Monday, September 24, 2012

The new IPhone

This past Friday the iPhone 5 was released to record-breaking sales and favorable reviews, yet what I have been hearing from a lot of people is about all the things the iPhone can't do, or is a year late being able to do.  Yes, LTE, I'm talking to you.  Every year a new iPhone is released and people are surprised that the improvements are evolutionary and not revolutionary.  Just to be clear, you can only invent the iPhone once.  After that it's just how can we make it better. Samsung took some shots at Apple this week in regard to how much allegedly better the Galaxy S III is.  In full disclosure, I have never used an android phone.  I'm even willing to bet they have some good phones, but there are new android phones all of the time and only one iPhone a year.  Apple is going to make the best overall phone they can make where their competitors make phones in all shapes and sizes and hope one sticks with consumers.  The iPhone, and all Apple products for that matter, speak to people who like things that just work.  You either buy in to the utopian world Apple is trying to create, or you don't.





Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Terrestrial radio is dead

I read a column last week that Dan Mason, the President of CBS radio wrote, proclaiming that radio was far from dead.  Early in my career I worked in radio, and it's an industry I still follow closely.  Mr. Mason talks about the changing demographics of the listeners and how innovative the industry is with all of their streaming apps  and HD radio and how we may never have another Howard Stern, Tom Leykus, or Rush Limbaugh again.  I fell in love with radio for the personalities.  Johnathan Brandmeir, Steve Dahl, Howard Stern.  To me, this is radio.  Not voice tracks and a few cookie cutter formats.  I subscribe to SiriusXM and listen to people like Adam Carolla and Marc Maron's podcasts regularly.  This is the radio I know and love and this is the radio I choose to listen to.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Goldberg,Version 2.0

I haven't been blogging for a couple of weeks as I went through a very large professional life change.  For the first time in 15 years I'm in between jobs, a free agent, taking time to catch my breath.  Frankly, that's all just fancy talk for unemployed.  The last couple of weeks have been interesting for me as I've transitioned from Rich Goldberg from X company to just plain old Rich Goldberg.  It's not often in a career you get an opportunity to stop and not only smell the proverbial roses, but make different choices.  I've always told my employees as they managed their career to make sure they were going towards something and not just running away from situations that were challenging.  I'm looking forward to the process of going towards something.  I will keep you updated as well as continuing to give my thoughts on other business related topics.  Thanks for reading.

I blog with BE Write

Sunday, July 15, 2012

What are your core Competencies?

What are my core competencies is a question you should ask yourself every year.  Companies do it and so should employees.  We spend far too much of our time trying to improve what's "wrong" with us as opposed to taking greater advantage of our strengths.  I always try to make my weaknesses "less weak" and work hard to capitalize on what I'm good at.  The book is more than a decade old now, but I really recommend First, Break All the Rules by Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman.  There have been a few follow ups to the original, but this book changed my professional life and think it can help you as well.  The entire book discusses why we should focus on strengths and uses data from Gallup to back up their assertions.  Let me know if and when you read the book.  It would be fun to discuss.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The future of education

I just started taking CS 50 at Harvard College.  I have all of the lecture notes, video of the class sessions, the problem sets and the quizzes.  The amazing thing is the course cost me nothing.  Welcome to open courseware.  This is where colleges and universities create course content and share it freely across the internet.  The classes won't give you course credit, but will provide you with the same knowledge as the student who pays $20,000 a year in tuition.  What does this mean for the future of education?  I don't know, but I have a class to watch.  I'm trying to learn to program.  If you want more information on open courseware please go to OCW Consortium

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Sunk Costs

I was looking for the best definition I could to properly explain a sunk cost and then I came across a Seth Godin blog post from 3 years ago which explains it perfectly.  Click on this and then come back to me.  Good reading, right?!  Especially in a down economy, we have to beware of the sunk cost.  Not all decisions are going to pan out, but we have to be willing to keep trying to make the right one.  My Dad said to me that "if you aren't making any mistakes, it means you aren't making enough decisions."  Too many organizations  aren't willing to make the right decision after a wrong one because it costs more.  I assert the costs will be much higher if you don't make the best decision in the moment.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Ipad dominates tablet market

Very interesting article from All Things D commenting on the utter dominance of the Ipad.  The Kindle Fire sales numbers have decreased.  Are people buying the discounted Ipad2?