Almost Perfect
W. E. Peterson
http://www.wordplace.com/ap/index.shtml
A great read (for a free book)!
This book
reminds me of High Stakes, No Prisoners : A Winner's Tale of Greed
and Glory in the Internet Wars..
Chapter 1 was kind of bleak so you have
an inkling how the book will end.
Chapter 2 – Interesting how they
started compared to other startups at that time. They were ahead of
their time with the venture fund raising anyway. Also interesting
that they are clearly Mormon (which I didn't know).
Chapter 3 - Likened the lack of
business overseeing engineering as children pretending to grow up.
“Running
a company, however, did not require proficiency tests, a college
degree, or any relevant experience.”
“Writing
software in assembly language is somewhat analogous to baking from
scratch rather than using a mix.”
“We
had no systematic way of deciding what features went into a
particular version of the product, but many of the improvements came
from the suggestions of our customers, who were constantly calling
with requests for more features.”
I
find it interesting that no one liked the name wordperfect. It was
chosen by deafult because all the other names were already
trademarked!
Chapter
4 – Learned there is more to a software company than having a good
piece of software.
The
thought of being sued was a little frightening to me, because I did
not yet realize that lawsuits, like deadbeats, were a normal part of
doing business. I did not understand that a successful company was
bound to have at least one or two lawsuits against it at any one
time.
We
changed the date of the software on the diskettes inside the box, but
we left the outside of the box the same, a practice known in the
industry as slipstreaming. This was a controversial solution, but our
bad reputation disappeared. We learned that perception was more
important than reality. Our software was no better or worse than it
had been before, but in the absence of the new version numbers, it
was perceived as being much better.
We
quickly learned that no matter how many improvements we might
make
to a new version, if we took something away, we would have many
unhappy customers.
Our
advertising was still homemade, and our public relations was not very
good. We still did not know how to makes friends with the writers
from the press.
Chapter
5 -
Our
most difficult crisis at the time was maintaining good communications
inside the company.
We
learned a lot about the dynamics of communicating around a dining
table. We learned that a luncheon with more than eight people was
generally unproductive, because it led to multiple conversations that
were usually off the subject. Six was generally the best number for
getting work done. A round table was better than a rectangular one.
If a rectangular table was the only choice, it was always better to
sit in one of the middle seats if you wanted to be involved in the
discussions.
Meanwhile,
software customers were coming to the conclusion that any protection
was too much of an inconvenience. … Dropping the copy protection
was a good decision.
We
should have used more of our resources to improve WordPerfect, but
back then we were preoccupied with offering a family of products, and
shedding our one-product-company label.
The
failure of SSIData taught me two painful lessons: ideas should
be
shared so others can improve on them, and no one, including myself,
is infallible.
Chapter
6 - Great analogy to a kindom (King, Prime Minister and Knights) and
how each type is great at their job but may not be at another's job.
We
could have saved ourselves a lot of headaches by concentrating on
fewer products.
Chapter
8 -
It
was somewhat unusual for a software company to let the programmers
decide the future of its products. We were, however, a company
founded and owned by programmers, where programmers were treated with
an extra measure of respect. The marketing department was used
primarily to sell products once they were developed, and only rarely
did it get involved early enough to perform the traditional marketing
role of identifying a need and defining a product to fill that need.
At times this put us in the position of developing solutions before
we identified problems, but it was hard to be
too
critical of the programmers when the company was so successful. To
their credit, the
programmers
tried very hard to listen to our customers and to those of us in the
marketing
department.
The programmers were smart and thoughtful and very good at protecting
the best interests of the company. At times, however, they were prone
to manipulate some of the data they received to fit what it was they
wanted to do.
The
first step in our battle campaign was to hold a marketing boot camp.
For the first time we had formal training for all salespeople who
worked at the home office.
Next,
we brought in our 35 reps from around the country for the week of
October 26 and showed them 5.0.
Chapter
9 -
Selling
one hundred million dollars worth of software was easy compared to
the trouble we had fulfilling Alan's promise to take everyone to
Hawaii.
To
add to our pressure, we were offering free updates to anyone who
purchased 4.2 after the official 5.0 announcement at COMDEX. We did
this to prevent our 4.2 sales from falling in anticipation of the new
release. The offer worked, and our February and March sales were more
than ten million dollars each. Unfortunately, the offer was going to
cost us $1,000,000 for each month we were late.
Fixing
customer support was not as easy as fixing our buggy software. It
was not hard to figure out why morale in the department was so low.
Not only were the operators
paid
poorly, but they were treated as if they were second class citizens.
If
I ever start another business, I will have all employees sign a
contract requiring them to come to work with a good attitude. If they
decide one day they do not like their jobs or they do not want to be
cheerful, then they will agree in advance to an immediate termination
without notice, without severance, and without receiving any accrued
vacation pay. Life is too short to spend it with the dissatisfied.
Chapter
10 -
In
February, as was a tradition, we invited a few representatives from
our largest accounts to come to Deer Valley to ski with us and tell
us how we were doing.
I
explained to the new hires a little of the company's history, its
purpose, a little of what it was we did, and how we were different
from other companies.
I
should have taken a lot more time to explain how the company did its
work and what people could expect. Too many people, especially young
college graduates with no other job experience, came to work with the
wrong expectations and some bad habits.
They
[salespeople] were given one month of training before going out into
the field and were brought back to Utah for training twice each year.
… we wrote the first rep handbook, which explained the purpose,
objectives, and duties of a rep. We experimented with different
salary schedules, none of which included a commission, and made sure
that the reps were given regular evaluations.
Chapter
11 -
WordPerfect
Corporation was not intended to be a social club for the
unproductive. While other companies might condone many personal or
social activities at the office, ours did not. Things like
celebrating birthdays, throwing baby showers, collecting for gifts,
selling Tupperware or Avon, managing sports tournaments, running
betting pools, calling home to keep a romance alive or hand out
chores to the children, gossiping or flirting with co-workers,
getting a haircut, going to a medical or dental appointment, running
to the cafeteria for a snack, coming in a little late or leaving a
little early, taking Friday afternoon off, and griping about working
conditions were all inappropriate when done on company time. Even
though these activities were condoned by many businesses across the
country, we felt there was no time for them at WordPerfect
Corporation.
WordPerfect
Corporation was also not an arena for political games. A good old boy
network method of trading favors inside the company to get things
done was frowned upon. Kissing up, back stabbing, and seeking for
power and position were inappropriate. Making decisions by
compromise, the politician's favorite tool, was not acceptable.
Finally,
WordPerfect Corporation was not a "New Age" company. We
were neither employeeowned nor a democracy.
Peter
Drucker's book The Practice of Management
Chapter
15 -
If
I had to do it all over again, I would have tried to find a way to
either run the company officially, with the full support of Alan and
Bruce, or shift some of my responsibilities to others. I took myself
and my job too seriously. I held on to my opinions so strongly that I
always put myself in a position where I had to shoulder too much of
the blame. Someone had to say no, but it should have been someone
else some of the time.