Friday, March 09, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCVIII (FM Part XV)


In yesterday’s post we invoked the much maligned user vision in the Financial Marketplace’s “Marketplace Interface” of the Preliminary Specification. We want to continue on with the discussion of the scenarios that were being played out in the discussion and specifically what the division of labor and specialization were having in the makeup of the financial marketplace. It would seem that the majority of the costs of transacting within the banking and investment community are fixed. That is there is little a producer can do to offset the costs associated with these services. And they are usually priced as a percentage of the transaction for loans and investments, or service fees based on banking practices that are global in terms of their competitive offering. Therefore the need to leverage these services should be the key to optimizing the value of these services.

Before we go any further we should note that the People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification aligns the seven frameworks of the Joint Operating Committee with the compliance and governance frameworks of the producer firm. This alignment includes the financial framework as we have discussed in this the Financial Marketplaces Preliminary Specification. Having the legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural, communication, innovation and strategic frameworks aligned permits the speed, accountability and innovativeness that we are seeking in the oil and gas industry. Therefore the probability that a Joint Operating Committee will be using the Financial Marketplaces “Marketplace Interface” is a certainty.

Offsetting as much of the logistical and transaction related costs associated with the banking and investment management to the banks and investment managers will enable this marketplace to operate more efficiently. Imputing that the division of labor and specialization will fall within the domain of the bankers and investment managers, and the fee for their services will be one charge for that service. From a paper by Harvard Professor Carliss Baldwin.

The user and Producer need to deploy knowledgeable in their own domains, but each needs only a little knowledge about the other's. If labor is divided between two domains and most task-relevant information hidden with each one, then only a few, relatively simple transfers of material, energy and information need to pass between the domains. p. 17

and

Placing a transaction - a shared definition, a means of counting, and a means of payment - at the completed transfer point allows the decentralized magic of the price system to go to work. p.22

By leveraging the marketplace in this manner helps to mitigate the increased logistical load on a producer as a result of the many Joint Operating Committees undertaking their own banking and investment management needs. This leveraging, and the aid of Information Technology, make this a minor irritant when compared to the benefits achieved when the financial framework is aligned with the other six frameworks of the Joint Operating Committee and the governance and compliance frameworks are also aligned. (Speed, Accountability and Innovativeness vs. a minor logistical irritant.)

The most significant fact about this system, is the economy of knowledge with which it operates, or how little the individual participants need to know in order to be able to take the right action. In abbreviated form, by a kind of symbol, only the most essential information is passed on... Frederick Hayek (1945)

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Thursday, March 08, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCVII (FM Part XIV)


Within the Financial Marketplace module of the Preliminary Specification we are providing the innovative oil and gas producer with the capability to finance their operation at the speed of their innovativeness. Therefore it is necessary to accelerate the pace and speed of the financial community in terms of their capabilities in understanding the producers business.

The first thing we want to do in this the fourth or capabilities pass of the Financial Marketplace is to start the “Marketplace Interface” for this module. Just as in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace module, the Financial Marketplace will use the user vision to create a virtual instance of the financial marketplace that exists. This will be of the banking and investment communities that we have discussed earlier in this module. Creating an environment where the marketplaces capabilities in terms of banking and investment dealing are made available to the producers through a “Marketplace Interface”.

Within the “Marketplace Interface” producers will be able to engage banks to conduct the banking that they do today. The interface will provide the medium of communication and transaction support that is currently available in two separate medium. With the user vision focused on your bank and their representatives, all of your banking documents that you have with the bank are available to you in the tiles that populate your screen. The items that are outstanding or at issue with the bank are also populated in other tiles and are a simple click away from your full attention. You are able to resolve the outstanding issues and transactions with the bank and move your focus on to the next group.

While still at your desk, the next area of your focus is the investment group that you have been working with on a financing in your firm. They have been undertaking a review of your firm and have some detailed questions of you and your representatives to answer. Those representatives are available and are brought into the virtual meeting and are recorded for the archives. It would seem that the investment group want to take your firms offering on speculation and would appreciate it if you would increase it by 30%. Such is the way for innovative producers.

