Archive for the ‘Quickbase CRM’ Category

Inside Access: Reporter’s Notebook

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Ramping Up the Customer Experience

At Ramp Motors in Port Jefferson, NY, more than 70 percent of business comes from return customers and referrals. “It’s all about relationship marketing,” says Barbara Gasparik, Standards of Excellence leader for the car and truck dealership. The company has a database of about 30,000 customers, which it has recently centralized to share information across the organization. Ramp thinks of customer relationships not based on products, but with a customer-centric point-of-view. “In one family, the wife may have a Chevy Malibu, and the husband may own a dump truck for his business,” she says. “There are many ways a customer interacts with us, and we want to understand that.”

The dealership has six locations and 150 employees, so the company installed a Quickbase system from Intuit to manage sales and service by customer, not product. Ramp now manages prospects, dealer information, finance, delivery, and service through the system. Emails automatically get sent internally to relevant employees when a customer interacts with any touchpoint, so the entire organization is on the same page as the customer. “Salespeople know when customers are in for service,” she says. “When leases or loans are coming due, we proactively contact the customer.”

Ramp can also measure customer satisfaction, which is key to long-term success. “Chevrolet gives us very high customer satisfaction goals to hit, but we want to exceed them,” Gasparik says. Data is analyzed, and customers with low scores get special attention, such as personal phone calls, to help the relationship. “Now we’re one big team, which gives us a competitive advantage.”
– Elizabeth Glagowski

QuickBase Helps Workgroups Collaborate

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Intuit’s Web-based project management program provides flexible tools, but is too costly for smaller groups.

Workgroups in need of help managing their projects will appreciate Intuit’s QuickBase. This Web-based program offers a flexible means of coordinating sales, marketing, customer service, and other business projects. I looked at the final version of the recently revamped application and discovered that, while larger companies requiring QuickBase’s power will find a lot to like, smaller shops will likely deem the program too costly.

To get you up and running rapidly, QuickBase includes several prebuilt applications–covering project management, sales and customer management, IT management, legal/real estate/professional services, and more–that you can customize to suit your specific requirements. You can import your existing data into QuickBase from a spreadsheet, database, or Microsoft Project. If one of QuickBase’s prebuilt apps satisfies all or most of your needs, you could be all set within a few hours. If none of them seems appropriate, you can design your own application from scratch–a process that isn’t too difficult for a reasonably tech-savvy user.

Once the application is ready to go, the administrator can quickly set up user groups and assign permissions from the program’s easy-to-understand drop-down menus. Users can then access the app from their Web browser, either Internet Explorer version 6.0 or later or Firefox. Depending on their permissions, users can assign tasks, view their tasks, and monitor the progress of projects with reports and charts. Users can also consult the applications overview screen–the Dashboard–which has been redesigned in this version for easier access to tasks that require action, including unassigned tasks and those overdue for completion.

The latest release of QuickBase also includes dynamic forms that change depending on the information entered. In addition, the program has more types of display charts, and allows users to drill down in the charts so they can easily examine data in greater depth.

Since QuickBase is hosted online, updates are automatic. You access your application via a secure 128-bit SSL Web browser; to get the best performance, you should have a broadband Internet connection. Intuit says data is backed up nightly and also mirrored to a second data center.

QuickBase costs $249 per month–including storage for 5MB of data and 100MB of file attachments–for up to ten users. Additional users cost $3 each per month; volume pricing is available for groups of 100 or more. Extra data storage is available as well.

QuickBase’s price seems prohibitive for smaller groups of just two or three. A less expensive alternative is Alexis Team 2, which, unlike QuickBase, is a packaged application that installs on your PC or Web server. It costs about $155 per user and has many of the same collaborative features, though it isn’t quite as flexible as QuickBase.

If your business needs to better track and coordinate work, QuickBase is adaptable enough to let you develop just the application you need to accomplish the tasks at hand.

Intuit: Innovation and The Bottom Line

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Susan Kuchinskas submits: Web companies like Google make a big deal about innovation. But boxed software vendor Intuit (INTU) shares many of the characteristics of more glamorous companies.

Intuit is organized into three business units: The Consumer Tax Group [CTG] makes TurboTax tax preparation software for individuals; the Small Business Division produces the QuickBooks business accounting packages; and Quicken Solutions Group offers financial management software for consumers.

These groups have released 11 new products, services and updates in 2006; there will be a new version of TurboTax by the end of the year.

Intuit manages innovation: There are executives charged with not only inspiring but also with actually producing innovation. At the same time, the company has instituted procedures, such as training sessions, to further its goal of mustering rank-and-file innovators. But most innovation is focused directly on the core products, which are expected to account for revenue of $2.310 billion to $2.330 billion in 2006, representing annual growth of 13 to 14 percent.

Founder Scott Cooke has worked to create a culture of innovation that eschews rockstar-engineer syndrome. Collaboration is encouraged and rewarded. Says Anthony Creed, leader of one of Intuit’s designated innovation teams, “We try to have everybody galvanize everybody else, so the bar is raised for everyone, not just for a few. If someone becomes expert in their field, we try to ensure they’re able to maintain that expertise within a great place to work.”

At the same time, innovation is carefully tied to Intuit’s core products, and, because people pay for those products, the company’s leaders must ensure that products are complete and work well. The goal for products, Creed says, is to “provide a nicely polished package to begin with. Our emphasis is, here’s a solution you can use without really trying to try too hard.”

Intuit doesn’t have a research lab per se, but it does have four teams charged with leading innovation. Three of the teams are associated with business units: iTeam is attached to the Consumer Tax Group; Creative Solutions is tied to the Small Business Division, maker of QuickBooks business accounting packages; and the New Ventures group is part of the Quicken Solutions Group, which produces financial management software for consumers. The fourth, the Innovation Lab (iLab), is a corporate-level team that acts as a resource for the various Intuit business units.

The innovation teams are considered a “federated group,” meaning they collaborate and work together, but there is no reporting structure between or across the labs themselves. Pairing an innovation team with a business unit ties research directly to the product development cycle.

The iLab is led by Janna Eggers, a former researcher at Los Alamos. Eggers says she left pure research for the business world because she prefers projects that are not only technically interesting but have a business case, as well.

“I wanted to translate high-end geek stuff into real-world business,” she says. “[In business,] … you have to show direct impact on the bottom line. Not only did I do something cool and scientific, but I paid peoples’ salaries and created value for shareholders, and I had to do it in a short timeframe.”

Neither did Eggers like the “skunkworks” aspect of some companies’ R&D labs, which she describes as, “Lets hide a few engineers over here and prove we can do this and then throw it over the wall into the business. I learned that while skunk works is great for getting technology figured out, it doesn’t give you a stable garden for planting those seedlings.”

INNOVATION AND THE BOTTOM LINE
Despite her focus on tying innovation directly to the product line, Intuit’s Eggers says she doesn’t worry about sizing the market or projecting revenue for a new product or feature. Sounding much like Google, she says, “[We talk] about figuring out what jobs you’re solving for and how painful they are. People get too caught up in, ‘What’s the market size for this?’ rather than saying, ‘Forget market sizes and product categories, and let’s look around for pains.’”

For example, Eggers ran an Intuit project called QuickBase, designed as an online database for small businesses. The revenue projections for the product were excellent, but it was an utter failure: Small businesses didn’t have much structured data and they didn’t need processes automated.

But QuickBase was being used by some large enterprises, so the product was repositioned as a tool for work groups.

