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Social media seminar with Conor Lynch – Making social media work for your business

June 22nd, 2011 No comments

Digital & social media workshop presented by Conor Lynch of Socialmedia.ie & sponsored by Celtar business consultants

This seminar is something I wished to organise for a while, so I am very glad to present the opportunity to clients and other businesses.

Recognising the potential for clients in exploiting digital and social media I have partnered with social media expert Conor Lynch of SocialMedia.ie in this special seminar.

Many business owners & managers I work with don’t want to be left behind  and wish to avail of digital marketing opportunities and the latest ways of communicating with customers.

Benefits & features of seminar

  1. Learn how to use social media to reduce marketing costs by generating more qualified leads
  2. Hands-on training  – bring your laptop and begin co-creating a digital and social media strategy for your business
  3. Training delivered using case studies and examples from participants
  4. Training materials and handouts including free eBook: Introduction to Social Media
  5. €95 cost – deep discount to Celtar clients – workshop normally priced at €145

 

When: Wednesday 13th of July

Time:  9.30am to 2pm, includes light lunch

Where: 133 Capel Street , former Riverdance Studios

For more information about the seminar and Conor Lynch,

And to book & pay please go to

www.socialmedia.ie/services/training/celtar-social-media/

Book early as seats are limited!

Tesco legal services on the way?

May 5th, 2010 No comments

 

 Commoditisation of legal services

 

“It is worthwhile to reflect on what is happening in other industry sectors, and to review opportunities in your own environment,” says management consultant Billy Linehan . “The legal profession in Ireland has been battered by the recession, even the best of firms have suffered declines in turnover and profits. Firms must plan for a changing world with new business models” advises Billy who is a management adviser to partners in several professional services practices.

A combination of technology and a change in the law are bringing a radical change to the legal sector in the UK where supermarkets are entering the market for legal services.

In an article today on the small business portal, www.bytestart.co.uk,  UK based solicitor Giles Dixon describes the changes.

If you would like to buy some shares in one of the large City law firms or get a will written while you are in the local supermarket or WH Smith, this may soon be possible.

For a very long time the only people who can own law firms and offer legal services have been qualified lawyers, but this will be swept away by a new law that was passed in 2007 and comes into effect next year. Under the Legal Services Act, non-lawyers will be able to form ‘Alternative Business Structures’ with solicitors. This will mean that large companies such as banks or supermarkets will be free to offer legal services to their customers.

Some organisations are already reported to be getting ready for this brave new world – among them the Co-operative Group which has set up Co-operative Legal Services to support their members and offers will-writing and conveyancing services. Others, such as Tesco and the AA may follow. As the author of one recent report has said, “this is all about opening up the market by using the economies that come through scale and using marketing in a different kind of way”.

So instead of going to a high street solicitor in future, those wanting a legal service may go to a store which employs lawyers to provide services to its customers. And in time we may see new business models developing – for example a new nationwide “Easydeath Services” offering a menu including will writing and inheritance tax advice, funerals and probate services, all for pre-agreed fixed fees.

At the other end of the scale, some large city firms may decide to float on the stock market, releasing capital for the partners and opening up ownership to pension funds and other investors.

While the big bang day is not scheduled until 2011, another even more influential force – the internet – is already making legal services available in new ways – without even the need for the customers to leave their home or office. As well as low cost contract templates, wills and leases, there are services offering online divorce, online dispute resolution and mediation as well as debt collection. And by no means the most recent online service is that run by the Courts which have facilities for claims to be filed online.

The losers in this new legal world are going to include some smaller law firms, but there are opportunities for them as well. There is a limit to the number of legal services that can be commoditised – legal fees may be needed to tailor a contract template to the customer’s particular requirements, but a combination of a £40 template and some legal advice on that template is going to be a lot cheaper for the customer than going to a lawyer in the first place.

