Monday, February 18, 2008

What's a CTO to do?

In my work as a consultant, I'm finding that there is an increasing niche for the role of a Consulting CTO. Rather than employ a full-time Chief Technology Officer, some smaller organisations and start-ups find it more cost effective to have a CTO on tap.

It's worth making the distinction here between a CTO and someone who's simply technically very strong. A lot of start-ups have brilliant engineers who often find themselves in the role of CTO, but without the business and strategy background that's so important to the role. This can lead to conflict between the engineering team and the management team, which can be exacerbated if the management team is not as tech savvy as they could be.

To highlight one particular point: the CTO should really not be the Chief Architect. However, quite often the person in the role of CTO is actually the best engineer in the start-up, or the founder with the technology background, or something of this nature. Sure, they are technically brilliant, but just as often, have no clue about business or strategy.

I see Architecture as just one of 7 disciplines that a strong CTO needs to be on top of. The Disciplines are:

  1. Strategy

  2. Architecture

  3. Infrastructure

  4. Product

  5. People

  6. Program

  7. Process


I know that Customer is not in that list - and that's intentional because I think that they are so important they need a specific focus. There's elements of customer in all of the 7 disciplines listed above - the trick is working out which customer.

In a future post I will examine each one of these disciplines and try to pose some questions that asoftware start-up CTO should be able to answer, and that a CEO (or board) should be asking.

M@

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Nothing at all to do with Technology

Today, Australia's new Government, under the leadership of Kevin Rudd, formally apologised to the Stolen Generations [1]. What struck me about the apology was how natural it seemed, and how right it sounded. After such a long time watching the previous Government ducking the issue and playing a mean and tricky semantic game with the words, saying "Sorry" was the right thing to do.

However, as symbolic as the words are, they will not mean a thing unless they are backed up by real actions and bipartisan political support. I wonder if that's what we will see?

M@

References
[1] The Stolen Generation

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Microsoft buys Danger

In the news today [1] is the story that Microsoft has acquired Danger, Inc [2], maker of the Sidekick [3] portable connected device. Microsoft sure is spending some money at the moment [4].

What does that mean for Windows Mobile?

M@

References
[1] Microsoft to Acquire Danger, Maker of Sidekick Technology
[2] Danger, Inc
[3] T-Mobile Sidekick
[4] Microsoft, Yahoo!, Google ... and News Corp?

Hmmm ... not much demand to switch after all?

Following on from yesterday's post [1] regarding the Australian Federal Government's push to make switching bank accounts easier for customers, comes this article in the TheSheet.com.au [2]. Quoting research from Roy Morgan, it suggests the desire to switch is actually not that high. In fact, less than 10% of people surveyed were dissatisfied with their primary financial institution, and over the last 12 months, only a touch over 3% of those surveyed had changed financial institution.

This says to me one of two things: Either, a) customers really are happy with their financial institutions and the politicians have got it wrong, or b) it's just so painful and expensive to switch that customers have convinced themselves that they do not want to have anything to do with the idea.

I wonder which one it is?

M@

References
[1] Original identification: impeding or enabling churn
[2] Not much demand for switching accounts

Monday, February 11, 2008

Original identification: impeding or enabling churn

Because of my background with Westpac's Trust Centre, and a general interest in economics and the banking system, I have found the recent comments by the new Australian Government regarding account switching very interesting.

Treasurer Wayne Swan [1] and Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner [2] have both been in the press [6] over the last week berating the banks for raising interest rates above the recent increment by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).

The twist here is that under the Australian banking system, there is, by design, very little the Government can do about the rates banks choose to charge borrowers. Some time back (under the previous Government), the Reserve Bank was given the power to independently set rates, and the banks now respond to this, setting rates as they deem appropriate for market conditions.

Of course, this is a Good Thing. Leave the Reserve Bank to handle the cash rate and leave the Government to look after fiscal policy. That's a sound economic principle and a pillar of the Australian banking system. And for the most part it works.