“This is not a defined market,” Eggers says. “It goes from the enterprise down to three-person companies. If you go out and try to search for the market size of work groups, you won’t find it. So any business plan I build will be based on gut instincts and experience.” The small business spreadsheet was awesome on how well we would do.”

Intuit still doesn’t know whether QuickBase will be a $2 billion or a $30 billion market, but, Eggers says, “The market will be there.”

Chris Trimble, adjunct associate professor of business administration at Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business says that at companies like Intuit, where innovation doesn’t require a change in the business model, “an organization that leaves innovate initiatives tightly integrated with the existing business is appropriate.”

WHERE DO IDEAS COME FROM?
Around 80 percent of iLab projects are sponsored by a business unit; 20 percent are more speculative, initiated by iLab without necessarily having a clear idea of what business unit might benefit.

The teams may trade off projects among themselves; they also may take learning from one unit and translate it for other units’ use.

One major goal of the innovation teams is to get innovation out of the lab and into the rank and file. The iLab holds training exercises for staff. It teaches product managers how to conduct “follow me homes,” where they visit customers who are using Intuit products to discover how they use them, what they like and what they don’t like. (These follow-me-homes help the company prioritize features and also create new products.) The lab also teaches brainstorming techniques and now to run an internal innovation project.

Business unit sponsors actively engage in iLab projects. Eggers requests two people from the sponsoring unit, typically an engineer and a product marketer or product manager. Ideally, they’re hands-on enough that they can go on customer visits and review the work done by the iLab; at the same time, they should be senior enough to have the clout necessary to get the recommendations adopted.

Eggers points out that the goal of innovation is to come up with new ideas that might be hard for the company to accept. She says, “Surprises aren’t natural for an organization, so you need senior people who have the influence to say, ‘I know this doesn’t seem like conventional wisdom, but if it was, it wouldn’t be innovative.’”

The CTG iTeam offers three-hour rapid prototyping workshops that explain how to develop and test an idea before creating a full-blown project. The emphasis is on finding the fastest cheapest way to get results.

“The workshops help people understand the process of going from nothing to something — and the fastest and cheapest way to get results,” says Creed, a psychologist and the iTeam leader. “A lot of consultants would have you believe innovation is a big secret, but actually it isn’t.”

The innovation teams are charged with helping everyone be more creative. Says Creed, “If the receptionist sees we’re doing something stupid, he’s encouraged to point it out. One of the objectives of my small team is to promote and encourage that mindset for everybody in the organization.”

IDEA TO PRODUCT
Because Intuit products are used to manage personal and business financials — and because customers pay for them — the company won’t release software until it’s been thoroughly vetted. There are no beta releases here.

The CTG publishes a federal version and 50 state versions every year; approximately 50 percent of the federal TurboTax product is sold shrink-wrapped. This product group has an advantage when it comes to the iterative development process: Because customers must purchase a new version each year, there’s a continual development cycle built in.

This cycle allows Intuit to iterate installed software in much the same way that companies offering web-based apps or SaaS do. Because customers who buy the software CD still must go online to get final updates and their state tax prep software, Intuit has a bit mire flexibility in that product cycle.

Tying packaged software to the web for updates could be a key strategy for innovation, according to Dartmouth’s Trimble.

He says, “One of the questions in the software industry that interests me deeply is how companies like Intuit can make the transition from shrinkwrap to software-as-a-service. My instincts tell me that the approach of setting up a distinct but linked business model — one that can operate with a different set of organizational policies without being strictly isolated — is pretty close to what’s going to be needed to make that transition. Maybe it is easier for Intuit to go to online tax prep than it is for an Oracle to create something like a salesforce.com.”

Intuit also takes advantage of outsourced innovation with its Intuit Developer Network and QuickBooks Enterprise Solution Provider Program. The developer program has more than 600 custom applications produced by independent software vendors that attach to QuickBooks Enterprise Edition through an API. More than 350,000 visitors come to Intuit’s application marketplace.

The Intuit discipline extends to the developer network. Says Shannon Adkins, senior manager of developer engagement, “There’s a huge diff between our developer program and others’. Our developers are not doing development or engineering for the sake of engineering or technology. They’re solving a customer pain. Many started out as small business owners themselves.” For example, an application to manage a convenience store/gas station that connects with QuickBooks was developed by a former store manager. The company tries to draw that outside creativity back into its four walls with monthly brown bag lunches at which QuickBooks staff hear from a developer who’s doing something particularly different or innovative. In some cases, these meetings lead to a joint development product or marketing support from QuickBooks. “Also, more informally, if a product manager is interested in learning about an area that’s a customer pain point, we invite developers in to share their expertise, so we know them and feel more comfortable about recommending them to customers,” Adkins says. The QuickBooks Enterprise Solution Provider Program, opened in May 2006, invites experienced QuickBooks consultants and resellers to offer both horizontal and vertical extensions to the software.

Jim Gregg, channel director for QuickBooks Enterprise, says the Solution Provider Program will help QuickBooks in its move up-market from small businesses to bigger companies.

THE PRODUCT PROCESS
A team of five to nine people typically will explore a new application. For example, the recently released TurboTax Pro, an extension of the existing tax prep software, was entirely developed by five or six people; the team had grown to 15 by the time it went into production.

Intuit will “divide and conquer” a large project, splitting it into sections. While hundreds of people comprise the full TurboTax development staff, any given team within it will be from five to 15 strong.

Teams are cross-functional and follow the traditional software development model: a product manager, designers and engineers; they work together cross-functionally, as well. The product manager is responsible for defining the customer experience as a concept, and then the design team is responsible for figuring out how to make that a reality.

According to an Intuit spokesperson, the company defines the product manager role as the bridge between the customer and product development. The product manager interfaces with customers to identify their business needs and then defines the requirements to design and develop the product. An engineering background is sometimes preferred, but not always required.

The development process for existing products is well-defined; development of experimental applications is more informal and relies more on the work of individual contributors.

The development proves includes rigorous qualitative testing to make sure the product doesn’t incorporate any errors. Says iTeam leader Anthony Creed, “You can’t put betas out there and expect people to pay for them.”

The company has adopted the “lean programming” strategy, which seeks to speed development by reducing or eliminating wasted and unnecessary steps, such as writing detailed documentation. At the same time, lean programming uses an iterative development proves in which the product grows by small but complete portions delivered throughout the cycle. Each iteration results in working software. Core features are user-tested and feedback is gathered during the development process, and the product may change in response to that feedback. Says Creed, “It boils down to, you figure out what are the most important things that have to be done. Decide which are the biggest or riskiest and tackle those first; and avoid doing anything that doesn’t add value to the customer.”

TEST AND RELEASE
The ultimate exit criteria are objective: Do the calculations work? Are they accurate? Is all content covered that needs to be covered? Both quantitative and qualitative testing continues after a product is released. The company does market surveys and also has a 6,000-member user panel called the Inner Circle. Intuit uses the Net Promoter strategy of “one simple question,” that question being, “Would you recommend us to a friend or colleague?”

Review: QuickBase Helps IT Build Powerful Web Apps Quickly

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

No time to build an application for IT’s own use? QuickBase may be the answer.

Like the cobbler’s children who go barefoot, IT departments never seem to have the time or resources to build online applications for its own use: project management, shared document libraries — you name it, IT does without because it’s busy putting all its focus on building user applications.

Intuit’s QuickBase tackles this problem head-on with speed and grace. You can build your own Web-based application from scratch or use one of several application templates (management projects, contacts, or files), define users and assign permissions, and you’re up and running. You can tweak any application simply and easily: add your own fields, create validation criteria, set field- and record-level security, join tables, build (or modify) forms and reports—all from a simple online interface. You can even build the interface that your users see, such as a “main menu.”

