Monday, July 15, 2019

Do What You Can and Move On - Don't Sweat a Recalcitrant Stakeholder Forever

We've all heard the phrase "good enough for government work", usually uttered sardonically these days. Most people don't realize that the phrase originally referred to the high standards required for government work - work that was good enough for the government was work that met the highest standards. (I bet you didn't know that!)

I use the modern, sardonic variation: sometimes you should aspire to quality that's good enough for government. In other words: don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

Do I mean cutting corners on critical due diligence efforts? Do I mean failing to negotiate a good deal for your company? Of course not! What I mean is: don't hold up a purchase by sweating every minor detail, amplifying small issues beyond their actual importance, or stressing over a difficult stakeholder.

Suppose, for example, you're considering a new market research vendor to support your financial services consultants. The practice head for asset management consulting has indicated you need a new fund flows vendor. You already know the space pretty well, have met with and vetted the leading providers in the space, and are ready to make a recommendation.

The problem is, you only have buy-in from your Asia and US practice teams. You have been trying to get people in Europe and Canada to participate -- their commitment would scale the costs of the purchase substantially (lowering your unit costs), and you know -- you just know -- these teams are going to want the content eventually.

But you just can't get your potential users to do the work. Frustrating!

What to do? Two options:

  1. Move ahead with just the Asia and US content, knowing you've done your best to achieve maximum buying power;
  2. Make an executive decision to buy the EU and Canada content anyway. 
As a rule, Option 1 makes the most sense and is the least risky approach: it's almost always a fraught endeavor to purchase product you don't have explicit buy-in for. Even if you know the stakeholder could use the content, you're operating with limited information - you may not have visibility into their budget situation, for example. The last thing you want is to have to book the expense on your books or answer awkward questions from the CFO! 

The exception is a small, low-impact contract that's unlikely to raise eyebrows - an amount under a given spending threshold, for example. Perhaps you're looking at a trade publication that is segmented by sector - you know all the sectors will be useful but haven't heard from the Shipping team and you need to get the contract done asap. The incremental cost is $2K - well within your spending authority. Go ahead and add it! 

Before proceeding with a purchase that excludes content you know you'll need, try these steps to get the missing stakeholder to participate: 
  1. Give the recalcitrant stakeholder a hard deadline and tell them their chance to get access to the content will pass for a year (length of contract);
  2. Explain to management that you'd love to get additional buy-in but haven't been able to. Demonstrate the lower unit costs that you're missing out on - perhaps they can reach out to the stakeholder on your behalf;
  3. Enlist the vendor. This is hit and miss. Sales-people can be annoying and you don't want to needlessly irritate your stakeholder. But salespeople while occasionally annoying can be effective - they may be able to demonstrate the value when your efforts have stalled. 
Once you've taken these steps and alerted management, go ahead with the more modest purchase. You can't keep the business waiting forever! And yes, you will likely have to expand the contract later - when the additional stakeholders get their acts together. Such is life as a contracts manager! 

- Kevan Huston

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

We're Back

After a couple of months away from the blog, I am returning to our regularly scheduled blogging. I had an important project that I have been working on in the evenings. I hope to reveal this soon. Things are coming together nicely. Stay tuned!

Meanwhile, there's no shortage of news and developments in the market research and data space we need to get to. And of course, I will be completing the final segments of my series on Measuring Information Resource Value (MIRV). Previous editions are: Part 1 (Vendor Data), Part 2 (Quantitative Metrics), Part 3 (Qualitative Metrics), and Part 4 (Users).

Upcoming will be entries include a post on determining ROI for your information resources and a full case study.

- Kevan Huston

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Industry Round-up: First Quarter 2019

The Week in Review will be a quarterly digest going forward. 

M&A

The Financial Times has acquired a controlling stake in TNW (The Next Web), an events and media company with a focus on new technology and startups in Europe. The acquisition, its first in continental Europe, will deepen the FT’s reach into the European technology community and create synergies with its existing events business, FT Live. The move also complements the FT’s recent investment in Sifted.

