Tag Archives: General Electric Company

Facebook, Google Spend Big on Lobbyists

lobbyists

To some, Google and Facebook are a bit like cool, older brothers. You admire their laid-back, Gen X-style and the “Friends” vibe that everyone gets. But make no mistake, the two are also serious corporate entities with long political reach. In fact, Mashable’s Sarah Kessler reports that both companies have deep pockets when it comes to lobbyists. This quarter, Google spent $2.06 million, while Facebook spent $320,000 on Washington lobbyist—outpacing even Microsoft in that area. READ MORE »

Feds Approve Comcast-NBC Merger

The Justice Department and the FCC have approved the Comcast-NBC merger, which would drop GE ownership to only 49% and forge new ground for a massive cable company owning a popular television network. TechCrunch wonders what this means for the online television service Hulu. The real question: will The Office get renewed? Comcast-NBC Merger: The Hulu Rules [TechCrunch]

Special Technology Report: Inside Story

Special Technology Report The Internet promised to drastically change your business. Now state-of-the-art small-company intranets are actually delivering on that promise. Instant word-association test: What comes to mind when you hear the terms intranet and extranet? Chances are, it’s something like this: Big-company stuff. Internal Web sites with multimillion-dollar price tags at places like Hewlett-Packard and GE and Charles Schwab. Hotshot technology that my small business wouldn’t use and doesn’t need. And even if we did need it, we couldn’t afford it. Right? Guess again. True, intranets come to the party with a big-company, big-bucks reputation — and deservedly so. The earliest private Web-based networks began at Fortune 500 giants like Ford Motor Co. and Sun Microsystems. The best, in some cases, save more money than many small businesses make in a year. And true, they’ve typically involved large-scale initiatives, such as linking thousands of workers worldwide or putting millions of documents online. But here’s some news that is just as true: private Web sites are changing small business, big time. Small and midsize companies are turning to intranets (and their external cousins, extranets) in much the same way they turned to the public Web a few years ago. And in some cases, they’re getting far more favorable results with the private sites. Many are using them to fundamentally change some aspect of their business. A pioneering few are using the sites to drive their company’s entire strategy. And they’re doing it using technology once viewed as strictly a big-company tool. We’re not talking about companies’ using internal networks as electronic filing cabinets for human-resources forms or bulletin boards where Joe in accounting can advertise a used Jeep for sale. We’re talking about entrepreneurs’ strategically using a broad range of intranet-extranet efforts to gain a competitive foothold in a tight economy, typically by nurturing existing relationships or creating conduits for new ones. On one end of that spectrum are the rare companies run primarily, or entirely, on private Web sites that let them easily connect with employees, partners, or customers. One of those companies is 1-800-GOT-JUNK, a Vancouver, B.C., trash-removal business whose intranet for its franchisees, called JunkNet, helped to fuel the company’s growth from $2 million in revenues in 1999 to $10 million last year. Another is Boston-based SeniorLink, a fledgling company that will launch an extranet later this year to help baby-boomer customers nationwide find care-management services for their aging parents. On the opposite end are traditional companies that are using intranets to transform one practice, with effects that ripple through the rest of their culture. A sterling example: Extreme Logic Inc., an Atlanta-based technology consulting firm. Like many growing companies, Extreme Logic handles job-performance reviews online. What’s unusual is that the company encourages its corporate clients to log on and evaluate the employees who serve them. As a result, company officials say, Extreme Logic has deepened relationships with customers by letting them know they’re trusted partners whose opinions count. In the middle of the spectrum are companies with the most intriguing stories: those whose private sites create unprecedented opportunities. At TemPositions Group, a New York City-based staffing company, an intranet instantly matches customers’ requests for temporary employees with contractors who best fit the bill, allowing the 125-employee business to successfully bid against giant national staffing companies for major contracts. Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, a Pittsburgh-based law firm, now coordinates hundreds of product-liability claims filed nationwide against one of its major clients, thanks to sophisticated technology that makes it possible for the firm’s lawyers to share court documents with other lawyers in 50 states, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. And Eminent Research Systems, in Minneapolis, uses an intranet to dramatically speed up its ability to coordinate protocol documents for medical-device tests, thereby helping the company to increase its business capacity tenfold. It’s impossible to find hard numbers on how many companies are jumping onto the private Web. The few studies done to date confirm only that a growing number of small companies have either launched a private network or expect to do so soon. Most, it appears, still use the technology for pedestrian purposes: storing documents, sharing files, ordering supplies. But we’ve found a handful of cutting-edge entrepreneurs who are using intranets and extranets to transform their business strategies, in most cases by helping their