Episode 238
Crossing the Chasm in 2025: AI, Disruption, and What Still Holds True with Geoffrey Moore
In this landmark episode of The Business Development Podcast, Kelly Kennedy sits down with marketing legend Geoffrey Moore, author of the iconic Crossing the Chasm, to explore how the principles of market adoption have evolved in an AI-driven world. With over 30 years of influence on companies like Salesforce, Adobe, and Microsoft, Moore shares how his foundational frameworks still hold up—and where today’s entrepreneurs must adapt to meet the expectations of a rapidly shifting market.
From navigating disruptive innovation to avoiding false signals of early success, Geoffrey delivers a masterclass in understanding the pragmatist mindset, market timing, and the reality of business in 2025. Whether you're launching a new product, scaling your company, or simply trying to stay ahead of the AI curve, this conversation is packed with insights you won’t find anywhere else. Get ready to think deeper, market smarter, and grow faster—this is one episode you won’t want to miss.
Key Takeaways:
1. Crossing the chasm is still the greatest challenge for tech companies aiming to scale—especially in B2B.
2. Early adopters want vision and potential, but pragmatists want risk reduction and proof.
3. False signals from visionary buyers can create dangerous overconfidence before mainstream traction exists.
4. To cross the chasm, you must solve a painful, urgent problem for a very specific customer segment.
5. AI is redefining the adoption lifecycle, but the fundamentals of market timing and trust still apply.
6. Creating your own category and competitors is critical—mainstream buyers need options to validate their choice.
7. Every disruptive product needs a “whole product” ecosystem before it becomes scalable.
8. Business buyers face real risk when changing processes—unlike consumers, they don’t jump without justification.
9. Social media, especially LinkedIn, is becoming noisier—real value comes from thought leadership, not self-promotion.
10. Writing a business book is about building long-term impact and platform—not immediate profit.
🎯 Explore Geoffrey Moore’s Work:
- Crossing the Chasm
- Inside the Tornado
- Escape Velocity
- Zone to Win
- The Infinite Staircase (Philosophy meets Strategy)
🌐 Visit Geoffrey Moore’s official website: https://www.geoffreyamoore.com
Companies mentioned in this episode:
- Salesforce
- Microsoft
- Adobe
- AOL
- Capital Business Development
- Harper College
- KPMG
- Hewlett Packard
- Moderna
- Pfizer
- Amazon
- Nokia
- Regis McKenna
- Oracle
Transcript
Welcome to episode 238 of the Business Development Podcast.
Speaker A:And today we're joined by a true marketing legend, Geoffrey Moore, author of Crossing the Chasm and advisor to giants like Salesforce, Microsoft and Adobe.
Speaker A:We dig deep into innovation disruption and what it really takes to cross the chasm in today's hyper competitive world.
Speaker A:Stick with us.
Speaker A:This is an episode you won't want to miss.
Speaker B:The great Mark Cuban once said, business happens over years and years.
Speaker B:Value is measured in the total upside of a business relationship, not by how much you squeezed out in any one deal.
Speaker B:And we couldn't agree more.
Speaker B:This is the Business Development Podcast, based in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada and broadcasting to the world.
Speaker B:You'll get expert business development advice, tips and experiences and you'll hear interviews with business owners, CEOs and business development reps.
Speaker B:You'll get actionable advice on how to grow business brought to you by Capital Business Development, CapitalBD CA.
Speaker B:Let's do it.
Speaker B:Welcome to the Business Development Podcast.
Speaker B:And now your expert host, Kelly Kennedy.
Speaker A:Hello.
Speaker A:Welcome to episode 238 of the Business Development Podcast.
Speaker A:And today it is my absolute pleasure to bring you Geoffrey Moore.
Speaker A:Jeffrey is a titan in the high tech industry, renowned for his pioneering work in understanding and navigating the complex dynamics of disruptive innovation.
Speaker A:With over three decades of experience, Moore has become the go to advisor for both ambitious startups and established enterprises seeking to transform their markets.
Speaker A:His groundbreaking book, Crossing the Chasm revolutionized the way companies approached the daunting task of moving from early adopters to mainstream customers.
Speaker A:And it remains a critical playbook for entrepreneurs worldwide.
Speaker A:As an author, consultant and speaker, Moore has profoundly influenced the strategies of industry giants like Salesforce, Microsoft and Adobe.
Speaker A:But Jeffrey's impact extends far beyond the business world.
Speaker A:His exploration of the deeper questions in life and ethics in his recent book, the Infinite Staircase showcases his ability to apply strategic framework to the broader human experience.
Speaker A:Moore is not just a thought leader, he's a catalyst for change, pushing the boundaries of what is possible both in business and in life.
Speaker A:His legacy is one of innovation, insight and an unrelenting drive to help others ascend their own infinite staircases, both in the marketplace and in the world at large.
Speaker A:Jeffrey, it's an honor to have you on the show today.
Speaker C:Whoa.
Speaker C:I don't even recognize that person you just described.
Speaker C:But okay, okay, I'll play the role.
Speaker A:Amazing.
Speaker A:No, it truly.
Speaker A:It truly is an honor to have such a marketing legend on with us today, today.
Speaker A:So I really appreciate you taking the time.
Speaker A:Like I said before, I just finished Reading Crossing the Chasm.
Speaker A:And it's funny because the book is actually only two years older than I am.
Speaker A:Or, sorry, two years younger than I am.
Speaker A:That's the right word.
Speaker A:Like, I'm 35 and you wrote that book 33 years ago.
Speaker C:I did.
Speaker A:It's.
Speaker A:It's incredible.
Speaker A:And it was super fun to read it.
Speaker A:Like, we talked about this briefly before the show.
Speaker A:I could connect with so many of the companies that you chatted with, so many innovations.
Speaker A:It kind of felt like I was the right age for so many of those companies.
Speaker A:As we go through the book and obviously the Internet, I remember AOL.
Speaker A:I remember getting the free CDs and in a cereal box.
Speaker A:I think, like, it was crazy back then and, you know, it was a pleasure.
Speaker A:It was just as entertaining of a read 30 years later as I'm sure it was when you first wrote it.
Speaker C:Well, thanks.
Speaker C:I mean, what I, what I actually had to do was, was rewrite it twice.
Speaker C:But I didn't actually change the, the ideas or the frameworks really at all.
Speaker C:I just put in new sets of examples.
Speaker A:Yes.
Speaker C: So in: Speaker C: In: Speaker C: And then in: Speaker C:But, but the principles, as you said, it's interesting.
Speaker C:So the life cycle model, the technology adoption life cycle, actually goes back to a guy named Everett Rogers who did the original research back in the 50s and early 60s.
Speaker C:Basically, that model has been like, you're standing on the shoulders of giants when you're using that model.
Speaker C:Because that model, as you point out, is incredibly resilient.
Speaker C:The piece that I added to it was a chasm separated the early adopters from the mainstream market.
Speaker C:That was my addition.
Speaker C:That was great.
Speaker C:That chasm also has held up as a property of the technology adoption lifecycle.
Speaker C:The reason why it still works 35 years later is the dynamics of that, of that how people respond to disruptive innovation is a very deeply in rooted thing in the human experience.
Speaker C:And so it's still there.
Speaker C:And if, if you're dealing, particularly if you're a B2B player dealing with businesses adopting technology, it's still, it's still the play.
Speaker C:It still is the playbook.
Speaker A:Yeah, it really is.
Speaker A:And it's.
Speaker A:I don't want to say it's very complex, but it's very complex.
Speaker A:Like, you are so in depth with this book, far more than I think many marketers even take to heart.
Speaker A:And, you know, I mean, I almost hate to admit that being somebody who's been in B2B for so long, you know, there were, there were ideas in that book that hadn't really crossed my mind at all.
Speaker A:Did you find that when you were writing the book?
Speaker C:Well, it was interesting.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So when you write a book.
Speaker C:When I write a book, what I try to do is strap myself to a problem that I think is really hard to solve and I do not know the answer to it when I start.
Speaker C:So in other words, it keeps me engaged and it's something worthwhile.
Speaker C:In the case of crossing the chasm, my heart was going out to the product manager in a technology enabled firm who was supposed to create a product that would take to catch the world on fire.
Speaker C:And they were having this problem with the chasm.
Speaker C:So they get the early adopters, but they couldn't get across the chasm, they couldn't get the mainstream customers.
Speaker C:And so the first thing was to look at that and say, well, what's going on?
Speaker C:And part of it is a marketing communications problem.
Speaker C:So there's a way of changing your story from look at all the wonderful things you can do, which is what an early adopter wants to do, to look at all the terrible things you can avoid, which is what a mainstream customer is more interested in.
Speaker C:So you have to really change the narrative.
Speaker C:But in addition to changing the narrative, you have to build an ecosystem around the product.
Speaker C:You have to change your distribution, you change your pricing, you change your competitive strategy.
Speaker C:So we ended up having this checklist of factors that you had to go through and I think maybe some of those factors were not normally included in marketing.
Speaker C:Yeah, but in terms of market development, they had to be.
Speaker A:I really, you know, and we can get into this later on, but I really love the idea of needing to create your own competition in order to actually find success.
Speaker A:I found that like kind of eye opening.
Speaker A:I never thought about it that way.
Speaker A:But you could never get, you know, the long term customers without them having something to compare it against and say your product is the best.
Speaker C:Exactly.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:Pragmatist people are not interested in categories of one.
Speaker A:Yeah, it was, it was a little bit mind blowing and I can't wait to chat with you about all this.
Speaker A:But before we do, like, how did you end up such a marketing legend?
