Received: from MIT.MIT.EDU by po7.MIT.EDU (5.61/4.7) id AA21619; Sat, 27 Nov 93 14:21:11 EST Received: from midnight.midnight.com by MIT.EDU with SMTP id AA05059; Sat, 27 Nov 93 14:21:02 EST Received: by midnight.midnight.com (4.1/SMI-4.1) id AA04526; Sat, 27 Nov 93 14:19:55 EST Date: Sat, 27 Nov 93 14:19:55 EST From: art@midnight.com (Art Mellor) Message-Id: <9311271919.AA04526@midnight.midnight.com> To: rdshydur@MIT.EDU Subject: [peter: Things We Think We Got Right] Reply-To: art@midnight.com (Art Mellor 617/890-1001) Here's the list! ............................................................................... Art Mellor : Midnight Networks Inc. 100 Fifth Avenue Waltham MA 02154 art@midnight.com : Vox 617/890-1001 Fax 0028 The Best in Network Software GILB'S LAW #2: Any system which depends on human reliability is unreliable. Return-Path: Date: Fri, 26 Nov 93 21:49:05 EST From: peter (Peter H. Schmidt) To: art Cc: all@midnight.com Subject: Things We Think We Got Right Reply-To: peter@midnight.com [Art - Forward to Richard S?] Midnight Networks Inc. Things We Think We Got Right Peter Schmidt, Art Mellor - 11/23/93 Here is a list of the things which we think we have gotten right about running Midnight Networks for the past two years. We already believed in most of them before we started, but we've been surprised by just how right they are. Others we had no idea about, but we have been taught to value them by experience. Here they are, in no particular order: 1. Setting expectations correctly is the most important key to success, with - customers, especially - co-workers - yourself 2. Always use intelligent persistence - eventually (may take months, may take years) "no" will become "yes" 3. Ask your friends for help - they can give you - good business advice - emotional support in what is an often highly stressful endeavor - pro bono professional services (like graphic design, accounting consulting, marketing help, etc.), just for the joy of using their best skills on a "fun project" 4. The combination of competence and honesty is remarkably rare. Thus, it can be a competitive advantage for you. 5. Let your customers fund your product development. They know their needs better than do you or venture capitalists. If they want something, odds are a bunch of other people want it also. Make sure you keep the rights to everything you produce via contracts. 6. Do a newsletter. Send it to friends, family, old customers, and new prospects. Send it out quarterly, and try to make it light, fun and moderately informative. 7. Talk to your lawyer often. A good rule of thumb is, can she/he summarize the current state of your business' affairs to a third person? Another is, do you have his/her phone number memorized? 8. Fit into a category/Play a known role. Sure, you have to be different in some way: better, faster, cheaper, cleaner, etc. But don't try to be different in too many ways, or people won't understand how your offering connects to their problem. 9. Come up with a good name and logo. Ours generates a lot of interest in us; here are the rules we used to come up with it: - the name has to be easily understood when pronounced over the phone - you should never need to spell it out for someone - it should be distinctive - it should capture something of the image you want to convey in the market - it can't use any of "-tech," "-ix/-ex," "-tron/-ton," "system" or "-com" - it can't be a name of any of the founders - the logo should be designed in cooperation with a professional graphic designer 10. There is always competition. You are in business to solve customer problems, but these problems didn't just spring into existence yesterday. Your customers have been dealing with them one way or another for a while, and you must compete with whatever method they are currently using. The hardest sell may be when what they're currently doing is nothing! After all, doing nothing doesn't require writing checks, and whatever you are offering to them probably does... 11. There are no competitors, only other companies. If someone else is solving the customer problem that you want to, offer to do the solving for them. License your technology, enter into joint marketing agreements, hire them as a reseller, buy their company - the last thing you should do is start calculating how much "market share" they're "stealing" from you. 12. Everything always takes longer (but see below). 13. Kaizen. This Japanese philosophy of continuous improvement drove them to improve their manufacturing until it is the best in the world, and they`re still making it better! Use it to get over trying to always do the perfect solution the first time. Start with your best shot, and then make sure you regularly review how it's doing, and then improve it in the ways that become obvious. This takes out a lot of stress. But you have to make improving everything a key goal and part of your corporate culture, or "kaizen" may become just another name for management by fire-fighting and the chaos that results. 14. Focus on your processes and the products will follow. Solve problems by designing a process that will keep them from happening again, and then kaizen that process. 15. Treat _everyone_ as if you will soon be sitting across the table from them, trying to close a big deal. Everyone in your industry knows everyone else. 16. Communication is more important than your mother. 17. Plan in detail - forcing yourself down into the details helps catch all those "oopses" that make things take twice as long. Everything will still take longer than you estimate, but not grotesquely longer. And you will find that you get better and better at closing the gap. 18. Document everything: processes, important bits of information, your daily tasks, etc. If everybody gets in the habit, it won't take long, and it quickly becomes an invaluable resource. 19. Automate wherever you can, but don't do it faster than you need to - it'll be a while before the marginal savings outweigh the up-front costs. 20. Openness is essential. It will lead to trust between you and you customers, and between you and your co-workers. Without openness, you cannot learn from each other, and kaizen becomes impossible. 21. Talk to customers in advance. Let them tell you what they want. Do market research! 22. There is always a good solution. Use your head and find it. 23. Flexibility yields job satisfaction, nimbleness in the face of changing customer demands, and adaptability that is able to benefit from new ideas. 24. Customers need solutions, not technology. On occasion, you can broaden their horizons of what is possible by exposing them to new technology, and they will then recast their problem in terms that your technology can solve. Or they may not, and you need to be ready for that. 25. There are N ways to do anything. 26. Admit your screw-ups immediately and take responsibility for them. Your customers and employees will love you for it! Well, they will if you also kaizen a process that will keep the screw-up from happening again... 27. Your business needs a superlative: best, fastest, most economical, farthest out on the cutting edge, most profitable, most visionary, most fun to work for, best value, cheapest, youngest, etc. etc. This gives you and your employees a hook on which to hang your goals. And it's good for morale too! 28. Talk to others in the business regularly so that you keep getting reminded that you're not alone out there. 29. Make sure that everyone is responsible to each other for results, then leave the methods up to individuals - and resist the urge to back-seat-drive! 30. Your corporate culture should be explicit so that you can kaizen it. Decide what you want it to be in cooperation with your co-workers, and then take steps to make sure that it becomes whatever you decided on. 31. You are married to your partners, and the company is your child. If you have a spat with a partner, you will lose sleep over it just like you do when you fight with your spouse. If you recognize this and work on the relationships, you can derive many of the emotional rewards of marriage in your day-to-day interactions at work. 32. Cash is more important than communication. Business cash flow is _very_different_ from personal cash flow: income is a lot more irregular and uncertain, and outgo tends to come in lumps. You have to watch it all the time, lest you get to exercise "executive privilege" by foregoing your paycheck. 33. Negotiate on everything you can, but be sensible about it. The other guy needs to make money, too. 34. Have as your first instinct to Be Cheap. 35. Your employees' attitudes toward the business aren't the same as yours. 36. Running your business is more work than you imagine, but it's _way_ more fun, so on balance you're way ahead of the game. Copyright (C) 1993 Peter Schmidt and Art Mellor. All rights reserved. Peter H. Schmidt |`'| . | ,_ . , |_ + Midnight Networks Inc. peter@midnight.com | | | (| | | | (| | | |, 100 Fifth Avenue tel: 617/890-1001 _| Prospect Hill fax: 617/890-0028 N E T W O R K S Waltham, MA 02154