Inveterate dabbler in business, travel, gadgets & life

An academic book signing!

Just bought the book about the talk I’m now at in the Cambridge Chemistry department. Special 40 per cent reduction and the author, John Emsley, offered to sign it for me 🙂

Now for the talk on Molecules of Murder, about Ricin, Hyoscine, Atropine, etc etc

John Emsley signing book

ARU talk

Today was the second of my blogging and social software master classes at Anglia Ruskin University for the students on the Executive part-time MBA at Cambridge

. ARU Class

Robert, Claire, Ibrahim, Geoff, Stephen, Marcus, Philip, Alison

We went through similar stuff to last time, this time with three more staff members. In the second half we set up the new wordpress blog, CambridgeClusters where two of the students will be practicing their new found skills with Robert , Philip and I adding our 2/- worth.

Measuring up

I managed to get invited to a OHM event at the Saatchi Industry Lab in London on 28th November 2007 where the keynote speaker was Douglas Hubbard, inventor of Applied Information Economics (AIE). Douglas spoke about How to measure anything (which is also the title of his book).Douglas Hubbard

These are my rough notes..

An investment is a cost now with a benefit later.

First of all he defined measurement as an observation that results in reduction of uncertainty about a quantity (that is a measurement has an associated error bar)

Baysenian – each bit of data updates the measurement.

Bookies are great at assessing odds subjectively, Doctors are terrible!

You can easily train people, by calibration, to assess odds (decision psychology)

Computer managers are over confident – use too narrow a range in general – costs were measured more than uncertain benefits, small hard benefits measured more than large soft benefits.

Biggest risk decisions have least quantitative – only measure what they know – no benefits if no one uses it!

Once we determined what to measure we can think of observations that would reduce uncertainty.

Nike method – JUST DO IT – Don’t let imagined difficulties get in the way of starting observations.

Difficult – compared to what?

Ultimate non-random sample – their own experience.

“Its amazing what you can see if you look” Yogi Berra

  • Its been measured before.
  • You have more data than you think.
  • You need less data than you think.
  • Getting more data is more economical than you think.
  • Probably need different data than you think.
  • Your opinion about potential measurement of errors also has a lot of error!

Measure 13 things take 4th largest and 4th smallest you have 90% confidence in the answer.

Hubbard Chart

A very interesting and thought provoking speaker especially with the audience participation in getting people calibrated when ‘guessing’ quantities in bottle etc. He gave a few plugs for the TacAdvisory group who he does work for.

Still not sure how I came to be invited, guess they thought I was some high flying University Don!

Embedding Innovations..

For the Embedding Innovation series at Anglia Ruskin University I gave a two hour presentation on social media focusing on how blogging can help small enterprises and introducing them to such concepts as Twitter and Facebook . I made a simple slide show which is now on Slideshare .

I had previously looked at the participants websites using Poodle Predictor so the presentation came alive when their websites popped up on the screen (Thanks Euan for the Scrapbook recommendation). I showed a direct comparison between what the Google crawler sees and what is served up to the end user for a couple of their websites (see the slides above).
After the event I created a WordPress site for my favourite Cambridge Cafe, one of the delegates, Lingling from Le Gros Franck, which I would love to turn into a real social media experience, so that the daily specials can be twittered etc.

Many thanks to Robert Jones of ARU & Philip for getting me the gig. Interestingly this is the first time I have been paid an hourly rate for about 25 years! So a bit of an innovation for me.

Delegates at Embedding Innovation at Anglia Ruskin University