In fact, during the month I tested QuickBase, I did so completely without any printed documentation, and referred to the online help system only twice. Yes, the program is that intuitive—options were self-explanatory and well-organized (I never tripped over complex logic I didn’t need). A couple of clicks and I was editing a form or table, adding a field, or previewing changes. Response time was quick.

No programming skills are required, and apart from building formulas, there’s considerable flexibility built into options throughout the program.

Take the project management application, for example. Click on the “View” option and you can customize any of the predefined views—such as a list of open tasks by the worker assigned or all open tasks arranged by week—with a couple of clicks. Mix and match which views are made available to your users; arrange them in a dashboard in any order you like.

Figure 1 - A Custom Dashboard
Click to see full image
Need a custom view? The View Builder lets you choose the display criteria (only tasks that are complete, for example), sort order, columns to include, and what user interface options you want (you can display data or make it available for editing, for example). You can even use the View Builder to create a calendar based on any date field you choose from your table.

Need a special field for a table? You can define one using the standard field types: text, numeric (including currency), date, checkbox, e-mail address, URL, lookup, or file attachment, or define a custom formula based on the contents of other fields (here again, the interface is remarkably easy to grasp).

Figure 2 - Customizing a Field
Click to see full image

Even better—select a field and QuickBase will tell you on which forms the field appears (which it also does before you delete a field). A special check box lets other applications access your field as the source for a shared multiple-choice list.

You can edit in a form or in a grid (spreadsheet-like table). Date fields include a pop-up calendar to select a date, pulldown lists (such as options for the “Status” field) offer an “Add New Choice” option at the bottom so you can customize as you go.

The formula language includes 165 functions—from string manipulations to handling nulls, math (average, mod, rounding), and comparisons (greater than, less than or equal to). QuickBase is not as rich as, say, VBA, but it’s no lightweight either, and it’s particularly strong when it comes to manipulating dates, offering “FirstDayofPeriod” (useful when computing a biweekly payroll) and “WeekDayAdd” (to find the date 12 week days from the current date, for example).

New in the latest version of QuickBase; dynamic forms, which force a user to enter data in one field when another contains a particular value, new charting types, and chart drill down (to see the underlying data). Typically, users will log into QuickBase directly, but you can also create a data entry form for a QuickBase application that you can place on your Web site. Among other advanced features: if you’re already using Microsoft Project, you can exchange information between it and the project management QuickBase application — using QuickBase as a data entry front-end, for example.

Not everything, however, is as intuitive as I’d like. “Add Similar” is the oddly named button that lets you copy the current record. (The good news: you can copy a record across tables and even across applications using a wizard.) Also, I’d have preferred a drag-and-drop interface (a la Access) to build forms and reports, but I could get what I needed by clicking through QuickBase’s options. It didn’t give me unlimited control, but it was perfectly adequate.

Given that QuickBase is sold as a service, it presents all the same caveats you’d have of any other such “remote” application. Your data is stored on a remote server — in this case, on Intuit’s servers; given that the same servers store tax records from its TurboTax users, it’s probably a good bet that the data security is high. You can import and export data in a variety of file formats.

Another caveat: The application is only yours for as long as you continue your subscription. Intuit can help you move the application to your own server (as it has with some clients), but doesn’t recommend it (the software is designed to support millions of users, so it is an undertaking to support yourself).

QuickBase is sold based on storage used and number of users, beginning at $249/month for 10 users, 5MB of storage, and 100MB of file attachments (additional 5-user licenses are available for $15/month; additional data and attachment amounts are also available). You can get complete pricing information at http://www.quickbase.com.

When IT doesn’t have the resources to build its own user-friendly Web apps, QuickBase steps in with a convenient, economical, and appreciated assist.

Five Steps to Simple Marketing Project Management

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Do you remember that Dilbert panel where Dilbert follows a building map to find the marketing department? Upon arrival, he finds Grecian columns, a party that would make Bacchus proud, and a sign that says, “Welcome to Marketing. Two drink minimum.” For me, having been on both sides of those Grecian columns, this cartoon sums up a gap that exists between marketing and technology.

The reason for the gap is the cartoon’s punch line: marketing, particularly direct marketing, is a highly interactive, social sport dealing with customers, internal clients, partners, freelancers, agencies, and more vendors. And, until recently — with the exception of uber-geek, multiplayer games — technology wasn’t social. Think about that… direct marketers primarily have two types of software we use regularly:

Individual “productivity” applications, like PowerPoint and Word. These aren’t what we use to work together. Rather, we have e-mail (loads of it) and meetings to develop our presentations, messages, pitches and basically get work done.

Multi-user “big iron” software, like CRM systems, which are designed primarily for management tracking and reporting. Again, these don’t help us work together on a new DM campaign or any of the marketing programs that drive all those sales leads.

Direct marketing projects need technology that’s as interactive as they are.

Consider Collaborative Technologies 2.0
“Collaborative” technology to support business workflows has been around for awhile. I experienced the advantages of this technology with Lotus Notes. At one software company, our customers’ executives would actually call us to find out the status of any issue with an installation — even an issue on their side — because we always knew “the full story.” Our whole team contributed to that story by tracking issues and their status via our Notes-based solution, and we all benefited. But, the solution was very difficult to manage and maintain and our outside partners could not participate.

Over the past 15 years since that experience, things have changed for the better: the Internet as a stable “platform” for technology; software-as-a-service providers (like WebEx, Salesforce.com and Intuit’s QuickBase) have matured; and new technologies, like AJAX, help deliver a rich, software-like experience in a Web browser. Today, you can get high-quality, collaborative technology sharable internally or across company boundaries, reliably and securely, with no support required from IT. With these advances, direct marketers have the opportunity to make their projects as engagingly interactive as their campaigns.

Five Steps to Get Started
So, how do you find software to support your direct marketing efforts? Here are my top five ways to get started:

1. Know your processes. Whatever technology you choose must support your processes. That means it needs to make it easier to do what you are actually doing today. Technology often tends toward an overabundance of process. You want a technology that supports what you do today without requiring new behaviors, or a great deal of added work. Whether you have 5, 10, 100, or 1,000 people working in your organization, you want them to be effective, and supporting them in working the way they work is critical.

Tell your prospective vendors your top workflows and have them show you how their technology will support you and all the people involved in that process. They should be able to answer questions, give you examples of how others have been successful with similar workflows, and even be able to say that they use it themselves. I am amazed at how many technology companies don’t use their own products.

2. Don’t forget your partners. Direct marketing works with internal product teams, with legal and communications teams, with customers, with contractors, with agencies, with vendors and with partners. As an example, what good is a campaign management system that doesn’t allow me to easily track work with my product teams, or my customer account team, or my design freelancer? Your marketing team will only be more efficient if the technology easily supports working with teams outside of marketing. This means the system has to be easy to use – no installations or training – so partners will actually use it. Web-based, software-as-a-service provides some great options.

3. Focus on workflow. There are two basic types of collaboration software: real-time and workflow systems. Real-time tools, like instant messaging, white boarding, conferencing and chat are great for “bursts” of interaction, but your team spends most of their time collaborating in a workflow:

Alex decides she needs a new piece of direct mail collateral;

Liz defines and schedules the writing and design; Alex approves

Anna needs to design the layout of the document; Liz approves

The product team needs to review and approve the content
Kathy should get notified in case she wants to use it in some additional programs.

