Commentary
Final Analysis: Flying Higher
How a certain local airline could strike a blow for fairer treatment of college athletes.
Heres a thought: While Alaska Air Group spends $2.6 billion swallowing up Virgin America, it should wield some of its new clout Alaska will soon be the nations fifth-largest air carrier on becoming the college athletes best friend. Alaska already showers upon the University of Washington nearly $5 million a year for naming rights to…
Virgin on Business: Makers Mark
Lets celebrate the indelible imprint of manufacturing.
We live in a digital world, do we? Ha! Try driving your digital car from your home constructed of ones and zeroes to a grocery store made of the same stuff to buy food consisting of bits and bytes. Digital has its uses and value in enhancing communication, streamlining commerce and providing entertainment (that is,…
Letters to the Editor
Our readers weigh in.
PORT OF SEATTLE As a resident of Seatac and one who works just south of Harbor Island, I share a much less enthusiastic view of the Port of Seattle. Little in your March issue addressed the negative impacts. And I question if Lance Lyttle, a man used to the wide-open spaces of Houston and Atlanta,…
Editor’s Note: Japan Awaits
Looking to expand to Asian markets? China isnt the only option.
When it comes to exports, most people think first of China. After all, with a population of 1.4 billion, it is the worlds largest economy. But while a handful of corporate giants like Starbucks are minting money there, Chinas unfriendly regulators and rampant intellectual property theft are giving many American companies pause. Enter Japan. Once…
Leading Organizational Transformation
Lessons from Seattles hometown cruise line and its new president.
People have been talking about the importance of change as a critical management practice for decades. No matter how many approaches we recycle, one timeless truth returns to us again and again: Change is profoundly difficult and wed prefer not to do it. And those who try often fail. Its staggering how many costly failures…
Final Analysis: Am I Ready to Share a Bike? Not exactly.
Not until I can be sure Im safe on the streets of Seattle.
On a recent visit to New York City, I marveled at the sheer bravery of the people using Citi Bike, New Yorks bike-share program. Or maybe it was their audacity that struck me. Many of these helmetless people weaving around delivery trucks and taxicabs and metro buses seemed to be my age which equates to…
Editor’s Note: All Aboard!
An efficient light-rail system makes good sense for a Greater Seattle.
Light rail in Seattle has been a disappointment. The train trip from downtown to the airport, for example, usually takes nearly twice as long as by car. But with two new stations opening up recently in hard-to-reach locations, commuters may finally begin to see value in the system. Hop on the train at Westlake Center…
The Art of Making Change
If your business is doing things the way its always done them, youre not just standing still; youre moving backward.
If you keep doing what youve always been doing, youll keep getting what youve always gotten. Im sure youve heard some version of this saying. Youve read it in a dozen books; youve heard it in a dozen motivational speeches. (If that last part is true, congratulations on surviving a dozen motivational speeches.) If you…
Virgin on Business: Too Big to Derail?
Banking has certainly changed, but it has managed to avoid the disruption that upended other industries.
Lets do a quick review of the list of service businesses that have been disrupted by the internet. Retailing? Thoroughly. Communications? No doubt. Media? We could tell you stories. Travel and tourism? They could tell you stories as well about how customers get information and book their own travel arrangements these days. Banking? Hmm, theres…
Hard Accounting for Soft Assets
How to add a billion dollars worth of green to Seattles books.
The building boom thats driving up real estate prices and jamming Seattle with housing and high-rises is also squeezing out and devaluing the citys green, open spaces. That progress presents a paradox: Hard assets provide value temporarily during their useful lives; green, or soft, assets provide value forever. But the city sees dollar value in…
Final Analysis: The Buddy System
When the desultory style of Seattles mayor leaves you wishing for a felon.
Friends and I were talking recently about one of Seattles infrastructure problems dont remember if it was the abysmal traffic, rising homelessness, the messy waterfront and I said, as I often do in these situations, Maybe its time for Buddy Cianci. All told, Vincent A. Buddy Cianci, who died in January, was mayor of Providence,…
Who Needs Regulation?
The debate about rules for the sharing economy creates its own kind of disruption.
There have been two great waves of the American deregulation debate. The first was during the Carter-Reagan era, when entire industries airlines, railroads, trucking, natural gas, long-distance telephone service were freed from government constraints on what markets they served and what prices they charged. And the second? Youre experiencing it right now. You might not…
Final Analysis: Am I Ready to Share a Bike?
On a recent visit to New York City, I marveled at the sheer bravery of the people using Citi Bike, New Yorks bike-share program. Or maybe it was their audacity that struck me. Many of these helmetless people weaving around delivery trucks and taxicabs and metro buses seemed to be my age which equates to…