Last time we left off, we had identified an opportunity, and a financial reason to solve it. We even have secondary reasons such as a labor force with high week-over-week attrition hampering quality and production, today’s small businesses having zero path to a high-cost solution, and CEA and local produce becoming a necessity over being a nice to have. While the opportunity is large, we also have a growing pile of constraints. For brevity I will list them here.
Constraints:
To be honest, it was a high hill we chose to climb. Luckily, many of these constraints exist in other industries and by smartly matching patterns we could overcome. To provide some context, I started in technology before smart phones and the internet were really a thing. I was there building good and unfortunately bad tech during the internet bubble. I had front row tickets in the move from the internet to mobile phones to smart phones. Yes, I distributed the original Droid phone by Motorola (still the best smartphone I ever owned) and the Nexus for Google to developers before they were released to the public. I did process optimization for Blue Collar Labor in Distribution and White Collar Labor in Consulting and Legal. I was hired by Amazon largely because of my patents in Robotics and Fulfillment Centers and my proven process/software for maximizing profitability in electronic device returns. I was a GM at AWS when the shift to the cloud and Saas went from something people talked about to something people were doing. Want to talk about AI, I have a unique perspective from my Amazon Mechanical Turk (the first gig work marketplace) days and how humans train models. I received a master’s class on how to run and optimize a diverse remote virtual workforce.
While every industry has unique aspects, they also have a huge amount of commonality. Lots of patterns to match and leverage. It is why there are enterprise software and hardware providers solving common problems. ERP, WMS, HRMS, Payroll, Document Management, Email, Search, Intranet, Extranet… The list goes on and on. Most solutions are vertical in their capabilities commoditizing an area while ignoring the unique processes or secret sauce a company may have. An Enterprise company’s solution tends to be Frankenstein’s Monster of cobbled together platforms. Visibility is lost with every integration and the land of Data Warehouse, Data Lakes, Business Intelligence and now AI is used to combat this. Many of these companies have outsourced their information technology talent and every addition or upgrade has heavy consulting cost. From the good and the bad playbooks that took on these shifts over the years we settled on core pillars for a future solution:
We now have an opportunity, it has value, we have known constraints, and a general concept of what we want to build. But a platform of this magnitude is a heavy lift. Could we prove the idea without the expense? Show the idea as viable?
At this point I always picture myself as Winnie the Pooh in Pooh’s Thoughtful Spot in the thinkers pose tapping my forehead “think, think, think…”