Unfortunately, the fact that falling interest rates often signal a worsening economy and rising rates often signal a warming (or even overheating) economy is lost on most people. Complicating issues further is the fact that almost all of the reasons rates move around lie beyond the control of a single Government, or jurisdiction. They rest pivotally with the machinations of the global financial system, and the large economies of the World such as the US, China, Europe and Japan. Regardless of this fact, politicians of all kinds love to take credit for rates falling, and shift the blame onto external factors when rates go up.

What is interesting about the new Government's response to the recent rises is that instead of simplistically trying to move the blame for the rise to external factors, or shaming the banks publicly, they've taken the unusual step (at least in this country) of resorting to competition policy.

One thing that characterises the Australian retail banking sector is that it is highly concentrated. We have 4 very large banks and 1 not-quite-so-large bank, plus a handful of smaller regional institutions and credit unions. Between them, the Big 4+1 have the vast majority of retail banking business in Australia.

This concentration has lead to a rather stable market where there are very few positive incentives for customers to change banks. From the banks' point of view, any kind of price competition simply ends up eroding value, so they do not typically engage in that kind of behaviour.

This has led to a situation where it is quite difficult (by design) to move around from bank to bank. Closing down direct debits and re-initiating them is a complete nightmare, and changing mortgages is even worse. Exit and entry fees generally make it so expensive that the average person finds just too hard to switch.

And so the Government, in the face of some banks raising home loan mortgage rates by an amount greater than the recent RBA increment, has turned to competition policy. It has taken the view that if banks are going to do that, then the Government will seek to make it easier for consumers to switch.

Like the independence of the Reserve Bank, this is a Good Thing. In fact, it's precisely the kind of thing a Government should do in a mature and sophisticated banking market - make sure that structural inefficiencies (such as barriers to changing banks) do not artificially distort the retail interest rate. If it is too hard for a customer to switch banks, then it is easier for the bank to load up rate increases without fear that it will lose customers. Conversely, if it is easy to move, then a rational customer presented with an artificially high rate rise will simply change banks and choose the provider with the lowest rate. Over time, this will place downward pressure on the retail rate.

What does this have to do with the Trust Centre? In order to switch banks, I have to identify myself to the institution. Up until recently, this process was known as the '100 point check', where I used a variety of physical identity credentials to demonstrate my identity to the bank. Now that the banks have switched over to a 'risk based approach' under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Terrorism Financing Act, the process is not so straightforward. Organisations are using different methods to identify customers, and some are stronger than others.

An obvious attack in a switching-enabled system would be to establish an account with an organisation that had low identification standards and switch it over to an account with an institution that higher identification standards. So, whatever measures the Government implements with respect to switching, it is going to have to take serious care with working through the process of original identification.

Of course, if the consumer is strongly identified in the first place, and issued with an equally strong uniformly recognised identity credential, then switching is pretty easy. But the questions here remain as ever: What process? What credential? Who pays for it?

These were precisely the questions asked during the Trust Centre project. I wonder if anyone has the answers?

M@

References
[1] The Hon Wayne Swan MP, Treasurer
[2] The Hon Lindsay Tanner MP, Minister for Finance and Deregulation
[3] Accelerated account switching planned
[4] Switching in vogue
[5] Identity checks an equal barrier to account switching
[6] Cost of bank switches to be cut

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Microsoft, Yahoo!, Google ... and News Corp?

Watching the Microsoft/Yahoo! merger dance presents some curious permutations. There has been a lot of press about the deal, and rightly so. It's a (possible) merger that represents a fundamental shift in the structure of online business. However, one thing struck me about the clear "No" [1] signal from News Corp this week.

At first, I thought that a News Corp tie-up would be an obvious play, but on second thoughts, I wonder if Murdoch actually wants Microsoft to try to swallow Y! because he knows deep down that it's a fundamentally bad idea, and the end result would be a disaster. For example, what will Microsoft do with all of Yahoo's PHP? Port it to .Net? For Murdoch, that's great news, because it effectively takes 2 big online players out of the game, leaving him up against Google by himself. Whether or not that's a fair fight is another question, but it certainly makes the landscape simpler.

M@

UPDATE-2008-Feb-08: Ok, here's a different point of view. I could see that working.

UPDATE-2008-Feb-13: Or maybe News Corp will play: Yahoo talks to Murdoch: report. Interesting.

References
[1] News Corp Says "No Yahoo Bid"