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Thursday, October 14, 2010

The last staple

The moment when there's no more staples in your stapler always comes unexpectedly. You know that moment when you are in your flow, you turn to staple some documents and you feel within your hands that the gentle resistance that indicates a well staple stack of paper is gone... Perhaps, this is an opportunity to design a stapler that displays when you are almost out of staples!

Friday, August 27, 2010

Spreading ideas

Books are about spreading ideas and growing in some ways from it. One of the way we "spread ideas" the most is by sharing with people around us quotes and passages that moved us from something we read.

A simple feature that online book stores and publishers could add to their books is the ability to share exerpts from a book with others as a promoting tool for the book (receivers could rate, comment and of course purchase the book) and even a feedback tool for the author on what resonnates with his readership.

Tools that allow sharing and caring for an audience will do so much to spread worthy ideas.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Why presenting if you don't connect?

Over the years, I've had so many contacts with people working in the performing arts world in particular and the rest of the creative world that when I reached out to  a presenter of the Centennial Theater in Bishop, recently, I felt that I should talk about what I call the business of connecting humans to various expression of meaning.

I'm always surprised to notice and observe that some professional of the arts world don't seem interested to establish connections outside of what they perceive as their world and interest.From the outside, one could even draw the conclusion that their preoccupation for art and the creative expression is at best remote. Why is it that some presenters seem to be more interested in protecting their position  and their institutional position on the creative chessboard more than evaluating the value of connecting deeply with new and fresh source of talents?

If I was asked to lead a creative institution of any size, my focus would be to bring fresh and vibrant artistic and creative expression to my community.  To me, whether you are leading the Lincoln Center or a a local presenting center, you must show curiosity and passion for creative surprises or move on to another job. The point of any presenting house is not self preservation but the creation of a sacred, daring space where the creative and artistic cultures and expressions of the world (or a neighborhood) are presented to a community so that a new conversation can start or continue. In a way, part of the problem I am pointing at is that these "presenting centers" are called presenting house, perhaps there title should be changed to "conversation houses", "creative dialogue houses"...

After all, presenters are not so much in the business of presenting art as they are  in the one of fostering creative conversations leading to social, aesthetic, playful insights on us and our worlds. They are in the business of connecting humans to meaning. So if connecting with humans is a problem in the first place because you are too busy maintaining the bricks in place and you establish your presenting house as an institution (fortress) to the very artists who are the source of your life force, I call you on it today and encourage you to shift your focus to a vibrant, thought provoking, inspiring hub. Presenter of the world, you can be active and open members of your respective communities and meaningful players of our creative world... Kickstarter is doing it right now, one creative project at a time.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Do you smell the fire?

When fire burns in your gut,
notice what you've learned.

Notice the heritage running/
through.

Fire, down under - must be - something - to worry - about
> a lot.

Notice you learned that feeling the fire down under
meant you must drown your heart,
notice how slowly you learned the killing game.

Slowly too, I discover…

Your fire will not burn you the way you think
that fire, brings pain.

Perhaps, it was scary for those around you
but that fire is light.

So notice the messages through distortions
calling you, begging you, imploring you
to learn to live
with fire,
through danger,

with light

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Why Tweetting?

I always want to know more about coaching and productivity and while I was listening to a useful teleclass on Productivity Process for Coaches and Consultants by George Kao and reading the comments on his Facebook page, I came across a comment about Twitter and the confusion about its relevance. So this is what I share on my current understanding of the tool:

Twitter is a powerful tool in a number of ways. For instance, it can be used as a micro-blogging media, allowing you to write down your insights related to topics you deeply care about or topics where you are an expert, an enthusiast or a fan.

Incidentally, you can also find through Twitter people and organizations who dig what you dig, loving what you love. All of a sudden, you can connect, listen and share insights with people whom you share a common interest with. It is one way to use it, so you can connect and discover people who inspire you in any field imaginable. It is also a "listening device" as obviously it can be a part of a marketing strategy.

Obviously, because Twitter is part of what we call "social media" (I prefer to say media "closer" to people) that means that there is less room for phoniness and inauthentic communication. When you are not really authentic, your message is instantly less compelling and closer to spam.

I could go on... suffice to say, Twitter and the other micro-blogging devices emerging will continue to evolve and impact on the way we communicate, influence and socially agree on what matter to us.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Creativity, Productivity and feeling Stuck

I wrote this in response to Penelope Trunk's great post on creativity and productivity.
The way you channel strength and vulnerability in your post is remarkable! It makes your writing fresh and authentic.
***
Beyond goals, I find the real inquiry that creates more focus (and engagement) lies in discovering what values are truly important to us. Sometimes, just reviewing those values during the week makes a huge difference to realign ourselves and find what is truly meaningful in our goals.

So I would say that it is sometime hard to stick to the "A- to do list" when our goals are not really an expression of values we have determined or discovered for ourselves. I would even argue that we must let space for the sublime to feed more and more the mundane. So that when you write your to do list, answer to a post, coach, wash the dishes (the mundane), you feel the connection to something sublime that only you could have come up with.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

It's Now Your Value

This great article from the New York Times inspired me to learn more about the concepts of content and value as applied to the entertainment world.

Value and content were once the same thing. After all, if television said it was good for us, surely it was, right? But as most of us realize, things have changed - and so too have the concepts of value and content.

In the past, the very people who determined content were often the same people establishing what our values would be. They did this by telling us that their content was valuable. We had no choice. They even set the time we needed to watch or pay attention. This has changed profoundly.
Executives worry constantly about content for their new media platforms, and I realize how the executive mindset has not changed. The progressively emerging reality shows that  people will be willing to pay for value as opposed to prioritizing content. Content is simply not necessarily valuable anymore! This is nothing new! But our current media context reveals the lies we have to buy into.
 
Were I one of those executives, I would stop worrying so much about content and I go back to the fundamentals of figuring out what people really care about today. With this new mindset, eventually, the conversation would lead to art, to stories, to meaning, to offering your public something that truly matters for 3 reasons: it touches them, it can be shared, it can be recommended.