It isn’t important for Liz and Anna to be able to collaborate real-time on what the layout is, but it is critical for Liz to know when Anna’s done with her first draft for review. It isn’t critical that Alex and Kathy decide on programs together, but it is critical that the sales team knows when the mailer is being completed. This is workflow and it is how things get done. If a vendor can’t support your workflow, then find another vendor.

4. Expect simplicity. I’ll follow my own advice and keep this one simple. You must think about how much time and energy you are going to require from your team to learn this new system. By focusing on workflow, you are taking the right first step, now take the next and consider team adoption. How easily are your workflows implemented? Does a team member have to hunt through screens of information to find his action items? Does she have to go to four different screens to update one piece of information? Find a system that supports having each team member’s information most readily available, while allowing clear, fast paths to any additional information needed.

In addition to making it easy for your team, you need a system that’s easy to support. Make sure you talk to your vendor about what is required to maintain this technology. How much time do most customers spend supporting it? How easy is it to change?

5. Start now and iterate. John Hagel, the respected “where business meets technology” strategist, often says you need experience with a technology to be able to know how to use it. Don’t spend six months defining your perfect solution and then another six months installing and customizing it. Find a flexible solution that allows you and your team to change the solution easily. Yes, I really mean this. Many new technologies are easy enough for non-techies, even some technophobes, to customize. So, you can get started right away with core workflows, get your team comfortable using the technology, then iterate to improve the solution. Just make sure someone is actually making changes regularly.

Why Are You Still Reading This?
To get started, ask your selected vendors for a free trial. An advantage of Internet-based, software-as-a-service providers is that they have few costs associated with letting you try the software, and you have little cost associated with trying it. Take advantage of this. With some, you’ll be able to get an application working for your team within the trial period. This means that you are, right now, just days away from technology that can increase visibility and accountability across your team, and save valuable time and effort, at a cost you can afford. What are you waiting for?

Disrupting your desktop

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

New web tools are changing how office work gets done.

(FORTUNE Magazine) — On June 15, Bill Gates announced his retirement plan, and the software world turned its eyes in unison to Ray Ozzie, his chosen successor.

Ozzie had already signaled his vision for Microsoft (Charts) in a November memo, which was widely summarized as “must beat Google (Charts).”

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Mostly overlooked by the media, however, were Ozzie’s comments on business software, which might similarly be reduced to “must beat Quickbase.”

Quickbase, a division of Intuit (Charts), otherwise known for its tax software, is the elder statesman of a growing crowd of companies hoping to overhaul the way office work is done.

The most publicized aspect of this new software wave is the shift toward applications hosted on remote servers and accessed via web browsers.

While central hosting delivers economies of scale, what’s firing the business web crowd with revolutionary fervor is the promise that “webification” will bring to business software the sort of unexpected breakthroughs in collaboration that have reenergized the consumer Internet.

Until the success of Wikipedia, social content creation seemed at best implausible. And before the wildly popular Flickr, few suspected the powerful allure of sharing photos with perfect strangers.

Customized system
The Quickbase product - a sort of online spreadsheet - is at one level a do-it-yourself version of the industrial-strength tools sold by Oracle (Charts) and SAP (Charts) for managing sales or customer service.

Yet because managers can easily create custom “quickbases,” they are finding novel ways to apply the software. Procter & Gamble (Charts), for instance, now uses Quickbase to track technology projects.

Before, says P&G exec Irv Kieback, his team used “what we called the MOM, the mother of all spreadsheets. We’d have to have people sitting in a room, going through project by project. Now we just go to the web.”

And what works for a FORTUNE 500 IT shop also works for Ramp Motors, a General Motors (Charts) dealer in New York City.

“It lets many people work out of the same songbook,” says president John Rampone, who customized Quickbase to manage inventory, rebate programs, and even employee birthdays. “Everything we do touches Quickbase.”

Quickbase chief Jana Eggers says revenues and subscribers nearly doubled last year, and 43 of the FORTUNE 100 are customers.

That success has attracted the attention of Harvard professor Clay Christensen - who describes the software as “exquisitely modular and conformable” - as well as a slew of rivals.

Web-friendly
In March, Salesforce.com (Charts), which pioneered online sales management, launched AppExchange, a clearinghouse for web business applications that CEO Marc Benioff modestly hopes will supplant Microsoft Office’s lock on the corporate desktop.

Also joining the fray are Silicon Valley startups Socialtext and JotSpot, which have commercialized the technology behind Wikipedia for corporate knowledge management.

Chicago’s 37 Signals claims that over 250,000 people are using Basecamp, its web project-management application.

Then there is Microsoft, which under Ozzie is working to make Office more web-friendly.

Ironically Ozzie is the man who gave the world Lotus Notes - the first coming of groupware, which was generally considered ahead of its time.

Now he’s playing catch-up.

How Failure Breeds Success

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Everyone fears failure. But breakthroughs depend on it. The best companies embrace their mistakes and learn from them

COVER STORY PODCAST

Ever heard of Choglit? How about OK Soda or Surge? Long after “New Coke” became nearly synonymous with innovation failure, these products joined Coca-Cola Co.’s (KO ) graveyard of beverage busts.

Choglit, in case you blinked and missed it, was a chocolate-flavored milk drink test-marketed with Nestlé (NSRGY ) in 2002. OK Soda, unveiled in 1994, tried to capture Generation X with edgy marketing. The “OK Manifesto,” parts of which were printed on cans in an attempt at hipster irony, asked: “What’s the point of OK Soda?” It turned out customers wondered the same thing. And while Surge did well initially, this me-too Mountain Dew later did anything but. Sales began drying up after five years.

Given that history, failure hardly seems like a subject Chairman and CEO E. Neville Isdell would want to trot out in front of investors. But Isdell did just that, deliberately airing the topic at Coke’s annual meeting in April. “You will see some failures,” he told the crowd. “As we take more risks, this is something we must accept as part of the regeneration process.”

Warning Coke investors that the company might experience some flops is a little like warning Atlantans they might experience afternoon thunderstorms in July. But Isdell thinks it’s vital. He wants Coke to take bigger risks, and to do that, he knows he needs to convince employees and shareholders that he will tolerate the failures that will inevitably result. That’s the only way to change Coke’s traditionally risk-averse culture. And given the importance of this goal, there’s no podium too big for sending the signal. “Using [the annual meeting] occasion elevates the statement to another order of importance,” Isdell said in an interview with BusinessWeek.

Slide Show >>CLOSE TO BLASPHEMY
While few CEOs are as candid about the potential for failure as Isdell, many are wrestling with the same problem, trying to get their organizations to cozy up to the risk-taking that innovation requires. A warning: It’s not going to be an easy shift. After years of cost-cutting initiatives and growing job insecurity, most employees don’t exactly feel like putting themselves on the line. Add to that the heightened expectations by management on individual performance, and it’s easy to see why so many opt to play it safe.

Indeed, for a generation of managers weaned on the rigors of Six Sigma error-elimination programs, embracing failure — gasp! — is close to blasphemy. Stefan H. Thomke, a professor at Harvard Business School and author of Experimentation Matters, says that when he talks to business groups, “I try to be provocative and say: ‘Failure is not a bad thing.’ I always have lots of people staring at me, [thinking] ‘Have you lost your mind?’ That’s O.K. It gets their attention. [Failure] is so important to the experimental process.”

That it is. Crucial, in fact. After all, that’s why true, breakthrough innovation — an imperative in today’s globally competitive world, in which product cycles are shorter than ever — is so extraordinarily hard. It requires well-honed organizations built for efficiency and speed to do what feels unnatural: Explore. Experiment. Foul up, sometimes. Then repeat.

