Use Email Signatures, They are Important

I get emails all the time from clients, potential clients, and people who want me to buy something from them. What constantly amazes me is the lack of email signatures. I know for a fact that all email programs allow you to make an email signature with your name, rank, email address, phone number, Skype number, LinkedIn page, web page, blog address, and business address.

Why then, don’t people use them? It can’t be because they are lazy. Not having one loses you business.  After all, it is not always best to respond to an email with an email, especially when a topic is new, complicated, or sensitive. (more…)

Why I work at Contemporary Analysis

I get asked why in the prime of my career I went back to working for a startup company, run by young talent, in a field on the cutting edge of analytics.  It was because, for the first time, I felt like an owner had a vision I could get behind.  He wanted to be something better, do something different, and wanted me to help him create something magnificent.  I saw it as a unique opportunity because, for the first time, I found a true entrepreneur.
Most people define anyone that starts a business as an entrepreneur, which is actually not accurate.  That definition is the definition of a business owner.  An entrepreneur is a mindset, a way you do business and how you look at problems.  I knew Grant, the CEO of Contemporary Analysis, was different when he told me he was going to turn down being bought by 2 different companies. That alone puts you in a different class.  Most owners would sell if they ever got the chance.  In fact, Grant has no intention selling off or IPO’ing his  juggernaut of a company.  In fact, he wants to be a privately owned Fortune 500 company headquartered in Omaha, NE.  Grant not only is an entrepreneur, but he has vision.  And big vision at that.
People have told us that we can’t do it, and yet, we keep doing it.  We will easily have over $3 million in revenue for 2012, double that of last year and 10x’s that of 3 years ago, and already have contracts with 2 of the Fortune 500’s in our hometown.  We are hiring, building out, releasing new products, and thinking about how to do business better.  I have worked at a couple of startups in my life, but this is the first that does that kind of reflection and planning.  Our goal is to not only grow, but grow in a way that is sustainable and scalable by taking the time and energy to do things right the first time.  We want to build our products, people, systems and processes so they last, instead of being obsolete the next year.  While this requires extra time to research, tinker and think about what the future will look like, this philosophy allows CAN to grow without having to look back.  I wanted to be part of a company that has that kind of philosophy.
This philosophy has appealed to me.  I used to think I needed all the answers before I could recommend change.  Through the books Grant, he wants us to grow as humans and executives, has given me to read, I realized that I didn’t need all the answers before tackling a problem.  In fact, our whole company is based on the fact the answers that are out there are not the best way any more.  We have to invent new ways to stay ahead of competition or risk being a follower.  That understanding changed what I defined an entrepreneur as.  No longer did I see it as someone who likes risk, who lives on the stress created by it, and who loves the idea that while he or she may fail, the reward for winning is enormous.  Instead, I began to see an entrepreneur as someone who isn’t willing to accept things as they are as the best way.  In the hands of a true entrepreneur business is the best platform to change the world.
My philosophy also changed how I viewed risk and how I found that entrepreneurs viewed risk.
In the book Breakthrough Entrepreneurship, Harvard Business Professor Howard Stevenson defines entrepreneurship as “the pursuit of opportunity without regard to resources currently controlled.”  From working with Grant, I know that this is true.  He has the unique ability to take action that require using resources that he doesn’t have and sometimes that don’t even exist.  For example, he founded Contemporary Analysis in 2008 well before you could even Google “big data”, “data science” or “predictive analytics”.
Also in the same book, Jon Burgstone, summarizes a true entrepreneur’s ideology:

Every time you want to make any important decision, there are two possible courses of action. You can look at the array of choices that present themselves, pick the best available option and try to make it fit. Or, you can do what the true entrepreneur does: Figure out the best conceivable option and then make it available.

This is what makes Contemporary Analysis great, our leader does not look to see what choices are available, instead he looks for the option that would be best for the business, and then goes and finds out how to make that option available.  This takes leadership that is empowered, and empowers everyone they work with to question why everyone has always done everything.
For example, we go directly to buyers and  talk only to people who have the need,willingness, and resources to buy what we sell.  Also, we research every decision we make from chairs and desks to computers and phone systems.  We find the system that makes sense to us and then find the vendor who sells it.  We certainly don’t wait for cold calls, don’t put up with bad customer service, or buy from poorly trained sales people.  We do things differently.
I am excited to work here.  I have no pedigree of how things have been done for years to try and get out from under.  I have the freedom to help my clients answer the questions that they have been struggling to answer for years, and help them make better decisions on how to make their businesses succeed.  At CAN I am not limited by the technology or resources available, but empowered by the mandate to help every client work smart.
One more quote from Professor Stevenson:

When you don’t have the cash to boss people around, like in a corporation, you have to create a more horizontal organization. “You hire people who want what you have and not what you don’t have.”  In other words, entrepreneurs offer their team members a larger share of a vision for a future payoff, rather than a smaller share of the meager resources at hand. Opportunity is the only real resource you have.