Speaker A:Like who is Geoffrey Moore?
Speaker A:How did you end up on this path?
Speaker C:Well, Geoffrey Moore did not start on a marketing.
Speaker C:Jeffrey was an English professor.
Speaker C:Jeffrey was in love with literature from.
Speaker C:His mother was in love with literature and he.
Speaker C:I was a American lit major at Stanford.
Speaker C:I got a PhD in medieval and Renaissance literature from the University of Washington.
Speaker C:I went to teach in a small liberal arts college in Michigan called Olivet College.
Speaker C:Maria and I were married at the time, and we had our third child in Michigan.
Speaker C:So we had a small family, Marie's from Palo Alto.
Speaker C:We met when I was going to Stanford and the social climate just wasn't going to work right.
Speaker C:So we.
Speaker C:So at one point we just said, look, we have to go back to California.
Speaker C:That's really where we.
Speaker C:Where we fit, we belong.
Speaker C:Even though the college experience was, frankly, wonderful.
Speaker C:So we did well.
Speaker C:I went back.
Speaker C:There were no jobs in academics, so I wasn't gonna be able to get a job as an English professor.
Speaker C:So I joined a software company as initially as a training director.
Speaker C:And I told the guy that was hiring me, I said, look, I don't know anything about software.
Speaker C:I think I know something about training.
Speaker C:He said, well, you'll learn.
Speaker C:And I thought, I don't think so.
Speaker C:But no, no, you'll learn, you'll learn.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:So anyway, he believed in me, which was very nice, and he mentored me, and it was great.
Speaker C:And so I was at that software company and learned a bunch about software and a bunch about.
Speaker C:I realized at some point, in a tech company, you either sell it or you make it.
Speaker C:They're really.
Speaker C:I mean, being a staff person, it's not as much fun.
Speaker C:So I knew I wasn't going to make software, so I thought, well, maybe I'll sell software.
Speaker C:And I was kind of a gift of Irish heritage.
Speaker C:I mean, like, like, I like people, I like talking.
Speaker C:Okay, we'll do that.
Speaker C:And by the way, I was a very good presenter.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So that was great.
Speaker C:So we went into sales.
Speaker C:Turns out I was better at opening than closing.
Speaker C:Interesting feature.
Speaker C:That's not quite what you're looking for in a salesperson.
Speaker C:But eventually what it led me to was to marketing, which was like, well, what's hard about this?
Speaker C:And the.
Speaker C:The transformative moment in my journey was I joined a company called Regis McKenna, which was the premier marketing consulting company to high tech enterprises in the 80s, just by far.
Speaker C:And when I got there, it was like, I just come home.
Speaker C:I was like, I love everything about this.
Speaker C:I think I'm good at everything about this.
Speaker C:This is great.
Speaker C:So I was five years there and it was a wonderful place to be because that was Mecca for high tech marketing.
Speaker C:So everybody and his mother came through those doors and I had a role where I was.
Speaker C:I kind of sat in on most of the strategy sessions because I was sort of a Framework guy, conceptual guy.
Speaker C:And so I was just able to see.
Speaker C:I mean, people said, how do you do the research for that book?
Speaker C:I didn't do the research for that book.
Speaker C:I just sat in the room.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:I was in the room, like in Hamilton, in the room where it happens.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:And the book came out of an attempt to sort of say, well, how would we write a playbook to do this?
Speaker C:And that was the book Crossing the Chasm.
Speaker C:And being an English professor, writing was really fun for me.
Speaker C:So I liked the writing.
Speaker C:So that was great.
Speaker C:And it came out.
Speaker C:And I think, like, I asked, oh, by the way, somebody introduced me to a literary agent.
Speaker C:So for those of you who want to write a book, you do want a literary agent who, you know, kind of takes you through the steps.
Speaker C:And we did.
Speaker C:And, you know, we thought, well, could we ask for a $10,000 advance?
Speaker C:I don't know.
Speaker C:It's all.
Speaker C:No, he wanted to ask for a $50,000 advance.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:And we got this one company, Harper College, who said, well, no, but we'll give you a $10,000 advance.
Speaker C:And so I asked them, I said, well, so for a $10,000 advance, how many copies would you have to sell to break even?
Speaker C:They said, about 3,000.
Speaker C:They said, well, okay, what would, like, knock the COVID off the ball, be 6,000.
Speaker C:I said, okay, so could we raise the royalty for anything over 6,000 books?
Speaker C:Sure.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So basically, it's now sold between 1 and 1.5 million.
Speaker A:Wow.
Speaker C:It just.
Speaker C:It just.
Speaker C:But.
Speaker C:But the way it built was interesting.
Speaker C:So the first six months sold 3,000 copies, by the way.
Speaker C:I was doing breakfast with the people from people.
Speaker C:KPMG, because they were affiliated with Regis McKenna, and they like to have these breakfast sessions where they can bring their clients together.
Speaker C:And then, you know, there's a few more speeches.
Speaker C:And then.
Speaker C:And then somewhere along the line, I was introducing myself to somebody at a meeting, and I said.
Speaker C:They said, oh, I'm Jeff Moore, blah, blah.
Speaker C:Oh.
Speaker C:He said, you're the chasm guy.
Speaker C:I thought, oh, the chasm guy.
Speaker C:Maybe there's a.
Speaker C:Maybe there's a brand.
Speaker C:So that's why I decided to leave riches McKenna.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And to try this on my own.
Speaker C:And.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And it just.
Speaker C:It just.
Speaker C:It just kept going.
Speaker C:It was very.
Speaker C:It was just.
Speaker C:Just.
Speaker C:And then eight, I would say Hewlett Packard was.
Speaker C:Was my anchor client for the first time, ten years.
Speaker C:And they.
Speaker C:They just wanted to teach everybody the vocabulary.
Speaker C:And that was the deal.
Speaker C:The venture.
Speaker C:And then the venture community said, we want to teach our people the vocabulary too, because it just made for better conversations about investment decisions, how you.
Speaker C:How you're playing, you know, where are you in the metrics, expectations, that kind of stuff.
Speaker A:Wow.
Speaker A:Like, first off, amazing.
Speaker A:1.5 million copies.
Speaker A:That's unbelievable.
Speaker A:It's like, honestly, after reading it, it's not unbelievable, but it's.
Speaker A:It's very impressive.
Speaker A:So congratulations on that.
Speaker A:That's incredible.
Speaker A:And, you know, high tech, like, Obviously in the 80s, high tech was completely different.
Speaker A:Well, the same and different.
Speaker A:It was advanced for the time, but compared to today, man, we're living in the future.
Speaker C:We're the Jetsons now.
Speaker C:Well, so the thing that makes it the.
Speaker C:How does the framework then stay relevant?
Speaker C:It's around this idea of how do pragmatic executives make high risk, low data buying decisions?
Speaker C:So the thing about the next wave of technology is it has huge potential, but it also has material risk.
Speaker C:And if you wait until there's enough data, you will be late to the wave or you may even miss the wave.
Speaker C:So you have to make this thing about how do you.
Speaker C:And so what do they do?
Speaker C:So what they actually do, this is the whole key to the chasm, and we ended up calling the tornado, which is the.
Speaker C:The uplift.
Speaker C:The incredible uplift of demand, which follows the chasm, which is a dearth of demand.
Speaker C:And it's the pragmatic people going, talking to each other.
Speaker C:I mean, they listen to the industry and they listen to the experts.
Speaker C:They go to the Gartner group, they do all that kind of stuff.
Speaker C:But the end, they go, okay, what are you doing?
Speaker C:And they say, well, I'm not doing anything yet.
Speaker C:How about you?
Speaker C:No.
Speaker C:Okay, me neither.
Speaker C:That creates the chasm, by the way.
Speaker C:That's the junior high dance moment where nobody's going out on the floor.
Speaker C:The opposite thing happens later where they're going, you are, you are, you are.
Speaker C:Oh, my gosh, me too.
Speaker C:I don't want to be left behind.
Speaker C:So it creates this really peculiar rhythm in an adoption life cycle where it's.
Speaker C:It stalls, it stalls, it stalls and then it blows.
Speaker C:It blows up.
Speaker C:And so that was what.
Speaker C:That was the.
Speaker C:That was the core, the framework.
Speaker A:One of the questions that I had regarding the book was what is typically the timeline between, say, the chasm and the pragmatics hopping on board?
Speaker A:Is it a long time?
Speaker C:It has to do with.
Speaker C:Well, first of all, there's two things you can influence the timeline, because early on, and this was the whole point behind crossing the chasm, there will be a subset of the target market who is motivated to adopt earlier, not because they believe what you believe or believe in the new thing, but because they're in trouble.
Speaker C:They're in charge of a business process that just is under pressure.
Speaker C:It's breaking, it's not working.
Speaker C:They've applied every conventional solution they can.
Speaker C:It's not helping.
Speaker C:And so they look across the chasm to all this new tech over there, and they're going, if there's anybody over there that can help me, I'm.
Speaker C:I'm open for a meeting.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And so then what you have to do as a vendor to accelerate that is you have to not only bring your cool new thing, you have to bring the whole.
Speaker C:We call it the whole product, actually.
Speaker C:Ted Levitt was a guy called the whole product, but we stole the words.
Speaker C:Stealing is good, by the way.
Speaker C:So the whole product, which is the complete solution set for that problem in that industry, for that process.
Speaker C:So it's very local.
Speaker C:But if you take that problem off the table, then everybody in that smaller community tells everybody else in that community, hey, there's an answer to this problem.
Speaker C:It's like the vaccine from Moderna or Pfizer.