Granted, not all failures are praiseworthy. Some flops are just that: bad ideas. The eVilla, Sony Corp.’s (SNE ) $500 “Internet appliance.” The Pontiac Aztek, General Motors Corp.’s (GM\ ) ugly duckling “crossover” SUV. For good measure, we’ll throw in our own industry’s spectacularly useless flop: the CueCat. A marketer’s dream, the device, which was launched in 2000 (when else?), scanned bar codes from magazine and newspaper ads, directing readers to Web sites so they wouldn’t have to go to the trouble to type in the URL.

But intelligent failures — those that happen early and inexpensively and that contribute new insights about your customers — should be more than just tolerable. They should be encouraged. “Figuring out how to master this process of failing fast and failing cheap and fumbling toward success is probably the most important thing companies have to get good at,” says Scott Anthony, the managing director at consulting firm Innosight.

“Getting good” at failure, however, doesn’t mean creating anarchy out of organization. It means leaders — not just on a podium at the annual meeting, but in the trenches, every day — who create an environment safe for taking risks and who share stories of their own mistakes. It means bringing in outsiders unattached to a project’s past. It means carving out time to reflect on failure, not just success.

FAILURE PARTIES
Perhaps most important, it means designing ways to measure performance that balance accountability with the freedom to make mistakes. People may fear failure, but they fear the consequences of it even more. “The performance culture really is in deep conflict with the learning culture,” says Paul J. H. Schoemaker, CEO of consulting firm Decision Strategies International Inc. “It’s an unusual executive who can balance these.”

Some organizations have tried to measure performance in a way that accounts for these opposing pressures. At IBM (IBM ) Research, engineers are evaluated on both one- and three-year time frames. The one-year term determines the bonus, while the three-year period decides rank and salary. The longer frame can help neutralize a year of setbacks. “A three-year evaluation cycle sends an important message to our researchers, demonstrating our commitment to investing in the early, risky stages of innovation,” says Armando Garcia, vice-president for technical strategy and worldwide operations at IBM Research.

In addition to making sure performance evaluations take a long-term view, managers should also think about celebrating smart failures. (Those who repeat their mistakes, of course, should hardly be rewarded.) Thomas D. Kuczmarski, a Chicago new-product development consultant, even proposes “failure parties” as a way of recognizing that it’s part of the creative process. “What most companies do is put a wall around a failure as if it’s radioactive,” says Kuczmarski.

Intuit Inc. (INTU ), based in Mountain View, Calif., recently celebrated an adventurous marketing campaign that failed. The company had never targeted young tax filers before, and in early 2005 it tried to reach them through an ill-fated attempt to combine tax-filing drudgery with hip-hop style. Through a Web site called RockYourRefund.com, Intuit offered young people discounts to travel site Expedia Inc. (EXPE ) and retailer Best Buy Co. (BBY ) and the ability to deposit tax refunds directly into prepaid Visa cards issued by hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons.

But even hip-hop stars can’t make 1040s cool enough to get young adults excited about taxes. “We did very few returns” through the site, says Rick Jensen, vice-president for product management at Intuit’s consumer tax group. “It was almost a rounding error.” Through a postmortem process, the team that developed the campaign documented its insights, such as the fact that Gen Yers don’t visit destination Web sites that feel too much like advertising. Then, on a stage at the Dolce Hayes Mansion in San Jose, Calif., last October in front of some 200 Intuit marketers, the team received an award from Intuit Chairman Scott Cook. “It’s only a failure if we fail to get the learning,” says Cook.

In addition to postmortems, Intuit has begun plucking insights from its flops through sessions that focus on failure. Jana Eggers, who heads up Intuit’s Innovation Lab, held the first such “When Learning Hurts” session recently. There, she recounted the story of QuickBase, a software application that failed for its initial market, small business customers, but is now finding fans among large companies. Eggers hopes future conferences will feature even more presentations on failures. She also plans to distribute “narrative storytelling booklets” about failed projects so people can “feel the pain.”

Unlike Intuit, most companies don’t spend enough time and resources looking backward, says Chris Trimble, a professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College and co-author of 10 Rules for Strategic Innovators. That’s a mistake. “How do you learn if you don’t examine the past?” asks Trimble.

General Electric Co. (GE ) is trying to do just that. The company, which is well-known for sharing best practices across its many units, has recently begun formally discussing failures, too. Last September the company set up a two-hour conference call for managers of eight “imagination breakthroughs” that didn’t live up to expectations and were being shelved, or “retired,” in GE’s parlance. (”Imagination breakthroughs” — IBs — are new businesses or products that have potential sales of $100 million within three to five years.)

Such discussions can be nerve-racking, especially in companies where failure has traditionally been met with tough consequences. That was the case at GE, which is now three years into the effort spearheaded by Chairman and CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt to make innovation the new mantra at the $150 billion behemoth. “I had some offline conversations with some of the IB leaders reassuring them that this was not a call where they were going to get their pink slips,” says Patia McGrath, a GE marketing director who helped put together the call. “The notion of taking big swings, and that it’s O.K. to miss the swing, is something that’s quite new with Jeff.”

Some companies have gone even further, taking a comprehensive look at all their previous failures. That was the case at Corning Inc. (GLW ), which found itself teetering on the brink of bankruptcy after the once red-hot market for its optical fiber collapsed during the telecom bust. Following that debacle, then-Corning CEO James R. Houghton asked Joseph A. Miller Jr., executive vice-president and chief technology officer, to produce an in-depth review of the company’s 150-year history of innovation, documenting both failures and successes.

One of the failed products Corning investigated was the DNA microarray, or chip, which the company began developing in 1998. Genomics research was heating up at the time, with Dr. J. Craig Venter launching Celera Genomics that year. Corning, which makes laboratory sciences equipment, saw an opportunity. Its DNA chip was designed to print all 28,000 human genes onto a set of slides that could be used by researchers. By 2000, Corning had invested $100 million in the project and announced a partnership with Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

“WE WERE LATE”
But while Corning was trying to launch the chip, another company, Affymetrix Inc. (AFFX ), commercialized one. “They had the dominant design on microchips, and they were the first out,” says Peter F. Volanakis, now Corning’s chief operating officer. “We were late.” Quality problems plagued the project, and customers had not been brought in early. With Corning in a freefall financially, the DNA chip was killed in 2001.

Still, the experience opened Corning up to a whole new market. “We had discovered the marketplace of drug discovery,” says Miller. By combining its introduction to the drug research market with another failed business, photonics, which manipulates data using light waves, it created Epic, a revolutionary technology for drug testing that it will launch this fall. By using light waves instead of fluorescent dyes, Epic promises to accelerate dramatically the process of testing potential drugs and improve its accuracy.

One key difference? This time, 18 pharmaceutical companies have tested Epic before the launch. By 2010 to 2012, Jeff Mooney, who led Epic’s development, projects that Epic sales could reach $100 million to $300 million a year, and more than $500 million annually long-term.

As Corning learned from the DNA chip and with Epic, getting potential users in before a project goes too far helps to prove the market for it. But outside perspectives can also help neutralize emotions and biases about failing product lines, says Duke University Fuqua School of Business professor William Boulding. In research published in the April issue of the Journal of Marketing, Boulding and his colleagues contradict the common notion that teams cling to a project because they want to save face or salvage the “sunk costs.” Rather, the problem is with the objectivity of the people involved. “Even if you’re not on the hook in terms of financial embarrassment or psychological embarrassment,” says Boulding, “you did form beliefs, and that causes you to warp new feedback.”