So we can envisage partnerships between solicitors and suppliers of templates developing. Indeed, some providers of templates, such as ContractStore.com, already offer customers a limited legal service, using the lawyers who write the templates sold from their website. Others are developing packages that involve a lawyer finalising a document that is initially generated online by the consumer sitting at home.

Commercial deals and complex disputes will always need support from qualified legal specialists who can advise on strategy and negotiate on their client’s behalf.

As for commoditised services, there is a limit to what they can do and they do not always come with a human face. So, just as those wanting quality food will go to a farmers’ market or organic butcher rather than Tesco, so many people will still prefer to go to a solicitor rather than Tesco Law Ltd.

 

About the Author

Giles Dixon is a solicitor, managing director of ContractStore.com

www.bytestart.co.uk Posted May 5, 2010

 

www.Celtar.ie

Google is set to launch a property dimension to its UK mapping system.

December 8th, 2009 No comments

Threat to Daft.ie?

Are the days of growth finished for Daft.ie,  will the housing sales and rental market now be controlled by home buyers and home owners? This new service will allow both estate agents and private sellers to put their property as an overlay on Google Maps.

The plans were outlined at a conference called Estate Agency Events last week, although Google has declined to give official confirmation.

Shares in the property portal Rightmove fell more than 10% as news emerged, the sharpest faller in the FTSE 350 index of companies for the day.

The new service is expected to launch next year and would be similar to a service Google launched in Australia.

 

Sarah Beeny

Sarah Beeny says Google will level the property playing field

That site allows estate agents to list properties for free, with pictures taken from its Street View service and listing details on a map.

Speaking to BBC News, Edward Mead – sales director for Douglas & Gordon estate agents – said that the new system would be a win-win situation for both Google and estate agents.

“The technology to do this is already in place and estate agents are a little busier these days, although transactions are still fifty per cent down on what they once were.

“So this service, which is free, will appeal to estate agents’ cost-cutting nature and given that sixty per cent of agents are one-off traders, this will have serious appeal.”

Mr Mead said that Google’s head of property and classified team, Ben Wood, briefed 30 of England’s top estate agents at Estate Agency Events last week, telling them everything about the system, other than an official launch date.

‘Hurt estate agents’

But Sarah Beeny, who presents Channel 4′s Property Ladder and also runs her own home sales property site Tepilo, told BBC News that the service could well damage estate agents in the long run.

“It will hurt estate agents and it will hurt property sites like Rightmove.

“If it does what Google says it will, then it brings the buyer and seller closer together and that could mean removing blocks in the way, and that could mean no longer having to pay extortionate fees to estate agents.

“It will certainly blow Rightmove out of the water. You can only get your property listed on that site if you are an estate agent – what Google will do is level the playing field and they are doing it for free,” she said.

 

For sale signs

The site would directly link property buyers with vendors

The news shook traders on the London Stock Exchange. At one point, shares in online property portal Rightmove fell by 13% over concern about competition from the world’s biggest search engine, although a late afternoon rally saw them close 10% down at £4.95 a share.

The firm remained bullish, despite the news.

Speaking to BBC News, the company’s commercial director, Miles Shipside, said his business was still strong and the site was still getting lots of traffic.

“It remains to be seen what actually happens,” he said.

“Google is a big name, but they don’t always manage to follow things through on a local level.

“We only list property with estate agents due to UK legislation. Agents offer very good value and charge very competitive rates compared to the rest of the world.

Billy Linehan of Celtar sees this as a threat to property websites and as another innovation that will change the shape of the housing market for sales and rentals.

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Google and innovation

November 9th, 2009 No comments

What is it that enables Google to be so innovative?

From an interview on mycustomer.com with people operations director Liane Hornsey who shares some of Google’s secrets.

Google has a European HQ in Dublin, and is one of a cluster of technology companies based here whose presence is encouraging local tech start-ups.

 Google Wave isn’t even accessible by the user community at large and yet already it is being heralded as yet another successful innovation by Google.

A company that has carved a reputation for pushing the envelope, Google has been consistently lauded as one of the most innovative companies in the world by the likes of Business Week and Fast Company – perhaps only paralleled by Apple.

