Posts Tagged ‘ireland’

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Course Wrap-up

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

I was quite fortunate to have had a great class again this year.  The students were committed, professional, engaged, punctual, and represented the university, the state and our country extraordinarily well.

By my count, the students have met with 19 leaders in the public and private sectors along with 5 grad students from UCD, and countless others at the companies where they worked for five days.

  1. Joe Dowd, Entrepreneur
  2. Jim Lyons, Ireland’s Honorary Consul for Denver
  3. Donal Cullen, CEO, Spanishpoint
  4. James Wolsey, Honorary Trade and Investment Representatives in Europe for the State of Colorado
  5. Ronan Loftus, Co-founder & Director, Identigen
  6. Alan Looney, CEO, National Chemical Company
  7. Kieran Daly, CEO, Shimmer Research
  8. Andrew Parish, CEO, Wavebob
  9. Colm McGoldrick, Founder, CEO, Maildistiller
  10. Paul Byrne, CEO, Trintek
  11. Bryan Keating, Angel Investor
  12. Norman Apsley, CEO, NI Science Park
  13. Willie McCarter, Former Chair, International Fund for Ireland
  14. Sir George Quigley, Chairman, Bombardier
  15. Lisa Bradley, International Program, University of Ulster
  16. Connor Walsh, CEO, Andor
  17. Deputy Bernard Durkan
  18. Peter Connor, Mentor & Entrepreneur, Startup Bootcamp Dublin
  19. Cyril Brennan, Deputy Director US Affairs, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  20. Grad Students from UCD

The students attended an informal gathering of investors and entrepreneurs in the tech space, and also a briefing to 200 business leaders in Belfast on the potential of the cloud market.  We were in Northern Ireland for the Queen’s historic visit when she shook hands with a former IRA leader.  Two of the people we interacted with met the queen during our visit, and two others we met had previously received honors from the queen.

We learned about leadership, entrepreneurship, where the potential opportunities lie, and the similarities and differences of the Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland, the UK, and the growing influence of the EU.  Teaching leadership, I often refer to the necessity of understanding others’ values, assumptions, beliefs and expectations.  In Ireland, many of the leaders made multiple historical references as necessary to understand the likely implications of future decisions.  This in particular stands in stark contrast to normal conversation in the U.S.

The take-away for me is human relationships – past, present and future.  The effective CEO’s we met ask good questions, keep things as simple as possible, stay focused, empower teams, and provides opportunities for growth and development.  People work with, buy from, do deals with, help, mentor, teach, and assist people they like and trust.  And people in Ireland and Colorado have a tremendous amount in common when it comes to answering the three universal questions:

  1. Can I trust you?
  2. Do you care about me?
  3. Are you committed to my success

We answer those un-asked questions in a positive way by doing what’s right; doing our best; and treating people kindly.  The east coast has two hours on us when it comes to Ireland, but what draws people to our state are the values of self reliance expressed in entrepreneurs, risk takers, and deal makers.

I feel strongly that we’ve created an outstanding academic program for our students to gain international experience. I also believe we’ve strengthened the bridge that exists between Ireland and Colorado.  The Irish Network, the University of Colorado Denver, the Graduate Business School at the University College Dublin, the University of Ulster, the Governor’s office, and businesses of all types and sizes in both countries are collaborating better than ever to develop a highly skilled workforce that can compete in a global market.  We can focus on negative news, but we can take solace from history that adversity is the crucible by which each generation’s leaders are forged.  There are outstanding examples of breakthrough performance with the five generations in the workforce today already innovating, and leveraging strengths to boost prosperity for all.

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Fourteen

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

Wow – where to start?!

We showed up in Northern Ireland’s Technology, Science & Innovation Community blog yesterday!

We attended an excellent event on Cloud Computing with over 200 business leaders in Belfast this morning.  Here is a terrific summary of the event.  Surprising to me was that only 7% of CIO’s say ERP should deploy in the cloud.  What’s that mean?  According to Sarah Friar from SalesForce.com, the cloud market will hit $53.5 billion by 2015!  Someone described a leader as the ability to make others believe they can do anything, and to that end, check out this video regarding the potential power of “social marketing.”

*The class photo was taken on the Titanic staircase replica in the new Titanic Museum where the event took place.

Later in the morning, we were treated with a presentation by Willie McCarter.  Willie discussed his role with the International Fund for Ireland and we received a great perspective on macro and microeconomics.

Willie was followed by Sir George Quigley.  We heard about his education, career, role with Bombardier, and how leadership in general can be quite a transferrable skill.  We learned a great deal about rebalancing public and private sector involvement in enterprise, and about the complexities of national corporate tax rates.

