.]
Out here in West Texas, we have a cer­tain type of indi­vi­dual, who are affec­tio­na­tely refe­rred to as “Desert Rats”.
Desert Rats are basi­cally peo­ple who choose to live a spar­tan, alter­na­tive, self-sufficient exis­tence out in the desert. Pro­bably the most famous clus­ter of them around these parts can be found down in Ter­lin­gua Ghost Town, in the Chi­qua­qua Desert, about 100 miles South of where I live, close to Big Bend Natio­nal Park and the Mexi­can bor­der. Some­body just made docu­men­tary about them.
Ter­lin­gua Ghost Town used to be a small mer­cury mining town of about 2,000 peo­ple. Then in the 1940s the ore ran out, and the work dried up over­night. So peo­ple left. It became a ghost town, just like hun­dreds of other for­mer mining towns here in the South­west. A few deca­des later peo­ple loo­king to escape the rat-race in the most extreme way pos­si­ble star­ted moving down there. The utter harsh­ness of the lands­cape somehow ins­pi­red them.
When tal­king about Ter­lin­gua, you never go very long without someone men­tio­ning “The Porch”. They’d be tal­king about the porch of the Ter­lin­gua Gene­ral Store, the place where peo­ple gather daily at sun­set to drink beer, play gui­tar and tell sto­ries. I’ve hung out there a few times. Got chat­ting to Doc­tor Doug, one of the local cha­rac­ters. Nice guy. He’s been living in a rusty, yellow, dila­pi­da­ted school bus for 20 years or so [He gets a men­tion in the docu­men­tary, so click on the link above to see more].
But not all Desert Rats live just in Ter­lin­gua– they’re pretty much everywhere round these parts. I’ve met lots of them here in Alpine, for ins­tance.
What you notice is that, their uncon­ven­tio­nal lifestyle not­withs­tan­ding, they’re quite dif­fe­rent to the usual alter­na­tive Woodstock-college-student-hippie-drippie ste­reotype. They own guns and hun­ting kni­ves, and will use them if they have to. Try tres­pas­sing on their land with bad intent one day, if you don’t believe me.
The other thing you notice is JUST HOW LITTLE MONEY some of them live on. Heck, I thought I was cut­ting back when I moved out here, but some of these peo­ple are off the scale. It’s not uncom­mon to see them living on $5 – 10 thou­sand per year. Lord knows how they do it; except that bar­ter is a huge part of the equa­tion.
Sure, by mains­tream Ame­ri­can stan­dards you could argue the Desert Rats are an eccen­tric, “out there” bunch. But there’s something com­pe­lling about them, too. That great Ame­ri­can ideal, “Rug­ged Indi­vi­dua­lism” is clear to see in their faces. Their lives somehow seem a lot clo­ser to the 19th-Century Wes­tern pio­neers, than to say, the present-day, Blackberry-addicted com­mu­ters of New York and San Fran­cisco.
And you always ask your­self, Why? What makes them take this par­ti­cu­lar path?
Short Ans­wer: Because they can. They wan­ted to do it, some­ti­mes for good rea­sons, some­ti­mes for bad. And so they did, for bet­ter or for worse. And yes, though parts of their lives seem inc­re­dibly rewar­ding– espe­cially from a dis­tance– they’ve also paid an equally inc­re­dibly high price for the pri­vi­lege, which isn’t always so obvious at first glance . This inc­re­dibly high price is no dif­fe­rent than anywhere else, whether we’re tal­king here in West Texas, or we’re tal­king a big tech com­pany in Sili­con Valley, a star­tup in Chi­cago, a Wall Street bank. “Living on The Edges” is inva­riably a damn expen­sive business.

August 28, 2008

the farmer’s market

edges003.jpg
[“Edges 3″. Part of “The Edges” Series. Click on image to enlarge etc.]
Alpine, Texas. A lot of my friends in this town work in the cons­truc­tion busi­ness; a lot of for­mer big-city peo­ple are moving into the area these days, mostly trying to get away from the urban sprawl. So that’s where a lot of the local well-paid jobs are. As a result, kno­wing what I know, a lot of my friends end up pic­king my brains for mar­ke­ting advice, which I’m happy to give them.
What I usually do is start out by telling them about the local Alpine farmer’s mar­ket, which hap­pens here every Satur­day.
Our farmer’s mar­ket has one main pro­blem: This isn’t far­ming country. This is high moun­tain desert. This is ranching country. Peo­ple har­vest cattle and oil round these parts; they don’t do so well with legu­mes.
The peo­ple selling the pro­duce for the most part are local ama­teur gar­de­ners, who pri­ma­rily grow what they need for them­sel­ves, then sell on wha­te­ver sur­plus they have to folk like me, for a little extra cash.
What does this mean? It means you have to get there early, because the mar­ket opens at 8.30 in the mor­ning and is COMPLETELY sold out within 45 minu­tes.
Whole Foods? For­get it. You really have to drive to Mid­land, 150 miles away to get anything clo­sely resem­bling what you’re used to in the big cities. The local super­mar­kets do what they can, I’m told they’re a hell of a lot bet­ter than they used to be, but… there’s still a long way to go.
There’s something so inte­res­ting to me, that in this modern, over-supplied world, the supply for something most of us edu­ca­ted, blog-reading types take for gran­ted– high qua­lity food– falls so short of actual demand. There’s plenty of peo­ple in this town who’d gladly spend more money on qua­lity food if some enter­pri­sing per­son would set them up, so why isn’t it hap­pe­ning?
I’m opti­mis­tic. I believe it’s just mat­ter of time before the afo­re­men­tio­ned enter­pri­sing per­son spots the gla­ringly obvious gap in the mar­ket, and actually does something about it. This is Texas, after all. Sit­ting on your ass doesn’t get you too far in these parts. Stuff tends to hap­pen if there’s enough peo­ple willing to pay for it.
So I tell my cons­truc­tion friends, well, what’s true in the local food mar­ket is also true in the cons­truc­tion mar­ket. There’s a lot of peo­ple from the big cities moving in with a lot of money in their poc­kets, com­pa­red to what the locals are used to making. And they’re used to a cer­tain level of ser­vice which a lot of the time, THEY ARE SIMPLY NOT GETTING. The cons­truc­tion per­son who can ACTUALLY unders­tand and ACTUALLY cater to their ACTUAL needs will win. The cons­truc­tion per­son who still wants to do it same-old-same-old will have a much har­der time of things.
Then kno­wing this, the only ques­tion that remains is, which cons­truc­tion per­son are you going to be? The Trail­bla­zer, or the Same-Old-Same-Old? Only you can ans­wer that.