The point of the “Marketplace Interface” is to provide a virtual environment that accelerates the pace of the producers financial capabilities. If the producer and Joint Operating Committee are to pursue the oil and gas marketplace in the future then the pace of their operations will most certainly have to accelerate. The demands for more energy will be insatiable. The prices realized by the producers will reflect this demand and those prices are rewarding enhanced innovation. It is therefore necessary to ensure that the producer has the capabilities within the financial communities to finance this level of activity. We will be discussing these capabilities further in this the fourth pass through the Financial Marketplace of the Preliminary Specification.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Wednesday, March 07, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCVI (PLM Part XXXI)


This will be the last post of our fourth or capabilities pass through the Petroleum Lease Marketplace module of the Preliminary Specification. Tomorrow we will begin with our fourth pass through the Financial Marketplace module. I think that what we have learned about capabilities is valuable and applies to the “Marketplace Interface” that we detailed during this fourth pass. That “knowledge, skills and experience” are the basic ingredients of capabilities and these fit in well with the Petroleum Lease Marketplace module. If we at People, Ideas & Objects could be so bold as to assert that we include “ideas” with knowledge, skills and experience then we are starting to really build on these concepts.

The other aspect of what we have discussed is the role the oil and gas industry has in making the market supporting infrastructure. This includes standards and as we have discussed, software like People, Ideas & Objects to support the markets and the marketplace. The choice between the marketplace and the management as to who will control the industry in the future has already been made. The Internet demands the decentralized methods of the market will rule the day. Just don’t tell the current management as they fight to hang on to their last few moments of control.

When a modular product is imbedded in a decentralized production network, benefits also appear on the supply side (Langlois and Robertson 1992). For one thing, a modular system opens the technology up to a much wider set of capabilities. Rather than being limited to the internal capabilities of even the most capable Chandlerian corporation, a modular system can benefit from the external capabilities of the entire economy. External capabilities are an important aspect of the “extent of the market,” which encompasses not only the number of possible traders but also the cumulative skill, experience, and technology available to participants in the market. Moreover, because it can generate economies of substitution (Garud and Kumaraswamy 1995) or external economies of scope (Langlois and Robertson 1995), a modular system is not limited by the weakest link in the chain of corporate capabilities but can avail itself of the best modules the wider market has to offer. Moreover, an open modular system can spur innovation, since, in allowing many more entry points for new ideas, it can create what Nelson and Winter (1977) call rapid trial-and-error learning. From the perspective of the present argument, however, the crucial supply side benefit of a modular production network is that it provides an additional mechanism of buffering. p. 70

To summarize the interfaces in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace to this point:

Capabilities & Commitments Interface

A summary of the capabilities that are “acquired through” and “committed to” the various Joint Operating Committees your firm is party to.

Long Term Capital Program Interface

Summarizes in geographical and account form the projected capital expenditures of the firm. Data is sourced from reserve reports, stripped of any proprietary information, is aggregated with other producers information and published to suppliers and vendors.

Revenue Per Employee Interface

Calculates Revenue Per Employee for each producer in the industry. Variances and trajectories for volume, price and number of employees, public data. Calculations for Revenue Per Employee for each Joint Operating Committee that your firm participates in. Variances and trajectories for volume, price and number of employees, private data.

Strategy Interface

Collaborative interface to discuss with partners what the strategy for each Joint Operating Committee will be. Overall interface which summarizes what each unique Joint Operating Committee’s strategy is.

Marginal Production Threshold Interface

An interface that enables the producer to collaborate with other members of the Joint Operating Committee and establish thresholds where prices or other criteria would trigger action to reduce production. Once criteria are established, then the interface could be used in as automated a fashion as desired to reduce production.

Marketplace Interface

A virtual environment that represents the Petroleum Lease Marketplace. An environment where the producer or Joint Operating Committee can buy, sell, bid, post, acquire, participate, trade, in lands, leases and oil and gas properties. An environment that is supported by the administrative and transaction capable lease administration necessary to support the marketplace.

What has been done already has the sharp-edged reality of all things which we have seen and experienced; the new is only the figment of our imagination. Carrying out a new plan and acting according to a customary one are things as different as making a road and walking along it. p. 27

and

There has to be a mechanism by which new knowledge enters the system. And that mechanism cannot be rational calculation, for as David Hume (1978, p. 164) long ago observed, “no kind of reasoning can give rise to a new idea.” p. 27

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification.

