sexta-feira, outubro 13, 2006

Orhan Pamuk, nobel da literatura

Orhan Pamuk tornou-se ontem o primeiro escritor turco a ganhar o prémio Nobel da Literatura.

Deixo-vos com um pequeno comentário do The Guardian.

Nicholas Birch
Friday October 13, 2006
Guardian Unlimited


Twenty-four hours after Orhan Pamuk became the first ever Turkish writer to win the Nobel prize, reactions in Turkey are strangely mixed.

His fellow artists have been overwhelmingly positive. Yasar Kemal, doyen of Turkish novelists and often tipped for the Nobel himself, emailed Pamuk to congratulate him for an award that he "thoroughly deserved", while the winner of the 2003 Grand Jury prize at Cannes, Nuri Bilge Ceylan declared he was as happy as if he'd won it himself.

Others picked up on Pamuk's suggestion that his award was above all a victory for all Turkish writers. "It's a great opportunity for Turkey and Turkish literature to be better known by the world," said the bestselling crime writer Ahmet Umit.

Generosity has been in much shorter supply in Turkey's mainstream media. "Should we be pleased or sad?" asked Fatih Altayli, editor of the mass circulation daily Sabah, in his Friday column.

Unlike the fork-tongued contributions of other equally prominent journalists, what he wrote next at least had the merit of being straightforward.

The best reaction to Pamuk's victory was pride, he opined. And yet "we can't quite see Pamuk as 'one of us'... We see him as someone who 'sells us out' and ... can't even stand behind what he says."

Turkey's most influential paper, Hurriyet, also felt the same impulse to question Pamuk's Turkishness.

Editor Ertugrul Ozkok wrote at length in his column about the difficulty of choosing the seemingly banal headline "Nobel to a Turk," declaring "we all know this headline will probably satisfy nobody's 'Turkish side'."

While some have seen Pamuk as something of an outsider since the publication in 2002 of Snow - his most overtly political novel - such ill-disguised bile has surrounded him ever since he told a Swiss newspaper last year that nobody but him dared to say that Turkey had killed 30,000 Kurds and a million Armenians. Within hours, he became Turkey's enemy number one.

Lawyers hauled him into court on charges of "insulting Turkishness" - charges dropped amid ugly scenes earlier this year after international pressure - and one provincial official issued orders for copies of his books to be collected and burnt. Not one was found.

Pamuk's sin wasn't just to break a taboo. By talking about such delicate topics with foreigners, he opened himself to accusations of treason and political opportunism. Many Turks remain convinced his remarks were a calculated attempt to win the status of political dissident.

The cartoon on the front of today's Sabah shows the novelist in front of shelves emblazoned "works that won Orhan Pamuk the Nobel".

On the upper shelf, his seven novels. On the lower, a grey tome with "Turkish Penal Code Article 301" - the article used to bring him to trial last December - inscribed on its spine.

Some see the criticisms as simple jealousy on the part of a parochial-minded intelligentsia. Others present them as just the latest evidence of how much damage the authoritarian coup of 1980 did to Turkish society.

But the debate is also typical of the country's elite: determined to be taken seriously on the international stage, but only on its own terms.

"It's tragic really", said Elif Shafak, another novelist brought to book under Article 301 last month. "This is a huge honour both for Pamuk and the country, and yet so many people are so politicised they forget about literature entirely."



terça-feira, outubro 10, 2006

Why It's So Hard to Value Social Networking Sites

Less than three years after emerging from nowhere, the hot social networking website MySpace is on pace to be worth a whopping $15 billion in just three more years. Or is it?

Is the much smaller Facebook, run by a 22-year-old, really worth the $900 million or more Yahoo is reported to have offered for it? Maybe. Or maybe this is Dot-Com Bubble, Part II, with MySpace, Facebook, YouTube and the other new Internet phenoms destined for oblivion when the fad fades.

"What makes this hard is that these companies seem to be so many years away from the kind of earnings that the valuation numbers are forecasting for them," says Andrew Metrick, finance professor at Wharton. The $15 billion MySpace figure "would imply that a lot more people will be on MySpace than are currently on it."

