Bigwords
About BIGWORDS.
Hey there all. I am finally feeling like I am alive and part of the world , again.
If you want to read this I will tell you a little bit about what happened at BIGWORDS
and then give you my take on what is happening overall. More than anything I want
us all to remember that this sort of rough patch has happened before in this industry,
it will happen again, and the vision that fed the craziness, which then turned
into all out greed, is just as real as it ever was. The learning we all just did
over the past few years is stunning. We owe it to ourselves to continue to believe
in ourselves, the good parts of what we created and learned, and to apply all
of that in even better, more mature and helpful ways. More rah rah later, but
I really mean it. (Seriously folks, it took Walmart 10 years to get profitable!
Think about that!)
The whole end of BIGWORDS was just such a drag in so many ways that I am still
trying to figure out how to deal with it. I think I felt pretty sorry for myself,
and all the rest of us there, for a while. You spends a lot of energy trying to
figure out what one coulda/shoulda/woulda done differently, things you regret
doing, and even more, the things you regret not doing. I guess I can honestly
say that I gave BIGWORDS my all, but I still wish I would have had more; had enough
to make it work. (I also think there are stupid forces outside BIGWORDS to think
about, but that's at the end of this...)
I almost don't know where to start, or what to say. I want to take the lessons,
and there are plenty. I want to start by admitting that hindsight is 20-20 and
I know that. I also want to make the point that things look a whole lot different
when you're on the battlefield and the acrid smoke makes it hard to breathe or
see very far and the screaming bullets give a special excitement to merely standing
there having a conversation. That said, I guess that I learned a few things. These
are totally my opinion, as well, and may have no basis in fact. But, I think there
are good lessons to be learned.
First, BIGWORDS had an overflow of the most talented people that walk the earth
and I am proud of all of them. Words genuinely don't suffice, so I'll stop about
that. If you were there you know, 'nuff said. There were a lot of things that
went right, but I will tell you about three of the big things that went wrong,
beyond the obvious fact that the market cratering made the approach so many companies
were taking, BIGWORDS included, impossible. One was a software decision, one was
a resource allocation issue, and one was a management issue; none of which were
super obvious at the time. I am not placing blame, this is total hindsight in
an attempt to learn. I personally also gave up tons of power and took a back seat
in order to allow people with more experience the room and autonomy to do their
jobs well. What I write below is largely what I put together from stories, experiences
and observation, not because I was in the meetings. I wasn't.
Jump in with me... It is our first quarter and we realize very quickly we are
not going to be able to make our own supply chain software fast enough to keep
up with our increasing volume. We had so many problems with our outsourced warehouses,
as well, that it was really difficult to tell where the problems really were,
so we felt we had to get some kind of tried and proven solution that would help
us manage all the things we had to manage, from inventory to coupon offers and
so on. Well, we saddled ourselves with an extremely old, COBOL based inventory/supply
chain solution early on, which turned out to not really be tuned to work in the
way we wanted to use it. It was a catalogue seller solution that didn't translate
at all well into the extremely high speed, real time way we wanted to use it and
the volume we were doing was also just overwhelming. Tack onto that the fact that
we had to pay consultants ridiculous amounts to be able to do anything at all
customized to our needs and you can only imagine the difficulty. That we got it
to finally work as well as it did is the amazing thing, actually. It was even
more frustrating since so many of the links in the chain were brilliant and worked
spectacularly well. But, a (supply) chain is only as strong as its weakest link,
and the unwieldy system at the heart of our chain proved to be a large part of
our downfall since we could never get the books to people as consistently as we
had to be competitive. The fact that we never had our distribution as perfect
as it should have been would haunt us until the end. As it has many other e-commerce
companies.
I think it is really important to point out that the world was not, and still
in many ways is not, ready to play as fast and precise as we would all like it
to play. Suppliers are not ready for the fast turnaround times, systems aren't
set up to work as quickly or as scalably as we needed them to be, and it was an
amazing battle of wits, cajoling, work-arounds and tons of sheer will to make
things work as well as they did.
Bottom line: We crippled ourselves with a proprietary, essentially closed system
that was nearly impossible to seamlessly integrate into the rest of our technology.
