"That Jarring Gong," Part IV
People, Ideas & Objects are the licensed commercial developers of the Intellectual Property presented in this blog, wiki, and other platforms. Moving forward requires licensing this IP to our user community and their service provider organizations. This will also be a crucial consideration in what we anticipate to be a comprehensive Oracle agreement.
My initial negotiations with Oracle in 1991 took a year to complete. People, Ideas & Objects have unique and specific needs that Oracle may or may not have encountered before. However, we have always found Oracle's organization to be performance-oriented and highly motivated. What we sought to accomplish in 1991 pales in comparison to the complexity of our current implementation.
We approach this endeavor with open eyes and the benefit of our experience from our Oracle relationship between 1991 and 1997. That relationship ended in failure due to the lack of market performance and the inability to get oil & gas producers to commit to participation. We now attribute this failure to producers' reluctance to embrace accountability within their organizations. This is the same type of failure Oracle experienced with their Oracle Energy initiative, which was removed from the market in 2000, and the same issue IBM faced when they exited the market in 2005. These market failures, driven by the actions of producers' officers and directors, have been documented in detail on this blog over the past few decades.
Groundwork
Repeating the same actions and expecting different results might question my mental fitness, but the persistent issue is the lack of producer participation. This has been evident in our 2017, 2021, and now fourth attempt to fund the development of oil & gas ERP systems. Given the industry's current level of destruction and the urgent need for a rebuild, the avoidance of accountability by producer officers and directors has become untenable. Is it my persistence that’s at issue here, or is it the obstinance of producer officers and directors?
In the first year of our development, we must focus on organizational groundwork. People, Ideas & Objects have operated on a bare-bones budget for decades, and it shows. Discretionary funds are virtually nonexistent. Consequently, many tasks beyond our Intellectual Property still need to be addressed. The advantage of this situation is that the configuration is yet to be written, allowing us to seek input and foster a collaborative environment. This collaboration will be essential in determining the appropriate methods to resolve difficulties as part of the overall vision of the Preliminary Specification.
My Role
When I began, my sole ambition was to write software. Those days are behind me, and the scope and scale of our work have expanded to the point where no single person can claim credit. Instead, our initiative will be the collective effort of thousands. Our user community is the driving force behind this initiative, as detailed in our user community vision. User communities are essential for building and implementing quality ERP systems. Our user community is licensed to create derivative works of the Preliminary Specification, and our developers are licensed to seek input exclusively from our user community, which also has absolute control over its budget.
Our user community wields the power to effect change and build the Preliminary Specification within the rebuilt oil & gas industry culture of preservation, performance, and profitability. People, Ideas & Objects, our user community, and their service providers are dedicated to providing the most profitable means of oil & gas operations. Producers will have a single point of contact to address their software configuration and development issues. In today's ERP systems landscape, who has the authority or financial resources to adapt to the industry's evolving needs?
My contributions are embedded in the current Preliminary Specification. In 2003, recognizing the potential of the Joint Operating Committee as a solution, I embarked on a decade-long research journey to determine what, how and why producers and the industry should operate if the Joint Operating Committee were the key organizational construct. This involved answering critical questions, exploring every possibility, and learning from failures. The work was arduous, especially during the 2008 financial crisis, when I felt I was failing to deliver timely solutions. However, the research culminated in the completion and publication of the Preliminary Specification in August 2012.
Our User Community
People, Ideas & Objects are built upon three distinct competitive advantages: Intellectual Property, research, and our user community. At the start of 2024, we focused on developing our research capabilities and initiated three unannounced projects. One of these projects involves the compensation structure for our user community. Currently, user community members are compensated on an hourly basis. Their individual contributions will be analyzed using AI to determine the service provider organization they have earned, its function, and the corresponding assignment to a user community member. This performance metric serves as a strong incentive based on their overall contribution.