Dun & Bradstreet and an investor group led by CC Capital, Cannae Holdings, Bilcar, Black Knight, and funds affiliated with Thomas H. Lee Partners, along with a group of other investors, announced the completion of the Investor Group’s previously announced acquisition of Dun & Bradstreet. In connection with the closing, Anthony Jabbour, Black Knight’s Chief Executive Officer, was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Dun & Bradstreet and will remain in his current role at Black Knight.

Dennis Publishing, the international media group, announces it has acquired Kiplinger, a provider of business and personal finance information, in print and online. James Tye, Group CEO of Dennis, said: “Kiplinger is a great fit for Dennis. It expands our presence into the finance category, an area we already have an impressive footprint in with the The Week and MoneyWeek..”

Import.io, the Web Data Integration solution provider, announced that it has acquired Connotate, a provider of web data extraction for corporate enterprises, to further solidify its market leadership position in the emerging Web Data Integration category. Connotate brings new technology to Import.io, including eight patents.

TheStreet, a financial news and information company, announced it has completed the sale of its institutional business units, The Deal and BoardEx, to Euromoney Institutional Investor PLC. As previously announced and in connection with the closing of the sale, TheStreet will now be led by Eric Lundberg as Chief Executive Officer, who will also continue his role as Chief Financial Officer.

People

Fitch Group announced the appointment of Ted Niedermayer as its Chief Operating Officer, in addition to his ongoing role as Chief Financial Officer.  This new role is designed to enhance Fitch Group’s overall operating performance, inter-company coordination and business analytics.

Product

Bloomberg announced that alternative datasets are now available through the company’s “ready-to-use” data website, Bloomberg Enterprise Access Point. Adding alternative datasets allows Data License clients to easily access and incorporate new, non-traditional forms of data from Bloomberg and alternative data providers.

TechCrunch is launching a subscription product called Extra Crunch. Extra Crunch is an additional layer of content, coverage, product and events-based offerings for our most regular and engaged readers. This will consist of articles that go more in-depth on topics in the entrepreneurship and startup universe.

Partnerships

CoStar Group, the provider of commercial real estate information, analytics and online marketplaces, announced an expanded agreement with Oxford Economics, the global economic advisory firm and provider of economic data, analysis, and forecasts. Oxford Economics will provide CoStar with the economic data and forecasts used in CoStar’s product offerings and commercial real estate forecasting models across the United States, Europe, and Canada.

Dow Jones Risk & Compliance and Dun & Bradstreet have agreed to utilize their datasets to enhance their respective risk management and regulatory compliance solutions. Dow Jones Risk & Compliance will make Dun & Bradstreet’s beneficial ownership data available through its web-based platform, RiskCenter, or via API.

Nielsen and The NPD Group released details around a new alliance that reimagines the future of omnishopper measurement and marks a key milestone in Nielsen’s measurement of the total consumer. Nielsen and NPD are building a large-scale, comprehensive omnishopper consumer panel, pairing Nielsen’s consumer packaged goods (CPG) measurement with NPD’s general merchandise consumer measurement to bring insight into today’s emerging omnishoppers.

TIBCO Software, a global provider of integration, API management, and analytics, announced it has entered into an agreement with IHS Markit. Through TIBCO Spotfire and related technologies, this partnership will deliver advanced analytics capabilities, providing accelerated and meaningful insights by making vast amounts of energy data more readily available, as well as speeding up the exploration of data.

Financing

LinkSquares, a Boston, MA-based provider of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered contract analytics software, closed a $4.8m financing round. The company intends to use the funds to expand the team, invest in advancing AI capabilities, and focus on a customer-centric go to market strategy.

Tradeweb Markets, the bond and derivative platform co-owned by financial-data platform Refinitiv, filed for a U.S. initial public offering, kicking off plans to go public five months after being acquired as part of a $17 billion buyout. Tradeweb filed with an initial offering size of $100 million, typically a placeholder amount used to calculate fees that’s likely to change.

- Kevan Huston