Second, we overestimated the desire of people to buy other things on-line. We
put a lot of money into some absolutely wonderful clothing, accessories, aromatherapy,
little red wagons to drag your keg around with. I mean, it was great stuff! But,
we didn't listen to the students like the student group that I talked to that
suggested we sell art supplies and office stuff and things for your dorm room
and stuff that had a little more practical application. I brought the charts they
drew up during their brainstorm for us into the office. But somehow, in the heat
of the situation, all the sexy stuff seemed more important. We also overestimated
our volume. For a complex of reasons I don't want to go into we didn't get the
vast increase in volume that we had upgraded our warehouse facility to handle.
The combination of upgrading that facility along with the inventory purchases
we made looked really bad in hindsight. Again, leading up to it they almost seemed
absolutely necessary. Our marketing budget was definitely crippled by these and
other things, so the whole combo was like a bad drug interaction.
Bottom line: We allocated resources incorrectly. Perhaps understandably, but incorrectly,
and didn't get the volume of customers needed to make the allocations pay off.
That sucked.
Finally, I think we suffered from a serious, in hindsight, management issue. I
learned a very big lesson at BIGWORDS in how teams work. Individual team members
need to be bought into each other's success. If you're going to introduce someone
into a team (especially a high level manager) it is wise to bring them in and
let the team meet them and then ask the team if they like them. Allow the team
as it already exists to want the new member - if the new person is that great,
they will. They are then a part of the hiring decision, and they then take some
responsibility for the success of the new person, who may be their boss. And who
will undoubtedly be crucial to the success of the company. This takes maturity
and a real lack of ego on the part of the person bringing the new team member
into the group.
Unfortunately, somehow our top management team didn't get bought into each others'
successes as fully as I would have wished. For some reason I think there was a
bit of jockeying and infighting that made it so our different departments didn't
cooperate as fully as we needed them to. From experience I think this was fostered
by a "new kid on the block" mentality, fostered from the top down, that made it
almost impossible for new members of the management team to integrate without
the rancor of existing members. There was also, for whatever reason, always a
seeming lack of knowledge about various departments budgets. I think people do
an amazing job of working with what they have to work with, but when they don't
know what the budget is they have a tendency to overspend.
Bottom line: I think that we needed more maturity and experience at the very top
once we passed a certain point in our growth. A leader that could have bound our
team together and made it a hyper -cooperative, better informed UNIT would have
been hugely welcome.
And finally, the market absolutely tanked. One important point about that is the
fact that I think we made a big mistake by not being ready for things to go soft
a lot earlier than we were. In a mad bull market it's ok to be a lone gunslinger.
In a turning, or bear market you better hope you have a lot of friends, and be
busy talking to them. I think, furthermore, that in a "networked economy" like
ours, your real currency is your "network." Had BIGWORDS been less arrogant and
more open to mergers, buy-outs, even just friendships, I am certain that things
would have turned out differently. Hindsight, again. However, it bears repeating
that we should have been a lot more open to cooperative possibilities a lot earlier
than we were. I went into BIGWORDS on the last day still thinking that we would
be bought out by Barnes and Noble. The shock of finding out we were really, truly
going out of business was something I won't ever forget. I think that if you are
a company that participates in the networked economy you had better know your
competitors and have a provisional plan for how you could work together with them,
just in case.
I am sure that there are a lot of people who will agree with me, who will disagree
with me, and who have a much better insight into the specifics of everything that
went on. I would love to keep the dialog going in a positive, learning focused
way.
At the end of the day, I offer no excuses, we didn't succeed. I think I won't
be able to sleep tonight if I don't point out, however, that I DO think we (as
an Industry) got screwed in a hard way by the greed and inexperience of a whole
bunch of new investors (the Etrade generation?) who are not savvy, not necessarily
smart, and who got pretty darned greedy. I mean, WalMart took 10 years! OK, so
there were way too many companies with stupid ideas getting funded (present company
excepted ) and not all of them could possibly succeed, but that was because
everyone saw the stupid valuations taking off and wanted to get in for the "short
haul." Greed. Deadly. Well, if you're working and always thinking about that Ferrari
then I don't respect you. If you're working at something you love and are passionate
about, then I wish you all the success in the world. Go get 'em, Tiger.
By the way, check out http://www.bigwords.com/index.php?from=john1
I am working with Jeff Sherwood, one of the other co-founders, who bought the
URL from the bankruptcy court (thank god) to make Biggerwords someplace that really
is useful to college students. It's a pricing bot and it's a good idea.