Furthermore, Google has provided proof that innovation needn’t come at the expense of customer satisfaction, scoring successfully on the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). The company seems to have an uncanny ability to understand its users and read the market right. They provide customers with more, and for most of the stuff you don’t pay. It’s sort of a wining proposition no matter how they do it. The more content Google provides, the higher the likelihood that their customers will be more satisfied.

So what is it that enables Google to be so innovative? How can it consistently create these “winning propositions”? Is it something that’s in the water at Google HQ? Or is there a model that any organisation can follow?

With a McKinsey survey revealing that 94% of senior executives believe that people and culture are the twin keys to innovation, Liane Hornsey must hold many of the secrets in her role as people operations director EMEA. And whilst she is unwilling to reveal the finer details, she has divulged broader details about the three main factors that have led to Google becoming what she calls “the most innovative company of its size in the world”.

1. A strategic priority

First and foremost, Hornsey believes that Google have placed innovation as a strategic priority within the organisation – something that is easy to say, but not so easy to do. “All of our strategic processes – our planning process, our board process, our business plan, our three year plan – have innovation as the number one issue that we have to crack. So we look at innovation at the most senior level of the company before we even begin to talk about the numbers,” she explains. “An example of the way the board are committed to innovation is that very recently one of our competitors brought out a product that for the first time was vaguely interesting. Not a worry, but vaguely interesting. Our response was that the board decided to split the time that they spent together and spend 50% of the time only considering how to be innovative. They wouldn’t talk about anything else.”

Perhaps its most famous initiative to ensure that it fosters an environment in which its staff are free to innovate is Google’s 70-20-10 model. According to Hornsey, she is often asked by people whether this model is mere Google folklore – but she confirms that it is one of their standard practices.

“For our engineering population, which is roughly 50% of all Googlers, we tell them to work 70% of their time on their core job, 20% of their time on projects that are loosely connected with their core job (so if they work on search, then maybe 20% of their time looking at the fringes of search), and 10% of their time (i.e. a day a fortnight) thinking about whatever they want to think about. No meetings. No emails. Nothing. You spend a day a fortnight thinking big thoughts,” she explains.

“And so when people ask me how it is that Google is so innovative, how it is that we have the best products in the world, how it is that we are one of the most profitable and fast growing companies ever, that is the reason. We invest 10% of our people’s time to think big thoughts. And out of that 10% we have launched Picasa, Gmail, Google News, Google Apps and so on.”

2. Bureaucracy busting

Having provided their staff with the space and time they need to think, Google has also created the networks that allow their employees to share their thoughts, and build on each other’s ideas. As Hornsey suggests, if you hire talented people, you need to put them together.

“One engineer may spend 10% of his time interested in how you get to the moon, so he blogs about this and we start a Twitter-type exchange. And we have those networks all over the company. Any Googler at any time can start an idea on any thread that can go through 20,000 people in a nanosecond. And these networks are huge and they are the basis on which we innovate. So somebody has an idea, someone adds idea B, somebody adds idea C, somebody adds idea D, they get on a videoconference or they may even fly to get together to talk about those ideas. And that is how products are born.”

And to further aid the transfer of knowledge and streamline communication channels, the company has worked hard to keep its bureaucracy to a bare minimum. As part of this, it has implemented ‘bureaucracy busters’ – regular sessions whereby the company picks the icons of bureaucracy such as the CFO or legal adviser, and asks staff to get online and brainstorm ideas to reduce the red tape, with the best ideas being implemented. This has led to a “bottom-up culture that is without hierarchy” according to Hornsey.

3. The greater good

The third reason for Google’s success at being an innovative hub according to Hornsey is its emphasis on data. “People think we’re very left field, but we are highly data-driven and highly analytical. We measure the hell out of innovation. All of our leaders, everyone in a management position, has a goal and has a bonus on how innovative they have been every quarter, and we measure that – and we measure it before we measure the numbers. It is the first question we ask: what did you do that was different this quarter, what did you do that was big this quarter, what thoughts have you had about how you are going to move to the next level, and maybe in the next hour we will get the numbers.”

