5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC

February 16th, 2011 — 11:01pm

picking your second in command biden palin bkt 7163 5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC

Last month, Steve Jobs handed the Apple reins back to his second-in-command, Tim Cook.

Likewise, Mark Zuckerberg has Sheryl Sandberg on staff to provide some adult supervision at Facebook.

Even for a five person business, a second-in-command can balance the demands of running your company; a 2iC who has been clearly anointed can go a long way toward making you redundant, which should be the objective of anyone wanting to build a company that can one day be sold.

But how do you pick a second-in-command? For help, I turned to Silicon Valley–based Bob Sutton. Sutton is a Stanford professor and the author of the books Good Boss, Bad Boss: How to Be the Best . . . and Learn from the Worst and The No Asshole Rule: Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn’t.

Based on my conversation with Sutton, here is a five-step plan for hiring your second-in-command:

Step 1: Identify Someone Internally

“The research is clear,” says Sutton. “Unless things are totally screwed up, internal candidates have a strong tendency to outperform external leaders.” According to Sutton, although it can be tempting to bring in someone from outside, a newbie without a deep knowledge of the quirks of your organization will struggle in the role.

Step 2: Give the 2iC Prospects a Special Project

Sutton suggests giving each of your second-in-command prospects a special project that allows them to demonstrate their leadership skills to you and the rest of your team—a test that can serve as a great audition. If your candidate(s) shrivel under the pressure of leading, you know you have the wrong person/people in mind and can be glad you didn’t just hand over the reins. On the other hand, if one of them thrives, you’ll be able to justify to yourself—and your team—why he or she was selected above others.

Step 3: Use the “Hit-By-a-Bus” Conversation Starter

Once you have selected a candidate, it’s time to communicate your choice to the rest of your team. In a small, tight-knit business, picking one person to rise above his or her peers can disrupt the delicate balance of chemistry and egos that keep a small business going. Sutton recommends you start the conversation by asking your senior team to imagine a scenario in which—as morbid as it sounds—you get hit by a bus. Explain who you would want leading the team and why.

Step 4: Wrap Your Arms Around the Losers

Once you pick a second-in-command from an internal pool, the people who were passed over for the job will likely feel slighted. “It’s human nature to hide from the people who you didn’t pick,” Sutton says, “but it’s exactly the wrong thing to do.” Instead, he recommends you go out of your way to spend time with those you passed over to make it clear how much you value their contributions.

Step 5: Shift from Manager to Coach

Strapped for cash in the early days, many business owners hire doers, not leaders, so they start out as managers learning a command-and-control style of leadership. That may have served them well in the early days, but according to Sutton, with a second-in-command in place, you need to shift your style: “The transition from manager to coach is a gradual evolution where the goal of the coach should be to ask more questions and spend more time listening and less time talking and directing.”

Who will be your Leo McGarry?

John Warrillow is the author of Built To Sell: Creating a Business That Can Thrive Without You, which will be released by Portfolio/Penguin on April 28, 2011.

 5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC  5 Steps to Picking Your 2ICp 8bUhLiluj0fAw.gif?labels=pub.29945.rss.Business.33108,cat.Business 5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC

 5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC  5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC

 5 Steps to Picking Your 2IC

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CMO Survey Results Reported

February 16th, 2011 — 8:00pm

The CMO Survey from Duke University?s Fuqua School of Business and the American Marketing Association is a comprehensive look into the minds of C-suite marketers like few others. The press release for the survey describes the participants The CMO Survey, is a nationwide poll of chief marketing officers (CMOs) conducted twice annually by Duke University?s [...]

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Oops! Mobile Users Don?t Mean to Click

February 16th, 2011 — 2:00pm

Oops, I did it again, and again and again. Me and forty-seven percent of mobile application users who responded to a recent Harris Interactive survey click on mobile ads more often by mistake than we do on purpose. That’s a lot of wasted coin-for-click and as Mobile Marketer points out in their review of the [...]

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Advertising: Competing for the Cover of the Rolling Stone

February 16th, 2011 — 7:00am

The competition is being sponsored by the hair products brand Garnier Fructis and will give one of 16 bands a recording contract with Atlantic Records.

 Advertising: Competing for the Cover of the Rolling Stone

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How to Talk to Your Kids about Safe Sex

February 16th, 2011 — 4:00am

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5 Critical Components of Lead Management Software

February 16th, 2011 — 1:00am

Considering a Lead Management Program? If so, leverage our list of 5 critical components to lead management software.