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCV (PLM Part XXX)


The key deliverable that would be the outcome of the development of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace of the Preliminary Specification. Would be the removal of management control by the current bureaucracy and replace it with the “vanishing hand” of the marketplace. The representation of the marketplace would of course be through the “Marketplace Interface” that we have been discussing here. In this quotation, taken from Professor Richard Langlois’ book “The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism” he reflects on this point.

In highly developed economies, moreover, a wide variety of capabilities is already available for purchase on ordinary markets, in the form of either contract inputs or finished products. When markets are thick and market-supporting institutions plentiful, even systemic change may proceed in large measure through market coordination. At the same time, it may also come to pass that the existing network of capabilities that must be creatively destroyed (at least in part) by entrepreneurial change is not in the hands of decentralized input suppliers but is in fact concentrated in existing large firms. The unavoidable flip-side of seeing firms as possessed of capabilities, and therefore as accretions of habits and routines, is that such firms are quite as susceptible to institutional inertia as is a system of decentralized economic capabilities. Economic change has in many circumstances come from small innovative firms relying on their own capabilities and those available in the market rather than from existing firms with ill-adapted internal capabilities. Chapter 5 will reconstruct the New Economy of the late 20th and early 21st centuries along exactly these lines, once again adding nuance and historical texture. If the antebellum period reflected the Invisible Hand of market coordination, and if the late 19th and early 20th centuries saw the rise of the Visible Hand of managerial coordination, then the New Economy is the era of the Vanishing Hand. p . 14

One could certainly accuse me of being anti-management. They and I have had an interesting battle since the discovery of using the Joint Operating Committee was the key to administrative efficiency in the innovative oil and gas producer. Our other key discovery, that software defines and supports the organization, and therefore to change the organization requires that we change the software first. Management have distorted this knowledge by realizing, if they never changed the software, their domain would never be challenged. Using this knowledge to seal their future. But we know many things from our review of Langlois, Coase and Chandler; specifically.

  • Management have no stake in the firm. 
    • If a crisis were to strike a firm, the management would resume elsewhere. 
    • It is the investor and debt holders who will shoulder the costs.
  • Management currently hold the reigns, and are mindful that their options may lay elsewhere. 
    • Ownership, in the same fashion as the Merchants needs to start over. 
    • Starting over begins with supporting People, Ideas & Objects and the Community of Independent Service Providers.
  • Chandler noted that management have failed before. 
    • During the great depression. 
      • A time when government had to increase its involvement in the economy.
      • Management may not see the more global picture, and therefore, may fail again.


The knowledge that management have in not changing the software is an extension of their monopoly on the tacit knowledge of how to get things done. They know that the tacit knowledge can be held by bureaucracies or markets and have ensured that no tacit knowledge capable markets gain a foothold to challenge their franchise. Making the entire People, Ideas & Objects idea an exercise in futility, or a call to action for the ownership class of the oil and gas industry.

Much knowledge - including, importantly, much knowledge about production - is tacit and can be acquired only through a time-consuming process of learning by doing. Moreover, knowledge about production is often essentially distributed knowledge: that is to say, knowledge that is only mobilized in the context of carrying our a multi-person productive task, that is not possessed by any single agent, and that normally requires some sort of qualitative coordination - for example, through direction and command - for its efficient use. p. 359

The assertion that vendors and suppliers are greedy and lazy is as much self serving and designed to ensure that the market doesn’t develop and compete with management. What is needed is the market supporting efforts of an innovative oil and gas industry that depends on a dynamic and effective “Marketplace Interface” in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Monday, March 05, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCIV (PLM Part XXIX)


The past number of posts have focused on the deliberate nature of developing the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace of the Preliminary Specification. During the 1960's systems capabilities were limited and their applications were quite crude. Organizational developments were therefore constrained by the limitations in Information Technologies. The focus of systems development was the firm itself, and that focus was driven primarily by the compliance and governance requirements of firms (Accounting, Tax, Royalty, SEC etc). During this time, in oil and gas, the Joint Operating Committee was secondary to the demands of the compliance and governance frameworks of the firm. This systems thinking grew over a period of time in which it included several generations of people. Through this process the administration of oil and gas became more oriented to the compliance and governance frameworks and conversely more withdrawn from the seven frameworks of the JOC.