So without giving away any secrets, Hornsey has revealed the inner workings of Google – a culture that allows its people to challenge bureaucracy and feel enabled to be innovative; an emphasis on data; and making innovation part of the strategic process.

www.mycustomer.com

Celtar provides business advice to tech start-ups

Hungry for Success, Takeaway.ie

January 8th, 2009 No comments

 

They say hunger is the best sauce, and hunger was foremost in the minds of web developers Ciara Traynor and her Canadian business partner Anthony Kauffmann when they found themselves working late into the night on a project a couple of years ago.  After turning their office upside-down in vain looking for a takeaway menu, they fumed at the fact that there wasn’t some way of getting fed online.  That frustration was their eureka moment, and the idea for takeaway.ie was born.

Ciara had an understanding of how the restaurant business ticks as her parents owned a sea-side restaurant in Laytown, Co Meath.  However, her career had taken a different path.  She had worked in the banking sector in IT and then spent a few years in Paris before returning home to break into the area of web design.  Herself and Anthony, pride themselves on building clear, practical commercial websites through their company Technotion (www.technotion.ie).

The duo realised that the concept for an online food ordering website, coupled with the fact that they were the first in Ireland to try to fill this gap in the market, was a big project, and probably best separated from the ‘bread and butter’ business of Technotion.

“Essentially we wanted to build a portal, where good quality food outlets could put their menus on our site and customers could order directly through it,” explains Ciara. 

They approached Dublin City Enterprise Board (DCEB) and got assistance through two employment grants and the invaluable mentoring skills of Celtar consultant Billy Linehan. “DCEB have been fantastic,” says Ciara. “Billy was really enthusiastic, but he warned us that we needed to get a better grip of the details.  We realised that we had to do more than just talk the talk; we had this great idea, but it was just an idea.  We had to build this site and start approaching people before we could speculate on how our users, clients and income might grow.”
They managed to secure the essential ingredient for any web-based business – the right domain name.  When someone is hungry and hunting for a solution online, a ‘does-what-it-says-on-the-tin’ domain name is crucial – no tricky hyphens, no added words.  Takeaway.ie was launched in April 2008 and is on an impressive growth curve both from clients keen to make their food available, and from punters happy to take part in Ireland’s latest food revolution.  What’s more, Ciara and Anthony also snapped up the takeaway.mobi domain so they will be able to develop their concept into the mobile technology market.

Online food ordering is a hot idea right now.  One of the biggest restaurant franchises in the world, Dominos, has seen online sales grow 85% to £25.3m in the UK in the last year, with internet and text orders representing 22% of the firm’s pizza delivery sales in the UK.  While many restaurants have websites where they can place their latest menus and offer contact details, takeaway.ie can give them something almost impossible to achieve on their own – top billing on a Google search. 

“Some of the restaurants we approach say ‘well we already have a site’, but we explain that what we’re doing will not detract from that online presence at all,” says Ciara.  “In fact, they have the same facility to update their menus and keep control of the content, but we make that menu easier to find online and much more prominent.” 

From a surfer’s point of view, takeaway.ie ticks lots of boxes.  Searching for a meal near you is made easy by the straight-forward layout and function of the site.  And there’s no bickering if someone wants Indian and someone else Italian food, as it’s easy to order from a variety of outlets at one sitting.  It can cater for an individual with an attack of the munchies just as easy as someone  who’s entertaining guests for the evening.
The revenue stream is simple, there is no set up charge to restaurants and it’s free for website users. Takeaway.ie’s business model sees it take a percentage of each sale generated through the site.  Food outlets are happy with the growth in business, and customers can enjoy the satisfaction of good food delivered to their door without the hassle of cooking and cleaning.

www.Takeaway.ie
www.DCEB.ie
www.CELTAR.ie