Monday, January 6, 2014

Zappos says goodbye to bosses

Zappos says goodbye to bosses



Online retailer Zappos has long been known to do things its own way. The customer-service obsessed company calls its executives “monkeys,” has staffersring cowbells to greet guests, and offers new employees cash to quit as a way to test their loyalty.
The Las Vegas-based retailer is now going even more radical, introducing a new approach to organizing the company. It will eliminate traditional managers, do away with the typical corporate hierarchy and get rid of job titles, at least internally. The company told employees of the change at a year-end meeting, Quartz first reported.
The unusual approach is called a “holacracy.” Developed by a former software entrepreneur, the idea is to replace the traditional corporate chain of command with a series of overlapping, self-governing “circles.” In theory, this gives employees more of a voice in the way the company is run.
According to Zappos executives, the move is an effort to keep the 1,500-person company from becoming too rigid, too unwieldy and too bureaucratic as it grows.
“As we scaled, we noticed that the bureaucracy we were all used to was getting in the way of adaptability,” says Zappos’s John Bunch, who is helping lead the transition to the new structure. The company has become a force in online shopping as it expanded beyond shoes into apparel, housewares and cosmetics. Amazon, which acquired it in 2009 for $1.2 billion but allows it to be run as a mostly independent unit, does not break out sales for Zappos.
The holacracy concept is the brainchild of management consultant Brian Robertson, a serial software entrepreneur who says he launched the idea after realizing he was “more interested in how we worked together” than in his own job. The concept has a couple of high-profile devotees — Twitter cofounder Evan Williams uses it at his new company,Medium, and time management guru David Allen uses it run his firm — but Zappos is by far the largest company to adopt the idea.
At its core, a holacracy aims to organize a company around the work that needs to be done instead of around the people who do it. As a result, employees do not have job titles. They are typically assigned to several roles that have explicit expectations. Rather than working on a single team, employees are usually part of multiple circles that each perform certain functions.
In addition, there are no managers in the classically defined sense. Instead, there are people known as “lead links” who have the ability to assign employees to roles or remove them from them, but who are not in a position to actually tell people what to do. Decisions about what each role entails and how various teams should function are instead made by a governing process of people from each circle. Bunch does note, however, that at Zappos the broadest circles can to some extent tell sub-groups what they’re accountable for doing.
Zappos and Robertson are careful to note that while a holacracy may get rid of traditional managers (those who both manage others’ work and hold the keys to their career success), there is still structure and employees’ work is still watched. Poor performers, Robertson says, stand out when they don’t have enough “roles” to fill their time, or when a group of employees charged with monitoring the company’s culture decide they’re not a good fit.
Bunch, meanwhile, says that while people have latched on to the idea that Zappos is getting rid of managers, what the company is actually doing is “decoupling the professional development side of the business from the technical getting-the-work-done side.” 
Both also say that while the system lacks traditional managers, it does not mean that leaders won’t emerge. If anything, the goal is to get more people to take charge.
Still, truly stamping out the corporate hierarchy may be much more difficult than it seems. Bob Sutton, a professor at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and author of the forthcoming book “Scaling Up Excellence“, says “show me any group of five human beings or five apes or five dogs, and I want to see the one where a status difference does not emerge. It’s who we are as creatures.”
While Sutton says that the instinct to remove as much friction and internal competition is the right idea, “creating situations where you’re clear who has decision authority is important.” Without that, he says, “you get more politics.”
Since April, Zappos has moved 10 percent of its employees to the new system. Now that it’s official, Bunch expects that the rest of the company’s employees will transition by the end of 2014. He acknowledges that it could take up to six additional months, though, for people to fully understand its complexity. “There’s no two ways around it — this is a difficult system to grasp. We’re so ingrained in the traditional work paradigm.” 
Note: Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos also owns the Washington Post. 


Follow vam_27 on Twitter

Thursday, January 2, 2014

It’s the end of the line for Indian IT

It’s the end of the line for Indian IT



India is not taking advantage of a huge opportunity: robotics.

When Wall Street Journal and Forbes published articles, a few years ago, predicting the demise of Indian IT, I responded in BusinessWeek that they were dead wrongI said that the outsourcing market had a long way to go before it peaked; rising salaries and attrition rates were not a cause for long-term concern; and Indian IT would soon become a $100 billion industryI was, of course, right.
+

Now I am ready to declare the end of the line for Indian ITThere are new $100 billion opportunities that could revitalize this industryBut from what I’ve seen, Indian executives seem incapable of steering their ships in the right directions.
+

It is not that Indian outsourcers have become less capable of servicing Western needsIt is that their customer base—the CIO and IT department—is in decline.With the advent of tablets, apps, and cloud computing, users have direct access to better technology than their IT departments can provide themThey can download cheap, elegant, and powerful apps on their IPads that make their corporate systems look primitiveThese modern-day apps don’t require internal teams of people doing software development and maintenance—they are user-customizable and can be built by anyone with basic programming skills.
+

It takes decades to update legacy computer systems, and corporate IT departments move at the speed of molassesSo, Indian outsourcers have a few more years before they suffer a significant declineThey certainly won’t see the growth and billion-dollar outsourcing deals that have brought them this far.
+

The same advances that are changing the IT landscape are also creating new opportunities.
+

For example, advances in robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), and 3D printing are making it cost effective to move manufacturing back from China to the US, Europe, …and India.
+

Take the Baxter robot from Rethink RoboticsIt has two arms, a face that displays simulated emotion, and cameras and sensors that detect the motion of human beings that work next to itIt can perform assembly and move boxes—just as humans doIt will work 24 hours a day and not complainIt costs only $22,000. This is one of many such robots.
+

AI is making it possible to develop self-driving cars, voice-recognition systems such as Apple’s Siri, and computer systems that can make human-like decisions. AI technologies are also finding their way into manufacturing and are powering robots such as Baxter.
+

A type of manufacturing called “additive manufacturing” is making it possible to cost-effectively “print” products. 3D printers can create physical mechanical devices, medical implants, jewelry, and even clothing. The cheapest 3D printers, which print rudimentary objects, currently sell for between $500 and $1,000. Soon we will have printers for this price that can print toys and household goods. By the end of this decade, we will see 3D printers doing the small-scale production of previously labor-intensive crafts and goods. In the next decade we may be 3D-printing buildings and electronics.
+

These technologies are becoming readily available and cheap, but America’s manufacturing plants aren’t geared up to take advantage of themMost don’t have the know-howThis is where India’s companies could step inThey could master the new technologies and help American firms design new factory floors and program and install robotsThey could provide management consulting on designing new value chains and inventory managementThey could manage manufacturing plant operations remotelyThis is a higher-margin business than the old IT servicesAnd American’s would cheer India for bringing manufacturing back to their shores—rather than protest its taking their IT jobs awayWe are talking about a trillion dollar market opportunity.
+

India’s technology companies can also develop sensor-based biomedical devices, cures for diseases by analyzing genome and health data, drone-based delivery systems, smart cities, digital tutors, and sensors to improve farming. Software and IT are the key to developing all these.
1


Follow vam_27 on Twitter