While the social networking sites vary considerably, each relies heavily on content provided by users who can post personal profiles and build networks among friends and others with shared interests. For the most part, these users have free access and the sites are funded with advertising revenue. To lure advertisers, young sites typically offer deep discounts that make profitability elusive, and it is unclear when they will be able to push ad rates higher, if ever.

The problem, as Wharton accounting professor Robert W. Holthausen sees it, is a dearth of information to plug into the standard valuation models. "You have little data on what kind of revenues they can generate and what their cost structure is."

Valuing advertising-driven sites is particularly hard because the same numbers -- such as the number of users or page views -- can mean different things depending on how the advertisers are billed, Holthausen adds. "How often do they get paid for that advertising? Is it just when the advertisement appears? Or does there have to be a click through?" Similarly, not every user has the same value. That depends on how much the typical user is likely to spend and what he or she is likely to buy. Finally, Holthausen notes, a site will be more valuable if it uses a proprietary technology than if it simply offers services competitors can easily duplicate.

The $15 billion MySpace prediction was issued late in September by RBC Capital analyst Jordan Rohan, fresh from a meeting with Fox Interactive, the News Corp. unit that acquired MySpace's parent company, Intermix Media, about a year ago for a then-astounding $580 million. Rohan cited MySpace's phenomenal growth. It now has more than 90 million active users, twice as many as a year earlier, making it a magnet for advertisers. It recently signed a deal with Google to display search results and sponsored advertising links in exchange for $900 million over three years. In setting the $15 billion forecast, Rohan pointed to Google, which also relies on ad revenue, and which has a market capitalization of $120 billion.

But is Google a good benchmark? Google is without question the premier Internet search service, while MySpace is one of a number of competitors scrambling for market share in a new industry. Google has a proven track record of profitability, while MySpace does not.

Moreover, even Google's $120 billion market cap may reflect some irrational exuberance, making it a misleading model. Its shares sell for about 55 times annual earnings, roughly triple the price-to-earnings ratio of the average Standard & Poor's 500 company. Using the same 55-times-earnings figure, MySpace would need about $270 million in annual profit to justify a $15 billion value. Can it do that in three years, given it is expected to generate only about $200 million in revenue this year? It looks like a reach.

Consider some of the figures bandied about for Facebook. Last January, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, now 22, reportedly turned down a $750 million offer from Viacom, holding out for $2 billion, according to news accounts. This fall he is said to be mulling over a $900 million offer from Yahoo. Those are big numbers considering that the business, started early in 2004, has a modest nine million users and is believed to have annual revenue of around $50 million, though some experts expect that to double soon. If Facebook were valued at 55 times earnings, it would need a $16 million profit to justify a $900 million price.

"Discounted Cash Flow"

Still, there are sure to be some winners in social networking, and sites that are already pulling in significant revenue must certainly have an edge over the dozens of lesser-known competitors. "That's a lot of revenue," Metrick says, noting that this distinguishes Facebook from the dot-com bubble firms. "There were a lot of Internet companies in 1999 that had no revenue.... That kind of [$900 million valuation] doesn't seem so crazy if you believe there is a lot of growth built in." But, he adds, "There are a whole lot of examples of firms like Netscape which grew -- and then eventually lost."

The market-capitalization method of valuation is typically used with a public company -- a free standing entity that sells stock to the public. And it's best for stating a current value rather than a future one. Analysts also like to factor in a company's future prospects, using any number of calculations to derive a figure for "discounted cash flow." Essentially, they look at expected revenues over a given number of years and subtract expenses to arrive at a figure for "free cash flow." Then, using various assumptions about interest rates, they determine what money received in the future is worth in today's terms.

Analysts can never be sure about any company's future revenues and expenses, but the problem is even worse when dealing with a young company in a fledgling industry. The assumptions used in any valuation model are ideally based on experience of at least six or seven competitors, Metrick says. But there is no good peer data in the new social networking business.

With older industries, analysts often value a company on some ratio, such as a multiple of revenues. "But the problem is you are assuming the valuations put on these are rational," says Holthausen, arguing that expectations for new industries are often not rational. During the dot-com bubble, some companies that did have substantial revenues were valued far beyond what any standard analysis would say they were worth, he adds. "You totally had to suspend belief."

