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The Monday Morning Memo

Misdiagnosing Success

February 23, 2015

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Beagle_J-Curve_740

If success were the result of a formula, we would achieve it more consistently.

Every business has its little formulas for success.

These formulas, however, are always incomplete because they were reverse-engineered by connecting the dots after success had been achieved: the second thing (success) followed the first thing (cable TV ads, or raising your prices, or handing out coupons at the front door,) therefore we assume the second thing (success) was caused by the first thing (cable TV ads, or raising your prices, or handing out coupons at the front door.)

Logic then whispers into our ear, “If you connect these dots prior to your next attempt, success will surely follow.” This seductive logic has been frustrating humanity for so many years that it has a fancy Latin name: post hoc, ergo propter hoc.

“Success is not a dog that can be led about on a leash.”

No, that’s not the interpretation of the Latin phrase. It’s just something that popped into my head just now and I decided to share it with you. Actually, post hoc, ergo propter hoc is translated as “after this, therefore resulting from it.”

Analysis and ego and weasels with calculators use post hoc, ergo propter hoc logic to assert that we can map our way directly to success without making any wrong turns along the way. But if you keep your eye on these data-weasels, you’ll see them make as many wrong turns as the rest of us. And most of the weasels never arrive at the destination at all.

In truth, the variables that contribute to the creation of success cannot be fully calculated in advance. This is due to “the third body problem,” a mathematical conundrum that governs anything that would attract and hold another. Are you trying to attract and hold the attention of your customer? Welcome to “the third body problem.”

This same third body problem can also be used to your advantage if you have the courage, but we’ll save that discussion for when we have at least 3 uninterrupted hours together.

If you’d like to try to figure it out for yourself, just Google “Henri Poincare third body problem.”

Another common misdiagnosis of success – and one that’s much easier to explain – occurs when we judge results too quickly. We see the early stage of success and call it failure.

This is because when you’re doing exactly the right thing, the results will often get worse before they get better.

I’ve always attributed this to the law of seedtime and harvest, but my friend John Marklin prefers to call it the J-Curve.

Roy,

In the grocery industry, which is the world in which I live, a key component… is the J-Curve. For example, I built a ground-up store 4 years ago and was told I would do “X” in sales.

For two years I did 60% of X in sales. As I came out of the J-Curve I gained momentum and hit the budgeted number in year three.

J-Curves happen any time there is change and sometimes they defy logic.

For example, in one of my stores my meat sales sucked. So I doubled the size of the meat case and added variety. The result was lower meat sales. It took about 30 days for people to accept the change. Once they did, they liked the added variety and selections. Slowly sales increased and today they’re at the desired level.

Very few people speak of the J-Curve.

If you wish to discuss more, I would love to do so while on campus at the Valentine weekend.

Thank you.

John Marklin

The front side of the J-Curve is what I privately call “the little death” and publicly call “the chickening-out period.” The backside of the J-Curve is what my friend Chip calls “hockey stick growth.”

I’ve seen a lot of companies abandon brilliant ideas that would probably have led them to hockey-stick growth but they chickened out during the late stages of seedtime when they misinterpreted the early dip of the J-Curve to be failure.

Sigh.

But here’s where the J-Curve gets really messy: when you’ve made a mistake and you’re doing the wrong thing and sales begin to fall as a result, it looks exactly like the J-Curve before hockey stick growth.

How do you know when to hang on and when to bail out?

The only solution I’ve ever heard of is to take a deep breath, close your eyes and click your heels together as you whisper again and again, “The J-Curve is a bitch. The J-Curve is a bitch. The J-Curve is a bitch…”

I wish you success and joy in your adventure.

Come see us if you’d like to have some companions.

Roy H. Williams

Public Speaking 101 – March 4-5
Portals and the 12 Languages of the Mind – plus SXSW – March 18-19 + 3 days if you want them

Porsha

 

Golden Care is a concierge elder care provider in Southern California. Listen in as Porsha Vogt tells Dean Rotbart how she built Golden Care into a model of profitability through quality care at MondayMorningRadio.com

RickFerguson“Despite all of the talk about uncovering the Buy Button, no serious neuroscientist believes that we’ll ever be able to devise marketing messages that turn customers into shopping automatons. Human behavior is too complex to make behavioral predictions.”
– Rick Ferguson, Oct. 27, 2009

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Random Quote:

“Dear Reader,

When I was 12, I was given a scholarship to a private girl’s school in the town where I lived. All the other girls came from another – wealthier – town. They were driven to school in Jaguars and Mercedes Benzes. They ate artichokes. No way would I ever fit in.

In the midst of my funk, the English teacher assigned A Member of the Wedding by Carson McCullers. As it happens, Frankie, the book’s heroine, is also 12 and also wants to belong. Her yearning is such that she wants to know everyone in the world and for everyone to know her – exactly what I wanted! That’s what stunned me, not just the intensity of the longing, but the specificity. It meant – it had to mean – there were other people in the world like me. Not just Frankie, a fictional character, but the author who had to have felt that way herself in order to give Frankie that longing. I felt such an intimate connection with her, as if she’d looked deep inside me and knew me in the way I wanted the world to know me. Reading didn’t just offer escape; it offered connection!

All these years later, I just have to look at my copy of A Member of the Wedding on my bookshelf to experience again how I felt when I first read it and to feel the full force of that connection: to Frankie, to Carson McCullers, to the 12-year-old girl I was, and to 12-year-olds everywhere.”

- Emily Levine, A Velocity of Being, Letters to a Young Reader, p. 52

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