August 27, 2008

more thoughts on “the edges”.

edges002.jpg
[“Edges 2″. Part of “The Edges” series. Click on image to enlarge…]

OK, so this wee­kend I did another “Live On The Edges” car­toon. I’ve been pla­ying around with the idea A LOT in my head these last few days. More thoughts:
1. I pre­fer “Live On The Edges” more than “Live On The Edge”. Like I said in my last post, there are lots of “edges” out there. “The Edge” just sounds too “rock n’ roll lifestyle” for my taste. “The Edges”, at least to me, con­note more of a fee­ling “Explo­ra­tion” somehow.
2. Whether you pre­fer “The Edge” or “The Edges”, actually, I really don’t care. I really don’t think it mat­ters either way. That being said, the blo­gosphere is chock full of seman­tic micro-managers, so I must be care­ful.
3. I was dri­ving around town this mor­ning, run­ning errands, when sud­denly it occu­rred to me: I have actually reached a fairly high state of what I would call “Cartoon-Enabled Per­so­nal Sove­reignty”. In other words, I simply couldn’t do what I do without the car­toons. I’d have to go get a job somewhere. Ugh. My advice? Per­so­nal Sove­reignty is an edgy busi­ness. Not for ever­yone.
4. Yes, of course, the Inter­net DOES make it FAR easier to be an “Edge­ling”. I’ve been tal­king about that for years now…
5. I read somewhere that the ave­rage Ame­ri­can today has a higher stan­dard of living than Louis XIV, yet we’re all unhappy. Yeah, having read his his­tory, I’m not sure King Louis was that happy, either. But hey, at least he wasn’t a 17th-Century French pea­sant. Count your bles­sings where you find them etc.
6. I’m agnos­tic. I see both “The Edges” and “The Middle” two sides of the same coin. Like the circle’s cen­ter and cir­cum­fe­rence, both need the other.
7. TV shows start out see­ming kinda edgy, then after a while they seem mains­tream and boring. This hap­pens even when the writing’s qua­lity stays high. We get used to stuff. We assi­mi­late new forms of lan­guage, and then we move on. My car­toons are no dif­fe­rent. Ashes-to-Ashes etc.
8. “Living on the Edges” for its own sake is a com­plete waste of time. “Mommy! Mommy! Look at Me! I’m living on the Edges! Can I have a coo­kie?” What’s more inte­res­ting, of course, is the idea of “Cons­tant Rene­wal”, “Cons­tant Re-invention”. Edges are a good place to go out and find it. You either have an appe­tite for it, or you don’t. You either have a talent for it, or you don’t. Life is unfair.
9. I remem­ber when blog­ging was con­si­de­red “edgy”. It was actually not that long ago. Now it seems rather mains­tream. Like Point Num­ber 7, we assi­mi­late media as a new form of lan­guage, and then, again, we move on.
10. You get older and you start noti­cing how there’s a lot of peo­ple out there doing really inte­res­ting, crazy stuff, but then they go home and live these very ordi­nary, middle class, subur­ban lives. Han­ging out with the family, coo­king bar­be­cue in the back lawn, movies and going out for Chi­nese food, pla­ying fris­bee in the park, it’s all good. Ima­gine the trou­ble these folk would get into if they didn’t have that kind of balance in their lives. By most stan­dards, I would say I have a pretty “edgy” career. It’s why I live in West Texas in a quiet, sleepy town. It allows me push the edges inter­nally without get­ting rip­ped apart exter­nally. Living in Manhat­tan would kill me inside twelve months.
11. Peo­ple often ask me, “How do you stay ins­pi­red over the long haul?” My ans­wer: “By wor­king hard”. Bliss through Toil, Baby. It’s all good.
12. “Edges” is not a lifestyle choice. It’s just something you do. It just hap­pens. No, you have no real con­trol over it.
13. All is Vanity.