I’ve just ordered a new Saint Barth (2010) poster for my office. A small one, 74x114cm ;-)
Should help to wait till February 2011 for our next stay there!
TEDx = independently organized TED event
It’s the first time that a TEDx event is organized in the region where I’m living. So the first TEDxAlsace will be organized in Mulhouse/Alsace/France on coming October 2 by Salah, a “very nice guy” I know since a while. The general topic will be “visions of the future”.
Quite a good program and interesting speakers planned.
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x=independently organized TED event.
The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized (subject to certain rules and regulations).
1. Pourriez vous vous présentez ? ( professions, secteur, passions, projets, parcours,…)
Didier, 38 ans, marié, un garçon de 8 ans, entrepreneur.
Je vis dans un petit village non loin de Mulhouse, mais je travaille à Zürich en Suisse, où j’ai cofondé mon entreprise, Innoveo, en 2007, après un très enrichissant processus de “spin-out”. Nous fournissons des solutions logicielles aux groupes d’assurance dans le domaine de la distribution. Notre vision est d’aider le business à implémenter leur stratégie d’innovation et de développement à l’aide de solutions technologiques adaptées, tout en injectant du “sens” dans notre travail. L’approche dite “Agile” nous intéresse énormément et nous nous trouvons dans un processus de transformation profonde depuis quelques mois, basée sur Scrum. Je suis également membre du Conseil d’Administration de Boomerang depuis plus de 12 ans. Je possède une double formation d’ingénieur en informatique (ENSISA) et de Management d’entreprise (MBA à l’EMLYON).
Mes passions se retrouvent dans mon blog (dans le désordre): l’entrepreneuriat, le leadership, les industries du logiciel et de l’assurance, Innoveo, la musique, la photo, la dégustation de vins. Et pour une petite île perdue aux Antilles, exactement à la frontière entre l’océan Atlantique et la mer des Caraïbes … Saint Barth ;-)
2. Est ce que vous connaissiez les événements TED et TEDx avant de s’inscrire au TEDxAlsace?
J’ai la chance de connaître deux personnes qui ont déjà participé au TED, Jeff Clavier et Loïc Le Meur, tous deux très connus dans notre petit monde de “geeks”. J’ai pu rencontrer Jeff et Loïc grâce à Marc Goldberg, mon ami investisseur chez Bryan Garnier et grand connaisseur de la “scène” technologique européenne.
Je connais donc le concept … et Salah, organisateur de TEDxAlsace. Le mélange des deux ne peut qu’être détonnant!
3. Quelles sont vos motivations et attentes par rapport au TEDxAlsace?
Simplement écouter et apprendre, faire de belles rencontres.
4. Si vous avez une question à poser à l’un des speakers de TEDxAlsace, qui serait le speaker? et quelle serait la question ?
Tout d’abord, merci à tous de participer et de nous faire partager votre expérience!
Une simple question à tous: un lien vers un post, un site, un article qui vous a marqué ces derniers mois.
5. Quelle question nous avons oublié de vous posez ? Et quelle serait la réponse ?
Quelle est l’entreprise et l’entrepreneur qui vous inspirent en ce moment?
Entreprise: Netflix, entreprise américaine de plus de 2000 employés mais qui possède une culture d’entreprise très particulière et innovante. Elle cherche par exemple à minimiser ses règles internes au fur et à mesure de son développement. Leur présentation de leur culture d’entreprise est publiée sur SlideShare (en anglais).
Entrepreneur: Jean-Claude Biver, Directeur Général des montres Hublot. Entrepreneur en série puisque qu’il repris avec succès 3 marques de montres de luxe dans sa carrière: Omega, Blancpain et Hublot. Excusez du peu ;-) Quelle énergie, quelle stratégie, et quelle approche marketing.
6. Vos liens internet : (Twitter, Site internet, blog, Facebook…)
Blog: http://didierbeck.com (depuis mars 2004)
Photos/vidéos: http://visuals.didierbeck.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/didier.beck
Twitter: http://twitter.com/didierbeck (depuis juillet 2007)
Xing: https://www.xing.com/profile/Didier_Beck
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/didierbeck
Innoveo: http://innoveo.com
Boomerang: http://boomerangpharma.com
…is really cool ;-) Some interesting new features (SEO & sitemaps, statistics, etc.) were released in the last months, as usual. Still bringing quite a lot of traffic for me.
I’ve reached again the half million views on my pictures during the first half of this year (in June), with some days with more than 7’000 views… From January to August, exactly 622’310 views on pictures and videos on visuals.didierbeck.com. About 80% of the traffic is going on Saint Barth pictures (what for a surprise !).