After the bubble burst, valuing the survivors did become more sensible, and some are assessed fairly easily with standard approaches, according to Wharton marketing professor Peter Fader. That's especially true of publicly traded companies involved in ordinary commerce, such as bookseller Amazon.com and auction site eBay. Their stocks trade at 45 and 39 times earnings, respectively.

"You're not going to see an Amazon being overvalued like [Internet stocks] used to be," he says, "but these social network sites are the Wild West. This is an area where it has been notoriously fickle. It's not like search engines, where you can really compare them on objective criteria," he suggests, referring to established players like Google and Yahoo.

Among the unknowns: How well can social networking sites hold on to their users? One player, Friendster, burst onto the scene a few years ago, then largely deflated. On the other hand, users go to considerable trouble to upload information and images to these sites, and to establish elaborate networks of friends for electronic sharing. They are not likely to abandon all that effort as casually as they would switch from one online bookseller to another. "It does seem to me there is some stickiness to the model," Holthausen says.

Networks Based around Products

Metrick believes social networking sites will not be a passing fad. But there's no guarantee that MySpace, Facebook or any of the other current players will be the big winners in the end. Fader, too, believes social networking is here to stay, but he thinks it may work best not as a freestanding function but as an additional feature on sites that draw users for other reasons. Hence, the winners may turn out to be other sites that adopt social networking features. Or they may be new players, or current networking sites that broaden their offerings.

Many sites may ultimately be acquired in the way MySpace was bought by publicly traded News Corp., the enormous multi-national media company run by Rupert Murdoch. Part of the News Corp. strategy is to let advertisers link users into networks based around products, such as movies or music groups. More than a million bands have profiles on MySpace, for example.

If MySpace becomes the model, social networking sites will be quite different from the classic dot-com bubble companies which tried to cash in big by going public while staying independent. The risks are not the same when an iffy venture is part of something bigger, says John R. Percival, adjunct professor of finance at Wharton. "This is kind of like the oil and gas business. The risk might not be as great as you think, and a high valuation might be justified."

A small, independent oil driller faces a huge risk in drilling a new hole, which may be dry, he says. Compared to that, risks from changing oil prices and demand are relatively small. But the situation is reversed when the driller is part of a bigger enterprise that drills many wells. A dry hole here and there doesn't matter, but changes in oil prices and demand do.

Social networking sites may be risky for their founders and the venture capital firms that fund them in the early years, but they don't appear to be pumping huge amounts of risk to the marketplace the way tech firms did in the late 1990s. "If you have a little bit of money invested in this and you're already invested in other things," says Percival, "frankly the risk is not as big as you think."

Recalling the first dot-com bubble six years ago, Fader notes, "We all look back and laugh and say we will not go through that exercise again, but this could easily be a case of history repeating itself."


Location: Phildadelphia
Author: Knowledge@Wharton
Date: Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Actual Editora

Estou a ler o livro do Buzz Marketing, do qual oportunamente farei uma pequena nota de síntese para os leitores deste blogue.

Mas entrementes queria deixar-vos com uma pequena descoberta: a Actual Editora (www.actualeditora.pt). Com quem tomei contacto aquando do lançamento do último livro de Charles Handy.

A editora destingue-se das outras, e bem, por uma série de factores:

- especialização em temas económicos, gestão, marketing, liderança e desenvolvimento pessoal;
- livros de sucesso nos mercados anglo-saxónicos;
- capas cuidadas e muito atractivas;
- traduções esmeradas;
- composição do texto indutora de leitura não cansativa.

Um regalo.
Parabéns!

quarta-feira, outubro 04, 2006

MIFID: avanços recentes

A nova directiva europeia relativa aos Mercados e Investimentos (Market in Financial Instruments Directive) será transposta nas legislações nacionais até final de Janeiro de 2007 e realidade em Novembro de 2007.

O Committee of European Securities Regulators nomeou uma equipa de especialista para o Level 3 da Directiva. Este grupo irá recomendar e propôr às autoridades legislativas e regulatórias o detalhe técnico necessário para a sua implementação.

terça-feira, outubro 03, 2006

Derrota do Porto

Em Braga, ontem à noite, o que relançou o campeonato.
E o Sporting Clube de Braga, com uma equipa de rejeitados (Paulo Santos, Wender, Luís Filipe, João Pinto, Marcel) fez a cabeça em água a Jesualdo Ferreira e seus comandados...