**The photo shows Mr. McCarter on the left, and Sir George on the right.

Lisa Bradley, from the International Business program at the University of Ulster in Derry was a big hit with the students as well.  She described a new MBA program in creative technologies, and really engaged the students in dialogue as she was looking to learn as much from them as they were from her!  She asked, “What have you learned in Ireland – i.e., what’s different?”  Some of the responses from the students:

  • Government support for entrepreneurship is greater here than in the US
  • Focus seems to be on niche markets – very motivated entrepreneurs.  Relationships are very strong.  CEO at project companies made them want to perform better.  It’s not just about the numbers here – relationships are greatly valued as is creating jobs.
  • The lack of female leadership in Ireland versus the US is stark, but access to all types of leaders is better in Ireland.
  • There is a big skill gap with strategic marketing and branding.

Colm McGoldrick also addressed the class and said that working for a large company where one has an employee ID is akin to a prison number!  He encouraged young business people to take the leap to become an entrepreneurs, and once successful to give back.

We traveled to Andor and received a tour of the manufacturing facility, and were treated with words of wisdom from ultra-successful CEO, Connor Walsh.  His experience provided a structured approach to problems – e.g., trying to understand the markets and why customers buy.  His AMAZING numbers:

  • 14 year CAGR revenue of 30%
  • 20% profit increase from 2004-2007
  • 557% profit increase from 2007-2011 ($1.4M to $10M)

The secret sauce?

Andor Values (core responsibility as CEO – what makes us unique)

  • Do the right thing for our customers (contract interpretations – i.e., judgment)
  • Continually innovate & improve (don’t rest on your laurels)
  • Are open, honest and respectful in our dealing with others (challenge each other)
  • Focus on generating solutions
  • Embrace change and open to new ideas
  • Honor our commitments
  • Take pride in everything we do
  • Are passionate and driven to win

Lastly, we heard from Bryan Keating present, “Risk taking – a perspective on leadership.”  Bryan quoted Howard Stevenson to get things going:  “The pursuit of opportunity beyond the resources currently controlled.”  He has a great “test” for the students on risk taking, and one person “passed!”  I don’t want to say more in case a future student reads this!  Bryan’s concluding remarks, “Life is not a rehearsal – and it’s never too late.”

A good day of learning and reflecting, indeed!

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Twelve

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012

The Belfast Team presented their final analysis and recommendations to the Maildistiller CEO today regarding a channel strategy, and received excellent feedback!  Now we need to learn the following from the two projects we conducted here in Ireland:

  1. What will be the economic impact of the student’s work?
  2. If paying for this work on the open market, what would have been the investment?
  3. Please address the teamwork and leadership of the group.
  4. Were there any areas of opportunities identified?
  5. What are the similarities and differences between US and Irish students?
  6. For next year, are there any specific skill sets you would like to see?

The team also had the opportunity to participate in the Belfast Pub Summit in the evening as well.  We had the chance to meet Irish investors, entrepreneurs, professionals, techies, and the media.  The subject of risk came up again, and I did speak to one gentlemen who believes the Irish embrace risk, but my informal survey over the last several days shows that most Irish business men and women believe that risk aversion is a cultural phenomena that will only slowly diminish over time.

The Maynooth Team finished their project today, and wrapped up one additional country study from a channel perspective.  Tomorrow, we’ll all be together in Belfast (along with the Queen!) where we’ll have the grand opportunity to meet and hear from Norman Apsley.

Lastly, I have had the privilege to meet Mark Jones from UCD, and he’s taken the imitative to brainstorm ideas on how we can continue to build an economic and cultural bridge between Colorado and Ireland.  Mark is one of the sharpest students I have met, and it’s thoroughly energizing to be around him.  He’s a future leader to watch!

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Eleven

Monday, June 25th, 2012

The teams are back to work today, and we received terrific feedback from the Wavebob CEO on the work of the Dublin Team!  I will be with the Belfast Team tomorrow when they present their final findings and recommendation to the Maildistiller CEO.

The students and I were discussing how failure is viewed culturally here in Ireland.  I am not sure if what we’ve heard is widespread opinion or not, but whereas in America entrepreneurship is looked at quite nobly, and failure is viewed as a learning event, failure here seems to be considered more a permanent black mark.  We’ll have to speak with more people to see if that’s a majority perspective, and whether it’s changing as Enterprise Ireland and others are encouraging young people to venture out.

A good friend here often says, “Life ain’t a dress rehearsal,” and in the pub tonight, another fellow said, “You only get one lap around.”  Those sentiments aren’t consistent with a culture that doesn’t accept risk and failure.  There is great pride here in the industrial history, technical savvy, and innovation that make Ireland’s labor highly desirable.  I still see large gaps in the “commercialization” side of things, and in the understanding of how strategic branding can be an extremely powerful competence.  I believe more strongly than ever that Colorado is well positioned to leverage the unique strengths of the Irish professional due to complementary skills, similar values with regard to self-reliance, and a common sense of pride and work ethic.

