Archive for August, 2010

A Word from Our CEO

This week, WOW!’s CEO Colleen Abdoulah posted an article on our employee blog.  It tells the story of what makes WOW! unique and I thought I would share pieces of it with our community visitors.  As a Company, we speak about our core values – Respect, Integrity, Accountability and Servanthood.  We talk about Leading with Courage, Serving with Heart and Celebrating with Grace.  We try to influence, but really have no control the attitudes or the ‘mindset’ of an employee. 

Colleen starts her article this way:   “As you know, mindset simply refers to a person’s outlook – their attitude, approach, or way of thinking. During these times, we know there are many people and companies of all sizes who are struggling. This past quarter, another 500,000 people became unemployed. It is no wonder we may experience people whose mindset is negative, defeated, desperate, anxious and maybe even bitter.”

The year 2009 was a tough one, but WOW! managed to meet its budget plan and financial commitments.  The first half of 2010 so far not much easier, but our performance is still meeting expectations and our owners and investors have not lost confidence in us.  Why is this?  How is it possible?

Says Colleen, “It is not because we are the low price provider. It is not because our cost structure is less than our competitors. It is not because we have an easy budget and low expectations from our owners and lenders. It is not because we have technology and products that no one else has. So why and how do we continue to create value, sustain our market position, provide growth opportunities that allow us to build new plant – all during times that are tight and difficult for so many? Is it because we have it easy with all the resources in the world to just coast along on our past successes?  Of course not.  For me, how and why we are able to achieve these things is anchored in our MINDSET.”

“Yes, technology matters. Systems integration is critical. Processes and procedures that help us learn and do things faster and better are essential. Our products and services need to keep pace with ever-changing consumer expectations.  But choosing to serve one another instead of competing or blaming opens the way for ideation and innovation.  And at the foundation of it all is each and every team member’s chosen outlook – how we choose to approach our day and the obstacles and opportunities that are presented. The attitude we each project to one another and our customers is unique. With all the uncertainty in life, each of us has control over how we choose to respond. And what a mindset we have at WOW!.”  It is not our products and services that are differentiators – it is each of US that makes WOW! unique.

At the end of her article, Colleen invited comments from employees, asking what and who had influence over their mindsets every day.  I wish the community readers could see employee responses – tThey are numerous, genuine and inspirational.  What I’ve learned over nine years with WOW! is that this positive mindset, this can-do attitude, this ‘how can I help approach’ is a self-fulfilling prophecy.   As Colleen says, a strong business plan and sound technology are critical to our business, but it is our spirit and our attitudes that set us apart from our competitors.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dancing with the Stars Cast Announcement During The Bachelor Pad?

I understand the whole idea of cross-promotion for networks – Get your viewership numbers up for the night by getting viewers from a highly popular show to watch for your big cast announcement.  But, really ABC, why would you try to force me to watch the Bachelor Pad just so I can find out who’s the next cast of Dancing with the Stars.  There has been enough speculation going around about who’s on the show as is – with an even bigger focus on reality TV stars.  Didn’t Kate Gosselin teach you anything?  On top of reality stars, now we are getting more politics in the mix with Sarah Palin’s daughter, Bristol on the show.  Seriously?  I know that no one is going to be pleased with every single cast member that is chosen but don’t stray away from what made the show popular in the first place, dancing.

I would love to hear your thoughts about the show and the potential cast for this upcoming season.

Blackouts Revisted

In checking the WOW! internal customer service announcement page (the main place our customer service reps go to regularly for helpful information) for a good educational topic to blog about, a blackout announcement was right there on top.  There’s a blurb about the Cleveland Indians game with the Chicago White Sox on WGN on August 30th and it occurs to me that football season is upon us.  Oh wait a minute while I google it.   It’s baseball, not football.  Sorry, I’m not a professional sports fan although I do have a special place in my heart for the Colorado Rockies and notice, as I was googling about the other teams, that the Rockies just beat and stunned the Atlanta Braves on Wednesday.  Way to Go Rockies!  Most often though, I have a hard time telling one team from another.  But, I do know there’s always the start of a professional sports season lurking in the near future, so blackouts are  a good topic to refresh everyone on.  To do this, I reached way back into our archives to an article that Bob Pech contributed early in the year about blackouts.  I thought it was a good one, one that you’d enjoy reading again if you’ve been following our blog, and if you’re new to the site, you’ll enjoy it as well.  Click  here to read it.

