I’m not sure which books Seth Godin would have been between in 2006 when he gave this Ted talk. But the lessons are still valuable today. Worth the 20:00 if you have it today.
Seth Godin at Gel 2006 from Gel Conference on Vimeo.
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I’m not sure which books Seth Godin would have been between in 2006 when he gave this Ted talk. But the lessons are still valuable today. Worth the 20:00 if you have it today.
Seth Godin at Gel 2006 from Gel Conference on Vimeo.
Nothing revolutionary here, and I may be a little late to the ballgame on this one. But I’m having a lot of success working with Flavors.me as a super simple, 10 minute way to build out nice looking web properties.
There’s nothing genius in the concept, but the execution is unbelievably quick and easy. In about 20 clicks, you can aggregate together all your social feeds, upload background pictures, change the font colors, and – if you choose too (I haven’t yet) – grab a custom url. So if you publish for multiple blogs, in theory you could grab all the rss feeds from those blogs, and suck them into your single Flavors.me page.
There’s real value in the system if you are struggling with clients who have multiple locations, and can’t decide if they should have different url’s, different Facebook pages, etc… This gives you a nice aggregation capability.
For personal branding, I can’t think of anything much easier. Get your resume, photos, designs, feeds, reading lists, etc… all dragged into one place for an employer / client to look through, and save them the hassle of google.
Give it a whirl and let me know what you think.
How hard is it to build a video production studio in your house? Watch and learn…
(Reposted from the Social3i Consulting blog.)
I’m not necessarily a gadget guy. I like the toys, but I’m generally towards the tail end of the early adopters. For me to spend a lot of money on something, it needs to be good enough to justify replacing the time and energy I’ve already invested on something else.
I usually get pushed over the edge when I see that someone I respect has adopted the technology into their everyday life. So a few weeks ago, after I watched one of our clients taking notes on his slick little tablet, I went forth and joined the iPad nation.
Here are some notes now that I’m two weeks in:
I haven’t really gotten into games or anything yet. Also, I can’t say I use the browser or email any differently that I’d use my iPhone, so that’s not a real differentiator. And I’m just starting to get into the speech recognition stuff, but I haven’t really nailed that yet.
Overall, it feels like there’s a decent learning curve between making the device a really cool photo album and a fully functional work device. More to come.
A friend of mine recently told me, “Your blog sucks. If you aren’t going to write about business, then you need to write about personal stuff. Otherwise, what’s the point?”
Now, I didn’t want to get into a debate of the value of SEO and owning your own brand name, so I took the point to heart. So this post gets a little into a little bit of personal opinion on business.
I’ve waited a long time to write about this, mainly because I don’t want to embarrass anyone, and I want to keep the players in this story anonymous. I’ve worked at a lot of places, and as a consultant I’ve been inside a number of organizations and groups, so I’ve changed some characteristics in order to hide the true identity of the players here.
Let’s begin. I was recently told a tale by a long time colleague of mine. This colleague wove a story about sharing drinks with an ex-coworker of mine, who likely didn’t know the two if them shared a connection with me. My colleague was caught off guard when this ex-coworker said something along the lines of, “I like to use jedi mind tricks of people I work with. If I don’t like them, I’ll wait for them to have a really bad idea, then I’ll tell them it’s a great idea so they’ll go forth with it. Then when they fail, they look dumb. It’s really pretty easy to do.”
My colleague was pretty aghast, and he was especially shocked since this woman was involved with HR back in the days when I worked with her. It led us to a discussion about “Intentional Acts of Destruction” inside companies.
Sure, nothing the woman did was illegal. But what kind of long term issues did it cause for her company and group, to push forward ideas that were not in the best interest of the business? What kind of resource drain was it for any man hours to be spent on research or exploration? Where could those man hours have been better spent?
But more importantly, how many people think this way? Maybe if you have one employee who does this, it gets cancelled out by the mass of the organization. But suppose there is one person in each group who thinks this way?
Furthermore, as a manager, how do you decipher the evil from the ignorant? If you want to allow your employees a lot of blue sky to fly in, how do you know when an idea is being endorsed by the rest of the team because they believe in it, or because it’s part of a sabotage effort?
We couldn’t answer any of these questions. But we agreed that it was one of those management problems they don’t teach you in business school. We like to think that we can follow a handbook, and that we work with well intentioned people who have the best interest of the team at heart. But the reality is that some people don’t. And the hard thing is, unless they drink in bars and share their misguided thoughts with others, we never know who endorses our ideas because they agree, and who is looking to execute an Intentional Act of Destruction. It’s a good lesson for all of us to keep in mind when we head into the office.
Fun little side note here to what is probably the most successful guerilla YouTube ad ever, Nike’s “Write the Future. Now, we’ve all seen the actual ad about a gajillion times. I’m not sure why I was interested in digging in here – probably because I figured they created all the audio in a studio. But it turns out the main theme from the spot (other than the use of Van Halen’s Hot for Teacher drum rift in the beginning) actually comes from a 1970’s Dutch band. The Dutch band were even the ones who had the yodeling. Check it out here.
There’s a new viral music act climbing the charts lately — and it ain’t Gaga. The Gregory Brothers — of “Auto-Tune the News” fame — have scored a spot on the Billboard Hot 100 with their remix, “Bed Intruder,” another feather to add to a cap already feathered by a top-selling iTunes jam and an upcoming pilot on Comedy Central.
It’s worth reading the whole Mashable article here.
(My previous Blog post on Antoine here.)
It’s this guy to the right. David Silverman, Vice President and Communications Director of the American Atheists.
Now, he’s not a jackass for being Atheist. I support atheism. I mean it’s really a silly thing to argue about here on earth. One day we’ll either die and find out atheists are wrong, or we’ll die and won’t be doing anything at all, so what’s the purpose of arguing about it. To me, it’s the same as if Muslims want to fast during Ramadan. It doesn’t bother me, so why would we argue about it.
But this where Silverman steps into new territory.
You see, there’s a stretch of highway in Utah. And the good people who live in Utah decided they should remember state patrol officers who died in the line of duty by placing white crosses on the highway. This seems like a nice thing to do, no?
Well apparently folks like Silverman are so insulted by this affront to atheists, that since 2005 — YES 2005 — he’s been going to court to stop this.
Here’s a guy with apparently so little to do, that he’s going to go out of his way to stop a tribute to honorable people who lost their lives doing an honorable job, just because the memorials are in the shape of a cross.
Now, if the Utah wanted to call the stretch of road, “Highway to Heaven” or “Ascension Blvd” I might follow the Separation of Church and State argument. Same if before every Jazz game fans had to recite a pledge to God and remember the 14 dead. Along those lines if all fast food restaurants in Seattle were closed during daylight hours during Ramadan, or if no one could serve meat of Fridays during Lent, I’d throw a fit.
But really, do we need to protest crosses memorializing fallen officers, especially in a state based on religion? I say no. And I think it warrants Silverman and his cronies for some sort of jacka$$ award. So if that gets me kicked out of atheist heaven, so be it.
I mean, do you have something better?
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