That’s why W.L. Gore & Associates Inc. in Newark, Del., makers of the waterproof fabric Gore-Tex, recognizes outsiders — people within Gore but not on the product development team — who make the call on projects that need to be pulled. When Brad Jones led Gore’s Industrial Products Div., which makes sealants and filtration systems, he handed out “Sharp Shooter” trophies to these outside managers when a project was effectively killed. These marksmen, so to speak, freed from the trappings of familiarity, can identify potential snags that the team may have overlooked. “We’re effusive in our thanks for that contribution,” says Jones. “We ask them to write up what they learned from it, and how we could have made the decision [to kill the project] faster.”

FIND YOUR OWN FLAWS
The mindset that Gore looks for in these outsiders — the ability to home in on uncertainties — requires employees to reframe their thinking. Most people naturally seek positive outcomes and set about trying to prove that an experiment works.

But designers, inventors, and scientists, all models for companies struggling to be more creative, take the opposite tack. They try to prove themselves wrong. That focus on potential flaws makes failure, and the lessons that come with it, happen earlier. Amy Edmondson, a professor at Harvard Business School who has studied how organizations learn from failure, says managers would do well to think more like scientists. “Failure provides more ‘learning’ in a strictly logical or technical sense” than success, she says. “It’s a principle of the scientific method that you can only disconfirm, never confirm, a hypothesis.”

Failure’s capacity to teach is exactly why venture capitalists often look for managers to run startups whose résumés include experience with a flop. Gordon McCallum, CEO for Richard Branson’s Virgin Management Ltd., can point to managers within Virgin who might have been overlooked by other companies because of failures in their careers. He’s also quick to note that errors on the job, as long as they aren’t repeated, are not only supported, but valued.

One example: Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd.’s J2000 seats, a $67 million investment made in 2000 to create new sleeper seats that reclined at an angle for the airline’s “upper-class” seats. Although sleeper seats had long existed in first class, airlines had not yet adopted them for business class. Virgin was the first to announce it would be offering “a bed in business,” says Joe Ferry, Virgin’s head of design, who led the design of the J2000 seats. Within a year, however, Virgin’s idea was one-upped by its chief competitor, British Airways PLC (BAB ), which rolled out a truly flat bed. While customers were initially enthusiastic about the J2000, some complained about sliding and discomfort. In the end, says McCallum, it “was wildly unsuccessful. Everybody acknowledged that it was not as good a product as our principal competitors’.” Agrees Ferry: “We were an also-ran, which didn’t really sit well with us.”

But Ferry didn’t get the ax. In fact, Virgin entrusted him to take on another extraordinary risk, committing a huge $127 million to an overhaul of the airline’s upper-class seats years before the traditional product life cycle would have ended. And the company stuck by its investment even after September 11. The new version, launched in 2003, has been a solid success. Called the “upper-class suite,” Ferry’s makeover made a design leap beyond merely being flat. Flight attendants flip over the back and seat cushions to make the bed, allowing for different foam consistencies for sitting and sleeping. While Ferry hoped the new seats would eventually improve Virgin’s business-class market share by 1%, they’ve already exceeded that goal.

TREMORS AND THRILLS
A company’s reaction in the face of intelligent failures, whether it’s Virgin reinvesting in a pricey design revamp or Intuit giving an award to its marketing team, can send tremors or thrills through a culture. If top executives are accepting, people will embrace risk. But if managers react harshly, people will retreat from it.

That’s something Eric Brinker, JetBlue Airways Corp.’s (JBLU ) director of brand management and customer experience, wants to make sure doesn’t happen. Last year, JetBlue, which tries to limit its in-flight snack mix to keep costs low and reduce complexity, began hearing that some of its customers wanted a healthier choice. Brinker and his team decided to replace a popular but hardly healthy mix of Doritos chips called Munchie Mix. “It’s the ultimate junk food,” says Brinker.

The junk food fans revolted. “The tribe had spoken, and these guys wanted Munchie Mix,” Brinker says. “People wrote really spirited letters, saying: ‘This is the only reason I flew JetBlue!”‘ Brinker realized he would have to reverse course, but he didn’t want his team to think change wasn’t encouraged.

So he decided to make fun of himself to keep the reaction lighthearted. On the company’s intranet, Brinker started up a “Save the Munchie Mix” campaign that read: “Some pinhead in marketing decided to get rid of the Munchie Mix!” He invited employees to write in poems and stories about why the snack should return to JetBlue. The point? By keeping things fun, he hoped employees wouldn’t hesitate to make their own creative decisions. “If we don’t have people willing to risk something, then we’ll really end up like our competitors.” And that, of course, would be a failure indeed.

Professor: Disrupt or Be Disrupted

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

Q&A: Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen handicaps the race for business advantage via technology.

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Disruption in business is the focus of Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen, who has carried out groundbreaking research into how small, underestimated companies can disrupt and unseat established and seemingly invincible firms.

ADVERTISEMENT Christensen has raised flags of both warning and hope for big companies with books titled “The Innovator’s Dilemma,” “The Innovator’s Solution” and “Seeing What’s Next.”

In addition, he is co-founder of Innosight, a management consulting and education company in Watertown, Mass. He also serves on the boards of directors of four companies, including India-based IT outsourcer Tata.

Consultancy Services and W.R. Hambrecht, which hosts online auctions of initial public offerings.

eWEEK Executive Editor Stan Gibson interviewed Christensen June 7 in Christensen’s offices at Harvard Business School in Boston, where Christensen offered provocative insights on companies’ use of IT to disrupt their competition.

Do you see any companies that are using IT to be disruptive?

That’s how Wal-Mart has disrupted the full-service department stores. They manage the flow of inventory so that their turns are high.

In retailing, the way you make money is you have a gross margin, times inventory turns. So if the department stores turn their inventory over three times a year. In order to earn an adequate return, their gross margins have to be about 40 percent.

If you turn your inventory over six times per year, then your gross margins can be 20 percent and you’ll earn an adequate return. It’s key in the retail business to have that. I think they made very good investments that way.

They’ve been trying to push RFID [radio-frequency identification]. Is that disruptive?

It is. However, the prediction would be that Wal-Mart, although they aggressively seek RFID-compatible suppliers, will probably be one of the last companies to adopt RFID.

The only way it would make sense would be if RFID performs better in terms of cost and reliability and accuracy than bar coding. They are the world’s state-of-the-art practitioner of bar coding. They’ve got billions of dollars every hour staked upon the accuracy of that system. My models would predict that where you see RFID take root will be where bar coding is impossible or very cumbersome, and then, adding those new applications, RFID will get better and better until ultimately it’s good enough so that a complex operation like Wal-Mart could adopt it.

Let’s consider Nick Carr’s famous article, “IT Doesn’t Matter.” Do you think IT matters?

I think it matters tremendously. Let me revise that—it could matter tremendously. But it matters when the IT system is interdependently woven into the operating processes of the company.

When IT is simply an information system that exists independently of the operating processes, then it actually does get commoditized.

Carr’s thesis, though, is that IT is like electricity, and he notes that we don’t have electricity managers at companies anymore, although we apparently once did. Do you agree with that big picture?

It’s hard for me to agree with it. Toyota is an example. It has an information system where the key pieces of information actually travel with the product as it goes through the system. It’s an IT system that is just totally woven into the operating processes at the company.

I don’t think that is like electricity. It is a productive process. Southwest Airlines has an IT system where, again, the information system is connected right to the customer, right to the planes, right to the baggage. And so I don’t think it’s electricity. I think you would say the same of Wal-Mart.