It is my opinion that the Preliminary Specification is not revolutionary in it's move to the Joint Operating Committee, but evolutionary. Particularly from the point of view that we are moving towards the common-sense form of organization of the industry. Leaving this 1960’s “systems thinking” that is prevalent in today systems behind. This is what is necessary for the innovative producer to attain the speed of operations to compete in the 21st century oil and gas industry.

We also must contend with the concepts that originated in the minds of the software developers of SAP and Oracle which certainly were different then what have been stated in the Preliminary Specification. I believe that whatever their vision may have been, for oil and gas it is misguided as it does not recognize the unique nature of the business, the Joint Operating Committee. The unique nature of the industry had developed solutions to the problems and manner of operation. Those solutions consist of the JOC and the dependence on the market to provide for its needs. I can't think of an industry that comes close to the culture of the energy business.

Today the technologies involved in the Internet provide the industry with the opportunity to realize the fashion that it operates is unique, and deal with those anomalies in the best Interests of the industry. A dedicated software developer to build the systems that mirror the manner of the industries operations, will enable greater innovation by relying on the marketplace and allowing the innovation to flow from where-ever and whomever. This will not happen by chance. It is a deliberate act. And today that demands a software development capability and vision like that offered by People, Ideas & Objects and the Preliminary Specification.

Here again, I think the problem is one of conceptual imprecision. It is perfectly common, and often unobjectionable, to contrast a market and an organization, that is, to contrast the institution called a market and the institution called an organization (such as, notably, a firm). But the opposite of “organization” in the abstract sense is not “market” but disorganization. More helpfully, the opposite of conscious organization is unplanned or spontaneous coordination. In this sense the market-organization spectrum (and similar spectra one could imagine) are arguably orthogonal to the planned-spontaneous spectrum. One could well wonder, as I have (Langlois 1995), whether large organizations do not in fact grow far more as the unplanned consequence of many individual decisions than as the result of the conscious planning of any individual or small group of individuals. And it is certainly the case that, as Alfred Marshall understood, both firms and markets “are structures for promoting the growth of knowledge, and both require conscious organization” (Loasby 1990, p. 120).

Therefore development of the “Marketplace Interface”, complete with the user vision, is not a nice to have but a necessary for the innovative oil and gas industry.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Sunday, March 04, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCIII (PLM Part XXVIII)


In yesterday’s post we detailed some of the interfaces that would be used by the suppliers and vendors in providing specific products and services to the oil and gas producers and Joint Operating Committees through the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace. Today we note the Community of Independent Service Providers as they are called at People, Ideas & Objects, or Industrial Districts as Professor Langlois refers to the concept, is structurally different then in the Resource Marketplace. The focus of the work that is done in the “Marketplace Interface” is primarily administrative. Although the disruption in moving the majority of the work from the firm to the marketplace will involve innovative and creative processes, once the marketplace settles into a rhythm, the administrative level of change will slow. Much of the actual work that is conducted in the “Marketplace Interface” will be to support the transactions that are conducted by the producers in the marketplace environment.

That it is not a source of innovation for the oil and gas producer is what is expected of the “Marketplace Interface” in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace. It is an area where the producer can focus on their core competitive advantage of their land and asset base. The administrative efficiencies and effectiveness are certainly part of the competitive advantage. I only raise this point to identify that there will be the dynamic nature of the marketplace for buying, selling, purchasing, bidding, acquiring, dealing, surrendering, etc leases and properties and that will contrast the rather static administrative service and support environment that enables the marketplace to operate.

If we invoke the much loved user vision, we have a producer who is interested in determining what the market value for their interest in a small gas plant will generate. The average production is 100 barrels of oil equivalent per day from 50 wells, compression and dehydration. Through the “Marketplace Interface” the producer puts their 17.5% working interest in the property on the market for sale and is open to offers. The property is then highlighted in the Google Earth section of the “Marketplace Interface” where users can see that property was just posted for sale. It is also listed by zone and product category in the international markets databases. Soon offers are made and the property attracts a reasonable price. The seller deems the property is to be sold, none of the partners are able to match the best offer, and the property is sold. Immediately the administrative aspects of having the leases, agreements and partners recognize the sale agreement, and with the closing executed, these administrative tasks are done.