Speaker C:You should take the vaccine.
Speaker C:Right.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:So you do.
Speaker C:And that creates the beginning of an ecosystem and the beginning of this pragmatist herd effect of, oh, they're doing it so I can do it so that.
Speaker C:So in the absence of doing a crossing the chasm effort, the chasm can last forever.
Speaker C:I mean, in other words, you have to intervene.
Speaker A:Are there any examples of companies making it without crossing the chasm?
Speaker C:Yeah, you can actually start.
Speaker C:Well, it's interesting.
Speaker C:There are things, if the world's just ready for Facebook.
Speaker C:Facebook didn't cross the chasm.
Speaker C:Facebook went from like, 0 to 107 seconds because so much work had been done in advance.
Speaker C:And indeed, there's a guy named Martin.
Speaker C:I'm forgetting his last name for the moment.
Speaker C:He's at Andreessen Horsewitz.
Speaker C:He's a wonderful, wonderful investor.
Speaker C:But he's making the point to me the other day of saying, look, Jeff, now that we have so many layers of technology deployed across the world, the chasm problem's getting less and less.
Speaker C:My view of that is certainly for consumers, that's really true.
Speaker C:Consumer things really need to start inside the tornado.
Speaker C:They need to be able to take.
Speaker C:They're like a fad.
Speaker C:They need to be able.
Speaker C:Taylor Swift.
Speaker A:We're so aware, too.
Speaker A:We're so aware of the development of technology.
Speaker C:Yes.
Speaker C:But businesses who have to change their operating model, no matter how sophisticated they are with technology, anytime you mess with your operating model, you're taking an investor risk.
Speaker C:You're taking a real risk.
Speaker C:So the risk.
Speaker C:And that's the whole point of the life cycle.
Speaker C:Where there is risk, there's a life cycle.
Speaker A:Interesting.
Speaker A:So kind of what you're saying is that on the consumer market, maybe it has been alleviated, but really, when you get into big corporate, when you're selling to corporations, it's.
Speaker A:It's as evident as ever because they're not willing to take that risk until you've proven with.
Speaker A:Beyond, beyond all doubt that it is going to be the effective solution.
Speaker C:Or, or, or they're under duress to fix something that they can't fix by any other means.
Speaker C:Yes, that's absolutely correct.
Speaker C:And so the consumer thing.
Speaker C:The thing about the consumer thing is it's a risk.
Speaker C:Is TikTok a risk?
Speaker C:Well, yeah, but you know what?
Speaker C:Then just deinstall it.
Speaker C:So it's not.
Speaker C:The amount of risk is so low.
Speaker C:That's why you can play the game.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker A:You know, Jeff, we have a lot of listeners right now who maybe have not read the book.
Speaker A:I'm going to be promoting it.
Speaker A:Huge.
Speaker A:Because I do think everybody should read this book.
Speaker A:But for those of them who are hearing this idea of the chasm, but we haven't really explained it, do you mind just giving a brief overview of what the chasm.
Speaker C:Sure.
Speaker C:So what the.
Speaker C:What Rogers did in the technology adoption life cycle is he said, look, there are different Personas that adopt the technology at different points in its history.
Speaker C:And he identified five Personas.
Speaker C:And I'll use our term.
Speaker C:He had his own terms for them, but I'll use our terms.
Speaker C:So the first Persona is the technology enthusiast.
Speaker C:Think about Sheldon on the Big Bang Theory.
Speaker C:This is somebody who just loves technology, wants to play with it.
Speaker C:You will.
Speaker C:You will travel to a trade show in order to see your product.
Speaker C:I mean, they're just real.
Speaker C:It's their love.
Speaker C:Okay, that's great.
Speaker C:They're important because if they say, this is not really any good, nobody else will play after that.
Speaker C:So you really.
Speaker C:It is important you have good technology.
Speaker C:The other early adopter constituency we call the visionary, that's an executive who goes, you know, if I voluntarily adopt this now, I realize it's not ready for prime time, but if I put extra skin in the game, I can leapfrog my competition and I can get a competitive advantage that will crush them.
Speaker C:So this is like Jeff Bezos with using the Internet for bookselling yes.
Speaker C:At the time, Borders and Barnes and Noble were dominant.
Speaker C:How in the world could this kid in Seattle change the world?
Speaker C:And he just completely crushed them.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:So that was the visionary thing.
Speaker C:So that's fine.
Speaker C:The Chasm is the next Persona we call the pragmatist, and that has that dynamic I was telling you about.
Speaker C:I will do it when I see you do it, but not before.
Speaker C:So that created a chasm because they weren't doing it.
Speaker C:And then if you could cross the chasm and get these pragmatists in pain, we called them the Pragmatists in pain.
Speaker C:On the other side of the chasm, they're doing it under duress.
Speaker C:They're not doing it voluntarily, but they do it and they succeed with it.
Speaker C:And then we.
Speaker C:As you kind of go niche by niche, you get more and more.
Speaker C:A little bit like winning the New Hampshire primary and then maybe the Florida primary or the Iowa caucuses.
Speaker C:Or whatever.
Speaker C:At some point the thing goes, whoa, this is a real movement.
Speaker C:And then you start getting New York and California and Texas and the bigger states.
Speaker C:And then we call that the tornado.
Speaker C:That's when it just takes off.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And that the tornadoes last less than a decade, you know, more than a year and less than 10.
Speaker C:So usually five to seven years, sort of.
Speaker C:At some point, they ease off and you're on what we call Main Street.
Speaker C:And Main street can last for decades.
Speaker C:Main street is just a continual evolution of the category after that.
Speaker C:So the crossing the Chasm thing was.
Speaker C:It's so hard for an entrepreneur.
Speaker C:And all you entrepreneurs out there, please listen.
Speaker C:Because when you're selling to the early market, those visionaries and technology enthusiasts, the Bezos and the Sheldons of the world, whatever, they believe what you believe, and you tell them you're an evangelist and you tell them the story, and they light up, and you guys have this wonderful, wonderful exchange, and everybody's excited, and you all are rowing the same direction.
Speaker C:When you cross the Chasm, you're talking to people that don't believe what you believe.
Speaker C:And your first thought is, why am I talking to them?
Speaker C:And the answer is, because you've run out of people that you believe.
Speaker C:So then the question, what do they want to talk about about?
Speaker C:What they want to talk about is this problem they have that nobody's solving.
Speaker C:So you have to completely invert your priorities.
Speaker C:It's not about you anymore.
Speaker C:It's about the problem.
Speaker C:And the sales process is about the problem, and the marketing communication is about the problem.
Speaker C:And then eventually you get to Talk about your solution, but not until we've completely had exhausted the dimensions of the problem.
Speaker C:So it's just different.
Speaker C:The kind of salespeople you have, the kind of systems engineers you, the kind of the demos you give, it's all different.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:And if you don't change, if you cling to your old methods, you can't cross the chasm.
Speaker C:And so that's what makes it hard.
Speaker A:One of the really interesting things that you talked about is that you can have almost like a false sense of success.
Speaker A:Right before crossing the chasm is like, you could have this like, blow up where you're having great sales and everything's looking amazing and it's on the up and up.
Speaker A:And then it's like whole crap, we're actually in trouble.
Speaker A:That blew my mind a little bit.
Speaker A:Can we chat about that?
Speaker C:And it's true.
Speaker C:I mean, because the early market, by the way, some of those deals in the early market market are eye popping.
Speaker C:I mean, people will put a ton of money in, but it's, it's the visionary and the visionaries figured, look, I'm betting my career on this thing.
Speaker C:I don't want to, I don't want to skimp.
Speaker C:So I'm going to put a ton of money behind this thing because I, I got a race, I got to be successful.
Speaker C:So that means.
Speaker C:But that you're the vendor thinking, whoa, do I, I am Taylor Swift.
Speaker C:I just don't look like her.
Speaker C:And it's like, well, maybe not.
Speaker C:So that's the challenge.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:No, that, that really blew my mind because I could see as like somebody who's in marketing, as someone who's in business development, if you're having that early success, it really would give you a false sense of, I got this.
Speaker A:Like, we got this all figured out.
Speaker A:Let's just keep doing the same thing.
Speaker A:Let's keep hammering what we're hammering.
Speaker A:We're going to get more people on board.
Speaker A:And what you're saying is, no.
Speaker A:And talk to me about that, about that frame of mind switch, because I can tell you from someone who's been in business development marketing a long time, switching your frame of mind when you're having success is a hard thing to do.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:Well, a couple things.
Speaker C:So first of all, before you cross the chasm, what, what is the minimum?
Speaker C:What do you have to accomplish before you cross the chasm?
Speaker C:And what we would say is you need at least one marquee reference.
Speaker C:And what that means to us is it's a company that everybody's Heard of, by the way.
Speaker C:They've never heard of you, so.
Speaker C:But they've heard of this.
Speaker C:This company and that this company has gone all in on whatever your disruption is.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:And what you did in order to make it work, because there was no partners, there was no standards, there was no.
Speaker C:You put a ton of your.
Speaker C:Probably your engineering team and anybody else in your company, and you just put them on the project.
Speaker C:You treated it like a project, and you just, you said, we're going to do whatever it takes to make this customer successful.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:When you do that.
Speaker C:And then people like to write about that.
Speaker C:So the Fortune magazine people and the.
Speaker C:Whatever business development podcast you might have that CIO on the podcast to tell, what did you do with this thing?
Speaker A:Exactly.
Speaker C:But now we got to get systematic market development.
Speaker C:And when you go out and you try to tell the story, people just don't listen.
Speaker C:Their eyes kind of glaze.