companies forge new relationships. OPEN BOOK: Dennis L. Veraldi says that his law firm’s extranet improves services for clients. What’s propelling this small-business intranet revolution? Experts tick off a number of drivers: the migration of big-business practices to small-business scale, recession-driven pressure to find new ways to get new customers or better serve existing ones, and increased comfort with doing business online. “All the things that the major corporations were doing two or three years ago are trickling down to the small-business realm,” says Ryan Bernard, president of Wordmark Associates Inc., a Houston consulting firm, and author of The Corporate Intranet. “The larger corporations were the proving ground.” Web-usability consultant Jakob Nielsen, whose Nielsen Norman Group, in Fremont, Calif., annually honors 10 outstanding intranets, has recently noticed that more small companies are making the list. Says Nielsen, “That proves it’s possible to get good effect out of an intranet without being a huge corporation.” Other experts call the trend evolutionary, saying that it is picking up speed as companies conduct more and more business online. Nearly everyone can use a Web browser, which means that nearly everyone can adapt almost instantly to a Web-based network. And small companies can now choose from a broad range of intranet options, from cut-rate do-it-yourself models to cutting-edge, custom-designed systems. Admittedly, the trend’s leaders tend to spend freely to launch, staff, and maintain their private Web sites. Initial five- or six-figure investments aren’t unusual, and some ambitious companies may well spend more. But there are plenty of less pricey options, ranging from having a savvy staffer do the job in-house to renting the service. (See ” Spin Your Own,” below.) Perhaps the most remarkable cultural change is how many entrepreneurs are overcoming their natural reticence to share information, inside the company or out. Brian Chavis, CEO of ARGroup, a Web and intranet developer based in Leesburg, Va., says that he used to have to pitch the idea of private networks to his customers. “I don’t have to do that anymore,” he says. “Our clients are telling me that they want this.” What they want, as the leading examples show, are new and better ways to connect with customers, employees, and partners. Rather than blindly following the late-1990s mantra to endlessly hurl money at their public Web sites in hopes of expanding their reach, many companies now look inward for ways to better serve customers they’ve already got. “Companies are saying, ‘Let’s really strengthen those relationships as much as possible,” says Ray Boggs, vice-president of small-business and home-office research at IDC, in Framingham, Mass. Randy J. Hinrichs couldn’t agree more. Hinrichs, group research manager in learning sciences and technology for Microsoft Research and author of Intranets: What’s the Bottom Line?, says intranets and extranets provide the perfect environment for small companies to create and nurture the partnerships they need to thrive. He makes the goal sound almost romantic. “You make long-term, meaningful relationships by saying, ‘We can share each other’s data,’ and knowing that it’s going to be consistent and trustworthy,” he says. Executives at Atlanta IT-consulting firm Extreme Logic consider it critical to forge long-term commitments with both employees and customers. So the company sends both to its combo intranet-extranet for performance reviews. The system hasn’t directly affected Extreme Logic’s revenues, which topped $30 million last year. But it’s improved the company’s own showing in two top-priority areas: retaining star performers and nurturing all employees. When workers leave — whether they’re hired away by competitors or fired for poor performance — the company spends as much as three times an employee’s annual salary to find and train a replacement. Getting quick online feedback directly from customers lets Extreme Logic reward its stars and provide specific improvement goals for everyone else. The approach seems to work. Mike Williams, who oversees human resources, says the company’s turnover rate is 5% to 10% lower than the IT industry standard. And since the company added the performance-evaluation feature to its intranet, 18 months ago, about 80% of its employees and managers feel that they’re working toward the same goals, compared with 52% before, according to an internal study. For TemPositions, making connections quickly is what counts. The company, one of 350 temporary-staffing agencies in New York City, has begun bidding against the big boys — including $4.1-billion Kelly Services — for major contracts. To compete against the industry giants, TemPositions focuses on what CEO and president James Essey calls its core strength: delivering the perfect worker faster. And to do that, TemPositions relies on an intranet that, much like a dating service, instantly matches customer requests with the best available contract employees. If, for instance, a client company needs a registered nurse with pediatric experience, the TemPositions intranet automatically E-mails the job offer to the best-qualified candidates. The system excludes temps who are already on assignments or unavailable because of vacation or illness. When contractors accept gigs, the intranet automatically E-mails them a link to their own personal job bank sites, where they find assignment sheets with dates, prices, a map, and supervisor contact information. When temps reject offers or don’t respond, the intranet solicits the next person in line. Corporate customers can even make their own temp requests online. Essey says the do-it-yourself convenience “cements us to the customer in a big way because once they get into the system and see