Or something along those lines. The point in this scenario is to briefly show how many of the attributes that we have been talking about will work together in the “Marketplace Interface”. The efficiencies of the marketplace in terms of having a ready market to buy and sell properties, leases and interests. And to have those transactions backed up by the transaction processing that is as complex as is necessary to close the most complex of purchase or sale agreements. This is how the innovative oil and gas producer will need to operate in the 21st century.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Saturday, March 03, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCII (PLM Part XXVII)


Lets assume for a moment that you are a vendor that is involved in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace and you want to involve yourself in the People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification to expand your business. To include your firm in the “Marketplace Interface” would require you to use some of the interfaces that we developed in the Resource Marketplace module. This blog post is how the vendor would interact within the “Marketplace Interface” and engage with the producers and Joint Operating Committees that were looking for your products and services.

First we should mention who it will be that makes the changes that we expect to see in the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace. Resistance to People, Ideas & Objects by the current bureaucracies has been strong. They have a comfortable system that keeps them firmly in control and do not foresee any need for change. So how do these changes in the marketplace come about. And how does a marketplace like that which has been described here in the past few days come about. The answer is simple and is reflected in this next quote from Professor Richard Langlois paper “The Vanishing Hand: the Changing Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism”.

Ruttan Hayami (1984) have proposed a theory of institutional change that is relevant to my story of organizational and institutional change. As they see it, changes in relative scarcities, typically driven by changes in technology, create a demand for institutional change by dangling new sources of economic rent before the eyes of potential institutional innovators. Whether change occurs will depend on whether those in a position to generate it - or to block it - can be suitably persuaded. Since persuasion typically involves the direct or indirect sharing of the available rents, the probability of change increases as the rents increase. And the more an institutional or organization system becomes misaligned with economic realities, the more the rents of realignment increase. pp. 36 - 37

Simply is the profit opportunity from being an innovative oil and gas producer greater then what is offered by today’s marketplace? And will those that operate in the “Marketplace Interface” find greater profits by providing services that innovative producers will want and need. If either of those situations are the case then the profits will motivate the changes within the marketplaces described within this blog.

In terms of the interfaces that will help the vendors who provide lease and land services to the innovative oil and gas producers the first would be the “Vendor / Supplier Contact Database”. This provides the basic information that is needed for the oil and gas producer or Joint Operating Committee to have on the vendor. Think of it as a rich contact data base that is maintained by the vendor. There is a second aspect of this data base that provides a secondary or tertiary level of data to the producer when the firm is engaged by the producer. This includes access to the vendors staffing profiles, calendars and scheduling information and enables the producer and vendor to work to establish further elements of their working relationship. (Query the “Vendor / Supplier Bidding / Commitment Manager” for further information on the extent of these interactions.)

The second interface that would help the vendor in operating within the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace would be the “Gap Filing Interface”. Recall this is the interface that is used by producers and vendors to communicate the need to have a “Gap Filled”. The gap being a situation where the division of labor could be expanded by providing a further service that is not currently offered. The expansion of the division of labor is done through the process of filling gaps. And if producers and vendors identify and communicate needs and services that are in need of filling, or demanding of new services, then the opportunity for the service to meet the demand will occur quickly. The reason for this is that we live in a time and a place where the service and the need may be located thousands of miles away from each other, or even just next door, and may never know that either exist. The “Gap Filling Interface” helps to eliminate the time and distance of these needs.

