Sustainable Transportation Panel: April 12 in NYC

I’ll be moderating a panel discussion on sustainable transportation as part of the Columbia Business School’s New York Alumni Club’s “Making Green from Green” series. It will take place on April 12 and the public is welcome. So, please, come on by.

In 2010, Tesla went public, Nissan LEAF and Chevy Volt launched, natural gas vehicles gained momentum in commercial transportation. Cities like New York continue to remake their pedestrian walkways and bike lanes. This evening will feature expert discussion on developments in alternative transportation with ample opportunity for questions and audience dialog. Among the questions we’ll tackle will be:
  • Who will fund the new infrastructure?
  • Are government and industry poised to work together?
  • Where do hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles fit in the road ahead?
  • Will U.S. manufacturers compete globally with low cost providers in China, India and elsewhere?
PANELISTS
  • Chuck Feinberg, Chairman, New Jersey Clean Cities Coalition; Executive Vice President, Greener by Design
  • Trent Lethco, Associate Principal, Arup’s Transportation Planning Group
  •  B. Eric Graham, Director, TechBridge, Fraunhofer Center for Sustainable Energy Systems
  •  Brent Dewar, Senior Advisor, GreenOrder 
Date: Tuesday, April 12, 2011 • 6:00 pm
Time: 6:00pm Doors Open and Sign-in • 6:30 – 8:00pm Program • 8:00 – 9:00pm Reception and Networking
Place: Citi, ICG Conference Center • 388 Greenwich Street

Getting Ready for Sustainable Cities

New York is Going Green

I’m serving as editorial director and moderator of the upcoming Executive Council Sustainability Leadership Forum –  Sustainable Cities: Smarter, Greener, and More Competitive. It has been an interesting event to put together as I’ve interviewed and recruited speakers from companies like Autodesk, Coca-Cola, IBM, Cisco, ARUP, and many others. I’ve learned a lot and look forward to a day of rich, robust discussion.

Amanda Crater, founder of CraterCom, recently interviewed me for apodcast preview of the event: Eric McNulty-Sustainable Cities.

Executives from these large companies all have highly polished stories to tell. Their firms are doing good work and the impact that can be had at the scale at which they operate is significant. My editorial challenge, of course, is to puncture the polish. Not to play “gotcha” but to be sure that the audience gets the insights it needs.

I’m working on my queries: What will the long-term implications of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill be for business in general — not just the extractive industries? Must the cities of the developed world go “brown” before they go “green”? What sustainability opportunities with short payback windows are businesses overlooking?

What are the questions you’d most like me to ask of these executives?

UPS Longitudes

Among the programs I developed and ran at Harvard Business Publishing is the Longitudes series created in collaboration with UPS. These events presented thought leadership on global trade and supply chain management to an audience of top UPS customers. We held these events in Chicago, Frankfurt, New York, Paris, Shanghai, and Toronto. I had the privilege to work with presenters such as the CEOs of Procter & Gamble, Williams Sonoma, Premier Farnell, and others as well as executives from Disney, IBM, Wal-Mart, Starbucks, and a wide range of other companies. Academic leaders from around the world added their insights and I can’t forget Presidents George H.W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, F.W. DeKlerk, Vincente Fox, Mikhail Gorbachev, Vaclev Havel, and Lech Walesa.

UPS was a great client with which to work: their top management team was deeply invested in the program, they were truly engaged in the ideas and the concept that educating their customers would pay dividends (and at one point revealed that the Longitudes program had a 500% ROI), and were just all around nice people. The program won the Silver Anvil from the PR Society of America in 2006 and, subsequently, two other top industry awards: Gold award for Best Multi-Venue Event(B-to-B) as given by Event Marketer magazine’s EX Awards  and the silver award for the Best Business to Business campaign as given by the Marketing Agencies Association Globe Awards.

I’ve attached the summary report from the last of the events: Longitudes ’08 held in Barcelona. If you’d like information on any of the others or about how to use thought leadership events to engage more deeply with a key constituency, please be in touch.

Boss, I Think Someone Stole our Customer Data

I didn’t know much about data security when I first started helping to shape the content for the 2007 Visa Security Summit.  One of the skills I brought to my role of Director of Harvard Business Conferences was the ability to look at a thought leadership challenge faced by a company, get up to speed on it quickly, and frame it in a way that was compelling for the target audience to be influenced (and legitimate for HBP to be talking about). From there, I worked to create content that met high editorial standards, was objective, and yet which still helped the sponsoring company meet its communication goals. In other words, I helped companies get beyond their own marketing hype to see how their customers viewed the world and to deliver meaningful information to help those customers solve an important problem.

I see thought leadership as an algabraic equation: given challenge X, your customers will be better equiped to meet that challenge if you educate them about Y. The sponsoring company gives you X and you solve for Y. The customer remembers the sponsoring company as the source of the knowledge and thinks of them as the smartest folks regarding that challenge and this makes them more likely to call. In addition to Visa, I led efforts to do this for UPS (global trade and supply chain management), Accenture (adoption challenges with electronic health records), Coca-Cola (happiness), Nuance (customer experience), SAS (analytics) and others.

After the Visa summit, I turned what I learned into a case study for Harvard Business Review (repurposing content is part art and part science), “Boss, I Think Someone Stole our Customer Data”:

Flayton Electronics is showing up as a common point of purchase for a large number of fraudulent credit card transactions. It’s not clear how responsible the company and its less than airtight systems are for the apparent data breach. Law enforcement wants Flayton to stay mute for now, but customers have come to respect this firm for its straight talk and square deals. A hard-earned reputation is at stake, and the path to preserving it is difficult to see. Four experts comment on this fictional case study in R0709A and R0709Z. James E. Lee, of ChoicePoint, offers lessons from his firm’s experience with a large-scale fraud scheme. He advises early and frank external and internal communications, elimination of security weaknesses, and development of a brand-restoration strategy. Bill Boni, of Motorola, stresses prevention: comprehensive risk management for data, full compliance with payment card industry standards, and putting digital experts on staff. For the inadequately prepared Flayton, he suggests consulting an established model response plan and making preservation of the firm’s reputation its top priority. John Philip Coghlan, formerly of Visa USA, discusses the often-divergent positions of data-breach stakeholders and puts customers’ interests first. Swift disclosure by Flayton, he argues, would empower consumers to protect themselves against further fraud and might even enhance the company’s reputation for honesty. Jay Foley, of the Identity Theft Resource Center, recommends that Flayton emphasize quality of communication over speed of delivery. More broadly, he advocates cautious management to prevent data thefts, which are proliferating and could have long-term consequences.

I’ve gone on to teach this case several times for the Insitute for Advanced Network Security –now known simply as IANS (where I am on the faculty for leadership and management) and I know that it used at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute and other institutions of higher education.

As with all of my work for Harvard Business Publishing, it is still for sale on their site so I can’t post the entire article. They’ll be happy to sell you a copy.