Thursday, October 19, 2023

The Infatuation Interval

 

Ever heard of an “infatuation interval?” You should, because it determines to a large extent how successful your products and services are—and especially for how long. This is what it means.

In his book, “Slingshot,” Gabor George Burt introduces the concept of an “Infatuation Interval.” It is a key part of his Slingshot framework that is definitely worth reading in its entirety.

An Infatuation Interval is the period during which customers are so excited about a product or service that they, as Burt argues “become temporarily blinded by any shortcomings or possible defects and are in a trance of positive affiliation.”

During the Infatuation Interval it is primarily the customer’s emotions at play, and in particular their excitement about the novelty of the product or service.

Once this period is over, customers enter a second phase, which Burt calls the Entitlement Period. During this follow-up phase customers “consumers feel entitled to all of the offering’s perceived benefits and demand more.”

In short, during the Infatuation Interval, customers are more excited about a less-than-perfect product, while during the Entitlement Period they are less excited and demand a perfect product.

Whereas the change from Infatuation Interval to Entitlement Period will be gradual, the radical difference between the two phases creates a clear case for serving as many customers as possible during the Infatuation Interval.

After all, during that time they are more excited, less complaining, more willing to pay, and more likely to be ambassadors for your product or service. Burt provides us with three ways to leverage this period to make optimal use of it:

1. Extend the Infatuation Interval by creating a product or service that is simply fascinating and which has diverse facets of which discovery takes some time. Another way to do so is to hold back supply so that demand overshoots supply.

2. Create a stream of Infatuation Intervals by continuously innovating, extending or improving your product or service. By launching new updates, upgrades, add-ons, or features, you keep the product/service interesting and customers excited.

3. Create infectious infatuations so that the excitement of one group of customers spreads to other groups of customers. This happens, e.g., when you target one specific market segment first, after which you market it step-by-step to other target markets.

I believe there’s many organizations who can benefit from actively managing the Infatuation Interval of their products and services to make and keep them exciting for customers. Can you create and extend your Infatuation Interval?

DNA of Dubai

 


Interesting to Listen to..

Sunday, October 15, 2023

THE FOUR QUOTIENTS

 

Leadership is more of an art than a science
And it's a lifelong learning process.
The 4Q's is an intriguing way to consider the different dimensions leaders must excel at.
 
INTELLIGENCE QUOTIENT - IQ
 
IQ tests were first given in 1904 by Alfred Binet to help identify children that needed extra help in French schools. Over the past century, the interest in IQ has remained high across the world.
Whilst top leaders typically have a higher IQ on average, IQ alone won't get you very far to become an effective leader.
 
EMOTIONAL QUOTIENT - EQ
 
Although the term Emotional Quotient first appeared in 1964, it really took off in 1995 with Daniel Goleman’s book “Emotional Intelligence”.
Today it’s widely acknowledged that to be truly effective, leaders must develop the five dimensions of EQ: empathy, effective communication or social skills, self-awareness, self-regulation, and motivation.
This is very challenging - because leaders are under constant pressure.
There's a constant focus on results, KPI’s and key stakeholder interests.
Often the hard things (results) are in focus, not EQ.
So, leaders that do embrace and develop EQ are those that truly multiply their potential for growth and impact.
But that only has value if you are taking the organisation in the right direction… which is where SQ comes in.

STRATEGY QUOTIENT - SQ
 
The Oxford languages definition of strategy is "a plan of action or policy designed to achieve a major or overall aim."
Phenomenal strategists have the ability to develop a strategy that builds on the collective experience of the organisation, market dynamics, organisational capabilities and constraints, key trends... And then set that in motion so that people are excited to charge ahead.
... But SQ without execution is merely a daydream - so, we need XQ to get results.

EXECUTION QUOTIENT - XQ
 
There is no dictionary definition of XQ, probably because it remains somewhat elusive and so challenging.
XQ is obviously crucial to sustain an organisation and momentum.
The leaders who are strong in this get results no matter what.
But it needs to exist in harmony with the other Q's, otherwise individuals, teams and the organisation cannot follow or perform in the long-term.
 
 
THE FOUR QUOTIENTS - EQ, IQ, SQ, and XQ - are interdependent.

 
IQ is a foundation, EQ enables collaboration, SQ maps the journey, and XQ drives us to the destination.
Leaders must strive to hone and develop and balance these four quotients to unlock their full potential.
Consider where you are and how you can become stronger.
Keen to hear in the comments which one you think is the most important.
 
Enjoy your weekend!
Jakob 
#leadership #iq #eq #sq #xq

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