The third interface that provides value to the vendors in the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace is the “Actionable Information Interface”. Although somewhat similar to the “Gap Filling Interface” it fills a different role. If a vendor was undertaking a strategic and competitive investment over the next five years that would fundamentally change their service offering. They would publish this information in the “Actionable Information Interface”. This would inform the producers and Joint Operating Committees of the prospective changes in the marketplace and allow them to engage the vendors on what they need. This being a collaborative interface the vendor would be able to engage the market to help define their market offering in the mid term. Most of this information is available to the prudent Google researcher today. However, it being located in one database in the “Actionable Information Interface” the value of the information in its aggregate would provide a unique window on the marketplace offerings and the direction of the industry. One might question why you would publish such sensitive information. I would remind readers that the act of publication is how you earn the copyright.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Friday, March 02, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXCI (PLM Part XXVI)


To review what we have with the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace in the Preliminary Specification. Is that we have an environment that is accessed by the user, a member of a producer firm or Joint Operating Committee, through the People, Ideas & Objects user vision. There they find a rich market environment where they are able to resource the skills, knowledge and experience they need to secure and manage their Petroleum and Natural Gas lease and land base. Given that marketplaces time to develop and grow, with its own market supporting institutions, it will take on its own characteristics and efficiencies. Enabling the innovative oil and gas producer to leverage the marketplaces capabilities and focus on their core competitive advantages.

Making this transition to where the producers and Joint Operating Committees capabilities are sourced from the marketplace will take time, incur unique costs and involve many iterations. These “Dynamic Transaction Costs” as Professor Richard Langlois calls them are necessary as the transfer of capabilities from the firm to the market occur. One should recall the reasoning for this transition. And the reasoning is not as strong in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace as it is in other modules such as the Resource Marketplace module. Is that we are moving the industry from the “High Production Model” to the “Decentralized Production Model”. This provides the producer with the capability to shut-in production, and then have the associated costs of production not incurred.

One might think that, as governance costs diminish in the long run, the boundaries of the firm would be determined solely by capabilities. But capabilities also change over time as firms - and markets - learn. The classical presumption was that the firms capabilities would diffuse completely to the market in the long run, leading to complete vertical disintegration. This reinforces the point that capabilities are more than a matter of production costs in the neoclassical sense and, more importantly, suggest that the notion of a firms capabilities implies a kind of information or knowledge cost - the cost of transferring the firm's capability to the market (other firms) or vice versa. these costs are a neglected kind of governance cost, which I call 'dynamic' governance costs. These are the costs of transferring capabilities: the costs of persuading, negotiating and coordinating with, and teaching others. These costs arise in the face of change, notably technological and organizational innovation. They are in effect the costs of not having the capabilities you need when you need them. pp. 123 - 124

As one can imagine, this marketplace would be dynamic. The need for a dedicated software developer to identify and support not only the innovative oil and gas producer and Joint Operating Committee, but also those changes that are occurring in the marketplaces vendors and suppliers, would be critical. That is the role of People, Ideas & Objects.

"The basic argument - the vanishing hand hypothesis - is as follows. Driven by increases in population and income and by the reduction of technological and legal barriers to trade, the Smithian process of the division of labor always tends to lead to finer specialization of function and increased coordination through markets, much as Allyn Young (1928) claimed long ago. But the components of that process - technology, organization, and institutions - change at different rates." p. 3

This provides a high level summary of the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace module. One that relies heavily on the user vision and the software development capability of People, Ideas & Objects.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Thursday, March 01, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CXC (PLM Part XXC)


Now that there is a marketplace established for the knowledge, skills and experience of the resources used in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace. We can begin to approach that marketplace from the point of view of its standardization and division of labor. So much of the work that is undertaken within a producer firm for Land administration etc. is done for the purposes of timeliness and accuracy. Due to the scope and scale of the individual producers volume of lease and land activity. Efficiencies from the analysis of the division of labor and specialization may not be available. With the development of the “Marketplace Interface” of the Petroleum Lease Marketplace the opportunity to conduct that analysis during the Preliminary Specification is provided.

It was autonomous innovation that Adam Smith had in mind when he argued that the division of labor enhanced innovation: each operative, by seeking ways to make his or her lot easier, would discover improved methods of performing the particular operation (Smith, 1976, I.i8, p. 20). The improvement he had in mind were such that they improved the efficiency of a particular stage without any implication for the operation of other stages. Autonomous innovation of this sort may even further the division of labor to the extent that it involves the cutting up of a task into two or more separate operation. Instead of being differentiating in this way, however, an innovation may be integrating, in the sense that the new way of doing things - a new machine, say - performs in one step what had previously needed two or more steps (Robertson and Alston, 1992). More generally, a systemic innovation may require small modifications of the way work is performed at each of a number of stages, and would thus require coordination among those stages. pp. 116 - 117

In today’s market we have powerful tools that help alleviate us from the repetitive nature of lower level work. Two of those tools are computers and globalization. Our analysis of the marketplace should use these tools to the fullest extent to enable us to focus our attention on innovation. If we look at the Petroleum Lease Marketplace “Marketplace Interface” from this perspective there is much work to be done, and a significant opportunity to provide real value for all producers. Having a Petroleum Lease Marketplace that provides the producer and Joint Operating Committee with the ability to focus their capability on building their land and asset base would be a worthwhile objective for this module. It is fully one half of an innovative oil and gas producers competitive advantage.