Why do our employees love working here?

Good question, glad I thought of it :) . It all starts with the hiring and screening process. The HR department does an extremely thorough job of making sure the candidates for hire, fit in with the culture that WOW! has established. This doesn’t mean that the potential employee needs to be overly qualified for the position but it means that the attitude they bring will also fit in.

After the decision is made for hiring the individual, the next step would be on to the training department. The energy this team brings is contagious. Every class they are involved in, are always very upbeat and keep you focused on the subject for that particular day. While passing the training room in the hall, I can always feel the energy that is coming from that room. Once in a while ( ok, quite a bit) I will come by to just sit and listen to the class and absorb the energy. I can tell you this: If you are ever tired and run down, go by the training room and your whole attitude will change for the better.

When the training is complete, the individuals are assigned to the suitable supervisor in their appropriate departments. The supervisor’s job is to take these newly developed people and mold them into a lean, mean helping machine. The individuals are continuously coached on policies and procedure as well as new products and services available. The job of the supervisor is not only to be the developer but also to ensure their individuals are taken care of physically (i.e. the ergonomics of the desk they are in, height of the chairs, etc…) and remain enthusiastic about the job.

The turn-over rate for a call center is typically very high, while the WOW! centers are very low. I have seen people leave from here, to find that greener pasture and return almost immediately. Stating they didn’t know how well they had it until they left. No matter what department the newly hired are assigned to, the result s are the same: Create an experience that lives up to our name, WOW! and have a great time doing it.

High Dynamic Range Video: Part 1

I spent some time this past weekend mounting a couple of prints from my trip to my ancestral Montana home last summer for my office at work.  As an avid amateur photographer, I’m always trying new techniques to produce the strongest photographs possible.  One of my favorite techniques that I use quite often is known as HDR (high dynamic range) photography in pro and serious amateur photography circles.  It is a relatively new technique, though not a new idea, made possible by the strong digital processing options available to digital photographers today.

Here’s the thing.  If we are to consider the action of the pupil in the eye adjusting to varying light, the eye has almost 24 f-stops of dynamic range–said another way, we can see a starlit sky in the dead of the arctic night all the way to sun blazing off of a placid lake on the equator at noon-an increase of one f-stop essentially doubling the brightness perceived.  But even at a static pupil aperture, the eye can still detect between 11 and 14 f-stops of dynamic range, and we use the dynamic range of that wonderful instrument daily to see detail that no past or present camera (including film) technology can capture.

The state of the art dynamic range available from the sensors on high end digital cameras or video cameras today is about 8.5 f-stops–material outside of that shows up as either straight black or straight white.  So while an eye can look at a scene and see 11-14 f-stops of dynamic range, a digital camera/video camera will only detect slightly more than 8 f-stops, and because this is a logarithmic scale, this is a significant difference in performance.

The technique I presently use in my digital photography is to bracket three quick exposures, one under exposed, one properly exposed, and the final over exposed.  Both my cameras can be set to do this automatically, and both support “rapid fire” exposures–up to 8 frames per second.  So this can be done quickly as one is shooting the picture(s), but (and here’s the rub) these three negatives must then be combined digitally using computer processing techniques to create a single high dynamic range image.  In other words, almost 64 megabits of data from multiple negatives must be processed to create a single 20 megapixel image in HDR.  The results are stunning–detail that looks realistic to the eye when properly done.  Like anything else, this technique can be taken to the extreme and not all HDR pictures are particularly life-like.

So what does this have to do with my TV?  Most current video displays have the raw ability (if not the actual circuitry) to display dynamic range that simply isn’t available in most video content.  It is possible that the “next big thing” in video will be getting the content, storage, transmission streams, etc. to move to true high fidelity video (not just high definition) by increasing the dynamic range to something closer to what the human eye can perceive.  My sense is that this element may be more important to video cognoscenti than 3D in terms of actually enhancing the video experience.

Next week, I’ll discuss the fine points of this future technology and the ramifications to the industry should it be adopted.  In the meantime, take a look at this sample of HDR video–understand it’s highly compressed and just a rough approximation of what is possible, but very intriguing nonetheless.

HDR video sample

Until next week….