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Internet marketing requirements for clients

February 15th, 2011 — 10:00pm

 Internet marketing requirements for clients
 Internet marketing requirements for clients

So, you’ve decided to hire an internet marketing company. Congratulations! Before you kick back your heels and say “go do it” to your newly hired partners, though, here are a few things you’ll need to know:

  1. You’ll have to change your web site. A lot. Search engine optimization will require changes to content, code and maybe your entire server infrastructure. Conversion optimization and testing will require tweaks to your site design. Make sure you’ve got access and resources to handle that.
  2. You will end up on Facebook, and Twitter, and who knows where else. Get used to it.
  3. Your branding people will freak out. Lose their minds. Swallow their own tongues. Because your internet marketing firm is going to push things. In social media, nut cases do best.
  4. Your assumptions will be challenged. A good internet marketing agency will want to test everything. They’ll add a big red ‘buy now’ button to the home page, or move navigation around, or tweak your e-mail marketing creative.
  5. Turnaround times will shrink. Rapid iteration is the best way to win at internet marketing.
  6. Someone’s gonna have to write. No content, no marketing. Period.

The short version: Everyone on your team, from the web developers to the designers to the CEO, are going to be uncomfortable. A good internet marketing firm will work just as hard to fit things to your own culture, to a point. but a good firm will also be brutally honest if they feel you’re hurting yourself.

I’m writing this using in-flight wifi, so I’m done. Have a great Thanksgiving!

 Internet marketing requirements for clients

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Python code to grab KeywordDiscovery API data

February 15th, 2011 — 6:00pm

 Python code to grab KeywordDiscovery API data
 Python code to grab KeywordDiscovery API data

If you use the KeywordDiscovery API, and Python, my pain is your gain. It took me a few hours to get this to work. You can grab it and go. Here’s the function, written in my usual Python Pigdin. I don’t recommend using it without a passing knowledge of Python, but that’s up to you:

def kwdiscovery(username,password,phraselist): 	base64string = base64.encodestring('%s:%s' % (username, password))[:-1] 	authheader =  "Basic %s" % base64string 	apiurl = "http://api.keyworddiscovery.com/queries.php?queries=" 	separator = "%0D%0A" 	counter = 1 	for phrase in phraselist: 		# make sure there's no funny characters 		try: 		    phrase.decode('ascii') 		except UnicodeDecodeError: 			continue 		phrase = phrase.replace(" ","+") 		phrase = phrase.replace("\n","") 		if (counter > 1): 			apiurl = apiurl + separator + phrase 		else: 			apiurl = apiurl + phrase 		counter = counter + 1 	apiurl = apiurl + "&empty=1"  	req = urllib2.Request(apiurl) 	req.add_header("Authorization", authheader) 	blah = urllib2.urlopen(req) 	# because sometimes, things just go wrong 	try: 		result = ET.parse(blah) 		resultlist = [] 		lst = result.findall("r") 		for item in lst: 			this = item.attrib["q"],item.attrib["m"] 			resultlist.append(this) 	except: 		this = "__one of the words in this request                  caused an error:",apiurl 		resultlist = [this] 	return resultlist	 

And here’s how you’d use the function:

#!/usr/bin/python import string import sys import httplib import urllib2 from urllib2 import Request, urlopen, URLError import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET import base64  f = open('longw.txt','r') g = open('words_countedlongtail.txt','w') words = f.readlines()  username = "ENTER KEYWORDDISCOVERY USERNAME HERE" password = "ENTER KEYWORDDISCOVERY PASSWORD HERE"  start = 0 count = len(words) while (count > 0): 	count = count - 9 	end = start + 9 	a = words[start:end] 	print "sent ",a 	resultlist = kwdiscovery(username,password,a) 	for l in resultlist: 		q = str(l[0]) 		m = str(l[1]) 		line = q + "\t" + m + "\n" 		g.write(line) 		print "received ",line 	start = end 	 f.close() g.close() 

Who knows, I might even create a web interface one of these days. In my spare time.

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 Python code to grab KeywordDiscovery API data

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Google?s JC Penney Move Like a Grain of Sand in the Desert

February 15th, 2011 — 2:00pm

While the SEO and search engine world in general is all fired up about the New York Times’ piece on JC Penney?s search dalliances it’s probably important to recognize what Google?s actions in response to the situation were: PR. Now, that the New York Times is the new Google police (that?s for another discussion but [...]

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Advertising: From Established Agency, Bets on Upstarts of the Future

February 15th, 2011 — 11:00am

Kirshenbaum Bond Senecal & Partners plans to announce a new unit that will invest in early- and mid-stage ad and technology firms.

 Advertising: From Established Agency, Bets on Upstarts of the Future

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