Designing and implementing a marketplace that organized these capabilities in an efficient and effective way would not be the difficult part. Ensuring that the user community was supported through their learning and development of new and innovative capabilities would be.

A market form of organization is capable of learning and creating new capabilities, often in a self reinforcing and synergistic way. Marshall describes just such a system when he talks about the benefits of localized industry. p. 120

To start this process we have the Preliminary Specification. It would provide us with a beginning of how this marketplace would be formed. When you consider the scope of the work that would need to be done to detail the “Marketplace Interface” the budget for the Preliminary Specification (all 11 modules equals $100 million) doesn’t seem that high after all.

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification. 

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

The Preliminary Specification Part CLXXXIX (PLM Part XXIV)


There is a distinct market capability that is available in the Petroleum Lease Marketplace of the Preliminary Specification. A capability that is not reflected in the Research & Capabilities module, a capability that resides in the “Marketplace Interface” of the PLM. A capability that provides the innovative oil and gas producer with the ability to participate in the dynamic marketplace of oil and gas leases, lands and properties. If the Research & Capabilities module handles the earth science and engineering aspect of the producers competitive advantage, it is the Petroleum Lease Marketplace that handles the Land and Asset Base attributes of the producers competitive advantage.

As we have discussed here many times, the amount of engineering and earth science effort for each barrel of oil or gas produced will continue to increase as time passes. Naturally therefore the volume of activity associated with oil and gas will increase as well. This imputes that the number of P&NG Leases and agreements will increase as will the number of Joint Operating Committees you may participate in. The Petroleum Lease Marketplace is the means in which to participate, make sense of and build your land and asset base from. It is reasonable to assume therefore that this may require a multiple of legal, administrative and negotiating resources on your behalf in order to achieve these outcomes. The “Marketplace Interface” therefore becomes the first place for you to source the skills, knowledge and experience you need.

Although one can find versions of the idea in Smith, Marshall, and elsewhere, the modern discussion of the capabilities of organization probably begins with Edith Penrose (1959), who suggested viewing the firm as a 'pool of resources'. Among the writers who have used and developed this idea are G.B. Richardson (1972), Richard Nelson and Sidney Winter (1982), and David Teece (1980, 1982). To all these authors, the firm is a pool not of tangible but of intangible resources. Capabilities, in the end, are a matter of knowledge. Because of the nature of specialization and the limits to cognition, organizations as well as individuals are limited in what they know how to do effectively. Put the other way, organizations possess a pool of more-or-less embodied 'how to' knowledge useful for particular classes of activities. pp. 105 - 106.

It will be through the “pool” of knowledgeable providers who enable the innovative oil and gas producer. The “Marketplace Interface” will enable these providers to engage with the producers and build their firm. These will be the Land people, the administrators and those that support the negotiations and transactions involved in land deals. Traditionally these people have been employed by the individual producers, however, with the “Marketplace Interface” there may be a need to have these services provided by the marketplace. That may be one of the changes that occurs during the development of the Preliminary Specification.

But often - and especially when innovation is involved - the links among firms are of a more complex sort, involving everything from informal swaps of information (von Hippel, 1989) to joint ventures and other formal collaborative arrangements (Mowery, 1989). All firms must rely on the capabilities owned by others, especially to the extent those capabilities are dissimilar to those the firm possesses. p. 108

For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.

Please note what Google+ provides us is the opportunity to prove that People, Ideas & Objects are committed to developing this community. That this is user developed software, not change that is driven from the top down. Join me on the People, Ideas & Objects Google+ Circle (private circle, accessible by members only) and begin building the community for the development of the Preliminary Specification.