July 03, 2008

The challenge of our real-time, multi-tasking world

I was sitting at my PC today, drafting my blog whilst skirting over the news headlines on my iGoogle homepage.

There were a few other windows open on my PC.

One for Wimbledon live on the BBC, which I can now watch through live streaming video. I like to listen to the radio commentary, so I also had BBC Radio 5 Live on my internet radio player, rather than listening to the BBC TV commentators.

I have a TV in my office as well and, as usual, I had that tuned into Bloomberg News to track the business and stock markets, with the sound on mute.

Anyway, I was happily clicking between iGoogle news, Internet TV-Radio and TV News whilst clattering away on the keyboard drafting this blog when my Skype phone went off.

Read more ...

March 28, 2008

Visa's IPO strips to the core

Now that Visa have IPO'd and the execs and banks are profiting from the rocketing share price, the firm has decided to push the limits further by stripping their products down to the basics for their latest TV campaign.

November 06, 2007

Business Journalism

In the taxi on the way home last night after (another) too long day in the office I was listening to a re-broadcast of what sounded like a BBC program on the current market conditions. I was very pleasantly surprised to hear it actually making sense - the talking heads chosen were happy to correct the journalist if she misunderstood and, even better, the journalist was willing to listen and incorporate the comments made by the interviewees.

There was a particularly good section on Citibank and Prince's resignation. In this, the journalist asked if the sub-prime related write-downs were what had prompted him to go and the interviewee said that the write-downs  certainly did not help, but the failure to knit the bits of Citi together over the years since the last lot of mergers was much more important. He also made the point that Rubin was definitely in Prince's camp and, at 69, likely to stand down soon.

All in all a good program. Unfortunately, after a quick search this afternoon I cannot find it on the BBC website. It was re-broadcast in Australia at about midday GMT, probably live, if anyone can point to it.

This reminded me of an old bug-bear of mine about business journalism - with a few honourable exceptions, a lot of it is wrong or completely misses the point. As soon as it gets beyond simply reporting the facts much of the analysis seems misleading.

In risk management one of the great uncertainties is name risk - how can we be reasonably sure that an incorrect or  overblown story does not (undeservedly) damage or destroy our reputation? Is it the fault of the journalists or of the business community if they print wrong or bad stories?

What can we do to avoid it or at least minimise the risks?

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