Asking the Right Questions Before Diving In

A good way to find out how sharp a person is to listen carefully to the questions they ask. Smart people ask very sharp questions which cut right to the core of an issue, while less astute individuals kind of dance around the edges.

Smart entrepreneurs ask the sharpest questions because often the success of their own business depends on the questions they ask. Smart people who work for large organizations usually do not have to ask such sharp questions because they have an employer who tells them what they need to do, and they are usually not paid to ask questions, they are just paid to do things they are told to do, regardless of whether the tasks are smart or not.

I have long been an admirer of the folks at 37 Signals because I think that they are a small and very smart crowd of people. For me, they represent the kind of company which future entrepreneurial organizations should be like: small, smart, fast and lightweight. They are the Davids (as opposed to Goliaths) who want to continue to be small and smart, and focus on serving their customers’ needs.

One of the reasons I admire them is because they were the incubator/developer for Ruby on Rails, which I talked about earlier in this article. What is significant about the 37 Signals team is that they think of themselves more as designers than developers, which gives them a different perspective. Instead of adding features, they are focused more on making software programs easier to use. This is the thinking behind their online application suite offering which includes Basecamp, Highrise, Campfire, Backpack, Writeboard and Ta-da. After doing web development over several years, they have captured their thoughts about web application development in a downloadable PDF book called Getting Real.

A major part of their appeal is that aside from being designer/developers, they also have an appreciation of how the business world works. For this reason, I’m a frequent visitor to their website. Recently, they had a posting to their company blog called Question your work. According to this article, there are several questions which you should always ask:

  • Why are we doing this?
  • What problem are we solving?
  • Is this actually useful?
  • Are we adding value?
  • Will this change behavior
  • Is there an easier way?
  • What’s the opportunity cost?
  • Is this actually worth it?

All of the questions are very good big-picture questions which should be asked up-front before embarking on any major development project. I have seen many fairly major software development undertakings, as well as marketing projects, which did not answer these questions well, and frankly, a good deal of grief would have been saved if these questions were posed first.

So regardless of where you are, whether you are in the US, China or anywhere else, ask these questions first before you embark on a major business adventure.

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A Quick Look at 2008 and China

Is there any way at all that 2008 will not be the year of the Chinese Olympics, and by extension, China? Will we be stuck between the rise of China narrative and the sourness to the point of completely puckering up of the US media and to a lesser extent European media re China?

I say yes.

The coverage of China by the major media has been completely unsatisfactory; it has not been informative and has instead driven their own editorial agenda. That old editorial agenda no longer works because it does not reflect the ground reality of China. It does make sense though to take a closer look at China’s development outside of just the tier one cities. Let’s hope that this begins to happen.

In the big picture though, the Chinese Olympics are not the biggest story. There are so many interesting things and opportunities happening on the Internet. I’m surprised that so many people miss them, such as the fall of Facebook even though their numbers continue to increase, and the failure of social networks to monetize their traffic because they have chosen to side with advertisers against their own user base.

Facebook is like a rocket which continues to coast upwards even though its engine has cut off; momentum is carrying it upward. But eventually gravity will win…

We are in the early stages of growth for the Internet, I believe that increasingly new Internet startups will be founded by business people, not technology people. On the PC platform, the technology is mature; it is the business models which aren’t working. Now, the smart technology people are switching their focus to the mobile Internet.

For smart business people who want to disrupt the current business models, 2008 will be a banner year. For more predictions, take a close look at the predictions of Mark Anderson and Fred Wilson. Part of the reason new and viable business models have grown relatively slowly on the Internet is because the business side has been driven by technology people who don’t understand business and how to make deals, and the business people have been thinking too much in terms of the large corporate businesses which are now being disrupted by the Internet.

It is time for a new breed of entrepreneurs who understand technology, and are not behoven to traditional businesses. In China, this has already happened in gaming with Timothy Chen Tianqiao of Shanda and Shi Yuzhu of Giant Interactive. Ironically, it has not happened as quickly in the west.

It’s time to expand the base.

On the web application side, it is getting easier and easier to develop robust applications. Twitter, a very successful social application was developed with Ruby on Rails, a full stack web application framework which was released by 37 Signals, a Chicago-based design firm.

The significance of this is that web applications can now be designed by designers who are more focused on user experience than software engineers who are focused on features (many of which are of dubious value). One thing I have noticed among many Ruby on Rails deployments: narrower focus. Instead of trying to do everything, these applications focus on doing a few tasks very well. Good examples are the online project management tools put out by 37 Signals and which I use to manage my business.

Wouldn’t it be great if these web applications were made available to a Chinese audience?

As for myself, I’m sharing my feeds on Google Reader. You can find them through Google Talk and Gmail by contacting me. You can reach me at paul dot denlinger [at] gmail dot com.

I’d like to see yours too; let’s start sharing in 2008!

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What’s Wrong with China’s Internet Developers?

In the course of my work, I’m often asked, based on my experience living and working in China, “What’s wrong with China’s Internet developers?” Unfortunately, I have never attacked the problem in a systematic way and organized my thoughts, even though I should.

Today, I was visiting the Signals vs. Noise website which is maintained by 37 Signals, who are Ruby developers. David Heinemeer Hansson, who extracted the Ruby on Rails framework works there. He also publishes his own blog, Loud Thinking.

If you have an interest in technology from a technology and/or business viewpoint, you really should read the 37 Signals blog; it’s really excellent.

When I read this posting on “Secrets to Amazon’s Success” , I said to myself “That’s it; that’s exactly what’s wrong with China’s internet developers!”

If Chinese developers just followed what Amazon has done, they would be in a much better place.

Read it and tell me what you think in the comments below.

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