Not bad for an amateur as I in this area ;-)
Quick “hello” from Combrit Saint Marine in Brittany.
We are finished with our “stroll week”. Each day about 6-8 hours on foot, a looonnngggg time we haven’t done that ;-) Fantastic landscape, varying a lot each day, as the weather!
That’s a real break, different from St Barth, but still a cool break. Today, first time with a kind of real Internet connection ;-)
As I didn’t want to transport my 3+ kg Canon EOS 5D MarkII with its lens during the 6+ hours walk per day, I have bought a Canon S90, just before going on holiday. As a Canon-fan, I had mainly the choice between a G11 or a S90, both with almost the same technical and optical characteristics, excepted that the G11 is still quite big. Some pictures below (RAW + DxO post-prod, but with a small netbook ;-). More on the Canon S90 later. But generally speaking I’m super happy with it!
Now, back to the “big one”!
So some days off with the family from now on, that’s good! No cell phone, no emails, but for sure my iPad, Canon cameras and lens, and my netbook for the pictures ;-)
Quite a big program, this time in France, and more precisely in Brittany. All in all 2’400km with the car and some km on foot.
Different stops planed:
So quite a long journey with the car, but hopefully we should see and visit some interesting places!
Netflix thinks that “as they grow, they have to minimize rules”. Different approach as what we all know, experience, read. And … Netflix is definitely not a startup anymore! I would like to share with you a document from Netflix I found on SlideShare about their culture and some quite innovative management ideas they have put in place. Feed for thoughts ;-)
Sources: Wikipedia, Netflix Shareholder communication
Source: Netflix presentation on SlideShare
Worth an entire read, as the presentation is meant for reading, more than presenting ;-)
Some abstracts:
Great workplace is not day-care, espresso, health benefits, sushi lunches, nice offices, or big compensation,
and we only do those that are efficient at attracting stunning colleagues
“Which of my people,
if they told me they were leaving in two months
for a similar job at a peer company,
would I fight hard to keep at Netflix?
• It’s about effectiveness – not effort – even though effectiveness is harder to assess than effort
• We don’t measure people by how many evenings or weekends they are in their cube
• We do try to measure people by how much, how quickly and how well they get work done – especially under deadline
rather than limit it, to continue to attract and nourish
innovative people, so we have better chance of long-term continued success
1. Stay creative by staying small
2. Try to avoid rules as you grow, suffer chaos
3. Use process as you grow to drive efficient execution of current model, but cripple creativity, innovation, flexibility, and ability to thrive when market inevitably shifts
A fourth option:
• Avoid Chaos as you grow with Ever More High Performance People – not with Rules
• Then you can continue to run informally with self-discipline and avoid chaos
• The run informally part is what enables and attracts creativity
Instead of a Culture of Process Adherence,
Culture of Freedom and Responsibility,
Innovation and Self-Discipline
Mostly, Though, Rapid Recovery is
the Right Model
• Just fix problems quickly
– High performers make very few errors
• We’re in a creative-inventive market, not a safety-critical market like medicine or nuclear power
• You may have heard preventing error is cheaper than fixing it
– Yes, in manufacturing or medicine, but…
– Not so in creative environments
• “Good” processes help talented people get more done
– Web site push every two weeks rather than random
– Spend within budget each quarter so don’t have to coordinate every spending decision across departments
– Regularly scheduled strategy and context meetings
• “Bad” processes try to prevent recoverable mistakes
– Get pre-approvals for $5k spending
– 3 people to sign off on banner ad creative
– Permission needed to hang a poster on a wall
– Multi-level approval process for projects
– Get 10 people to interview each candidate
Until 2004 we had the standard model of N days per year
We’re all working online some nights and weekends, responding to emails at odd hours, and taking an afternoon now and then for personal time.
We don’t track hours worked per day or per week, so why are we tracking days of vacation per year?
We should focus on what people get done, not how many hours or days worked. Just as we don’t have an 9-5 day policy, we don’t need a vacation policy.
As We Grow, Minimize Rules.
Inhibit Chaos with Ever More High Performance People.
Flexibility is More Important than Efficiency in the Long Term
The best managers figure out how to get great outcomes by setting the appropriate context, rather than by trying to control their people
Provide the insight and understanding to enable sound decisions
CONTEXT
– Strategy – Metrics – Assumptions – Objectives – Clearly-defined roles – Knowledge of the stakes – Transparency around decision-making |
CONTROL
– Top-down decision-making – Management approval – Committees – Planning and process valued more than results |
Managers: When one of your talented people
does something dumb, don’t blame them.