However, we are concerned that this might not be sufficient. The task ahead for our user community is as challenging as the research that identified the Joint Operating Committee as the key organizational construct. While designing the details will be easier and less time-consuming, the conflicts and contradictions will be more intense. Our current hourly rate does not incentivize the rigorous work required to navigate these difficulties. It does not, in my opinion, set the appropriate tone to attract those with the sense of urgency, motivation, and incentive needed to resolve these industry issues. We are researching a new compensation method for our user community that is incentive-based and more lucrative for high performers while still providing adequate hourly compensation to meet their needs.
The hourly component will be used to acquire or purchase Intellectual Property from our user community members. We will buy it from them. Additionally, we will implement an AI algorithm to determine the allocation of service provider organizations for user community members when the application is deployed. We expect our user community members to hold part-time independent roles, otherwise leading their service provider organizations and to continue in these roles throughout the software's lifecycle. Our compensation system will consider these foundational aspects and include the following attributes:
- Budget Control. Our user community will control its budget, with a clearly defined process for its operation, that will be developed in these first year's budget requirements.
- AI Algorithm Development. The AI algorithm for assigning service providers will be developed by our user community in the first year, ensuring it is available when needed.
- Work Identification and Compensation. The process for identifying, budgeting, and approving user community members' work will be defined, with a significant portion of compensation coming from bonuses upon successful completion.
- Performance Criteria. The process will be developed by each user community member and will emphasize performance, represented by quality and features at the expense of cost.
- Decision-Making Authority. Each user community member will have decision-making authority over their domain of involvement as users and within their service provider organizations.
We are also exploring additional performance-based incentives for our user community members. Our compensation research project is expected to be completed by December 2024, ensuring that our user community has the means to make the Preliminary Specification successful. They will have the power to effect change, allocate financial resources to priorities, and incentivize performance to ensure both personal and professional success.
User Community Defined Quality
Developing and implementing Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) software is a complex and challenging task. The proven method to enhance system quality, implementation, and value is to align development with user needs. People, Ideas & Objects leverage our user community as one of our three competitive advantages. After publishing the Preliminary Specification in August 2012, we prioritized developing our user community, starting with the publication of our user community vision in March 2014.
The failure of most ERP systems today lies not in focusing on user-based systems but in their implementation. Typically, a user committee is formed to identify surface-level needs, leading to conflicts and contradictions that quickly inflate the budget. Consequently, the user committee is disbanded, a generic ERP system is implemented, and users must adapt to the system as is until the next implementation cycle.
Quality can only be achieved through an empowered user community, like that of People, Ideas & Objects. Although it may seem that this approach slows down development, we know otherwise. By publishing our user community vision in March 2014, we have sparked a shift in the minds of users within the oil & gas industry. They recognize the difference and understand how the industry should operate with the Preliminary Specification. Many have envisioned their roles in making this a reality, with ideas evolving in potential users' minds for a decade.
This long-standing engagement presents an opportunity to accelerate our quality-driven user developments. Empowered by a clear vision, our user community is poised to drive meaningful, user-centered enhancements in the Preliminary Specifications development, ensuring it meets the true needs of the industry.
Our User Community Conclusion, For Now
Our goal is to ensure that our user community members are empowered individuals, equipped with the right incentives and tools to drive the success of People, Ideas & Objects, the oil & gas and service industries. We aim to foster an industry culture centered on preservation, performance, and profitability, where dynamic, innovative, accountable, and profitable oil & gas producers are provided with the most profitable means of oil & gas operations, everywhere and always.
To achieve this, our user community must have the authority to effect these changes, control their own budget, be the sole source for software developer input, and be the exclusive point of contact for anyone seeking input on the developments of the Preliminary Specification. Governed by the Preliminary Specifications Intellectual Property license, each user community member will have decision-making authority over their domain. They will select an area of the application where they have skills, experience, understanding, and knowledge, but most importantly, where they have ideas. This will create a collaborative environment where like-minded individuals with different approaches and contributions can find each other and add value. Their processes and features will overlap and interact with others', creating a synergistic effect.