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Author Archive for JOHN ADAMS

Recent Tweets, 2.5 to 2.11

10 Feb
Mice upset with cats, too: Dem Superintendent Evers upset with GOP Gov Walker over education bill bit.ly/w6UfRQ

9 Feb
No easy path: Foreclosure Deal to Spur U.S. Home Seizures – Bloomberg bloom.bg/Ag98Bw

9 Feb
100% Ridiculous: Mississippi Bill Changes Name of ‘Gulf of Mexico’ to ‘Gulf of America’ bit.ly/Aw1VIQ

7 Feb
One of biggest WI stories in months: Lawmakers were made to pledge secrecy over redistricting bit.ly/wrnoL5

5 Feb
February 5th: On This Day in Wisconsin History 1849 – University of Wisconsin opens bit.ly/wcsgvS

‘Why Best Buy is Going out of Business…Gradually’

Larry Downes has a fine — very fine — critique of Best Buy’s many problems online at Forbes. Five solid, well-written and well-reasoned pages in which he takes apart the practices and supposed strategy of a mediocre retailer.

As a business critique, it’s top-notch.

Yet, Downes’s critique is even more useful: think ‘local government’ instead of Best Buy, and some of the observations about poor service, narrow perspective, and excuse-making still apply.

This observation, particularly, comes to mind, about how customers understand the Internet better than a retailer like Best Buy:

More than a decade ago, in “Unleashing the Killer App,” I wrote that while transitioning to the Internet was revolutionary for retailers, it was merely evolutionary for customers. “Ensure continuity for the customer,” I said as one of my twelve rules for building killer apps, “not yourself.”

What I meant was that consumers easily adapt to alternative retail channels. Before the Internet, there was catalog shopping and home shopping from television. For consumers, buying online was just the next step in an obvious progression of more convenient ways to buy.

For brick-and-mortar retailers, however, the shift was jarring. Moving online required new thinking, new management structures, and new strategies. It would also require integrated front and back-end information systems. Customers would expect inventory to be transparent between the web and the stores, and that specials and “exclusives” would be consistent across all channels. Whatever attributes they associated with a retailer’s brand—whether price, quality, convenience, expertise, service—would need to be translated to the online experience and enhanced.

Just as customers were ahead of slower-thinking brick-and-mortar retailers, so people are ahead of middling, stodgy politicians and dull, lapdog newspapers. The outlook in local government is mostly about what the politician is owed, what he’s achieved, his role as pillar of the community, etc., but talk of service is just lip service.

For example, the average resident is more capable than the average city bureaucrat realizes. Small cities are teeming with thousands and thousands of people whose production exceeds that of those who’ve spent a lifetime insisting on their own importance as career manager-visionaries.

Why?

It’s a mentality borne of complacency – so many contemporary local officials grew up in easier times, when they could do what they wanted, knowing the only news would be fawning, each story a valentine to incumbents and town squires. They came into their careers coddled, expecting (and really wanting) to receive others’ deference. They’ve not been tested and have not developed as much as residents in countless other jobs. But they don’t see that they haven’t, or don’t want to see it.

It’s not intellect, but rather perspective, that’s lacking.

If social and political conditions hadn’t changed when they did, or if they’d only retired sooner, leaders would have not been left in circumstances for which they’re ill-suited. But conditions have changed, and not everyone has adapted.

Just as Best Buy probably won’t make it much longer, a whole generation of local leaders will inevitably retire to be replaced with those better-suited to these times.

See, Why Best Buy is Going out of Business…Gradually – Forbes.

Daily Bread for 2.10.12

Good morning.

Whitewater will have a high temperature of about twenty-nine, with a good chance of snow, amounting to less than an inch.  In Portland, Oregon, it will be a day of showers, with a high of fifty-one.

The Wisconsin Historical Society marks today as one of changing ownership: “on this day in 1773, “the Treaty of Paris ceded formerly French-controlled land, including the Wisconsin region, to England. [Source: Avalon Project at Yale University].”

Something more about France, from Google’s daily puzzle: “What was the Allied code name for the evacuation of 338,000 troops from a French port during World War II?”

Valentine’s Day draws close, and the Journal Sentinel‘s OnTap writes to help: “Looking for love? Bartenders pour some dating tips.”  If there are those who know the ins-and-outs of a bar, they would be bartenders, I wouldn’t wonder.  You may judge for yourself how sound the suggestions seem, but it’s impossible to argue with the idea that a man shouldn’t ridicule a woman’s drink-choice.  If even that’s a problem, it’s sure to de downhill thereafter.

 

Know Your Rights: Photographers | American Civil Liberties Union

Here’s a link to photographer’s rights from the ACLU. These are the rights of citizens, rights (among so many others) that they have as citizens.

The linked page includes information on (1) general rights, (2) what to do if one is stopped for taking lawful pictures, (3) special considerations for video recording, (4) taking photographs at the  airport, and (5) other links for information on lawfully photographing and filming authorities during the course of their ordinary duties.

SeeKnow Your Rights: Photographers | American Civil Liberties Union.

Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters February 2012 Newsletter

The Whitewater-Area League of Women Voters’ February 2012 Newsletter is out, featuring both articles and a calendar of upcoming LWV events.

This latest edition is available as a link on my blogroll, and is embedded below, with coding through Google.

Upcoming events:

Whitewater League Website Now Live

www.lwvwhitewater.org

Have you checked out the League’s new website? Do you have ideas on how to improve what is offered? Do you have content to contribute? We hope so. Some ideas might include recommended reading and viewing titles, or testimonials to help personalize the membership page on why you are a member of the League and value its mission. Please send your ideas and suggestions to our webmistress, Stacey Lunsford at Stacey_lunsford@yahoo.com.

Date: February 18th (Saturday)
Event: Membership Meeting –Privatization Study Discussion.
Where: 10 AM Fairhaven Fellowship Hall

Date: February 21st (Tuesday)
Event: Primary Election affecting only Ward 10 in the City of Whitewater, Old Armory

Date: March 3 (Saturday)
Event:  LWV Board Meeting
Where:   10 AM, Public Library

Date: March 10 (Saturday)
Event:   Candidate Forum, Municipal Elections
Where:  10-11:30 AM, City Hall Council Chambers

Date: March 15 (Thursday)
Event:  “Judicial Independence and Impartiality,” Speaker to be announced
Where:   7 PM City Hall Council Chambers