Instead, ask yourself what context you failed to set.
Managers: When you are tempted to “control” your people, ask yourself what context you could set instead
Highly Aligned, Loosely Coupled
• Highly Aligned
– Strategy and goals are clear, specific, broadly understood
– Team interactions are on strategy and goals rather than tactics
– Requires large investment in management time to be transparent and articulate and perceptive and open
• Loosely Coupled
– Minimal cross-functional meetings except to get aligned on goals and strategy
– Trust between groups on tactics without previewing/approving each one – groups can move fast
– Leaders reaching out proactively for ad-hoc coordination and perspective as appropriate
– Occasional post-mortems on tactics necessary to increase alignment
• Hiring is market-based at many firms, but at Netflix we also make the annual comp review market-based
– Applies same lens as hiring
• Essentially, rehiring each employee each year, for purposes of comp
– At annual comp review, manager has to answer the Three Tests for the personal market for each of their employees
• We develop people by giving them the opportunity to develop themselves, by surrounding them with stunning colleagues and giving them big challenges to work on
– Mediocre colleagues or unchallenging work is what kills progress of a person’s skills
• Individuals should manage their own career paths, and not rely on a corporation for planning their careers
• Need a culture that supports rapid innovation and excellent execution
• Both required for continuous growth
• There is tension between these two goals; between creativity and discipline
• Need a culture that supports effective teamwork of high performance people
• High performance people and effective teamwork can be in tension also – stars have strong opinions
Cross-posted on the Innoveo Blog
via Celent
Michel Michellod from Celent, an international strategy consultancy focused on the financial industry, has just posted a very interesting article which is very “aligned” with how we understand ourselves the current and coming insurance front-end challenges.
Some interesting strategic challenges highlighted in the post:
The direct channel requires an appropriate front end. […] This goal can be best achieved through the implementation of open and flexible front end systems facilitating interactions with potential customers, integrating modern communication tools for call center officers and allowing a high level of reactivity in terms of product, pricing and discount changes.
Communication with aggregators is key. […] The second alternative consists in directing shoppers automatically onto the insurance online platform to perform the last step of the buying process (the effective purchase of the insurance product and its payment). This alternative requires an instantaneous transmission of customer and quote data by aggregators to insurers.
Insurers need to improve integration of affinity and bank channels. […] Insurers need to implement relevant portals allowing management and process of sophisticated insurance products.
Use brokers and agents in specific customer segments. […] I recommend insurers to implement sophisticated portals with rich functionality to provide point of differentiation.
Responding to multi-channel management. […] I believe insurers should prioritize sophisticated portals providing a single view of the customer based on service oriented architecture (SOA) with high level of automation.
As the insurance distribution landscape is changing fast and drastically, I expect this topic to be part of the European insurer’s top priorities in the coming years.
At Innoveo, we are exactly acting in this field and bringing a standard software product on the market – Innoveo Skye®– which allows insurance companies (life, non-life, health) to find an efficient, technology-proven and business-oriented answer to the different challenges raised by Celent.
Disclaimer: we were nominated by Celent as “Model Carrier” in 2007 for our effective usage of technology. See the report here.
Cross-posted on the Innoveo Blog
If you are reading this blog, you already know that I like very much the Hublot brand and watches. Hublot has just published its last newsletter, which contains some interesting information:
USAIN BOLT AT THE MANUFACTURE
The fastest man in the world ever received yet another honour on the 6th July in Nyon – for generosity. He took to the start line alongside 10 children – who were given a slight head start! A rapt public marvelled at his spectacular pace, though he allowed the children to beat him as Hublot had promised to donate 10,000 US dollars to the Usain Bolt Foundation for every child that crossed the finish line ahead of the "Lightning Bolt". It was a proud and highly motional moment for the young competitors, after which Usain devoted his time to the design of the watch that will bear his name in 2011.
I really like the way Hublot (and his CEO, Jean-Claude Biver) is marketing its products.
Super smart :-)
I’ve just acquired a new Canon L-series lens for my full-frame EOS 5D MarkII, the famous EF 24-70mm f/2.8 L USM. First impression: very sharp, fast autofocus, controlled vignetting (as usual some issues at the ends, specially around 28mm), solid, heavy (950g…), interesting focal length range – will take it with me for the coming holidays in August.
Post-production with DxO Optics Pro 6 Elite, which has a specific module for the combination Canon EOS 5D MarkII + the Canon EF 24-70mm L.
First pictures taken with it:
Some reviews found:
Canon website about this lens.