7/29/2006 04:52:00 AM|W|P|Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P| Success and failure are quite similar. Just as there is only a fine line between genius and madness there are a few striking similarities between failure and success. In general people think that success is a matter of having a good idea and working hard. In reality there are 5 components of any success and failure story. Heinrich’s Domino Model of Accident Causation is a theory that is being used in Risk Management. It explains that any accident can be broken down in 5 components that follow each other as falling dominos that lead to an accident. Here are those components: Social Environment: Those conditions which make us take or accept risks. Undesirable Human Traits: Anger, carelessness, tiredness, lack of understanding, inattention. Unsafe Acts or Conditions: Poor planning, unsafe equipment, hazardous environment. The Accident: The accident occurs when the above events conspire to cause something to go wrong. The Injury: Injury occurs when the person sustains damage. Social Environment, Undesirable Human Traits, Unsafe Acts or Conditions, The Accident, The Injury. If you want to examine an accident (from Plain crash to Dropped Ice-cream) you can start with looking at the different factors that caused the accident and use the Domino Theory to find out what actually happened. My theory is that you can also apply Heinrich’s Domino Model of Accident Causation to success. So here is my Domino Model of Success Causation: Social Environment: Those conditions which make us try a new service and accept change. Desirable Human Traits: Frustration, readiness, understanding, attention, the desire to try something new. The right Acts or Conditions: Good planning, good equipment, adaptable environment. The Success: The success occurs when the above events cause something to go right and grow virally. The Exit: The exit occurs when the entrepreneur sustains wealth through a liquidity event. If you want to know if a certain (your?) new internet company is going to be successful or if you want to know why a company failed it might be helpful to look at these 5 factors. An example: In 1996 I downloaded a software package that would enable me to make free Voice over IP telephone calls to other people using the same software with my Mac and an internet connection. In fact, VOIP has been around since the Network Voice Protocol was first described in 1973 and there have been dozens of companies that did what Skype does. So why was Skype a success and why did all the other similar products fail? The other companies were first to market, had similar technology and their elevator pitch must have been indistinguishable from Skype. It wasn't just the timing was it? Or maybe it was the team? The answer is that Skype scored well on all the 5 factors. Just as with any accident it was a collection of factors and components that led to the eventual success. In Skypes case the social environment was ready for change. We were all increasingly frustrated with the telephone companies and ready to adopt something new. They planned the process extremely well and were able to keep innovating as they grew. There was a critical mass of people with broadband access and the interface of the product was just easy enough. And the final factor that makes this a success: they had their liquidity event. You can have millions of users, be famous and very innovative but your company is not a true success until there is some kind of liquidity event. So based on this knowledge you could conclude that all you have to do is make sure you score well on each factor to build a successful company. This is true but also impossible to predict in advance. You can only hope that your timing is right, that the market is ready, that people are willing to try something new. In Risk Management if you understand the components of an accident you might be able to prevent one in the future. Hopefully, now that you understand the components of a success you might be able to predict one better. Just remember to apply the Domino Model of Success Causation.|W|P|115417490874149569|W|P|Domino Model of success Causation|W|P|bomega@gmail.com8/15/2006 01:25:00 PM|W|P|Blogger pve|W|P|The success or failure of a trend depends indeed on a lot of factures. Voip is a nice one, another one is podcasting. There too, the technology was already there. Read my analysis at