Speaker C:Your messages just don't land.
Speaker C:And so that's when you have to.
Speaker C:So I don't think people change their frame of reference because they're just thinking, well, I'm bored on a Tuesday.
Speaker C:And they certainly don't change it the day after they sold the big deal.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:They're just too happy.
Speaker C:But there comes a time when they look at their fun and here's what really happens.
Speaker C:They look at their pipeline and they realize, my pipeline is not.
Speaker C:I mean, the truth is they're a little bit like a python that swallowed an elephant.
Speaker C:That first thing was an amazing meal.
Speaker C:But it's like, you're not going to have like a pipeline of elephants.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:And so then it's like, I have a pipeline of rabbits, but that's a different hunting process and that's a different deal.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:And like, you know, one of the things that I've realized in my time in business development marketing is that you can lose a.
Speaker A:You can lose a company at any time for any reason.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:They can leave at any time for any reason.
Speaker A:And so many people get comfortable with what they have and they stop.
Speaker A:They stop doing business development marketing think, ah, we're good.
Speaker A:Like, we have so much food coming in, we don't got to keep hunting.
Speaker A:But the reality is, like, you can lose your customers at any time for any reason.
Speaker A:So you always have to be on the hunt and, you know, reading the book and thinking about the pragma, the Prague pragmatic situation and working with the pragmatist, it's really hard because like you said, they're.
Speaker A:They at that point, it's word of mouth that's really spreading, you know, the credibility for your product.
Speaker A:But how do you get those first pragmatists on board?
Speaker A:Because they're going to be so reluctant to make that jump to try something big.
Speaker A:Do you really just have to go all in and try to give them everything they want just to get them on board in the first place?
Speaker C:No.
Speaker C:What, what you for that first we call the beachhead segment.
Speaker C:The answer is yes.
Speaker C:At the beach end segment, you are 100% responsible for the whole product, including bringing in partners who do what you don't do.
Speaker C:Yeah, because that's fine.
Speaker C:But you have to bring them, you can't just assume that they're going to show up.
Speaker C:Now once you start getting that segment going, the second, third, fourth, fifth customer, same use case, same industry, therefore same word of mouth community.
Speaker C:Once you get three or four or five companies in the same word of mouth community doing the same thing, two things happen.
Speaker C:First of all, everybody else in that community is now feels free to buy that solution.
Speaker C:Second, the partners that are necessary to support the solution are now seeing it as a future source of business, not just a one off.
Speaker C:So they're starting to invest in the thing.
Speaker C:So now you're creating actually a sustainable marketplace where everybody has a shared interest to keep the fire burning.
Speaker C:Here that's when you go, we call it the bowling alley.
Speaker C:You then go to the adjacent pin.
Speaker C:Well, if I have references in a whole product here, where can I take it next?
Speaker C:Where I can leverage the success in the first market by going, either it's an adjacent segment or it's an adjacent use case or someplace my partners are taking me where they've been before.
Speaker C:So whatever it is.
Speaker C:And so you knock over a second pin and a third pin and what now it starts to happen at some point is the horizontal players go, well wait a minute, this isn't just for this vertical or this, this, this is for everybody.
Speaker C:And that now a bigger ecosystem starts to form.
Speaker C:So you don't at that point you just have to supply your ingredient.
Speaker C:You, you no longer have to do any more marketing for creating demand.
Speaker C:Now what you have to do is competitive marketing because everybody whose mother's now saying, well I want some of that.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:And now.
Speaker C:So it's a very different form of marketing in the Boeing outlets.
Speaker C:Solution marketing, very customer focused.
Speaker C:In the tornado, it's product marketing and it's very competitive focused.
Speaker C:So again, that's a second change of now we change.
Speaker C:You see I had to change your framework.
Speaker A:Yeah, again, yeah.
Speaker C:This is for Example way back in the day when word processing first came out, it was on many computers.
Speaker C:Wang was probably the most famous of them.
Speaker C:Nbi, there are a bunch of them.
Speaker C:But the point was when they went to the PC you had to go from, from solutions to products.
Speaker C:They didn't.
Speaker C:And so the PC word processing just went horizontal and took the market away from them going forward.
Speaker A:One of the examples you gave in the book was Palm Palm Pilot.
Speaker A:I am like on, I'm on the very tail end of Palm Pilot.
Speaker A:I remember people having Palm Pilots.
Speaker A:But at that point everyone was switching over to Blackberries.
Speaker C:Is, you know, you were reading the 99 version, right?
Speaker C:Because there's a 91 version, a 99 version.
Speaker C: So the: Speaker C: did not make the cut, but in: Speaker C:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker A:Yeah, it was, it was kind of funny listening to that.
Speaker A:I wasn't sure I picked it up on audible.
Speaker A:So I got whatever I thought I got the most recent version, but I might not have.
Speaker A:But it was funny listening to the Palm Pilot version of it because I remember that and I remember like obviously it went from being huge to being dead overnight when BlackBerry came along.
Speaker A:And then obviously BlackBerry became, was huge.
Speaker C:Dead until the iPhone came along.
Speaker C:Yeah, yeah, no, no, I know.
Speaker C:I mean it's, it's brutal.
Speaker C:And, and look at Nokia, Nokia just got caught out in the middle of that.
Speaker A:That was one of the questions that I kind of had given.
Speaker A:Like obviously you've been in technology for frankly an incredibly long time, especially for what is now because technology is changing so quickly.
Speaker A:Like you just see something new blow something out of the water every five years it seems like.
Speaker A:And you know, you just talked about like the life cycle.
Speaker A:It doesn't feel like, like the life cycle is much longer than five years of any technological advancement because it's just, it's changing so quickly.
Speaker C:Well, what happens is a lot of times the advancement will get subsided, will subside into the underlying platform.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So a lot of the technology that made, you know, BlackBerry successful is in the iPhone.
Speaker C:It's just under the covers.
Speaker C:And so the, the new thing comes along.
Speaker C:It also depends consumer life cycles, I think.
Speaker C:Well, no, there's no question they're shorter.
Speaker C: high tech software job was in: Speaker C:So at that time IBM was the dominant player.
Speaker C:And there were the other, they called them the bunch.
Speaker C:Burroughs, Univac, NCR Control Data and Honeywell.
Speaker C:And that was computed.
Speaker C:There were no mini computers, there was no PCs that was it?
Speaker C:So if you think those life cycles were at least a decade.
Speaker A:Yes.
Speaker C:And the minicomputer life cycle was at least a decade and the relational database life cycles.
Speaker C:But like the relational database is a good example that was invented in the 80s, it became universal in the 90s and it's still there.
Speaker C:So Oracle databases underlie, still underlie.
Speaker C:Most systems of record, most systems of engagement.
Speaker C:So that's what I mean by, it kind of sinks down.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker A:So, yeah, it's just, it seems crazy.
Speaker A:Like even I'll be Honest, like I'm 35, I should be fully immersed in tech.
Speaker A:And I try to, I try to keep up with it, but I feel like I'm hitting that age now where it's like, I don't know if I can keep up with this.
Speaker A:Like, my kids will be playing the latest video game.
Speaker A:And I'm like, I used to love video games.
Speaker A:And I was like, I just don't have time.
Speaker C:By the way, your neurons are now committed elsewhere.
Speaker C:By the way, when you get to my age, neurons, you're not, you need to save your neurons.
Speaker A:It's, it's, honestly, it's hard to keep up.
Speaker A:And you know, I'm trying to keep up with this new AI wave because I do recognize you talked about it in the book and you had said in the book at the time that the Internet was coming out, that if companies did not embrace the Internet and this was like, you know, back in 91, you were writing this, you're like.
Speaker C:If companies, I think you had the.
Speaker A:99 version, you were saying that if companies do not embrace the Internet, it'll kill them.
Speaker A:And you were dead on.
Speaker A:And I kind of feel, and like, call me out if I'm wrong, but I kind of feel like AI, is that right?
Speaker A:Right now if companies do not embrace AI and figure out how the heck they're going to utilize it, it'll kill them.
Speaker C:Yeah, I, I, I, I think actually people, pundits more experience than myself of making the point that AI may be the biggest effort.
Speaker C:I think it's important to say, well, what do we mean by AI?
Speaker C:Because for example, we've been doing predictive AI for 20 or 30 years.
Speaker C:That did not, that was, that has not been as revolutionary.
Speaker C:Wow.
Speaker C:So the, the definition of AI, I think that does catch what is dramatically different is the, it's five words, advanced statistical software that learns.
Speaker A:Yes.
Speaker C:And so we've, because we've had advanced statistical software for 40 years, 50 years.
Speaker C:I mean back to SAS and SPSS.
Speaker C:But.
Speaker C:But advanced statistical software that learns and that continues to learn, you know, organically, so that it just gets smarter and smarter and smarter.
Speaker C:We've never had that before, for sure.
Speaker C:Embedding that capability in every software system in the earth is feasible, and not only is it.
Speaker C:It's not even that hard to imagine, and it's.
Speaker C:If you now have to choose between a system that learns and a system that doesn't learn.
Speaker C:Yeah, I just, you know, that's the.
Speaker C:That's the issue.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:I'll give you, like, an example that I see it changing the world, and I think it really is, in time, efficiency and taking things away from humans that humans have to do into things that a robot can do.
Speaker A:Because ultimately, for instance.
Speaker A:Let's just talk about a podcast, because that's what we're on right now.
Speaker A:A podcast at some point will have to incorporate as much AI as humanly possible to remove the human contribution to it in order to keep it effective.