There’s much more to be said about the ever-changing political climate here, but to get it right, one needs more space than a blog posting to insure that nothing is taken out of context or misconstrued.  Interesting times here in Ireland, and the Queen’s visit over the next few days should provide to be historic, and enlightening as to what it will say about where things are, and where they’re headed.  I ran 5 miles this morning in Derry, which included crossing the Peace Bridge.  The bridge represents much more than a passage over the River Foyle, it’s a bridge that would have been impossible to cross even if it had existed just a few years ago.

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Nine

Saturday, June 23rd, 2012

It’s the weekend, and the students are off to enjoy the environs.  The Belfast team is in Portrush, and the Maynooth team is in Dublin.  We spent the day in County Mayo where we visited the cousins, and the cottage where my grandmother was born and raised.  This is my fourth visit to the family here, and it’s always a truly joyous gathering.  What I appreciate most are the memories my older cousin shares about what it was like growing up here in the 1950’s and 1960’s.  I honestly believe that you haven’t really experienced Ireland unless you’ve come to the West.  It’s akin to someone visiting the Northeast of the U.S. and thinking they saw the heart of America.

I am still struggling with some e-book concepts/themes regarding what I’ve learned turning 50; what I’ve learned transitioning to an empty nest, and what I learned observing my son’s experience at America’s premier leadership school.  What I do know is that transitional experiences force us to face our own hypocrisy.  That is, what’s next?

Time to embrace the crucibles and ask the really hard questions (the hardest related to purpose and legacy)!

If there is no struggle, there is no progress. — Frederick Douglass

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Eight

Friday, June 22nd, 2012

Based on a suggestion from Kurt Roush – a fellow ThoughtLeader, and the Executive Director of Fisher Professional Services at the Fisher College of Business at the Ohio State University, I am planning to have to students study four areas of Irish history prior to our visit next year:

1840-1850 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_(Ireland)

1916 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_Rising

Late 1960’s to 1998 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Troubles

1995-2007 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celtic_Tiger

 I visited the Belfast team today at Maildistiller, and they’re doing a fantastic job with Colm McGoldrick’s team!  Colm has clearly articulated his ambitious three-year goal, and the team is helping Colm look at a US targeting strategy along with possible branding and value proposition approaches.  It’s a fascinating exercise to help an Irish company figure out how to launch into the US market.  It involves a great deal of time, risk, legal issues, and investment of labor and capital.  It’s no small decision!

The team in Maynooth met with the CEO of Trintech, Paul Byrne, and learned a great deal about the challenge of leading a dynamic and entrepreneurial firm in Dallas from Dublin!

I am predicting some fantastic presentations to be delivered on July 11th in Denver!

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Seven

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

This morning, I met with the CEO of Trintech, Paul Byrne.  Paul heard about our program through an article Enterprise Ireland published back in March.  Trintech evolved from a company that was started in Ireland, was publicly traded, and is now owned by Spectrum Equity and has based their operations in Dallas.  Paul continues to be based in Dublin, and travels extensively.

Paul is a CEO with passion, vision, and an extremely strong work ethic.  He’s learned a lot about leadership through his powers of observation – i.e., watching effective and ineffective leaders over the years.  He is fully committed to developing his organization by creating a strong culture based on Self-Reliance (his words – not mine!), entrepreneurship, innovation, questioning, fun, and being a bit quirky!  He has reduced his direct reports to four, and describes them as a four-leaf clover.  They use the acronym I-Fit to describe their leadership approach:  “Infusing Fun into Trintech!”

Paul is an astute behaviorist, and a student of organizational culture.  He is keenly aware of the buying influences of the four generations currently in the work force, with Generation Z coming online in the next few years, which will make five generations.  As far as I can tell, that will be the most generations ever working together, which means inevitable strife, but tremendous opportunity if leaders are able to leverage strengths, create flexible work environments, and build cultures based on trust and teamwork.  The measure of success, or the canary in the coalmine, will be employee retention.  When recruitment and retention of top talent is high, it’s an indicator the strategy is on target, and financial results will soon follow.

Paul and I discussed the opportunity for Irish companies to develop strong US channel strategies, and that requires local sales professionals as well as a tight branding strategy targeted with specific value propositions towards various segments.  This is where U.S. graduate students may be ideally positioned to work and learn in consultative roles.  The U.S. represents a tremendous market for Irish companies, and Ireland represents the gateway to Europe for America.  The mutual benefit is what will provide the ideal business ecosystem for future leaders to gain invaluable international experience.

