5 Rules Alan Mulally used to turn around Ford, They make sense for most of us

How would you like to be faced with the challenge of turning around Ford in 2006.  Alan Mulally took the challenge and succeeded.

Barron’s has a post on the turn around

1) Internal fighting makes the company stronger.

2) Bend the truth to fit your view of the situation.

3) To make 1) and 2) easier everyone should have their own numbers.

4) Be like Teflon and let your actions slide pointing to others.

5) Look busy, doing more is most important.

OK, you know these can’t be the list.  I wrote the opposite on purpose.  The real list is: 

1) Stop fighting with each other. 
2) Tell the truth about the situation. 
3) Agree on one set of numbers. 
4) Be accountable for your actions. 
5) Do less, better.

The change included a weekly meeting for the immediate subordinates to know the #’s.

Mulally directed his immediate subordinates, from the chief financial officer to the general counsel, to attend a weekly business-plan review. They were to bring real numbers for their responsibilities. Few of the top guys knew them. They had subordinates to do those presentations. That was no longer allowed.

In most companies, such accountability -- up close and personal -- is rare at high levels, and it almost had never been seen at Ford. It now was required every seven days.

Results?

What caused this success? Ford, a company in which the top executives really knew their numbers, committed to take a high-risk leap forward with their whole product line. They did this knowing full well that their quality ratings would tank until factories and workers climbed the learning curve and customers climbed the confidence curve about its products.

Who would want the Target CIO job? Current CIO resigns amid breaches

Target’s data breach is infamous, and now the CIO has resigned.

Target CIO resigns amid breach investigations

  • Article by: JENNIFER BJORHUS , Star Tribune 
  • Updated: March 5, 2014 - 12:16 PM

Target shakes up its information technology management following last year’s theft of customer data.

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Beth Jacob, Target vice president and chief information officer, resigned in the wake of the data breach that jeopardized the financial and personal information of tens of millions of customers. The company announced Jacob's departure Wednesday. 2013 file photo.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One of my good friends just said he was going to make a job change and they want him because of his skills in data centers and software.

What caught my eye is the exiting Target CIO is an MBA who started out as an buyer.

Jacob, who holds an M.B.A. from the University of Minnesota, first joined the company in 1984 as a department store assistant buyer when it was known as Dayton’s, then left and returned in 2002 to Target as director of guest contact centers. She was promoted to CIO and executive vice president of Target Technology Services in 2008, and reported to Steinhafel.

Jacob ran Target’s technology infrastructure during a period of rapid change, including the relocation of some of its technology operations to India. Critics have noted that she has deep operations experience but lacked the information technology background that many see as increasingly important for a CIO at a major corporation.

Being CIO is really hard, and seems even harder if you don’t have an information technology type of degree.

I wonder if the new Target CIO will be more technical?

Do you use Trust as a Life Pattern?

Do you use Trust as a life pattern?  I do.  Things move so much faster and better.  If you take a risk with trust, then you can see whether the other parties are willing to increase the trust.  If trust doesn’t increase, then the partnership may not work.  Of course, there is exception, when those you meet you have no interest in developing trust.

This video has gone viral with 1.2 mil views in a week.

One of the interesting ideas is to design information systems to develop more trust.  Think about those systems you trust and others you don’t.

Be Happy, watch this video

It’s really hard to work on big ideas when you don’t feel good.  Be Happy.  Check out this video.

The innovative part is there is a site for 24 hours of Happy.  http://24hoursofhappy.com

Dubbed the world's first 24-hour video, it features a diverse cast of characters, including the artist and some famous friends, dancing along to the track. The video is presented as an interactive clock-- users can click specific "times," watching a few seconds of each performance or just Pharrell (his bits are indicated by the dots around the clock). Other interactive elements play with the 24-hour concept--comments, for example are time-stamped and linked to corresponding moments in the day-long dance, and they can be viewed in temporal order as an overlay to the video.

The First Graduate Degree for Datacenter Systems Engineering Program is at SMU

I have an engineering degree, and most of my data center friends have engineering degrees too.  But, no one has a degree in datacenter engineering.  SMU announced the first Datacenter Systems Engineering graduate degree.

SMU’s Master of Science in Datacenter Systems engineering is built around five core courses that address the industry broadly, while offering elective specializations in three technical areas:

  • Facilities, infrastructure and subsystems
  • Datasystems engineering and analytics
  • Computer networks, virtualization, security and cloud computing

”SMU’s Master of Science in Datacenter Systems Engineering program addresses a long unfulfilled need in the datacenter industry,” said Chris Crosby, CEO of Compass Datacenters. “Its comprehensive, cross-disciplinary curriculum provides the breadth of knowledge professionals need for success in this complex industry with numerous interdependencies.”

The SMU Datacenter Systems Engineering program is directed toward preparing professionals for a leadership role in this field, whether specifically as a technical contributor or more broadly in management. The program is designed to build a solid foundation for continued professional growth consistent with modern datacenter engineering practices and the changes that lie ahead for this industry.

SMU has a unique opportunity to play a significant role in educating engineering professionals in this field both locally on-campus and nationally via distance education. Approximately 50 datacenters exist within the greater Dallas area.  

There are some so called data center experts out there with no engineering degree so they can’t get their graduate degree in datacenter systems engineering.

In addition to meeting Lyle School admission requirements for a Master of Science degree, applicants are required to satisfy the following requirements:

  • A Bachelor of Science degree in one of the engineering disciplines, computer science, one of the quantitative sciences or mathematics.
  • A minimum of two years of college-level mathematics including one year of college-level calculus.

Part of what is needed in the data center industry is a pool of knowledge and SMU will enable a place to go to look for datacenter knowledge.

Key factors which determine successful competition in today's global environment are: timely and rapid response to customer needs, high product quality, and flexibility of operation. To achieve these objectives, the common element is an effective and knowledgeable organization oriented towed customer needs and requirements.

 We should all buy Chris Crosby a beer to show our appreciation to start something that hopefully will grow over time.