Speaker A:And if humans keep doing that task, it will make them ineffective and uncompetitive in, frankly, their show release schedule or their ability to stay relevant or their ability to interact with their.
Speaker A:With their customers, their listeners.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:It's going to kill podcasters who do not keep up with it.
Speaker A:And I see this in anything, business development people, anything along those lines where there's a human interaction or someone who has to interact physically with a computer to get something done.
Speaker A:If we can automate that, it's going to have to be automated just simply to stay competitive in the future world.
Speaker A:That's.
Speaker A:I guess that's the way I see it.
Speaker C:Right.
Speaker C:Well, I think there's two stages here.
Speaker C:So you're doing what I would call human in the loop.
Speaker C:And in the human in the loop model, what we're trying to do is accentuate the unique contribution of the human by essentially subtracting out anything that not only the AI could do, but actually can do better.
Speaker A:Sure.
Speaker C:It's very clear there's a whole bunch of stuff the AI does better eventually.
Speaker A:Yes.
Speaker C:And so as you subtract that, people get scared for their jobs.
Speaker C:And we have this whole.
Speaker C:And by the way, protectionism isn't crazy.
Speaker C:In the short term, protectionism makes sense.
Speaker C:In the long term, it's failure.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:But in the short term, it's a buffer.
Speaker C:And I think people should not be.
Speaker C:You should not patronize protectionism because it's an important thing to think about.
Speaker C:But it's not a strategy, it's a tactic.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:So, but then there's another form of AI, you're moving forward called systems of autonomy, where you say, you know what this is?
Speaker C:There's no human loop.
Speaker C:We're gonna have self driving cars, by the way.
Speaker C:That's a long way away, I think, but I think so the point is, at some point, I think you say, well, no, we will have self driving cars.
Speaker C:So, so there.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:But systems of autonomy are the ones where people are going.
Speaker C:This is where they talk about AI risk, this is where they talk about all those things.
Speaker C:So I think, I think if to have a productive conversation about AI, we should say, look, let's set systems of autonomy aside and understand that those are still potentially risk, highly risk bearing and need careful attention and not confuse them with systems of intelligence, particularly with human in the loop, where basically it just makes sense other than the fact that it may put people out of work, which is a concern.
Speaker C:And I think when you do that, what profession would not use this thing?
Speaker C:And the thing that's shocking, I think to people in the white collar is every other form of automation to date hit blue collar workers much more than white collar workers.
Speaker A:That's right.
Speaker C:Gen AI.
Speaker C:Excuse me, that was you and me.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah, it is, it is.
Speaker A:And there.
Speaker A:And you know, I really, I am a technology embracer.
Speaker A:You would probably call me a little bit of a vision.
Speaker C:You're, you're at the front, you believe what they believe.
Speaker A:I really do.
Speaker A:I really love technology.
Speaker A: ike I'm just a product of the: Speaker A:I'm a millennial, right?
Speaker A:Like, I love technology.
Speaker A:I grew up in the world and I, I've seen it.
Speaker A:What's funny is I'm a really unique generation because I've seen what happened before and I've seen what happened after.
Speaker A:I really fit in that middle ground.
Speaker A:But I'll tell you what, like, like you said, it's very hard to keep up.
Speaker A:It's very hard to keep up.
Speaker A:I like, even as a millennial, even as somebody who has embraced technology my entire life, I am finding it hard to keep up with the advancement of technology.
Speaker A:And one of the areas that I think I find it almost the hardest to keep up with right now is in AI, because like you said, I feel like I'm having to become a bit of a pragmatist because I'm getting hit with a new AI technology every single week.
Speaker A:Someone's reaching out to me.
Speaker A:Kelly, I got this great new thing you need to look at.
Speaker A:It's going to help you with your bd.
Speaker A:It's going to help you with your podcast, like, you got to look, it's the next big thing, but everybody has the next big thing.
Speaker A:And I guess let's talk to.
Speaker A:Let's talk to people who own AI companies right now, and they are trying, let's say, to cross the chasm, because they all are, but there's thousands of them, right?
Speaker C:What?
Speaker C:First of all, a couple of things.
Speaker C:First of all, for people like you and me as a customer, and then for the vendor, the thing in both cases, when you have too much technology coming at you too fast, stop thinking about yourself and think about your customer and work and say, where am I serving my customer?
Speaker C:But more importantly, where am I not serving my customer?
Speaker C:Or am I potentially letting my customer down?
Speaker C:Now, now, let's work backward from that interaction.
Speaker C:What could I invest in?
Speaker C:AI or anything else that would allow me to serve my customer better?
Speaker C:And I'm going to use that to prioritize what I investigate and what I invest in and how I go forward.
Speaker C:That takes a lot of noise off the table.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Now, if I'm in a vendor and I'm trying to cross the chasm, rather than just go to Kelly and say, hey, yeah, yeah, this is really cool, I want to say, no, I asked that question.
Speaker C:What are the Kelly's of this world?
Speaker C:Where are the Kelly's of this world?
Speaker C:Struggling with their business development.
Speaker C:What's going on there?
Speaker C:What could I do to take something off of Kelly's table?
Speaker C:And then I will qualify the conversation by saying, kelly, I'm not going to tell you about my new AI thing.
Speaker C:Are you having problem with this issue?
Speaker C:That you start a campaign and then it goes sideways and you lose track of it, or you start whatever it is, but it's got to be a real problem.
Speaker C:And you will either say yes or no.
Speaker C:If you say no, I say, great, I was in the wrong room.
Speaker C:If you say yes, well, then I'll probe deeper.
Speaker C:Well, why are you having this problem?
Speaker C:And we.
Speaker C:And the deeper we probe.
Speaker C:What I'm doing is I'm leading you to.
Speaker C:Well, interestingly enough, we have an AI thing that does exactly what you need, and we'd love to at least show it to you.
Speaker C:So you.
Speaker C:But that's how you play the game.
Speaker A:You're building the curiosity and figuring out if there's a need ahead of saying, oh, hey, maybe I have something for you.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And to be fair, are in the early market, you don't do that in the early market.
Speaker C:You say, this is amazing.
Speaker C:You want to see it?
Speaker C:And people say, yeah, yeah, but not on the other side of the cousin.
Speaker A:Yeah, it's, it's really curious because I, you know, I mean, obviously I was a bit too young for the dot com boom.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:Like, I don't, I remember being there.
Speaker A:Like I remember playing with the Internet.
Speaker A:But I was 12.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:It was a different experience.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:But you know, do you, Was it like this in the dot com boom where there just felt it to be like a bajillion things coming at you at any given moment?
Speaker C:No, I think this is where I think Martin Casado has got the point.
Speaker C:Every layer adds another set of exposures and so therefore you can have more things happen more fast and you get more deployment.
Speaker C:The other thing that's happened, which is interesting is the digital economy doesn't require as much capital investment as the industrial economy because you don't have to build as many factories, you don't have to build inventory, you don't have to build distribution.
Speaker C:I mean there's a whole lot of stuff.
Speaker C:If it's digital, you don't do any of that stuff.
Speaker C:Which means digital companies have returned much more capital than industrial companies ever could, which means there's a ton of money sitting around with financial managers wanting to put it to work.
Speaker C:That's what financial managers like to do.
Speaker C:Well, there's not, I mean, at some point it's like we don't need that much money.
Speaker C:And so then they start putting it to work in screwier and screwier ways and then crazier and crazier investments.
Speaker C:So you get this plethora of stuff, most of which in a, in a scarcer economy would not have been invested in in the first place.
Speaker C:And so there's a lot of noise right now.
Speaker C:And I think, I, I think that digital noise is going to.
Speaker C:And then we have state economies who are doing a version of this as well.
Speaker C:So I think there's going to be a lot of digital noise for a long time.
Speaker A:Yeah, obviously.
Speaker A:Jeff, it's been 10 years since the last revision.
Speaker A:What.
Speaker A:Has anything changed?
Speaker A:Would, would you write another revision?
Speaker C:Well, you know, I, I think you have to wait for the, the, so the last, the, the, the books, the examples in the last version were companies like Salesforce and, and Box and, and so they were mostly SaaS companies and Workday and those guys.
Speaker C:And I, I tend to be an enterprise software guy, so that's the center of my, I'm not a consumer guy.
Speaker C:So therefore there's a whole, the whole consumer thing.
Speaker C:So for example, Lean Startup was a much better book for consumer than crossing the chasm and vice versa.
Speaker C:For B2B, crossing the chasm is much better than lean startup.
Speaker C:Minimum viable product is kind of the key idea in consumer.
Speaker C:That's kind of like, duh, get that out there as fast as you can.
Speaker A:That's right.
Speaker C:But if, but if you're in nuclear energy, a minimum viable product may not be the best idea.
Speaker C:So, so, so you know that, that's, that's happened.
Speaker C:But, but then I think the smart.
Speaker C:So what one of the things they've changed since then.
Speaker C:Well, cloud computing did enable it.
Speaker C: oud computing was part of the: Speaker C: For: Speaker C:But since then, the combination of mobile and cloud has created ubiquitous.
Speaker C:Two billion, maybe two and a half billion people on the planet are digitally connected.
Speaker C:Yeah, 24 7.
Speaker C:So it's like that, that is a different reality.
Speaker C:And in fact, we're concerned about the social and psychological impact of being overly digitally connected on children, adolescents, and frankly, adults.
Speaker C:So that, that platform of life, going from the physical world to the digital world as your center of gravity, that's, that's a, that's a big change.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:And, and, and, and so I think that's, that's what we're, that's why you're getting all this sense of activity and noise.
Speaker A:Oh boy.