all the information there, they’re less likely to go to a competitor.” That’s a far cry from the traditional temp-placement process, which typically requires hours of telephone tag. (Customers call the agency with a personnel request, and then agency employees dig through paper files, call candidates, and wait for return calls.) And the streamlined process, in turn, has allowed the 40-year-old company to go after huge long-term contracts it couldn’t even have considered before. At press time, TemPositions was competing for a contract to supply the New York City schools with more than 1,000 temps in a variety of areas, including curriculum and course development and counseling. “We couldn’t bid on it if we didn’t have these tools,” says Essey. “We’d need enough employees to fill a football-field-size call center.” TemPositions, which had about $30 million in revenues in 2001, spent $250,000 building its intranet in 1998 — primarily, Essey says, on Web design and for the salaries of a chief information officer, a programmer, and a technology troubleshooter — and it continues to spend liberally on salaries, equipment upgrades, and maintenance. “It’s not free,” he acknowledges. At the same time, he expects the intranet to reduce the company’s head count — eliminating, for instance, the need for data-entry staffers. Essey says those savings are well worth the investment. GRAND SCALE: James Parks credits his firm’s extranet for letting Eckert Seamans go national. Speed was the issue at Eminent Research Systems, in Minneapolis, where clogged procedural arteries were stunting the company’s growth. The $7-million, 22-employee company specializes in coordinating trials for heart and blood-vessel devices such as stents — products that typically have a market life span of only 18 months before they’re replaced by newer models. Previously, Eminent sent 150- to 500-page study-protocol documents to participating physicians and regulators, who marked them up and mailed them back. Sometimes the hefty hard copies made several round trips before everybody agreed on protocols — a process that typically took at least two months. The lengthy procedure caused some customers to forgo putting their devices on the market altogether, which meant less work for Eminent. “Turnaround time is key,” says Linda Laak, vice-president and chief operating officer. “Our competition is not necessarily another company but whether or not the client will do the study at all.” That changed in February 2001, when Eminent launched an extranet that allows doctors nationwide to collaborate on protocols electronically. The system sliced the approval process from two months to two weeks. Meanwhile, although Eminent spent $50,000 to launch its private Web site, Laak estimates that the company saves 10 times that amount by eliminating the “heavy lifting”: shipping, storage, and paying the salaries of two administrative people who handled all the documents. And the company can handle 10 times as many projects at once as it could before, resulting in a 40% increase in revenues. At Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, the Pittsburgh law firm, an extranet became the key to going national without opening any additional offices. The 44-year-old firm wanted to serve as the national coordinator for thousands of product-liability claims against a major client. But the firm couldn’t possibly set up shop in all the affected jurisdictions: 50 states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Instead, the firm’s executive team decided it needed two things: a network of partners and a network connecting them. Those partners were, and are, “local counsel” — dozens of far-flung law firms that Eckert Seamans hired to handle claims in their own states. The network that connects them is Eckert Seamans’s extranet, which contains all related documents, including briefs, transcripts, interviews, research, medical and scientific information, and correspondence. Obviously, storing paperwork in one location helps everybody access documents faster. But Eckert Seamans argues that the extranet provides two more important benefits. First, it’s an unprecedented way to provide clients with a consistent nationwide defense by making sure that all the lawyers are literally on the same page. In addition, it saves time and money by providing those far-flung partners with research to strengthen the cases in their states. And the extranet lets the firm’s 215 lawyers coordinate cases in a way they couldn’t have before. “There is no way we could have managed and provided oversight to claims in Texas or California,” says the firm’s executive director, James Parks, citing the time and cost of constant travel, telephone calls, and shipping tons of hard copies cross-country. The system, part of a firmwide technology overhaul, didn’t come cheap: Parks estimates that Eckert Seamans has invested nearly $1.3 million so far, including construction costs to create a separate technology center. But chief operating officer Dennis L. Veraldi is philosophical about the cost. “Sophisticated, larger clients just expect that you’re going to be able to do those things, that you have the capability to service them,” he says. The firm doesn’t even worry much about tracking the system’s return on investment. “It’s part of the infrastructure, part of the overhead,” Parks says. “You have to manage it the same way you manage supplies or telephones or receptionists or libraries or anything else.” But he credits the technology with cutting legal-work costs by 6% to 7% annually and allowing the firm to take on more clients. But Eckert Seamans does worry about security breaches — and not just those involving hackers. The firm must also protect itself against possible security breaches involving the very partners for whom it established the intranet: those local-counsel firms. “Yes, we’re working with them, but they’re still competitors,” Veraldi says. So the firm relies on a combination of firewalls, multiple passwords, and encryption to make sure those faraway lawyers get access only to the appropriate cases — and only for the length of their contracts. For Eckert Seamans and other early adopters, the challenge now is staying ahead of the curve while not getting too far out in front. As Parks puts it: “We’re going to be very judicious about what we implement. We have to ask, ‘Are we letting the technology drag us? Or are we dragging the technology in a way that’s beneficial to us and our clients?’ “ But intranet evangelists believe the potential drawbacks — security concerns, cost, and the constant challenge of keeping current — pale when compared with the rewards gained from creating new partnerships and strengthening existing ones. Especially in a tough economy, the ability to forge new and stronger links offers small companies the best kind of competitive advantage. Anne Stuart is a senior writer at Inc. Jill Hecht Maxwell is a staff writer. Send your comments to editors@inc.com. Spin Your Own Why not? It’s getting cheaper. The companies mentioned here got transformational results from their intranets, but they spent a bundle. You don’t have to pay your way into intranet nirvana. There are less costly ways to get a little closer to the light. As more small businesses have started using private Web sites, software vendors and application service providers (ASPs) have found ways to reduce the pain of building them. Their offerings range from robust software packages to cheap, basic ones that a monkey can set up online in minutes. So how do you decide which path to follow? James Parks, who led the intranet project at Eckert Seamans, offers a few suggestions. BEEF UP SECURITY. Parks won’t touch a system that doesn’t force users to pass through three electronic checkpoints to enter. But if you don’t run a law firm, you may not need security worthy of the CIA. CREATE MULTIPLE LEVELS OF USER ACCESS. Some users need to read files; others need to edit them. Only a few should be allowed to delete them. So you should be able to determine whom you’ll allow into each part of your intranet and what they can do once they get there. DO AN INVENTORY OF YOUR EXISTING DATA. Can you easily move information from your company databases onto the intranet? When Parks started his firm’s project, Eckert Seamans already had 40-plus years’ worth of data living on its systems. CONSIDER STORAGE. If you’ve got 40 dedicated databases on seven mammoth servers, as Eckert Seamans does, don’t even consider the intranets that you can rent for a few dollars per user monthly. They won’t provide anywhere near the storage space you need. So if you need high security and have lots of users and mountains of information, you should start by looking at midpriced software packages — and perhaps talking with a consultant who’s built at least a few intranets before. For less than $6,000, you’ll find software from more than a dozen vendors, like Planet Intra, in Mountain View, Calif. Planet Intra’s software lets regular nontechie people create multiple levels of security access. All employees can use it to publish Web-ready content on a site, even if they don’t know HTML from TCBY. Of course, if you have a decent techie on staff, you can build your own simple intranet with a program like Microsoft FrontPage. You won’t need a firewall if you’re not letting anyone outside your office log on. Finally, if your needs are simple — say, you want a group to share a calendar, swap documents, and hold online discussions — you can set up an intranet for practically nothing. Intranets.com, the King Kong of off-the-shelf intranet ASPs, charges between $3 and $6 per user per month. Competitor InfoStreet charges $3 per user per month. Or try Microsoft’s SharePoint Team Services, which comes free with Office XP Professional Special Edition. Intranet gurus say that no matter which method you elect, there’s at least one thing you should do to ensure that your intranet doesn’t turn into the electronic equivalent of Euro Disney. Find out what would make your employees’ lives easier. People won’t use the intranet if it doesn’t help them. “Think about human needs as opposed to technology,” says Jakob Nielsen of the Nielsen Norman Group. –Jill Hecht Maxwell Still want more information on building your private Web site? Visit www.inc.com/keyword/intranet. Please E-mail your comments to editors@inc.com. Related Links: TemPositions Intranet Make Your Intranet Click Intranet Shortfalls

Upstarts: Energy Deregulation

A Shock to the System Where do you buy your electricity? If you don’t have a choice now, you will soon Twenty years ago most Americans got their telephone service from Ma Bell (a.k.a. American Telephone and Telegraph) and their power from the local electric company. Today consumers can pick from among AT&T and roughly a zillion other telecommunications companies — but most people still buy their electricity from a local utility. Shocking, really. But that situation isn’t going to last much longer. As the telecom industry did in the 1980s, the U.S. electricity industry is now undergoing deregulation. State utility commissions are unplugging their tight control on rates and allowing a range of new energy providers to enter the field. For consumers the process hasn’t been uniformly smooth. This past summer electricity users in San Diego and New York City were stung by price spikes after regulators removed long-standing rate caps as part of the deregulation process. Still, within five years, 90% of U.S. consumers will be able to choose where and how they buy their watts and volts, according to the Yankee Group, a