And this place is one of the best opportunities to make a difference in the world I have ever seen.
That’s why I work here.

Grant and Jefferson on the Grow Omaha Radio Program

Check out Grant and Jefferson‘s interview on the Grow Omaha Radio Show.  We talked about starting CAN, some of the interesting projects we have worked on, Startup Weekend Omaha, why we selected Omaha as our headquarters, and the importance of UNO for the future of Omaha.

Contemporary Analysis was founded on the premise that there is always a better way. In fact, we exist to help you find better ways to work smart. We do this using a methodology called predictive analytics.
Predictive analytics involves collecting data about your business and customers, and then applying theory and math to build simple systems to help you work more effectively and efficiently.
Our systems are tailored to fit your company no matter how big or small or what industry you are in. We have built simple systems for fast-growing technology companies, Fortune 500 companies as well as small companies in a variety of industries including community colleges, insurance companies, software companies and engineering firms.
 

Starting Contemporary Analysis

Contemporary Analysis

Contemporary Analysis was founded on the premise that there is always a better way. In fact, we exist to help you find better ways to work smart. We do this using a methodology called predictive analytics.
Predictive analytics involves collecting data about your business and customers, and then applying theory and math to build simple systems to help you work more effectively and efficiently.
Our systems are tailored to fit your company no matter how big or small or what industry you are in. We have built simple systems for fast-growing technology companies, Fortune 500 companies as well as small companies in a variety of industries including community colleges, insurance companies, software companies and engineering firms.
This video is the story of how I was first introduced to entrepreneurship and predictive analytics, and my journey from running a landscaping company to being the CEO of Contemporary Analysis.  I decided to make this my first video post.  I tell this story often, because it helps to illustrate CAN‘s mission of making the benefits of predictive analytics accessible to both landscaping and Fortune 500 companies.

Why I Support Startup Weekend

Why I Sponsor Startup Weekend

On September 16th, CAN will be sponsoring our 4th Startup Weekend, SWOmaha.

Startup Weekends are about building startups, however one of the primary reasons we choose to sponsor Startup Weekends is because they build communities.  They allow creatives, developers and businesspeople to move beyond simple friendship & networking and work together under pressure to develop a business and a working prototype.  It doesn’t matter what they build, or if they continue with their startup once the weekend is finished, but that they had an opportunity to work together and learn from each other.

Experimentation: Startup Weekend gives aspiring entrepreneurs the freedom to build something really innovative.  Innovation is the application of technology to create value.  When you reduce the cost of a technology, the barriers to entry are lowered, and people tend to find new applications, encouraging further innovation.  Startup Weekend builds on this principal to encourage people to experiment, by reducing the cost of programming, design and business development for 54 hours.  While it is unlikely that you will be able to build your dream product over a weekend, you should be able to know if your idea has merit.

Raw Material:  It’s possible to start a great company without political support or money, but without a talented, experienced and driven pool of businesspeople, developers and creatives, it’s impossible.  Startup Weekend flourishes by mimicking the constraints of a startup; the lack of money, time and resources provides a breeding ground for the talent essential to creating a great company.  Even if you choose not to continue with your startup after the weekend ends, Startup Weekend will provide you with an opportunity to be exposed and hone your skills under a bit of the pressure of a full time startup.

Humility: Startup Weekend keeps me as the CEO of a successful startup humble.  It reminds that if I get complacent with my success, that there is a new generation of entrepreneurs eager for their chance to compete.  Each time I attend a Startup Weekend I am reminded of a quote by Andy Grove , the former CEO of Intel, that “Success breeds complacency, complacency breeds failure, only the paranoid survive”.  Meeting the entrepreneurs of tomorrow helps keep me grounded and paranoid.
Community: Entrepreneurship can be very lonely.  As an entrepreneur, you are trying to accomplish the impossible under less than ideal situations. (Related Post) Besides other entrepreneurs, no one, not family or employees, will understand why you are risking everything and working 12+ hours a day.  At Startup Weekend, you are surrounded by people that are just as crazy as you, and it is really nice to know that you are not alone.

Steve Jobs: Parenting Your Startup

startup
“The rewarding thing isn’t merely to start a company or to take it public. It’s like when you’re a parent. Although the birth experience is a miracle, what’s truly rewarding is living with your child and helping him grow up. The problem with the Internet startup craze isn’t that too many people are starting companies; it’s that too many people aren’t sticking with it. That’s somewhat understandable, because there are many moments filled with despair and agony, when you have to fire people and cancel things and deal with very difficult situations. That’s when you find out who you are and what your values are” (Simon and Young 2005).
 

Featured Posts – Click the Brain
Archives
CAN Jewels