November 11, 2012

So I picked a fight with Tom Lee of Sunlight Labs about why a rather good piece on whether the big spenders in US politics actually achieved anything with their money didn’t have any charts. Sunlight reckons campaign money was surprisingly ineffective, and Republicans had the most of it, in a post that surely does…

Read More The smart money and the dumb money in the US elections

On a similar theme to the last post, this Twitter discussion led me to something interesting: https://twitter.com/relume1/status/265117766896476160 The linked Harvard Business School paper, which is good and worth reading, concludes that the craze for delayering in business since the 1980s, which was sold as a way of devolving decision-making authority to lower levels in organisations,…

Read More On the theory of the pathological firm

Inspired by this weekend’s story that you now pay a transaction fee to fly Ryanair even if you use a Ryanair credit card, which is apparently a thing that exists even if it sounds like it shouldn’t, I have been thinking about their business model. It is not what you may think it is. This…

Read More A brief inquiry into the nature and consequences of think-of-a-number pricing