research and consulting firm in Boston. As you might expect, the Internet is making things interesting by providing brand-new ways for energy providers to reach consumers. And investors have certainly recognized an opportunity: venture-capital funding in energy-related companies rose from $150 million in 1999 to an estimated $300 million in 2000, according to Venture Economics, a research company. Deregulation appears to be sparking a whole new wave of start-ups. Power to the people Newly empowered consumers in New York City, for instance, can now buy electricity from SmartEnergy.com, which was founded in 1999 by a team that includes five former energy traders from the New York Mercantile Exchange. “We figured that there was a huge market in electricity and natural gas at the retail level,” says SmartEnergy president and CEO Gautam Chandra. Someday, he says, Americans may buy their energy from familiar retailers like Wal-Mart or the Home Depot. But it’s likely that those retailers don’t know much about the complex supply chain in the energy market. That’s where SmartEnergy comes in. “We think of ourselves as a distributor,” Chandra says. That means supplying retailers with the electricity and natural gas that they will in turn sell to consumers. SmartEnergy, based in Woburn, Mass., doesn’t actually generate power. Instead, the company buys it directly from independent producers and is banking on its energy-trading expertise to save consumers at least 10%. (The energy is delivered to customers over existing infrastructure maintained by formerly monopolistic utilities.) So far, SmartEnergy isn’t selling to retailers like Wal-Mart or the Home Depot, but it has struck up partnerships with newly emerging Internet energy retailers such as Essential.com and Energyguide.com. Consumers can also buy directly from SmartEnergy, and the company offers features that it hopes will distinguish its product from that of traditional utilities. Call it commodity branding. “Customer service has been fairly nonexistent in the energy space,” says chief marketing officer Jon Sorenson. With SmartEnergy, customers can use the Internet to sign up for service, reach customer-service agents, and pay their bills with a credit card. They can choose from different service plans — such as one that lets them buy power at a fixed rate for 12 months and one that offers a rebate that rewards them for saving energy. They can even earn frequent-flier miles on United Airlines: 500 miles for signing up and one mile for every dollar spent thereafter. SmartEnergy rolled out in New York in February and aims to be in five more states, including New Jersey and Pennsylvania, by the end of the year. Funded originally by its founders, SmartEnergy has since raised more than $10 million from outside investors. The company expects to be profitable in the third quarter of 2001. SmartEnergy and other upstart providers still have a long way to go to make a dent in the market. As of June, only 2.2% of residential customers and 4.8% of business customers in New York State had switched from their old utility. And now, as the Yankee Group analyst Karl Jessen points out, SmartEnergy and its ilk are facing serious competition — namely, from the NewPower Co., a potential Goliath energy provider that is funded by energy giant Enron. On the plus side, this past summer’s price volatility — which temporarily raised electricity bills in New York City by as much as 30% — gave SmartEnergy a bit of boost. While traditional utility customers were paying wildly varying market rates, SmartEnergy offered consumers a chance to lock in a favorable rate that would remain in place for a year. A conduit for savings For a lot of consumers, having to comparison shop for a commodity they’ve long taken for granted could prove to be quite a jolt. Or so Harvey Michaels figured when he and two cofounders started Nexus Energy Software Inc., based in Newton, Mass., three years ago. “The company’s starting thesis was that consumers of energy don’t know what’s ahead, and that what’s ahead is going to be reasonably complex,” says Michaels. “But consumers’ decisions are going to have a big impact on household budgets or the bottom line of small businesses.” After all, he points out, energy can cost a homeowner $3,000 or more a year. “We’re addressing a very large cost that people don’t really think about” — yet. In his former life as president of energy-consulting firm Xenergy Inc., Michaels helped Fortune 500 companies analyze and reduce their energy consumption and save money. “If you’re a homeowner or a small business, you can’t afford to hire someone to do this,” he says. “We saw software on the Internet as a great enabler, helping consumers to make smart energy choices.” The result was Energyguide, which is the name Nexus Energy now goes under. At the company’s Web site, homeowners or small-business owners can get an analysis of their energy costs by answering an online questionnaire. Based on their data, they receive suggestions on how to reduce those costs. Consumers can compare the energy providers available in their area, sign up for service, and buy products (ranging from fluorescent lightbulbs to energy-efficient space heaters) from Energyguide partners. The company collects a fee for everything sold through the site. The company’s earliest revenues have come from strategic partners, deregulated utilities that were suddenly in the position of having to court their old customers. For them, Energyguide is a service that they can offer as a goodwill-generating freebie to their customers. About 20 utilities pay the company a licensing fee to put the Energyguide software on their own Web sites or to distribute it on CDs. Energyguide also shares in any revenues it generates for the utilities. That solid partner base