Click here to read about how tech giants are fawning over smaller companies.

These are pretty disruptive companies that initially had a cost advantage in low-cost labor and low-cost planes, but they’ve migrated their competitive advantage to the process. I think that process-based advantage is in the IT system that is knit inextricably into the business. They can’t outsource their IT stuff.

Do you think General Motors, which has a fully outsourced model and is using multiple providers, is on the right track?

Given the nature of their product line, it’s probably the right thing to do—just like when Compaq kept outsourcing to Flextronics, it was the right thing to do—in that, if you don’t do it, you’ll get killed sooner. And if you do do it, you’ll get killed later.

That sounds really bearish.

They’ve been disrupted by Toyota, which is being disrupted by Hyundai and Kia, which are being disrupted by Chery in China.

Can GM disrupt the disrupters from China?

ADVERTISEMENT That’s my prayer. I think my work has influenced them to do what they are doing to set up their operation to sell $3,000 cars. But they’ve got to be purposeful about that. They can’t say, ‘We don’t play at that end of the market,’ and come out with $15,000 cars. The OnStar business is a great business, however.

It’s not really the auto business though, is it?

And that’s why. It’s not. [OnStar has] negative net assets. It’s really an IT company. Your car can send you an e-mail every week. OnStar collects 1,500 points of data from every one of GM’s cars. They’ll tell you that you don’t need to change your oil yet and, at the rate you’re driving, you probably ought to do it on July 1.

And your brake pads are 80 percent worn, so you need to get into a dealer within six weeks, and your left rear tire needs 15 pounds of pressure, which is costing you a quarter of a mile per gallon. It’s a good business for GM.

On the vendor side, where do you see disruption coming from in the computer industry?

You see it in mobile phones—in the ability to bring content and functionality to mobile phones and BlackBerrys. There are some exciting opportunities in that space. There are opportunities for mobile phone companies to become banks.

You take your purchase to the merchant and key in a four-digit code and the price of what you want to buy and press “send.” The money transfers out of your phone account into the merchant’s account—and the phone company becomes a bank. They start to lend when they see which customers regularly replenish their prepaid account.

The phone companies can handle a transaction at a fraction of the cost that MasterCard and Visa can. Technologies have been developed in Japan where you can just tap your handset on the merchant’s counter, and the transfer happens. It’s really an exciting growth opportunity. It’s hard to draw the boundary around an industry.

We think of computers as computers and mobile phones as mobile phones and banks as banks, but things are blurring.

In your research, you note the need for larger companies to think small. How can IT vendors do this?

Intuit’s QuickBase is really interesting. Intuit has a business model to market toward small businesses. To them, a medium-sized business—a car dealer, for example—is a big business.

In software, what Intuit’s QuickBase offers is the ability—in a very simple, convenient, fast way—to build your own ERP [enterprise resource planning] system.

We’re writing a case study about this now. There’s a car dealership that bought QuickBase. For a car dealership, the functionality in an SAP system makes no sense. So these guys got QuickBase and developed their own ERP system.

When a customer makes a reservation to drop a car off for service, the QuickBase system sends a message to the salesman who sold that customer the car, so the salesman can come and greet the customer when he arrives.

That ability to customize is the way you’ve got to compete down at that end of the market.

America’s tech demise is greatly exaggerated. Click here to read more.

SAP and those guys feel the market is not growing. Oracle’s got to acquire PeopleSoft so that they can feel like they are growing. That’s really a consolidation in response to that market not growing. But at the bottom of the market, things like QuickBase are just growing [like] gangbusters.

Regarding IBM, this year it may lose the No. 1 position in the industry to Hewlett-Packard as CEO Sam Palmisano pursues a profit-first strategy. Is IBM doing the right things?

I don’t think so. They’ve done some good things. Really, the only way for a huge company to continue growing is for it to become a composite of small businesses. Because a small business can see small opportunities that are going to be big tomorrow, but a huge monolithic business has a hard time seeing small opportunities.

The Indian companies believe they will do to IBM and others what Toyota did to GM. Can the Indians disrupt and displace the established players?

I think there is a high probability of that. But the very same opportunity exists for IBM and Accenture. They have a big presence in India. But right now, all of those guys are competing head-on for the business of large global companies.

The next wave of growth will be small and medium-sized [customer] companies, domestically in India and then abroad. And so the providers also need to be small and medium-sized or have an economic model that can make money solving those kinds of problems.

Locking The Wireless Network

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

As the popularity of wireless networks in homes and small businesses continues to soar, so do the chances that outsiders will hack unsecured networks and use them for malicious purposes.
Very few home and business owners realize the importance of securing their networks and the risks they incur by not doing so. It is often up to solution providers to solve the problem. Fortunately, several methods and products are available to help mend the holes.

Michael Young, principal at Connected Homes, a San Jose, Calif.-based home integrator, says the starting point is often helping customers realize the implications of not securing their wireless networks.

“You try not to scare people too much, but they need to realize [the impact],” Young says. For example, Young notes that a home’s unsecured wireless network could be used by a neighbor for downloading copyrighted material. It is often difficult to determine who on a network downloaded particular files, so the network owner could be sued by the Recording Industry Association of America or other organizations.

Kevin Bankston, an attorney with the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, says there haven’t yet been cases of homeowners in the United States prosecuted for the activities of other users who access their WLANs to conduct criminal activity. “However, it could lead to that house being the first step in the investigation,” Bankston notes.

In March, an Illinois man was arrested after police noticed him sitting with a laptop in a car outside a nonprofit agency’s building. The man was accessing the Internet through the organization’s wireless network, and was charged with remotely accessing another computer system without the owner’s approval and fined $250.

Small businesses with unsecured WLANs may also be leaving open doors that can lead into the corporate network, says Greg Starr, principal at See-Comm, a New Boston, Texas, integrator. “If someone gets through the WLAN connection, they could potentially get to the company’s servers. These companies are leaving themselves wide open to a number of different types of attacks by not enabling security on their wireless networks,” Starr says.

Even home users are at risk if they access their employers’ secured systems via unsecured wireless networks. Attackers can use the network to gain access to the corporate systems.

One problem is that people generally don’t keep up with changing passwords and settings on their home and SOHO WLANs, says Robert Cox, principal at Cox Network and PC Services, a Bel Air, Md.-based integrator. Integrators can easily boost customers’ WLAN security by disabling SSID and setting up encryption keys to be changed on a regular basis, Cox says. VPNs also are helpful for creating secure remote connections.

Cox notes that the wireless signals in products from some vendors, such as Buffalo Technology, Hawking Technologies and SMC, can be modified so they don’t go beyond the building’s walls. While customers sometimes don’t want the extra expense for such access points, the investment is usually worthwhile.

Aaron Fuhrman, an engineer at Home Technologies, a Bellevue, Wash., integrator, says his company frequently limits the broadcast range of WLANs through power and antenna adjustments. “You can use a directional antenna so it only covers a building instead of radiating the signal in a 360[-degree] pattern,” he explains.

Another option is to configure the Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) and Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) security most vendors build into their products but most users ignore, Fuhrman says. “WPA is the more secure of the two and is not susceptible to brute force hacks,” he says. When installing older products that use WEP,
Fuhrman adds an extra layer of protection by using MAC address filtering, which prevents unauthorized users from accessing the WLAN even if they have the encryption key.

When it comes to encryption, a measured approach works best, says David Ducharme, CEO of Total Home Technologies, Salem, Mass. “Usually the more encryption you have, the less the range of the products, so it’s kind of a balancing act in some ways.”

