JCL Blog

Matchmakers You Can Trust

Just about any 17 year old American male will tell you that finding a date to the prom is a difficult and humbling experience.  Similarly, employers will tell you that finding a good employee is nearly impossible.  Buyers of IT products and services will echo the sentiment:  It is much harder than one would think to find and procure the technology a business needs to remain competitive.  Ironically, if you talk to the other half of each of these matches you will find quite a different perspective.  The Difference is enough to make you wonder if your grasp on reality is starting to slip away. 

Girls start planning on being asked to the prom 6 months before it even enters the consciousness of boys.  Even in this down economy, four million jobs change hand in the US – every month.  And companies spend millions of dollars trying to find their next customer.  For the past fifteen years the most successful companies on the web have aimed to do the matchmaking in these examples.  Online dating sites like match.com, eharmony.com, and some would say the entire porn industry have set out to capitalize on the first matching challenge.  Monster.com was one of the first Internet companies to buy a Superbowl ad, and Google, Bing, eBay, Amazon.com and now Groupon get paid quite well to connect would be buyers with would be sellers right at the very time the buyer wants to buy.

So successful internet business equals:  find an area where matchmaking needs to be done and have at it.  If you think you are late to the game, think again.  This internet thing is just getting started and there are many more untapped opportunities than tapped ones.  Yes indeed, Classmates.com, Facebook, and Yelp have all been invented already.  However, no one has even started to work to match enterprise technology buyers to enterprise technology sellers.  We all have lists of markets we would like to see better matchmaking tools on the internet.  Doctors to patients, kids to educational tools, scientists to research subjects, and even people to movies as the million dollar Netflix challenge demonstrated are all up for grabs.  For now, let’s focus on enterprise IT match making.

There are many things that stand in the way of solving this problem, but none as big as the lack of trust.  Trust has been eroded between the buyers and sellers of enterprise technology through repeated over promising and under delivering of products and services to the point that even the historically accepted measure of ten times better is no longer sufficient to get a business buyer to make a change and buy something new.  In the technology industry this phenomenon is sometimes labeled vaporware – software that has been promised to customers that does not even exist.  The risks for the buyer are quite large and even larger without vendor trust – and this slows down the adoption of new technology significantly.

Adoption of new technology is the key to increases in productivity and increases in productivity drive our economy and increase our standard of living.  Therefore one of the things standing in the way of our economic recovery is trust.

Successful matchmakers employ three simple tactics to get right at the trust issue:

  1. Make money on the success of the match:  A business model built on making the match between technology vendor and technology user, instead of making the sale of technology, aligns the interests of the parties and turns the matchmaker into a trusted advisor.
  2. Be transparent about how money is made:  A matchmaker advocating for a particular solution will always be suspected of doing so selfishly.  Full disclosure of how the matchmaker gets paid will drain away this suspicion.
  3. Demonstrate deep and wide knowledge:  It is natural to sell what you know and stay away from what you do not know.  Demonstrating a detailed understanding of all of the products in the category will validate the trusted advisor status.

The two most trusted matchmakers in business IT are Accenture and Deloitte.   IBM is a giant in the IT matchmaking business, but is also pushing its own technology.  At one time EDS, Perot Systems, and ACS were on this list -- until they were acquired by HP, Dell, and Xerox -- which changed their motivation from matchmaking to selling their own technology solutions. 

This will be a very interesting area to watch in the years ahead as new companies flood in to fill the trusted matchmaker void created by this consolidation.

Deloitte Brings Us Back to Earth

If you have not already read the 2010 Media Predictions recently published by Deloitte -- I recommend it highly.  Leave it to a venerable firm with its feet on the ground to help me gain some perspective on the world we live in.  I was shocked and swayed by several of their predictions and the common thread was:  those of us in the tech industry should remember that the "other half" is really the "other 95%" and they are the customers.  Here is what I mean:

Deloitte Predicts:  "Linear's got legs: the television and radio schedule stays supreme"

What?  There are people out there that still watch TV according to the schedule?  I thought the DVR took over in 2007!  Well it turns out that 90 percent of all TV is consumed according to the schedule and at the rate of between 20 and 30 hours per person per week.  The DVR people only watch 90 minutes a week.  So the schedule dominates.

Deloitte Predicts:  "The shift to online advertising: more selective, but the trend continues"

Well this is an easy one -- online advertising is going to continue to take marketshare.  Just when I am thinking that this is hardly a prediction they point out that by increase they mean going from 10% of the market to 15% over the next 2 years.  With the overall market contracting, this is really not much of a change.  Again, the web is cool, but advertising is a big industry and the web is still the infant.

Deloitte Predicts:  "Publishing fights back: pay walls and micropayments"

They predict that all of the huff and puff around paying for written content on the web will fizzle this year -- I happen to agree.

Deloitte Predicts: "Video-on-demand takes off -- thanks to the vending machine"

Look out Netflix -- here comes the ...... vending machine?  The prediction is that by the end of 2010 there will be 30,000 DVD vending machines in place and a capacity to deliver 1.5B DVDs per year.  This is quite a number -- and even if it does come true it looks like it might at best match Netflix's rental volume.  I suppose the question hinges on how to define Video-on-demand.  Getting a DVD in the mail is hardly on-demand, but driving to the vending machine is not either.  So this prediction is kind of a dud for me except that it reinforces the point I took away:  when you look at the whole market -- things just are not changing that fast.

Do download the article.  There were several other interesting points on eReaders, TV - Web convergence, Music, and 3D TV.  It does not seem like the theme was intentional, but each prediction reinforced the point:  even the most developed marketplace in the world is still dominated by relatively old technology.  Plenty of room for expansion in our market -- as long as we can break out of selling only to our "half".