Speaker A:Yeah, it, the whole metaverse idea freaks me out a little bit.
Speaker C:Well, by the way, I have a blog entry today about, about.
Speaker C:I don't know if you saw, but meta pulled back on its latest vid virtual reality headset.
Speaker C:Apple's things kind of at $3,500, it's not flying off the shelves.
Speaker C:What a surprise.
Speaker C:So, so, so the point is the life cycle is still alive.
Speaker C:Alive and well in terms of, you know, chasms and stuff.
Speaker C:There's.
Speaker C:Virtual reality has not crossed the chasm.
Speaker A:Yeah, no, for sure, for sure.
Speaker A:Although, you know, like you said, like it's just a matter of time.
Speaker A:Like all these things.
Speaker A:Although, like, what does that look like for a human?
Speaker A:Like, I guess I struggle with that.
Speaker A:And I like, I watch my boys, I love my boys, they love video games.
Speaker A:But that world too is a completely different world.
Speaker A:And it's funny because navigating as a kid who grew up in video games, right, Like I had a Nintendo from age.
Speaker A:But watching my kids in video games now scares the bejesus out of me because now they're actually interacting with other kids, with other people.
Speaker A:They're creating entire online communities.
Speaker A:They make friends there.
Speaker A:They look forward to seeing those People there.
Speaker A:It is a completely different world than even the world I grew up in.
Speaker A:I know as a, as a parent, I'm really struggling with how to navigate this modern metaverse world.
Speaker C:Well, I think, I think at some point this is why the last book was about philosophy.
Speaker C:Because, because basically as you change your worldview, you have to sort of say, well, how did my ethics.
Speaker C:It's like the book I wrote was like, look, all of our ethics were created during religious era.
Speaker C:Yeah, they were all, they all essentially derived from some religion.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:We're in a secular era now where the scientific explanation of everything makes it pretty clear that you don't need to have a religion in order to explain the universe.
Speaker C:But if there's no God, where the ethics come from and how does that work?
Speaker C:And you can't just have no ethics.
Speaker C:So, so that's what I was trying to do is saying, okay, in a secular world, how would you ground ethics?
Speaker C:How does that work?
Speaker C:Well, now you're saying the same thing again.
Speaker C:You know, in the digital world, okay, so what are the ethics in a digital world and what is okay and what is not okay?
Speaker C:Is it okay to betray your team on a digital universe?
Speaker C:You and I do not have this problem, but your kids do.
Speaker A:Yeah, I know.
Speaker A:It's like, it's like I can't even remotely foresee.
Speaker A:And like, I think that was one of the most surprising things.
Speaker A:And you know, since we're chatting about technology, right.
Speaker A:The most surprising thing in my lifetime was watching the evolution of a cell phone.
Speaker A:Right?
Speaker A: that my mom carried around in: Speaker A:And I, and I've, you know, I got my first cell phone.
Speaker A:I was in grade 10 or 11 when I got my first cell phone.
Speaker A:And at that time that was a pretty big responsibility.
Speaker A:We could text, but it was like 30 cents a text.
Speaker A:So you rarely did.
Speaker A:You waited till 5 o' clock to take a phone call because that's when they were free.
Speaker A:Right?
Speaker A:It was a different situation.
Speaker A:And then I watched that obviously evolve into the iPhone and at the time thinking, wow, that's cool, but like, ah, do I really need Internet on my phone?
Speaker A:Do I really need all these extra things?
Speaker A:Probably not, because I'm only texting and calling.
Speaker A:But then obviously that evolving into a supercomputer that only gets double as advanced every couple of years.
Speaker A:I could have never seen that coming.
Speaker A:And I guess for me, what I'm questioning right now, as a business owner, as somebody in business development, as someone who's watching The AI revolution is what is the next cell phone?
Speaker A:What's the thing that I can't see coming right now that in eight years is going to completely blow me away?
Speaker A:And I worry about that for my kids because I worry about, okay, you know, with the advent of social media, which is amazing on one hand and absolutely horrible on another, what is, what is the risk to them?
Speaker A:What is the thing that I can't see coming that is going to be dangerous for them, but I won't see it coming and I won't know how to handle it.
Speaker C:Well, I mean I, I think social media is dangerous enough that you should, don't have to worry about if there's a saber tooth tiger at your door.
Speaker C:You don't have to worry about whatever is on the other side of a hill.
Speaker C:And, and I, our, our society has not.
Speaker C:We don't know how to cope social media.
Speaker C:We thought social media was actually going to be a democratizing, liberating, you know, it's clearly, it's clearly a much more powerful tool for authoritarians.
Speaker C:It's a much more powerful tool for malicious actors than for, for life supporting actors.
Speaker C:So by the way, it is a tool for life supporting actors.
Speaker C:I mean it is it, the tool itself is neutral.
Speaker C:Yes, but, but I don't think anybody imagined how much power it could put in the hands of people that have destructive motives.
Speaker C:So, so, and we don't, and we don't know how to cope with that yet.
Speaker C:I mean we, we you the guy that today's news was, the Russian guy that got arrested in France because he had, he wasn't moderating content on his, on his social media platform.
Speaker C:I mean it's like so how, but by the way, if you moderate the content then you have other people that blow up that at you.
Speaker C:So we're, we're really, really struggling and this is, this is a, we haven't, I mean this, this is a definitive one.
Speaker C:And then you look at the, at the elections right now and you look at how just the, the noise and frankly the tone of voice in our, in America right now in political discussion is just horrific.
Speaker C:Yeah, so, so I mean those things are concerning and so I think what you, but back to being a parent, this is why you still need oh, first rule, no digital at the dinner table.
Speaker C:Yeah, we're going to talk to each other even if we don't know what to say and we're going to connect because we need to ground ourselves in something that's, you know, outside of the, of that noise.
Speaker C:So that there's a signal inside our hearts that can help us navigate a noisy world.
Speaker A:Yeah, it's, it's definitely a 21st century problem.
Speaker C:And by the way, my parents worried about, were worried about tv, then they worried about rock music.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Sex, drugs and rock and roll, psychedelics, marijuana.
Speaker C:I mean, I mean, oh, yeah, there's always, there's always some saber tooth tiger somewhere.
Speaker A:And now I can't even get my kids to listen to Kiss or Motley Crue.
Speaker A:They want to listen to something else.
Speaker C:Exact.
Speaker A:No, it's, it's definitely really interesting.
Speaker A:And I think about it a lot, you know, like, especially it's something that I never thought that I would struggle with.
Speaker A:Like, as someone who grew up in technology, who embraced technology, who loves technology, I never thought that that would be the thing where I'm like, oh my gosh, like, I think we might be getting too much technology.
Speaker C:Well, you know, this parroting thing, this parental Gene Kelly, it does work on the whole personality.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:You realize, you mean life's not about me, it's about somebody other than me?
Speaker C:Because when you're a kid, life is about you.
Speaker C:I mean.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:You know, and that's like, man, maybe it's not about me.
Speaker C:Yeah, okay.
Speaker A:No, it's, it's definitely, it's definitely nuts.
Speaker A:You know, and something I wanted to chat with you about too.
Speaker A:Like, as somebody who is a prolific author, you've written eight books.
Speaker A:We talked about this before.
Speaker A:Technically 11 if you consider all the revisions you've made to these books over time, like, first off, amazing.
Speaker A:And I know, you know, you started off in literature, but there's a lot of people listening.
Speaker A:I talk to people all the time who are like, I, you know, I need to write a book or I'm afraid to write a book or I don't even know where to get started.
Speaker A: oking to write a book here in: Speaker C:Well, I think, I think if you're not.
Speaker C:First off, some people are compelled to write.
Speaker C:Like, I would probably, probably pass this planet with a plan in my hand.
Speaker C:I mean, just because.
Speaker C:Set aside the people that are just compulsive.
Speaker C:So then the question is, well, why would you write a book?
Speaker C:And the answer is, because I need to get a platform for change in the world that I can.
Speaker C:A business development process, or if you're a social entrepreneur, a social development kind of process.
Speaker C:So to do that if you're not compelled to write.
Speaker C:First of all, it's not a bad idea to pair up with somebody who is a writer and to co write it with, you know, it'll say by Kelly Kennedy with so and so below and the so and so below.
Speaker C:Somebody that actually wrote the entire book.
Speaker C:But, but basically it's your book and they're putting themselves.
Speaker C:That's number one.
Speaker C:But even before that, at least in my experience was I got introduced to a literary agent before I I'd written a manuscript.
Speaker C:But you, but literary agents will.
Speaker C:Can talk to you before that.
Speaker C:And what they, what you realize is say that you want to write a book proposal and it turns out what a book proposal is.
Speaker C:It's a, it's a.
Speaker C:Something you give to a publisher.
Speaker C:The agent gives to a publisher that essentially describes why would.
Speaker C:What is there a marker for this book?
Speaker C:Who is the marker for this book?
Speaker C:Why would they buy it and how would the author help sell it and who.
Speaker C:What other.
Speaker C:So they're actually thinking about as a business.
Speaker C:Right?
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Which is not what you're thinking when you want to say I need to write a book.
Speaker C:That's not what you're thinking speaking about.
Speaker C:But, but if you're going to have a, a publisher now, you can also self publish on Amazon and if you're good at social media promotion, that actually works really well.
Speaker C:But you have to be good then you're going to promote the book, not the publisher.
Speaker C:By the way, publishers are not that good at promoting so that's increasingly an avenue to consider.
Speaker C:But the problem there is who's going to pay your co writer.
Speaker C:I mean there's, there's money in the deal.