Vendors are beginning to address the issue of unsecured WLANs with products designed specifically for homes and SOHOs. Kaspersky Lab’s recently-released Internet Security 6.0 includes software that scans home and SOHO wireless and wired networks, blocks access or limits the activities that can be done within the network and includes an antihacker feature, says Charles Waelde, senior technical engineer at the Moscow-based company.

“To protect the workstation, you also have the ability to put the PC into stealth mode. This will completely isolate the PC on the network from other machines and no one will be able to see you on the network,” Waelde says. If attackers use brute force, ping of death or denial-of-service attacks, the product can deny access from the IP address until the user allows access or blocks it permanently.

WiTopia, Reston, Va., just launched its SecureMyWiFi service, which starts at $9.99 per year for home users and $99 per year for businesses. The software is downloaded to the customer’s network and uses an external server to provide authentication, encryption and other services. The company provides integrators with a 40 percent margin on the price of the first year of service, and also offers the software preinstalled on other vendors’ access points.

Mount Laurel, N.J.-based TrustEli last year launched its Eli Managed Service appliance for homes and small businesses, and recently signed a distribution agreement with D&H Distributing. Eli includes a firewall, content filtering, wireless gateway, VPN support and protection against viruses, spam, spyware and phishing attacks. The cost is $199.99 with a $9.99 monthly service fee.

Another important aspect of securing wireless networks is documenting every step of the process and recording changes to equipment settings, says Gordon van Zuiden, principal at CyberManor, a Los Gatos, Calif.-based integrator. For an integrator with numerous customers, each with their own security settings and equipment specifics, keeping track of the details can be challenging.

“If you are going to start adding or changing things in the wireless network, you need to keep a database with all of the information logged,” he says. “If this information isn’t available, it will end up as an expensive wasted service call.”

Van Zuiden uses QuickBase, an online database from Mountain View, Calif.-based Intuit, for all of his service requests. QuickBase is useful because integrators can specify information such as client names, technical parameters of the home, IP addresses, logins and passwords. “The best part about QuickBase is that our engineers can access it online and get the configuration information at the customer’s location,” he says.

Integrators can rant and rave about the many problems with unsecured networks and the reasons to protect them, but demonstrations of the problem often are the most effective ways to convince hesitant customers. Young uses NetStumbler, Windows-based software that can detect open WLANs, to show clients all the open access points in their neighborhoods.

“I’ll arrive early, fire up my laptop in their driveway and tell them the name of their access points before I even walk in the door,” Young says. “Something that dramatic tends to make them realize that their WLAN signals don’t stop at the walls of their home.”

Locking The Wireless Network

Tuesday, April 24th, 2007

As the popularity of wireless networks in homes and small businesses continues to soar, so do the chances that outsiders will hack unsecured networks and use them for malicious purposes.
Very few home and business owners realize the importance of securing their networks and the risks they incur by not doing so. It is often up to solution providers to solve the problem. Fortunately, several methods and products are available to help mend the holes.

Michael Young, principal at Connected Homes, a San Jose, Calif.-based home integrator, says the starting point is often helping customers realize the implications of not securing their wireless networks.

“You try not to scare people too much, but they need to realize [the impact],” Young says. For example, Young notes that a home’s unsecured wireless network could be used by a neighbor for downloading copyrighted material. It is often difficult to determine who on a network downloaded particular files, so the network owner could be sued by the Recording Industry Association of America or other organizations.

Kevin Bankston, an attorney with the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, says there haven’t yet been cases of homeowners in the United States prosecuted for the activities of other users who access their WLANs to conduct criminal activity. “However, it could lead to that house being the first step in the investigation,” Bankston notes.

In March, an Illinois man was arrested after police noticed him sitting with a laptop in a car outside a nonprofit agency’s building. The man was accessing the Internet through the organization’s wireless network, and was charged with remotely accessing another computer system without the owner’s approval and fined $250.

Small businesses with unsecured WLANs may also be leaving open doors that can lead into the corporate network, says Greg Starr, principal at See-Comm, a New Boston, Texas, integrator. “If someone gets through the WLAN connection, they could potentially get to the company’s servers. These companies are leaving themselves wide open to a number of different types of attacks by not enabling security on their wireless networks,” Starr says.

Even home users are at risk if they access their employers’ secured systems via unsecured wireless networks. Attackers can use the network to gain access to the corporate systems.

One problem is that people generally don’t keep up with changing passwords and settings on their home and SOHO WLANs, says Robert Cox, principal at Cox Network and PC Services, a Bel Air, Md.-based integrator. Integrators can easily boost customers’ WLAN security by disabling SSID and setting up encryption keys to be changed on a regular basis, Cox says. VPNs also are helpful for creating secure remote connections.

Cox notes that the wireless signals in products from some vendors, such as Buffalo Technology, Hawking Technologies and SMC, can be modified so they don’t go beyond the building’s walls. While customers sometimes don’t want the extra expense for such access points, the investment is usually worthwhile.

Aaron Fuhrman, an engineer at Home Technologies, a Bellevue, Wash., integrator, says his company frequently limits the broadcast range of WLANs through power and antenna adjustments. “You can use a directional antenna so it only covers a building instead of radiating the signal in a 360[-degree] pattern,” he explains.

QuickBase Expands Sales Team Functionality

The new application offers Dashboard functionality, a user interface that is becoming very popular among vendors and customers. “It’s a good way for a user to see — quickly — where they stand or where the company stands on areas important to them,” said Jana Eggers, general manager of Intuit QuickBase.

QuickBase, a division of Intuit, has upgraded its hosted-model product to make it easier for sales  reps and sales executives — two user groups that often have competing application requirements — to use the sales module.

New functionality in the application, called “Manage Your Sales Team,” includes more advanced configuration, reporting and display tools. Another enhancement aimed specifically at sales reps is the addition of smart, or dynamic, forms that request information during the sales cycle only when necessary.
Time Is Money
“Adoption of a CRM system has traditionally been a tricky thing for a lot of companies to navigate,” Jana Eggers, general manager of Intuit (Nasdaq: INTU)  QuickBase, told CRM Buyer. “For salespeople in particular, any system  that requires a lot of input to keep a pipeline up to date is — in their view — simply money out of their pocket.”

The forms are designed to extract the minimal amount of data, based on where the rep is during the sales cycle, Eggers said. It doesn’t ask for information at the beginning of the sales cycle that is not necessary, or that the sales rep might not necessarily have at that stage.

For example, dynamic forms only require reps to fill out opportunity qualification questions when the status field changes to “contacted.” In a project management application, a time stamp with the current date can be automatically inserted when the task status field changes to “complete.”

Interactive Choices
QuickBase has also included interactive functionality in its chart and reporting features. “Users can drill down several layers of data,” Eggers pointed out. “They also have a lot of leeway in how the charts looks or how the data is presented to them.” The new charting functionality includes new chart types, as well as rollover, drill down and customization options.

The new application offers Dashboard functionality, a user interface that is becoming very popular among vendors and customers. “It’s a good way for a user to see — quickly — where they stand or where the company stands on areas important to them,” Eggers said.

QuickBase offers several packaged applications, many of which were upgraded along with Manage Your Sales Team. Manage Multiple Projects, for instance, now offers the ability to import from Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT)   Project with synchronization capabilities.

Manage a Project and Manage Multiple Projects have been enhanced with new resource allocation functionality, which identifies the workload of resources across projects.

QuickBase releases two major upgrades a year. The last release concentrated on supporting large corporations’ internal business proesses, Eggers said. The current release aims to streamline processes for users.