Later in the day, I visited the student team in Maynooth who are working on a channel strategy at Wavebob.  On June 8th, the President of Ireland, Michael D. Higgins named Wavebob a ‘Champion of EU Research’ at a recent ceremony in Dublin, Ireland.  They continue to garner international attention as a model green tech company.  Andrew was an extremely gracious host, and brought me up to date on the business model, and where the student’s project fit into the grand scheme of things.  We were fortunate to have been introduced to Wavebob by the Irish Embassy in Washington, DC, and we learned they now have a presence in Maryland.  Wavebob seems destined to make a significant contribution to our world, and it’s readily apparent that they are a nimble organization that knows how to adapt and thrive.  There may also be an opportunity for our future students to work with the School of Business at the National University of Ireland in Maynooth, which is something we need to explore for future initiatives.

The students have made great progress in short order, and in Stephen Covey’s terms, their project is allowing Wavebob to focus on very important work that isn’t necessarily critical for today.  As the CEO put it, the project is something he can’t dedicate resources to at the moment, because he’d have to shift resources from critical priorities, however determining whether a channel is viable will determine where those resources are deployed in the near future to create new growth opportunities.  The students report that the work is challenging, and definitely graduate-level work.  They’re working great as a team, and have moved quickly to leverage each other’s strengths and minimize any potential conflict.    In fact, one person on the team is leveraging his past work on sustainability while another student is using her language skills to write and communicate while conducting research.

The Belfast team is also making great progress at Maildistiller, and is developing clarity for the target market, and the prospect profile.  This will help determine the most appropriate value proposition to differentiate the offering.  For example, it’s clear that any new clients will be required to switch from a competitor, and this is quite a different message than “creating” a new market.  In the end, Maildistiller has an offering that is highly customizable and scalable, which will assist in its efforts to gain market share.  Like a lot of new ventures, asking the right questions at the right time is the key to focus, and the team in Belfast is making a significant contribution very quickly.

The bottom line is that our future business leaders are gaining tremendous international experience that will afford them the opportunity to take on great responsibilities while providing deliverables for Irish companies that are meaningful, impactful, and valued by the clients.

*The picture is of Barberstown Castle in Maynooth (County Kildare), which is now a hotel and restaurant.  It was once owned by Eric Clapton, and it’s where Andrew took us to lunch today!

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day Six

Wednesday, June 20th, 2012

The student teams in Maynooth and Belfast had their first full day with the teams at Wavebob and Maildistiller respectively.

The Maynooth team actually divided their work into two small teams to look at target country opportunities and potential competition.    They’re working closely with the CEO to keep expectations in check with daily updates to insure they’re hitting milestones with directional alignment.  The CEO has asked them to formally present their findings on Monday before he travels out of town so they’ll have the last day to modify their research and recommendations.

The Belfast team is also researching competitors to narrow down potential US partners.  It’s tough, because most of the potential partners are small, privately held organizations with little data readily and publicly available.  One of the students has primarily worked in large organizations, so she’s finding a small, entrepreneurial environment quite enlightening.  This team will be taking a consultative approach by asking a number of questions to help the client further focus on the potential target market.

Both teams are working extremely well together, and I will be with the Maynooth team tomorrow to see their work firsthand and to meet Andrew Parish, the Wavebob CEO.  We are certainly grateful to the Irish Embassy for putting us in touch with an outstanding executive at a company with tremendous growth potential of great benefit to renewable energy research, and the overall Irish economy!

Leadership & Entrepreneurship in Ireland – Day One bleeds into Day Two…

Saturday, June 16th, 2012

Friday started out great.  We had perfect weather during a brisk one-hour bike ride in the cool morning air that makes summer in Colorado spectacular.  The weather didn’t hold, and our flight took off two hours late, and we missed our connection in D.C. to London.  And because it’s summer, all the international flights are over-booked, so we are delayed flying out of Dulles by a full 24 hours.

We found ourselves killing time today by visiting the Air & Space Museum.  We were last there six years ago when my son was 16.  With the passage of time, his perspective has certainly changed as we viewed and discussed the Enola Gay on display (you can read about the controversy here).  The space shuttle Discovery is now housed at the museum, and it was interesting to see it up close.  The hodge-podge mosaic of black tiles on the under-belly is not a thing of beauty up close.  The entire machine hardly looks the part for a technically advanced and sophisticated vehicle with a track record of phenomenal service dating back to 1984.

The flight delays have certainly been a test of patience – not even close to one of my virtues!  Faced with no control whatsoever, I am reminded to be truly present.  In this case, I have no choice.  But I do have a choice to be present even when I have (the illusion of) control.  For this inconvenience, I will take that lesson as gift from the experience!