http://petersgriddle.net/2005/09/network-tipping-point-for-podcasting.html7/23/2006 07:57:00 AM|W|P|Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|A few years I sold my small company to a big company. One of the first thing they wanted to do was 'professionalize' our processes. Improvement is always good so I happily complied. We started with the helpdesk and they asked me how this was organized. I answered 'When the phone rings the whole office races to it. The one who gets there first gets to answer it' It was kind of an office running gag to see who could get the phone first and people were often surprised to get someone (out of breath in some instances) before the phone rang twice. The big company guys smiled politely and pointed out that that wasn't very professional and wouldn't scale and that we would hire a professional helpdesk service. So we did. The result was terrible. It cost thousands of euros a month and the quality of the service was no where near what we offered in the past. The service would let people wait for minutes until someone would become available and then the person who answered didn't know anything about the problem or didn't seem interested. The other effect was that we didn't hear about problems directly from clients anymore. The helpdesk service acted like a Berlin wall between the customers and the company. After a few months I suggested to the bigger company to get rid of the helpdesk company and get back to answering the phone ourselves. They thought I was crazy and answered that this was now a professional company and that it was unthinkable and impractical to just have everybody answer the phone personally. I figured that everyone in the company would have phone duty once a month, answer between 10 and 30 phonecalls a day, still be able to work and feel a lot more responsible and connected to clients. But no matter what I said, it just wasn't professional in their opinion. I think every industry, product, service and technique goes through the same phases: - interesting - improved - perfected - boring - personalized - interesting again I'll give you an example: Art. At first humanity tried to reach perfection. The perfect painting, indistinct from reality. But when we reached that point we started experimenting with reality and suddenly reality seemed less interesting than the interpretation of the artist. That is how we got to cubism, pointilism and abstract art. Another example: Virtual reality. At first, we tried to mimic reality as much as we could. But not until we added lens flare and other small imperfections did we really achieve it. And now we want to go beyond reality and shape new worlds instead of recreating our current one. Perfection just doesn't cut it anymore. The last example: Amateur Porn. The first popular porn images (And I don't mean the ones found in Pompeii) were black and white photographs that people took of each other and distributed among friends. This became a popular industry which strived to perfection. They tried to improve the images by using more muscular actors who could do things most people can't and who had seemingly 'perfect' bodies. No hair where it shouldn't be, no celulite and oversized... ehm... tools. Until that became boring. It turned out people were fed up with looking at 'perfect' bodies having sex for hours in positions that required impossible flexibility. They wanted amateur porn that looked real. And they got it. So what is the point of this story? If you are starting a business you might think 'I need a typewriter so I can send professional letters'. Now imagine how your clients would feel if you would send them a handwritten letter on a simple but elegant piece of paper. My guess is you will impress the hell out of them. I think 'professional' is not always better than 'amateur'. And it is always better to be a well meaning amateur than an uninterested professional.|W|P|115366746434570947|W|P|The effect of amateur porn on modern business|W|P|bomega@gmail.com7/23/2006 08:35:00 AM|W|P|Blogger BillyWarhol|W|P|Hey I was just doing a Search fer some PORN cuz my local variety store didn't have any copies of my fave mags HUSTLER & SWANK and stumbled across yer Biz article!

I like Art but I LOVE PORN!!

& Amateur Porn rocks cuz I feel I have a better chance of meeting a Real Live Woman like that rather than the Jenna Jameson or Pamela Anderson types I normally LUST after!!

;))7/23/2006 09:40:00 AM|W|P|Anonymous Anonymous|W|P|Boris,

great article - I totally agree that CS is one of the most important things in the current industry.

The product lifecycle doesn't end when it's RTM'ed but rather when the EOL date has passed.

From my experience, I know that I'd rather buy software from a company where I know I can personally talk to someone than a company where all I get are standard helpdesk mails built up by randomly arranged text snippets that don't have anything to do with the problem at hand.