helped the company rack up revenues of just under $5 million last year. Recently, Energyguide has also broadened its partnerships to include about 20 nonutilities, such as personal-finance Web site Quicken.com. Michaels estimates that the retail-energy market on the Internet could total $40 billion to $50 billion within the next five years. Energyguide is aiming for a tiny sliver of that. “We’re a long way from nailing down what our share ultimately will be,” says Michaels. “Probably in the hundreds of millions.” But to get there, Energyguide will have to fight off challenges from rivals in the consumer-information niche, including ChooseEnergy Inc. In March, Energyguide raised $7 million from a group of investors led by GE Equity, primarily to increase sales staff and develop more partnerships with energy providers. “Going forward it’s going to be a little more interesting,” says Michaels. Emily Barker is a senior staff writer at Inc. Energy Goes Cellular Along with more competition and — theoretically, at least — lower prices, energy deregulation is bringing some uncertainty to the nation’s power grid. After all, California experienced controlled interruptions of service this past summer because utilities had stopped building power plants in anticipation of deregulation. That instability is especially bad news for any company that does business on the Internet, since it takes uninterrupted power to keep Web servers humming. That’s where Sure Power Corp. comes in. Sure Power uses high-tech fuel cells to turn hydrogen and oxygen into electricity — a backup power source that the company claims is both environmentally friendly and available 99.9999% of the time. That availability level translates into a 1% chance of power failure over the course of 20 years, says cofounder and executive vice-president Art Mannion. Although fuel cells are similar to batteries in some ways, they never run down as long as enough fuel is present. Sure Power, based in Danbury, Conn., is betting on a growing need for dependable backup power. Its target market includes data centers, Web-hosting companies, medical facilities, research laboratories, high-tech manufacturers, and any other business that can’t afford to have its computers or equipment go down for even an instant. Using cells manufactured by a partner, ONSI Corp., Sure Power will install several dozen fuel cells for each of its customers and offer maintenance services for those setups. The installations aren’t small or cheap: each fuel cell is about the size of a sport-utility vehicle, and according to Mannion, a typical contract could run into the tens of millions of dollars — hardly a price point that most small businesses or individual homeowners would fall into. But Mannion insists that for a 10-year span, Sure Power’s system can cost two-thirds to one-half of what traditional power-backup systems would run. So far, with seven employees, Sure Power has just one customer — First National Bank of Omaha, which hired Sure Power in 1998 to provide uninterrupted power for its credit-card-processing operations. Sure Power’s revenues for both 1999 and 2000 hover around $2 million, says Mannion, adding that the company is currently negotiating contracts worth up to $50 million each. In landing the First National contract, says Mannion, it helped that some of the bank’s executives were familiar with fuel cells. Unfortunately for Sure Power, however, not every customer is going to be so knowledgeable. “Our biggest job is educating the public,” he says. Q&A Current Events Deregulation can be confusing. To make some sense of the muddle, we spoke with Hugh Holman, a senior analyst at CIBC World Markets who’s been tracking energy deregulation since 1997. Inc.: How did deregulation get started? Holman: The power industry is really the last remaining large monopoly. We’ve broken up almost everything else. California opened its market in 1998, and it looks as though the other states will follow. Inc.: How big is the potential market? Holman: Huge. The power industry is one of the largest in the United States. Revenues are more than $200 billion a year. Opening it to competition is going to have pretty dramatic ramifications throughout the economy. Inc.: Is deregulation spawning many new companies? Holman: There are a lot of newcomers. Some are power marketers who don’t generate any power themselves. They just buy power and resell it. A lot of them are selling on the Internet, which is a natural because the wires for providing electricity are already in place. These companies don’t need to build warehouses and so forth, like Webvan or Amazon.com, because the power can be delivered over the existing infrastructure. Inc.: But how can they make money in what’s historically been a low-margin business? Holman: You have to customize your product, differentiate what you’re selling. Green Mountain Energy, of South Burlington, Vt., has done that by offering environmentally friendly power, branding it, and selling the environmental attributes of the energy it’s providing. In some cases it’s going to be reliability that sells. Users like Amazon.com, eBay, and all of the other Internet service providers can’t be out of power. So they require highly reliable service, and they are willing to pay for it. Inc.: Are consumers ready for deregulation? Holman: I think the proof of the pudding will be whether people switch suppliers. In Pennsylvania they’ve had a very successful program to educate consumers. As much as a third of all the electricity consumed in Pennsylvania is now being purchased from an alternative supplier. So in that sense deregulation seems to work: people do seem to switch suppliers when given a choice. Related resource: Find out about ways to save on energy costs. Please e-mail your comments to editors@inc.com.