Desenvolvimento da democracia electrónica

A APDSI - Associação Portuguesa para o Desenvolvimento da Sociedade Electrónica criou um grupo de trabalho dedicado ao tema da Democracia Electrónica.

Podem os estimados leitores acompanhar o curso dos trabalhos aqui neste blogue ou em http://democraciaelectronica.blogspot.com

quarta-feira, setembro 27, 2006

Ainda e sobre os Hedge Funds, muito na berra...

Rep. Mike Castle (R-Del.) has introduced a bill in Congress requiring regulators to study risks that hedge funds pose to the U.S. economy and to make recommendations about disclosure requirements for the big investment pools.

"Regulators need to explore hedge funds and the potential risks they pose to financial markets and investors," said Castle, a member of the House Committee on Financial Services. "Transparency in our financial system is important for market discipline and investor confidence." Castle's statement comes the same day that Greenwich, Conn.-based hedge fund Amaranth Advisors LLC said it suffered big losses on natural-gas investments and is eliminating positions in the volatile commodity.

In a letter signed by Amaranth founder Nicholas Maounis and made available to MarketWatch Monday, the fund said it could be down more than 35% for the year to date when the natural-gas positions are unwound. "We have met every margin call to date. We are in discussions with our prime brokers and other counterparties and are working to protect our investors while meeting the obligations of our creditors," Maounis wrote in the letter addressed to investors. Early last month, MotherRock LP, an energy hedge fund run by the former president of the New York Mercantile Exchange, said it was shutting down also after suffering big losses in natural-gas markets in recent months.

Hedge funds have drawn scrutiny as they have become more accessible to average investors. Last month, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox told a Senate committee that his agency' is working on new rules about regulating the private investment partnerships. He said the investor-protection agency won't appeal a court ruling overturning a rule requiring hedge-fund managers to register with the SEC as investment advisers. Cox also said one proposal is a new antifraud rule that would effectively look through a hedge fund to its investors. Moreover, the SEC's considering increasing the minimum income and asset requirement for individuals who want to invest in hedge funds, Cox added.

Castle's bill calls on the President's Working Group on Financial Markets to study the type of information that the funds should disclose to the public; the potential risks that hedge funds pose to markets and investors; whether hedge-fund investors are able to protect themselves from risks associated with their investments; the growth of pension funds investing in hedge funds, and other issues. Castle acknowledged Congress has few days remaining before the November elections but said he was confident lawmakers would produce hedge fund-related legislation within a year. "There's a lack of information available to people that have to make decisions," Castle said.

sexta-feira, setembro 22, 2006

Voar como o Jardel: letra de Carlos Tê e música de Rui Veloso

Eu queria unir as pedras desavindas
escoras do meu mundo movedico
aquelas duas pedras perfeitas e lindas
das quais eu nasci forte e inteirico

Eu queria ter barra nesse cais
para quando o mar ameaca a minha proa
E queria vencer todos os vendavais
que se erguem quando o diabo se assoa

Tu querias perceber os passaros
Voar como o jardel sobre os centrais
Saber por que dao seda os casulos
Mas isso ja eram sonhos a mais

Conta-me os teus truques e fintas
Sera que os "Nikes" fazem voar
Diz-me o que sabes e nao me mintas
ao menos em ti posso confiar

Agora diz-me agora o que aprendeste
De tanto saltar muros e fronteiras
Olha para mim e ve como cresceste
Com a forca bruta das trepadeiras

Põe aqui a mao e sente o deserto
Cheio de culpas que nao sao minhas
E ainda que nada à volta bata certo
Juro ganhar o jogo sem espinhas

Tu querias perceber os passaros
Voar como o jardel sobre os centrais
Saber por que dao seda os casulos
Mas isso ja eram sonhos a mais

terça-feira, setembro 19, 2006

Economic Risk - US Downturn Won't Derail World Economy

A sharp slowdown in the U.S. economy in 2007 is unlikely to drag the rest of the global economy down with it, according to a research report by Merrill Lynch's global economic team. The good news is that there are strong sources of growth outside the U.S. that should prove resilient to a consumer-led U.S. slowdown.