Support your products the right way and people will come.7/24/2006 08:12:00 AM|W|P|Anonymous Anonymous|W|P|I agree! I recently wrote an article about handwritten notes and the value of that personal touch that you just don't get from big, "professional" companies: http://talkitup.typepad.com/weblog/2006/07/handwritten_tha.html

This is one misconception that I also suffered under--that "professional" meant "impersonal." It turns out that one of the biggest benefits of my running my own business as a speaker (as opposed to an agency or what have you) is the personal touch, those imperfections that make for real relationships, not sleek, perfect, "professional" ones.7/24/2006 10:56:00 AM|W|P|Blogger Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Hi Heidi, I guess I could have summed up the whole post with "professional doens't mean impersonal". I think that is exactely what I meant! Thanks for your comment.8/21/2006 04:41:00 PM|W|P|Anonymous Anonymous|W|P|- interesting
- improved
- perfected
- boring
- personalized
- interesting again

Not always. Since when was /dell/ interesting...?8/22/2006 02:54:00 AM|W|P|Blogger Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Hi Anonymous, you are right! Some (most) companies get stuck in the 'boring' phase...7/22/2006 12:34:00 PM|W|P|Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Yep, it has been very quiet at Fleck for the last few weeks. There are a few reasons for that but no excuses. The simple truth is that we have been too busy and occupied with other stuff. Such as developing the software, organizing The Next Web Conference and talking with investors. And we are STILL talking with investors. Just different ones than before. So, what is the roadmap for Fleck you wonder? Our goal is to finalize something within the next 2 months and get ready for a launch of the New New Fleck in september. The software is now in closed beta and will be until we launch. Until we launch I will continue to post about Fleck and throw in some thoughts about doing business on the web. My next post will be titled "The effect of amateur porn on modern business". I wonder what kind of traffic that will generate...|W|P|115359763250765533|W|P|What the Fleck is going on with Fleck?|W|P|bomega@gmail.com7/23/2006 07:55:00 AM|W|P|Blogger BillyWarhol|W|P|I'm glad I held off & waited for the NEW, BETTER, IMPROVED, FANCY version of Fleck!!

;))

will it be 3.0??8/21/2006 03:45:00 PM|W|P|Blogger BillyWarhol|W|P|Just checking in!

I was wondering whether U might be planning to do something in September when Europe & here in North America gets back down to Business after Summer Holidays!

;))8/22/2006 02:52:00 AM|W|P|Blogger Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Hi Billy, we are still working on our financing round. We won't launch until we have that taken care of. I don't think september will see the launch of Fleck. More something like november or december...7/22/2006 11:40:00 AM|W|P|Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Most blogs die after a few months. Its a fact of life. Some people think it is a matter of writers block - or Bloggers Block in this case - and you can find a lot of great articles on how to find inspiration for your blog and battle BlogBlock. My guess (and experience) isn't that people run out of inspiration or things to write about. I think the reason they stop blogging is because of the Hiatuses Increasing Aversion Effect. This is how it works; let assume you post 3 articles, every day. Then you miss a day or two. Instinctively you feel that your next post should make up for the lost posts and better be pretty interesting. This raises the bar for your next post so you decide to think about it for an extra day. The next day you want to post something again but this time you have an even greater responsibility to write a good post! And the longer you wait, the higher you feel the expectations will be. In other words: The Hiatuses Increasing Aversion Effect. Guess I overcame that one...|W|P|115359683563287105|W|P|Hiatuses Increasing Aversion Effect|W|P|bomega@gmail.com7/23/2006 08:03:00 AM|W|P|Blogger BillyWarhol|W|P|I have discovered the Magic Wand fer Blogging & creating content*

Flickr*

I find it sooooooo Easy to simply rap or blather on about any topic that floats into my head based on the Photographs i'm looking at or People's comments i'm responding to*

& the real Beauty of Flickr is how Easy it is to Blog the Photos which gives U an interesting Visual Image to go along with plain old boring text!!

Plus U are able to put a Link in Flickr under the Photo back to yer Blog* & hopefully generate some much needed Traffic!!

Any ideas on How to Create Blog Traffic??

Cheers Boris & Patrick! Billy ;))7/23/2006 08:20:00 AM|W|P|Blogger Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten|W|P|Tips for getting traffic to your blog: think of stuff that other people would like to link to. If you blog about someone elses blog than there is little chance people will link to you. But make a list "Top 10 of 10 lists" or come up with an original thought on anything and people will be interesting and blog about you inreturn...