Book Value: Welcome to the New Economy, Act III

Welcome to the New Economy: Act III Dot-coms have discovered that they have to make money, and the Fortune 1,000 have learned that E-commerce isn’t all that hard. What happens now? From .com to .profit, by Nick Earle and Peter G.W. Keen (Jossey-Bass, 2000) How Digital Is Your Business? by Adrian Slywotzky and David J. Morrison (Random House, 2000) The radicals of the 1960s got it wrong. The (technical) revolution will not merely be televised, it will appear on your computer screen in glorious, living color. In the new-economy tech wars, we are now in the third act of what promises to be a three-act play. In Act I, small companies used the Net to their advantage. In Act II, old-economy companies caught up with remarkable speed. And now, with the digital playing field more or less level, the best ideas and services will win. A series of new books reinforce the point that if you don’t understand what is going on, you — like thousands of generals before — are doomed to fight your last war. In their book From .com to .profit: Inventing Business Models That Deliver Value AND Profit, authors Nick Earle, president of Hewlett-Packard’s in-house incubator, E-Services.Solutions, and Peter G.W. Keen, a technology consultant who has written 20 books on business and IT strategy, deconstruct Act I clearly and informatively and delineate the new ground zero: being a dot-com, they say, “is about being open for business on the Web. Profit is about making money as a business on the Web. And they are not the same thing.” That distinction is being made painfully clear to tens of thousands of now struggling Internet start-ups. To underscore the obvious: being on the Web is no longer an objective but rather the price of entry for being in business. The ultimate goal is still to create a business model that makes sense. Ironically, that gives large companies an advantage. Prior to the advent of the Internet, old-economy companies had sales and almost always reported earnings. In general, costs fell dramatically and sales climbed as those companies went digital. GE is a perfect example. Once the company made the decision to master the Web, it caught up to, and in many cases surpassed, the dot-coms. What’s a smaller company to do now that the first-mover advantage is gone? Well, you could do a lot worse than spend some time with How Digital Is Your Business? by Adrian Slywotzky and David J. Morrison, authors of The Profit Zone and Profit Patterns (Random House). The book’s premise is that your company should have a “digital business design” — another way of saying that you need to have a detailed business strategy that actually makes sense. To Slywotzky and Morrison, a digital business design is “never about technology for its own sake; it’s about using technology to create a unique and better business design.” The authors go on to list eight areas of importance and pose eight questions that they say you need to answer when building that model: Customer selection. Which customers do I choose to serve? Unique value proposition for the customer. Why do they buy from me? Unique value proposition for the talent. Why do people work here? Value capture/profit model. How do I make money? Strategic control/differentiation. How do I protect my profits and my customer relationships? Scope. What do I do to add value? Organizational systems. What organizational structure and culture do I create? Bit engine. How do I manage and distribute the intelligence inherent in the system? Although the first seven concepts are fairly basic, they are important and necessary to mutually reinforce one another. But what is perhaps most intriguing about their list is the eighth item. In creating their concept of a bit engine, Slywotzky and Morrison are building on a concept put forth by Nicholas Negroponte, author of Being Digital and founder of MIT’s Media Lab. Negroponte drew the now accepted distinction between managing atoms and managing bits. Managing atoms is manipulating physical assets: stockpiling inventory, shipping product, building factories, and so forth. Managing bits is all about manipulating information. Obviously, given a choice, you would prefer to have your company stationed behind door #2. That, as Slywotzky and Morrison point out, is where digital business design fits in. “On the surface, Digital Business Design is about what fraction of your business processes are conducted online,” they write. “At a deeper level, it’s about whether you’ve transformed the way you do business by taking advantage of the new strategic options enabled by digital technologies.” Now, if you think some of that sounds familiar, you’re right. And concepts like the “choiceboard,” a process by which customers are allowed to interactively design the exact version of the product that they want, are just mass customization in a different guise. And many of the corporate examples given in the book (Dell, Schwab) will be well known to even the most casual business readers. But Slywotzky and Morrison have put this information together in a way that is useful for managers. They provide specific examples — including international cases such as Cemex, the Mexico-based cement company — that show how companies have digitized their business effectively. Their book could help you write your own Act III. On the Other Hand, Maybe We’re All Doomed The Coming Internet Depression, by Michael J. Mandel (Basic Books, 2000) Maybe you shouldn’t be thinking about technology at all. In fact, if you listen to Michael J. Mandel, a truly smart guy, you might want to use your computer to sell every tech stock you own and then go hide — with your money — under your bed. That would be a perfectly understandable reaction after reading Mandel’s book, The Coming Internet Depression: Why the High-Tech Boom Will Go Bust, Why the Crash Will Be Worse Than You Think, and How to Prosper Afterward. First a discussion about why you should believe Mandel, and then a summary of his argument. Mandel is an economics editor at Business Week. But unlike most editors, he actually knows something and has the credentials to prove it. (Mandel has his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard.) Second, he