Speaker C:Having said all of that, then I think the next thing is you need to write about a.
Speaker C:I use the word problem.
Speaker C:I'm not sure you always have to use the word problem, but it's got to be something that's, that's important and urgent and not solved.
Speaker C:If all you're going to do is write stuff that people already know, frankly just go on chat GPT and get it in seven seconds.
Speaker C:But if they don't already know it, then that's what requires you to, to lean in and do So I think that, that, that's, that's a piece of it as well.
Speaker C:Oh, and one last thing.
Speaker C:So in my case, I, I'm also a speaker and, and I would say even before people paid me to be a speaker, I used to give Crossing the Chasm talks for free because I just it was kind of, you know, you go to a trade show, they give you a speaking opportunity or lunch and learn at a company cafeteria.
Speaker C:I think trying out your book as a speech is great because A, you find out what lands and what doesn't land, and B, you actually are creating the outline from your book in your speech.
Speaker C:And.
Speaker C:And you, You.
Speaker C:When you've got the speech that finally works, that's probably the outline for your book.
Speaker A:That's amazing.
Speaker A:That's.
Speaker A:I've never heard that advice before.
Speaker A:So that's great.
Speaker A:You know.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:I think there's a lot of people who are just, like, on the fence.
Speaker A:Like, I think a lot of people think that they can write a book and get rich.
Speaker A:And I think I've talked to enough authors right now to know that that is not the common pract.
Speaker A:Happens.
Speaker C:No, no.
Speaker C:To be fair, I don't think about the book as.
Speaker C:I mean, the.
Speaker C:The publisher has to think about that.
Speaker C:But you should think about the book.
Speaker C:Well, for example, so, yes, crossing chasm sold 1 1/2 million copies.
Speaker C:Great.
Speaker C:The royalty, great.
Speaker C:So may.
Speaker C:You know, but.
Speaker C:But compare that to the amount of business it generated.
Speaker C:I mean, it created.
Speaker C:It created three different firms.
Speaker C:It created 30 years of consulting business speeches.
Speaker C:I mean, it created tens of millions of dollars of business easily.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Forget about it.
Speaker C:So you would give the book away on street corners if you had to.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:Yeah, don't think about.
Speaker C:I would not think about the book as a source of.
Speaker C:And now if you write a novel.
Speaker C:Very different.
Speaker C:If you.
Speaker C:By the way, if you can get your novel into a movie score, way to go.
Speaker C:That's a different.
Speaker C:That's a different economics.
Speaker A:Yes, yes.
Speaker A:No, that.
Speaker A:That makes a lot of sense.
Speaker A:And I think, think, you know, you hit it on the head.
Speaker A:It's like, don't.
Speaker A:Don't write a book to get rich from the book.
Speaker A:Like, if you're a.
Speaker A:If you're a market leader in something, you'll find other ways, but use it essentially as a resource for people.
Speaker A:Yeah, that's the right way.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And it's great.
Speaker C:And.
Speaker C:And it does help.
Speaker C:And then, Then people read the book and they say, okay, what happened to me was.
Speaker C:So how did this thing.
Speaker C:Business get started?
Speaker C:Well, you know, I went on my own.
Speaker C:I wrote a company called Lawson Software.
Speaker C:They read the book, they said, said, why don't you come out and give us a talk?
Speaker C:Came out.
Speaker C:Give them a talk.
Speaker C:They totally bought into the entire thing.
Speaker C:So they looked at me and said, we're not going to do this without you sticking around.
Speaker C:So we want you on our board of directors.
Speaker A:Wow.
Speaker C:So they.
Speaker C:I've joined the board of directors.
Speaker C:I mean, the point is, if the people, if they buy in your thing, then they want to, they want you to stick around.
Speaker C:And that creates, you know, either a consulting opportunity or, you know, speaking opportunity or.
Speaker C:And typically it's typically, you write a book, you get speakers.
Speaker C:People are always looking for speakers, say, okay, so you give it, you give a talk.
Speaker C:Somebody in the talk comes up to you and says, that's pretty interesting.
Speaker C:Why don't you give a talk to my company?
Speaker C:You go to that company, we say, well, we got this problem, but we need your help.
Speaker C:So why don't you come and do consulting with us?
Speaker C:Then when you do consulting, what you discover is, I didn't really understand the problem as well as I thought, did I?
Speaker C:Because we have these other problems.
Speaker C:And so you have to invent solutions during the consulting project to help the customer.
Speaker C:And you say, well, okay, I'm just going to add that one little extra slide to my presentation.
Speaker C:I'll be fine.
Speaker C:Then you do another one.
Speaker C:Well, I gotta add two more slides.
Speaker C:Pretty soon you get enough slides.
Speaker C:I gotta write another book.
Speaker A:I gotta write another book.
Speaker A:No, it's so funny too, because even when I'm working with business development clients, right, Every single one of them has something additional or something more for you to consider.
Speaker A:One size never really fits all, but it can give you a nice outline.
Speaker A:But you're right, there's always another slide.
Speaker A:There's always something else to consider.
Speaker C:Yep.
Speaker C:So when the center of gravity gets too heavy on the other side, you go, okay, I got another.
Speaker C:I need another platform.
Speaker A:Yes, yes.
Speaker A:You know, Jeff, one of the other things I wanted to chat with you about is you have probably a top 1% following, if not higher, on LinkedIn.
Speaker A:And in this, like, I don't think many people were even considering that they needed to start building their LinkedIn presence until maybe Covid.
Speaker A:I.
Speaker A:I like to say even after Covid, because I think, think LinkedIn really exploded in Covid, right?
Speaker A:Like there was pre Covid LinkedIn, which we knew how to use, but not really.
Speaker A:And then after LinkedIn, it was like, you best figure out how to use this damn thing because it is here to stay.
Speaker A:You know, you're sitting close to 700,000 followers.
Speaker A:What is it like to.
Speaker A:To grow to that level?
Speaker A:And then what kind of responsibility do you have when you have a following like that?
Speaker A:Which is, I think, something people don't consider.
Speaker C:Yeah, well, for me first of all, LinkedIn represents my target audience.
Speaker C:I'm a B2B marketing person.
Speaker C:This is a B2B.
Speaker C:This is not Facebook.
Speaker C:This is not TikTok.
Speaker C:This is business to business.
Speaker C:So that's number one.
Speaker C:I think number two is.
Speaker C:And actually something's happened to LinkedIn in the last it's post Covid where people are started using it more like business Facebook.
Speaker C:I think that's a misuse of LinkedIn where they.
Speaker C:I just think that's not what I would put on LinkedIn and it's going to make too much.
Speaker C:If I were the LinkedIn people, I'd worry about it because it's creating more noise, less signal.
Speaker C:The signal on LinkedIn is what are business people thinking about talking about and investing and struggling with and whatever.
Speaker C:So back to the responsibility.
Speaker C:I think, you know, everybody has a brand promise, so you have to think about, well, okay, what's my brand promise?
Speaker C:In my case, my brand promises.
Speaker C:I'm going to try to look at the situation through a business person's eyes with respect to technology adoption and all the forces in the industry and particularly if you're in a high tech company.
Speaker C:That's ground zero for me.
Speaker C:And I'm going to try to think about what are you struggling with?
Speaker C:And then I'm going to try to take the frameworks that we've developed over the last 35 years and there's probably a library of 20 or 30 frameworks.
Speaker C:There's a lot of frameworks after that time.
Speaker C:What framework would help straighten out this problem best?
Speaker C:And then write a blog post against it.
Speaker C:And my blog post always ends, that's what I think.
Speaker C:What do you think?
Speaker C:Because I definitely want to pull in people to that dialogue and the more people that get pulled in, the better.
Speaker A:So it's really about creating a conversation.
Speaker A:That's really what you want to do.
Speaker A:At the end of the day, you don't want to just put a statement out to the world.
Speaker A:You want to interact with people.
Speaker C:Right?
Speaker C:But you need to provoke the conversation, not just evoke it.
Speaker C:So you can't just say, well, what do you guys think?
Speaker C:Or like, what's keeping you up at night?
Speaker C:You know, that creates a kind of.
Speaker C:Creates too diffuse a response.
Speaker C:So you need to say, I'm going to make a provocative statement, but I'm provoking you in order to encourage you to disagree, not necessarily to agree.
Speaker C:But I want to get to the efficient frontier of where the problem is.
Speaker C:Because what people tend to do and what you frankly makes much of what's on LinkedIn.
Speaker C:And frankly, much of what's in any medium tiring is they, they restate the general consensus.
Speaker C:It's like, okay, but we kind of knew.
Speaker C:And if I didn't know the consensus chat, GPT will tell it to me in seven seconds.
Speaker C:And by the way, it really will.
Speaker C:You will really get the consensus.
Speaker C:Yeah, so.
Speaker C:So that's not what we need right now, people.
Speaker C:We need people at the efficient frontier of where the consensus breaks down.
Speaker C:What do we think is happening there?
Speaker A:How did you learn how to use it?
Speaker A:Like, and I know this sounds really funny coming from a millennial, but it does feel like the people who know how to use LinkedIn know how to use LinkedIn.
Speaker A:And I've talked to some people who said they hired coaches.
Speaker A:I've talked to other people who said, I've just been around and seen it happen.
Speaker A:In your particular case, Jeff, how were you able to learn how to utilize LinkedIn as effectively as you have?
Speaker C:Well, the guy's name is Rich Stimbrass.
Speaker C:So basically, I mean, my belief is you play to your strengths and partner to your weaknesses.
Speaker C:I am digitally weak.
Speaker C:Rich is a social media consultant.