(Fonte: the risk center´s risk alert daily digest)

sexta-feira, setembro 15, 2006

Conferência da MSI em Lisboa

Decorreu estas terça e quarta-feiras, em Lisboa, no Hotel Meridien, uma Conferência do MSI (Marketing Science Institute).

Elevado nível académico e intelectual, debates vivos, apresentações agradáveis e com o powerpoint reduzido ao mínimo indispensável.

Em breve daremos mais notas sobre a Conferência, que este vosso escriba é dos relatores.

segunda-feira, setembro 04, 2006

Marketing Metrics and Financial Performance

It is said that at least half of all advertising spending is ineffective, that up to 80% of new-product initiatives fail commercially, and that 85% of sales promotions lose money. Such sobering statistics invite a deeper examination of the productivity of marketing investments, especially as they impact customer attitudes and financial performance.
Newly developed marketing metrics and an abundance of good customer and marketing data provide the opportunity for improved marketing practice going forward. However, the data and the metrics do not suffice. We also need to know how the metrics relate to each other, and how marketing investments impact these metrics in different ways. For example, do increases in sales always correspond to increases in brand equity or in customer equity? If not, what are the tradeoffs between them? This conference will explore these and other issues including:
How do customer metrics relate to business performance? Which customer metrics should CFO’s and CMO’s be responsive to?
How do marketing mix models help clarify the all-important connection between marketing spending and business performance?
How do we integrate customer metrics, marketing ROI and financial performance?

(from Marketing Science Institute; http://www.msi.org/msi/meetings.cfm)

sábado, agosto 19, 2006

talentos de meus alunos

O Pedro Pimentel é modelo em anúncios para televisão de produtos como os automóveis SKODA ou o Sonasol.

O Martim desenvolveu o seu AbsolutMartunis, nóvel blogue, que podem aceder através dos links deste meu sítio.

Entrementes é bom estar em Lagos a contemplar a baía e o azul imenso... tomara que o vento norte venha logo pois as minhas velas estão à espera...

quinta-feira, agosto 03, 2006

Os descontos de Alegre

Os descontos de Alegre e a ética política
(...) Agora, a questão de fundo é isto: como é que é possível haver um sistema, uma lei, que permita uma situação desta natureza, que é que uma pessoa que trabalha três meses, porque continua a descontar ao longo da vida apesar de nunca mais ter exercido aquela função, tem direito a receber uma pensão de 600 contos. Eu pergunto: isto é justo? Que é legal, eventualmente é. Agora, é justo? Se for oito dias tem direito a 500 contos? Se for 15 dias? Quer dizer, três meses. É que isto não é um seguro privado. Num seguro privado eu digo: "Eu quero ter, no final da vida, uma pensão de tantos, e, portanto, desconto tantos por mês." Aqui não, aqui há uma ligação entre a actividade desenvolvida e o desconto. (...)Diz Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa na reprodução no DN da sua crónica de domingo na RTP
X--X--X
É verdade o que diz, quer quanto à irracionalidade do sistema quer quanto à honorabilidade do "poeta" (que antecede o que aqui transcrevo). O problema é, contudo, mais fundo e ele passa por ele em grande velocidade como gato em telhado de zinco.
Que estatuto confere o exercício de funções de representação política, naturalmente precárias, que possibilite a majoração de vantagens da actividade privada suspensa pelo exercício de funções políticas? Não se trata de perceber uma remuneração por uma função que não se exerce, mas de receber uma pensão de reforma por uma actividade que não se desempenhou, e que é condição sine qua non de um benefício que se alcançou pela idade e pelo cumprimento de obrigações de desconto. Ou seja a pensão é um benefício e uma contrapartida da prestação de uma determinada actividade profissional durante um amplo espaço de tempo? Ou uma benesse que alcança quem é experto e aproveita os buracos do sistema? Onde está a justeza do sistema e a linha divisória entre estatuto e privilégios?
posted by andarilho

O Antunoco no Exílio de Andarilho

Saído no Exílio de Andarilho, do professor Arnaldo Gonçalves, personagem maior nas relações luso-asiáticas

"Um blog sobre Marketing, publicidade e politica
Com a devida vénia, aqui deixo referência ao blog do amigo Philip Aristlotle Smith, que recomendo pela sobriedade e cuidado, aqui. "

Venezuela and Russia: axis of oil?

Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez's fourth visit to Moscow focused on new arms deals and energy co-operation. Both countries also used the occasion to further their international ambitions, inflated by windfall oil revenues. Yet while the Venezuelan president aspires to a strategic partnership, Mr Putin has a more limited agenda-and views Venezuela almost as much as an instrument as a partner.

terça-feira, agosto 01, 2006

Livro Marketing: lançamento em Novembro

Porque o Marketing está em grande renovação e aceleração de conhecimentos.

Porque pouco se tem escrito, de forma acessível, para o público interessado profissionalmente (gestores, economistas,...) e/ou para o público não especialista.

Porque existem bons exemplos internacionais e alguns nacionais sobre os quais é imperativo fazer alguma "doutrina" e tirar ilações.

Porque o problema da produtividade das empresas e dos países passa, em grande parte, pela resolução de problemas de marketing.

Porque os públicos alvo estão em fragmentação.

Porque os livros de marketing não têm que ser do tipo "banda desenhada" pueril.

Porque os livros de marketing podem ser instrutivos sem ser maçudos.

Por tudo isso, dois professores universitários (entre os quais o autor deste blogue!) vão lançar um livro de Marketing. Com direito a festa de lançamento (onde espero ver familiares, amigos e actuais e ex-alunos), cobertura da imprensa, etc.
Com a chancela de uma prestigiada editora.

Estejam atentos...!

Networking: ferramentas electrónicas

Duas ferramentas electrónicas úteis para quem deseja sempre saber o paradeiro de seus amigos e contactos, bem como manter sempre actualizados, face aos outros, os seus skills e realizações:

- Plaxo (www.plaxo.com)

Gratuita, constitui um engenhoso programa de cartões de visita electrónicos. Tem cartões pessoais e profissionais, onde uns e outros podem ser destinados ou vistos por pessoas de perfis diferentes.

Adicionalmente permite fazer envios periódicos de actualização de dados.

Mas o verdadeiro bónus está reservado para os aderentes ao Plaxo. Todos os que o tiverem integrado na barra do outlook (ou no yahoo mail) têm a garantia que qualquer alteração nos cartões (mudanças de emprego, telefones, email, etc) será registada no outlook de todos os outros que na sua lista de contactos também usem a ferramenta Plaxo.

Permite a integração com a agenda do telemóvel (compatível wap ou superior) desde que com acesso à internet.

Alerta-nos sobre os aniversários de nossos amigos (sogra, inclusivé...)

Em resumo, grátis, útil e não intrusiva.

- Linkedin (www.linkedin)

A ferramenta de networking electrónico por excelência. Permite manter um mini cv electrónico, partilhá-lo com os aderentes da rede linkedin nossos amigos. Permite fazer recrutamentos, participar em projectos colaborativos, etc, etc.

Claramente muito "job" ou "task oriented". Também integrada no outlook.

terça-feira, julho 25, 2006

Marketing e Recursos Humanos: entrevista

Caros leitores

Deixo-vos com o link (http://planetarh.com/modules/smartsection/item.php?itemid=282) para uma belíssima entrevista do Doutor Bruno Valverde Cota a propósito de recursos humanos e marketing, a importância da qualificação e formação dos recursos humanos em empresas de serviços.

terça-feira, julho 18, 2006

Dislogo

1) Estes dois últimos Sábados estive a dar aulas no programa de pós graduação Dislogo (futuramente Progama Geral de Gestão).

2) Alunos motivados e dedicados, o que torna um prazer dar estas aulas.

3) Conscientes de que a formação é um processo contínuo, sem pausas mas também, fazendo uso de um velho adágio alentejano, sem pressas.

segunda-feira, julho 17, 2006

Pateira muda de endereço e ganha vida própria

O blogue Pateira cresceu, ganhou leitores mas manteve o espírito irreverente.

O crescimento levou-o a um nono endereço:

www.pateira.net

Abandona assim o alojamento Blogger mas continua disponível no link nesta página.

Força

AristotlePhilipsSmith