has written well on the new economy for some years. Third, unlike most economists, Mandel has a definite opinion about what’s going to happen. And that opinion is this: we are heading for a heap of trouble, and technology is to blame. The intriguing thing about the new economy, Mandel says, is not that it has repealed traditional business cycles, as some contend. Rather, it’s that it has amplified them. Innovation is clearly the lifeblood of any economy. But in the new economy, funding for a large chunk of research has come from venture capital, and how much venture capital is available depends on how well tech stocks are doing on Wall Street. Mandel writes: “Faster growth and a rising stock market increase the incentives to invest in innovation — which yields more start-ups, faster adoption of technology and more pressure on existing companies to keep up. But when a downturn starts, watch out.” In a downturn, not only will funding for research dry up but established firms will have little to fear from start-ups, the economist contends. That will allow the veteran companies to set higher prices and boost margins, which in turn will lead to higher inflation. And suddenly we are in a never-ending downward spiral. “Hardest hit, of course, will be the stock market,” he writes. “Rather than a single sharp crash, the market will sour over time. The leading-edge Internet companies will tumble even further than they did in spring 2000. Initial public offerings will come to a dead halt and the downdraft will spread to the technology stocks, which accounted for roughly 45% of the gain in market value during the New Economy boom [which Mandel dates as beginning in 1995].” He goes on: “Attempts by investors to pull their money out of the market will drive down stock prices even further.” And down and down we go. Since a downturn is inevitable, are we truly doomed? Well, almost buried in this well-written, well-reasoned book is one reason for hope: “The venture capital business only represents about $100 billion of the $9-trillion U.S. economy.” So on an absolute basis, if it dries up, the hit should not be fatal. Mandel’s response? Yes, of course, the hit won’t be devastating — if people react rationally. But investors don’t always do that, he points out. A major sell-off in technology could have an amazing ripple effect. Maybe it’s time to bring out all those survival kits we prepared for Y2K. Who Needs Publishers? A smart CEO called me the other day, looking for some general background information on the publishing industry. (He was thinking about writing a book.) When I told him it usually takes from nine months to a year for a finished manuscript to appear in print, he was appalled. “Wait a second! It’s going to take me nine months to write the thing, and at least that long until it’s on the shelf?” he asked. “That’s a year and a half — if everything goes well, and you’re telling me I should count on two years from start to finish? How in heck can you do a technology book that has anything meaningful to say with that kind of lead time?” It’s a great question. So far, publishers don’t have any great answers. Why should you care? Three reasons: You want access to the best information you can get on a timely basis. You want to know who is a timely and reliable source of the information you need. Someday you may want to write a book. Traditionally, the book-publishing industry would have been the logical place to take all those desires. But as the CEO with whom I spoke the other day found out, conventional book publishing is becoming progressively irrelevant. With that in mind, keep an eye on what’s going on at sites like MightyWords ( www.mightywords.com) and Soapbox.com ( www.soapbox.com, created by the people at Motley Fool). Some sites allow nearly anyone, with some restricting conditions, to be an author. You post your approved original content and split the revenues. Not surprisingly, so far the content on such sites is remarkably uneven. However, as more people learn about the opportunity of taking their message directly to the marketplace, the better the material is likely to be. (Things will improve further as more companies, such as Soapbox.com, provide a feedback mechanism that allows users to evaluate the content.) Traditional book publishers dismissed Stephen King’s self-publishing efforts, through which he sold a remarkable number of copies of his novel The Plant (north of 150,000 downloads at $1 a pop) directly to consumers. (Interestingly enough, the book is about a human-devouring flora that’s sent to a publishing executive.) Book publishers would do well not to ignore new business models — and you would, too. If the plant doesn’t get traditional book publishers, the competition will. Paul B. Brown is the author or coauthor of 10 books and editor-in-chief of DirectAdvice.com, an online financial-planning company. Executive Reader George Pace CEO of Rocco Inc., in Harrisonburg, Va., parent company of the Shady Brook Farms brand of turkey Recent fave The Greatest Generation, by Tom Brokaw. “About 15% of our employees are from that generation,” Pace says. “Brokaw’s book helps you understand where they are coming from. Each story in the book is about the extraordinary actions average people took in tough situations.” Business basic A Passion for Excellence, by Tom Peters and Inc. contributor Nancy K. Austin. “You can have the greatest strategy in the world, but if it’s executed poorly, you can still lose,” Pace says. “If you execute well, you can win with an average strategy. Peters writes about finding a way to communicate to your employees no more than five priorities the company has, and how everyone can accomplish them by pulling in the same direction. That’s easy to do when you have 5 employees, but not so easy when you have 3,500. But if you can do it, it’s magic. Executional excellence is critical.” For fun The Bear and the Dragon, by Tom Clancy. “I like Clancy. I enjoy thinking about how someone could think up all that stuff and keep it straight. Plus, it’s 1,028 pages. If you travel a lot, it’s good to have one book to hang with for a while.” –Jill Hecht Maxwell Please e-mail your comments to editors@inc.com.