Speaker C:And Rich, he's on retainer.
Speaker C:And so basically what he does, what I've asked him to do now, this is something we've developed over time.
Speaker C:But, but the current thing is every week on the weekend, he will send me a list of between three and seven topics, each with a.
Speaker C:It's, they're always in response to an article somewhere.
Speaker C:Might have been in Harvard Business Review, might have been on LinkedIn.
Speaker C:Most normally they're not mostly other media.
Speaker C:And he'll say, you know, here are seven things people are talking about.
Speaker C:You know, I think, you know, maybe one of those would spark your imagination so that we're doing that, you know, on a basis.
Speaker C:And then, and then I will.
Speaker C:And I, I'm compelled to write.
Speaker C:So I usually write something every weekend.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And.
Speaker C:And then we post it on Monday.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So that's what I'm doing.
Speaker C:And again, I think, I think if you, if you're genuinely at the efficient frontier of any interesting question, your audience will self organize around it.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:If you're trying to promote yourself, that's what, that's what I find annoying about LinkedIn.
Speaker C:There's too much self promotion and it's like, you know, God bless you, you know, and there's also too much atta boys, by the way.
Speaker C:Some atta boys are fine.
Speaker C:You know, okay, great.
Speaker C:But it's like, come on, let's get to stuff that matters.
Speaker C:And that's a lot of people.
Speaker C:That's not what they're doing.
Speaker C:They're, they're just either, they're either advocating for themselves or, or they're doing something that's.
Speaker C:You say, well, okay, God bless, but not very interesting.
Speaker A:Yeah, I think that you're right.
Speaker A:And I think those posts get very little engagement being the other side of it.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:Like when I'm teaching people how to use LinkedIn, I do try to say to stay personal, do something that actually is meaningful to you, speak in your own words.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker A:And I, you know, I mean, I think that that is what people should be doing.
Speaker A:I just think there's a lot of people out there who just haven't figured it out yet.
Speaker A:And they will.
Speaker C:To be fair, to be fair, blogging looks consumer.
Speaker C:Blogging is, tends to be personal and it tends to be very much like reading somebody else's diary.
Speaker C:Right?
Speaker C:I mean like, I mean really, they can be, be highly personal, can be amusing, it can be, it can be tragic.
Speaker C:It can be whatever it is.
Speaker C:So that, that is TikTok and Facebook and Instagram.
Speaker C:It's not LinkedIn.
Speaker C:Yeah, it's not what LinkedIn is for.
Speaker C:At least not my view, what LinkedIn is.
Speaker C:So LinkedIn is, is, should be a resource, not a, not a pulpit.
Speaker C:And so if you can put something on LinkedIn that is a resource, then I think it's, it's valuable and it should get a following.
Speaker C:But if all you're doing is expressing yourself, I would not use LinkedIn as a forum for self expression.
Speaker A:You know what's crazy though, Jeff?
Speaker A:I've watched people do it for that and get ridiculous engagement.
Speaker C:Well, okay, okay.
Speaker C:By the way, notice, do you notice that you're like, but my hair is very gray.
Speaker C:So.
Speaker C:So my demographic.
Speaker C:Let me explain.
Speaker C:I am advocating for the AARP part of your audience because for me that, that, that's over overstepping the thing.
Speaker C:But to your point, the younger you go, the more you go, hey, you know, we can do anything we want.
Speaker A:I do agree with you though.
Speaker A:I actually agree with you completely.
Speaker A:I think LinkedIn should stay beneficial.
Speaker A:But yeah, it is one of those things where it's like, if you look at what's, what's getting engagement, it really.
Speaker C:Is the problem now is LinkedIn's gonna lose its market.
Speaker C:If you think about how LinkedIn makes money.
Speaker C:If you think about how LinkedIn adds value.
Speaker C:This is not adding value.
Speaker C:It's actually, it's just noise.
Speaker C:It's not subtract well, it's subtracting value in the way that noise subtracts value from being able to detect signal.
Speaker C:So if I were the LinkedIn folks, I would try to think of some way to.
Speaker C:I don't know how I would do it.
Speaker C:We're back to now, how do you moderate social media?
Speaker C:Yeah, and, and the truth is we don't know yet.
Speaker C:But by the way, intelligence advanced statistical software that learns should help moderate something like this problem.
Speaker C:But, you know, it should help in.
Speaker A:Canada, man, they're filtering ours.
Speaker A:I'm not thrilled about it.
Speaker A:They, they filter the news we get here through social media in Canada, which is tyrannical.
Speaker C:Well, then the problem then is because.
Speaker C:Did you get Canadian.
Speaker C:So it's Canadian social filtering, right?
Speaker C:Yeah, you know, we just, we know how we filter.
Speaker C:We just take out all the extremes and we leave the middle.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah, we just, just leave.
Speaker A:We leave the opinion we want them to see.
Speaker C:Well, no, no, no, no.
Speaker C:We leave.
Speaker C:No, no, I'm gonna say this is an American talking about Canada.
Speaker C:We, we, we, we, we, we try to land on the opinion of least astonishment.
Speaker A:There you go.
Speaker A:Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker A:I, you know, I mean, I'm still of the belief that news should be free, but whatever.
Speaker C:Seriously.
Speaker C:Okay, stay with that.
Speaker C:Because it has to be free.
Speaker C:I mean, at some point, first of all, it's going to get out one way or the other anyway.
Speaker C:So that you can't stop Covid by not.
Speaker C:You have to vaccinate.
Speaker C:You can't just say isolate.
Speaker C:Remember, we did try isolate.
Speaker C:China tried isolating, not very successfully.
Speaker C:Vaccinate, don't isolate.
Speaker C:So the same thing.
Speaker C:You let it out there, but then this is back to your dinner table.
Speaker C:I want you to have your kids around the dinner table for their vaccination.
Speaker C:Now you can go out and play on the Internet.
Speaker C:Because we vaccinated.
Speaker A:Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Speaker A:No, this has been amazing, Jeff.
Speaker A:And you know, one of the things that has come to my mind throughout all this is I know, like, I know that you obviously have books out there and we're going to promote them for you, but are there other services that you also provide?
Speaker A:Are you still consulting?
Speaker A:Do you still.
Speaker A:I know you're still on board of directors for a few different boards.
Speaker A:Are you accepting more offers on that front?
Speaker A:What.
Speaker A:What is it that you.
Speaker A:I know you're doing public speaking.
Speaker A:Do you still take on any of these engagements?
Speaker C:So it's interesting.
Speaker C:There.
Speaker C:There's still two consulting firms that I.
Speaker C:So I'm chairing emeritus of these firms.
Speaker C:So so the Chasm Group and TCG Advisors.
Speaker C:Chasm Group more oriented towards startups and crossing the chasm, TCG Advisors more oriented toward established companies.
Speaker C:And the latest book called Zone to Win, which is basically, how does a big enterprise cross the Chasm?
Speaker C:Because it turns out it's the same problem as a startup.
Speaker C:But a startup does not have a problem of focus.
Speaker C:It only has one place to go.
Speaker C:But a big company has a lot of focus problems.
Speaker C:How do I.
Speaker C:How do I manage a disruptive innovation while I'm still trying to run the core business?
Speaker C:And it turns out that, that.
Speaker C:That's where I'm spending most of my time right now, with large enterprises that are struggling with that problem around this zone management framework that was in the last book.
Speaker C:But other than that, I have a very few relationships when I'm an advisor and I give speeches.
Speaker C:But typically, you know, in.
Speaker C:In forms, by the way they speak.
Speaker C:I don't know who invented the speaking business, but God bless them.
Speaker C:They pay you way too much money.
Speaker C:You always fly first class.
Speaker C:You give limos.
Speaker C:I mean, it's like blue M M's.
Speaker C:I mean, whatever.
Speaker C:I mean, so it's like.
Speaker C:I mean, I'm kind of hooked on that.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:But.
Speaker C:But those.
Speaker C:That's probably mostly what I'm doing these days.
Speaker A:Amazing.
Speaker A:Amazing.
Speaker A:And if people do want to book you for speaking engagement, how do they go about doing that?
Speaker C:Well, they go to the LinkedIn thing and just send me a message on LinkedIn.
Speaker C:And I live in a bubble, by the way.
Speaker C:There's some wonderful people that surround me that take care of all the stuff that I'm bad at.
Speaker C:So all I have to do is be on podcasts or write books or give speeches.
Speaker C:I don't have to do any of the work.
Speaker A:Well, I hope that I am that fortunate.
Speaker C:It's a good life.
Speaker C:It's kind of fun.
Speaker A:That is something to aspire to.
Speaker A:I am on board for that.
Speaker A:Jeff, this has been absolutely amazing.
Speaker C:Well, my pleasure.
Speaker C:Sure.
Speaker A:I want you to know that we are standing on, you know, on the backs of giants, and you are one of those giants.
Speaker A:And I just wanted to say thank you for your.
Speaker A:For your contribution to the marketing industry, to business development.
Speaker A:We could not be where we are without you.
Speaker A:And so thank you for all you've done.
Speaker C:Well, thank you for that acknowledgment.
Speaker C:I really appreciate it.
Speaker C:Thanks.
Speaker A:Until next time, this has been episode 238 of the Business development podcast, and we will catch you on the flip side.
Speaker B: business development firm in: Speaker B:His passion and his specialization is in customer relationship generation and business development.
Speaker B:The show is brought to you by Capital Business Development, your business development specialists.
Speaker B:For more, we invite you to the website at www.capitalbd.ca.
Speaker B:see you next time on the Business Development podcast.