Climbing Up

November 19, 2009

The financial crisis hits the super-rich as well, says Forbes 400, the ranking list of the 400 wealthiest Americans which was updated this autumn. Within one year they lost a combined $300 billion, about 205 billion Euros. Number 1 on the list is Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, with an estimated net worth of $50 billion. He had to swallow a loss of about $7 billion. Hit even harder was the investor Warren Buffet who ranks second. According to the American business publication Forbes he lost $10 billion.

But in these difficult times when announcing deficits are on the daily agenda, it is much more interesting to take a look at the winner: Marc Zuckerberg. Within one year the founder of Facebook climbed up from place 321 to place 158 of the Forbes 400. Originally the 25-year-old entrepreneur launched Facebook only for students of Harvard University. After some expansion steps, however, the social network today has more than 300 million members. Zuckerberg explained to Stern, a German news magazine, that it is his goal to gain one billion Facebook users. In Germany, also according to Stern, three-fourths of the 40 million internet users are already members of an online network, and this number is rising. But not only private networks are booming, also in business online networking is growing in popularity such as the business internet portal XING. But futurologists forecast much more: The personal presence on location will not be necessary any more. Research clusters can join their forces in networks. They can study in the same fields of research without being in the same laboratory. Nike picked up this trend: At the Nike+ 10km Human Race the runners don’t have to be present at any of the 30 race venues. Entrants only need a sensor and the corresponding software and with this, they can do their races by themselves at home. Afterwards they synchronize their data via the network. The Nike+ Community has grown to 1.2 million members from 142 countries at the Human Race in 2008.

But the topic of networks does also play an important role for the industry, e.g., to profit from results of the latest research or to educate employees. To push such networks between industry and academia, first and foremost platform- independent solutions and standardized interfaces are essential. The importance of standards is something the machine vision industry recognized early on, and consequently introduced the GigE Vision Standard. At the last Vision show, the three big associations, Automated Imaging Association (AIA), European Machine Vision Association (EMVA) and Japan Industrial Imaging Association (JIIA), entered into an agreement of cooperation for the common development and promotion of new standards in machine vision.

If you also know about the importance of networking: Become a member of our INSPECT network to share existing knowledge over thousands of kilometers. Our goal is one billion users as well – help us in attaining this!

Stephanie Nickl

Editor INSPECT


Anorexia?

October 6, 2009

88 pages. That was the size of the September issue of the INSPECT last year. About one third more pages than offered by the September issue of 2009. You surely already noticed that trade journals are significantly thinner this year and that they show a frightening tendency towards anorexia the further the year progresses. Why is that so anyway?

A trade journal is a product, as much as a consumer magazine is, or a book. This product needs to generate an income. That is exactly the same as it is with the products produced by your own company. For a trade journal the main source of income is advertisement, placed by companies who have an interest to communicate with you, the reader of the journal. The amount of advertisement continuously decreases since the beginning of this year and subsequently the income of trade journals abates. Now, one could argue splendidly if it is wise and well to save on market communication especially in economical difficult times, or if it were not even more important now to show a high visibility. On the other hand, one may not be mistaken that for many a company it is no longer a choice where to save.

As a consequence, cost saving has to be done by the publisher of trade journals as well. The first publishing houses announce significant economical imbalance and fight for survival. Others meet the market situation with magazines that rather remind you of a student´s notebook in size and haptics.

Not only in light of this comparison, the 54 pages of the September INSPECT are really good.

Is there no need to save costs for INSPECT as well, you might ask yourself now.

Yes of course there is, but we are lucky to have a very sound basis in more than one aspect: The companies that place their ads in the INSPECT know that in doing so they reach their customers of today and of tomorrow in an optimal way and our readers confirm for them that this choice is the right choice.

Take a close look at the advertisements on the 54 pages of INSPECT 8-9: for those companies it is a priority to be noticed by our readers and to communicate with them. This also shows economical strength, strategic sustainability and faith in their own future. Suddenly these ads have a whole new meaning in addition to featuring a product.

For us they provide the possibility to present with each issue a versatile, comprehensive and independent information package. In German and in English language. In each issue. This is complemented with our online presentation at www.inspect-online.com, taking up the topics from the printed issues and enriching them with up-to-date news on a daily basis, again in German and English language. During the summer our portal was given a facelift, that is – as with cars – a technical and optical makeover. Especially the interactive and the multimedia aspects, naturally rather out of reach for a print product, are offered by the website: search engines, webcasts, Buyers Guide database, job search, online polls, to mention but a few. But not only that: also the printed edition features some new components with which we hope to generate value and deliver delight.

Gabriele Jansen
Publishing Director INSPECT


Crisis Management

February 13, 2009

 

Financial crisis, recession, economic uncertainty – the consequence: lay-offs. Is that the necessary, sensible, businesswise responsible decision?

Daimler, Opel, Arcelor, SAP, but also Google and Microsoft lay off their employees. For the United States the biggest reduction of jobs since 1945 is already forecasted.

Costs need to be cut in difficult times, the belt needs to be tightened. The company as a whole needs to be protected, last but not least in the interest of the majority of employees (which were not let go). This is the usual and also the ethical correct argumentation. But is it economically sound? Is the short-term benefit really bigger than the potential damage?

Reducing costs, shedding cushions accumulated in fat years, making the company lean and agile, is not a bad idea, generally speaking. It might have been more clever, though, to accomplish that already during the good times and thus be better armed for the upcoming difficult months. But: Better late than never!, as the saying goes. Now it is up to the smart company leader to decide where the dispensable costs are located.

In our companies from the „developed countries” the block of labor cost ranges very highly in the cost categories. That makes cost cutting here so attractive. However, one of the reasons for this is the fact that our people are so highly qualified. They bring exactly the skill set to the table that is not only required for their demanding tasks – all other tasks are long since outsourced anyway -, but that was build up and financed heavily by the companies themselves. All the investments in these so called human resources – intensive recruiting, tedious selection processes, company internal training, additional education, specialization – are lost with the lay-off. As well as the know how of the people about the products, markets, competition, internal processes of their company. That is first and foremost a bleeding. Bloodletting was common practice in the middle-ages and was prescribed almost always no matter what the ailment was, but today we know that this lead more often than not to the early demise of the patient instead of his recovery. This is the danger that also the company faces when reacting to experienced or expected difficulties foremost with lay-offs and thus with decimation of their own strength.

A diet for the company can be reasonable, with love-handles too prominent fast movements are becoming difficult. But “lean” must not turn into anorexia. To hold one´s ground, not only but especially in times of crisis, requires strength. Strength in innovation capability to bind the customers to the company by better, not cheaper, products and services. Strength not to lose sight of the long-term strategic goals and thus stay a reliable partner for the customers. Strength to develop new markets, products and sales channels, i.e. to conquer the recession in the old markets with investment into new ones. Investment into the future in addition to coping with the not so easy presence is only possible with qualified and motivated people on board. A team that is spread too thin is lacking both, power and creativity.

BTW future. All current doomsaying put aside: the recession ultimately will end, there will be a rebound. First signs for this rebound are expected by the experts around mid 2009. In most European countries, with the respective labour laws, this will be about the time when the employees given notice today will actually leave the company. The necessary resources then required, will need to be searched for, found and trained and it will take quite some time before they can be as proficient as the experienced staff from the past.

Would it not be better to rise with the economic upturn with innovations, improved products and processes and motivated people on board, empowered by their own company?

This, in any case, is my point of view.