Really Simple Syndication (RSS) and the Boiled Frog Fable

Really Simple Syndication (RSS) is an area getting a lot of attention these days. According to Wikipedia, RSS is a group of "web-content distribution and republication (Web
syndication
) protocols primarily used by news sites and weblogs (blogs)".

One key aspect of RSS technology is that one can both rapidly add and comb through information sources. People like Robert Scoble talk about how he can read 1000+ sources of info a day by subscribing to blogs, etc. via RSS in a newsreader.

Here’s a potential problem. The fable of the boiled frog goes like this according to Frogland:

"They say that if you put a frog into a pot of boiling water, it will leap out right away to escape the danger.

But, if you put a frog in a kettle that is filled with water that is cool and pleasant,
and then you gradually heat the kettle until it starts boiling,
the frog will not become aware of the threat until it is too late.

The frog’s survival instincts are geared towards detecting sudden changes."

Adding a subscription to a blog via RSS is like gradually raising the temperature of the water. We may all be frogs one day. Riddup!

P.S. This is a fairly common fable used in the management consulting industry to coerce client organizations to change, especially in more mature companies that do not use metrics to the extent one would like. See Brad Feld discussion on metrics here.

Steve Shu
Managing Director, S4 Management Group

MBA Degrees Cause Corruption … What The Bleep?

I respect the Economist. I am on totally on its side on this article. But I don’t understand why it is an article at all. The article leads off …

"SEVERAL of the
corporate scandals that took place in the early years of this decade
are currently being replayed in courtrooms from New York to Alabama.
The trials of top executives at HealthSouth, Tyco International and
WorldCom are reminding the public how unethical was the behaviour of
some of the nation’s top managers only a few short years ago.

The finger of blame for this behaviour is sometimes pointed at the MBA …"

In my mind, an MBA provides a number of things:

  • training on latest, best practice management and business theories
  • frameworks for tackling business problems
  • in some disciplines, explicit trade skills (areas like finance and accounting)
  • a language for dealing with other business people (just like French is a language)
  • networks of contacts
  • a brand and degree reflecting committment to business in of its own right.

The MBA is not a substitute for real-world experience.

It does not provide training in corruption.

That said (and perhaps I will weaken my case here a bit), and MBA can teach one how to recognize corruption or at least recognize where financial numbers are being played with.

To blame the MBA on corruption in the business world is ridiculous. This is somewhat like blaming those who have pursued engineering or science degrees on the atrocities of war and the machines and mechanisms used by governments to conduct war.

The reponsibility of proper behavior ultimately lies with the individual.

In the case of corruption during the bubble era, I think the problems lie in people’s appetite and greed. I am appalled by how some CEOs in that era could have received total compensation in the top 20 of all CEOs (we’re talking $50M+ per year) and destroyed shareholder value by 10x+.

Steve Shu
Managing Director, S4 Management Group

Chapter 1 of Business Blogging Book By Shel Israel and Robert Scoble Posted

Shel Israel and Robert Scoble have released Chapter 1 of their forthcoming book on business blogging. For those that have not been following that closely, the book will be one of the largest authoring collaborations on the Internet as it will draw on experiences and feedback from the blogosphere at The Red Couch. Very unique means for building the book, and the structure of the book looks great so far. Even with the knowledge and power of Scoble, it would be impossible to write a book covering the subject without considering the rest of the blogosphere. The first proposal for Israel and Scoble’s book was produced in December, and the authors cut a (speculative) lucrative book deal with Wiley earlier this month. There is also a lot of hot of the presses drama behind the scenes associated with pioneers Dave Winer and John Robb being excluded from the deal. You can view some of it here (Scoble), here (Winer), and here (Robb).

Steve Shu
Managing Director, S4 Management Group

On The Blog People By Michael Gorman of the American Library Association

I’m almost at a loss for words here. I hate to put words into Michael Gorman’s mouth because he’s written a lot in here. Michael seems to characterize blogging as a phenomena not unlike that of the pre-bubble/irrational exuberance era of the late 90s. Here our failure would be (methinks) our voratious appetite for fast-food information as opposed to scholarly knowledge. Hat tip to Jeff Nolan for the link.

Thoughts on Virginia Postrel’s Post on “How to Get More Female Scientists”

Virginia Postrel has three excellent blog posts today covering Larry Summers and other stuff (here, here, and here). I generally agree with everything she’s said, but I wanted comment on the middle blog post that covers "How to Get More Female Scientists". As a person with a professorial wife and as a person that does nitty-gritty consulting with regard to pipeline operations (consulting that looks to optimize the relationships of metrics, people, jobs, workflow, throughput, quality, organizational structure, control structure, goals, systems, and culture), I really zeroed in on Virginia’s following text:

"So, if a university like Harvard wants to foster the careers of female
scientists, this is my advice: Speed up the training process so people
get their first professorial jobs as early as possible–ideally, by 25
or 26. Accelerate undergraduate and graduate education; summer breaks
are great for students who want to travel or take professional
internships, but maybe science students should spend them in school.
Penalize senior researchers whose grad students take forever to finish
their Ph.D.s. Spend more of those huge endowments on reducing (or
eliminating) teaching assistant loads and other distractions from a
grad student’s own research and training. If you want more female
scientists, ceteris paribus (as the economists say), stop extending academic adolescence."

Her closing comment "stop extending academic adolescence" is beautiful, but I would go further to say that universities should go even further to "stop creating academic obsolesence". The clocks don’t stop at the Ph.D. level. Getting tenure after becoming a professor means performing quality research (and sometimes also performing quality classroom teaching depending on the institution). Things like grading take up an extraordinary time and provide little if any benefit to either the professor or the students. There should be additional focus on actively monitoring, mentoring, and helping females through the academic process as opposed to having university adminstration passively check in on candidates.

Where I may differ from Virginia a little bit on specifics (although she probably was just blue sky thinking like I am doing now) is that I would focus more on acceleration of the graduate school part of the process (i.e., post bachelors degree through tenured professor) as opposed to the undergraduate part. Just my gut feel there. Although I hated undergraduate education more than graduate school, part of it has to do with that I wasn’t "educated" enough in a worldly sense back then to know the value and risks of shortening that timeframe.

As for Viriginia’s comment, "Penalize senior researchers whose grad students take forever to finish
their Ph.D.s.", I could get on board with that. But that’s a tough one to implement based on what little I know about the different flavors of university cultures and plethora of organizational processes.

Two other closing items I wanted to mention because it sheds light on both the pressure on females and the pressure of reasearch on both sexes in this whole process:

  • A number of female Ph.D. students I know have told one another that "the time to have kids is during the process before getting a Ph.D." Otherwise, you may be dead or childless unintentionally.
  • There was once a researcher who said something to the effect of "I have to think about research all of the time (even when I am not doing it) to be able to make it through the academic process. The only time I am not thinking about research is when I am swimming because I fear I will drown."

Steve Shu
Managing Director, S4 Management Group

Pardon The Dust

Just getting this blog online. Will take me awhile to get the kinks out and get used to the new workflow. Prior S4 Management Group Perspectives blog is here. My reasons for moving are also posted there. No current plans to migrate content.

Steve Shu
Managing Director, S4 Management Group