ANALOGY TIME! Here it is!
The whole dot com thing was a lot like the Sorcerer's Apprentice... Give me a
little leeway with it, and here we go...
Think about it like this. The young apprentice sees what is possible. He has a
VISION for making the world he lives in better. He spends a lot of time with the
magic, in a way he's way more in touch with it than the old Sorcerer, who still
kind of thinks that just 'cause something is unheard of makes it bad, maybe...
you know the type. Let's even grant the apprentice that his vision is not entirely
selfish. He sees the Sorcerer go to sleep ("is this Internet thing going to go
anywhere, really?") and he has the courage, if foolhardy courage, to don the Sorcerer's
hat and start conjuring up his vision for a better world, a world of less overstock,
less waste, on demand nearly everything, more connectivity, better views of inventory,
less spent of transporting unwanted goods, etc. He gets going and it starts to
work pretty well. VC's are bringing in the money two pails at a time. Hell, pretty
quickly the catchment basin gets totally full, to the point of being over full
maybe. So the young apprentice tries to stop it, but he hasn't counted on the
way the world really works. He doesn't realize that the suppliers don't want to
move that quick. He doesn't realize everyone in this or that industry has a set
way of doing things and don't really give a shit if he's got a better vision.
Change is terrifying and not very welcome, even.
And that basin is overflowing to the point of getting his little booties wet.
So he tries to stop the brooms with the pails, but only succeeds in creating more!
I don't blame him, it's the greed of the brooms that's driving things now! The
unsophisticated investors that think just 'cause all the money is heading this
way there will be a huge pay out really soon. The brooms aren't bringing in the
water to be nice, solely, they're thinking this thing is going through the roof
and they want to get in and get out. This isn't long term business investment,
this is the shortsightedness and instant gratification desire that makes pure
Capitalism as stupid as Soviet Communism seemed.
And the poor little guy is really freaking out now. Trying to do something with
the water that makes sense, trying to stop the flood, and finally he can't take
it anymore. He really has no experience with stuff on this level. It has gone
beyond his abilities, so he finally just passes out from exhaustion. And then
the Sorcerer wakes up. Boy, oh boy, is he in trouble. The market just utterly
tanks. The Sorcerer doesn't take the time to try to help him learn how he should
have implemented his vision. The Sorcerer just puts the whammy on it all, lock
stock and barrel. That was shortsighted, too. And you know what, it's not over!
The vision is still there, the apprentice is way more seasoned, and the Sorcerer
had better spend some time with the apprentice or next time it just may be a whole
lot worse.
I have said since the beginning that we need to work together. This will the "new
media" kill the "old media" is a pretty stupid question in a lot
of ways. If it does, it will be slow and they'll fuse together. I don't think
it will be like "Today the major networks announced that television is dead..."
It will be a lot more like loving banana shakes and then discovering mangoes.
Now you make banana mango shakes. Maybe sometimes you make mango shakes, but you
aren't going to stop using bananas. They compliment each other. Use them both,
combine them make a mang-nana shake. Maybe a hint of passion fruit would be nice,
too! Passion fruit won't bump mango, it combines nicely!
Anyway, the whole crazy thing started with VISION. The Internet is here, and it
is here to stay, to change our lives forever, and we had better figure it out
so we can make it a positive thing. That is why I jumped in with both feet so
long ago and never looked back. We have something so special here, let's not forget
that. I have never been more inspired by any group of people than I have been
by you, and all the other folks that have been the engine behind the whole Internet
Revolution so far. I look forward to a whole lot more great things from you all
and I will be in there scrapping with you. So let's do it.
Here is what Rob Brezny, of Free Will Astrology had to say about my sign, Scorpio
on the week that BIGWORDS.com tanked:
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Hallelujah and glory be to the Great Mobius Strip in
the Sky! You Scorpios have been chosen to receive a shocking privilege: the chance
to reincarnate without even having to die! This week is the time. Your home is
the place. The womb of creation goes into labor and out pops a new and improved
version of the jaded old you. Don't be afraid. It'll be more fun than any ordeal
you've ever had. The pleasure will outstrip the pain, I guarantee it! (P.S. Please
feel no shame if you immediately have to seek out some metaphorical diapers.)
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