Archive for the 'Self-care' Category

Seth Godin and Kathy Sierra on Sucking all the juice out

Seth Godin in an unusually arch rant about an editor’s work on his manuscript:

Just got some work back from a new copyeditor hired by my publisher. She did a flawless job. She also wrecked my work. Totally wrecked it.

By sanding off every edge, removing every idiom, making each and every fact literally correct, she made it boring and dry and mechanical.

It reminds me of Kathy Sierra’s excellent post—one of her classics, I think—called “Keep the sharp edges!” Kathy’s post focuses mostly on how committees are incapable of producing the remarkable, because groupthink is naturally a process by which rough edges and sharp corners are sanded smooth. In product markets, she goes on to say, product become more and more alike through this process.

Seth is writing about a single person’s effect on his work, but he acknowledges it’s a matter of corporate (i.e. shared) responsibility.

I need to be really clear. She’s not at fault. She did exactly what she was supposed to do. The fault lies in the job description, not the job.

When I buy a book by Seth Godin, I want it to sound like Seth Godin, not like Seth strained through several layers of bleached muslin.

It’s a lesson that is hard-won in my own life. I’m a reasonably facile writer, but a long period of my life, my first 30 years in fact, was one great writer’s block. What broke me out of it was to learn that while knowing proper English is a very good thing, when one writes, propriety had better not be the goal, you need to go for effectiveness.

I can be more concrete. I used to fuss over poetry manuscripts, because I couldn’t find a way to say what I wanted to say in a way that was both stylistically powerful and grammatically perfect. The revelation for me was when I was listening for the zillionth time to “Fun Fun Fun” by the beach boys. And I suddenly realized that the first two lines are both abominable English and a work of rare genius.

Let me remind you.

Well she got her daddy’s car and she cruised to the hamburger stand now.

See she forgot all about the library like she told her old man now.

That second line is purt-near unparseable. It’s also perfect, absolutely perfect. A gem, a thing of beauty and a joy forever. It captures the late 50s in a drop of clearest amber.

A dear friend of mine in Berkeley recently pointed out that I’m the only person she’s heard use the word “bodacious” since 1982 or so. I think she might have meant it as a criticism. I can only smile. I don’t use the word often, but when I think about excising it from my vocabulary, the prospect strikes me much the same as if somebody at Coke pointed out they could use a tiny bit less syrup in the drink and nobody would notice. Brand dilution.

Dowsing for clients: Seth, B. L. Ochman, and my business card

Seth Godin has everything to do with why I spent almost 50 hours creating my latest business card.

In case you went and looked at that post but didn’t read B.L. Ochman’s comment, I’ll repeat it here:

…when I had my own PR firm, in another life, I used to do something very similar to your new card. But frankly, i think there are more simple ways to make the point.

B. L. misses something important: My card is not just a way for me to tell something, but, and just as importantly, to learn.

When somebody phones me on the basis of that card, I know they’re already, in a very important way, a qualified prospect. They’re somebody I’ll be able to work with.

That card puts me on probation before I ever even talk to the prospect. And if I’ve passed that probation, the prospect has as well. Lots of people will toss that card, seeing me as a weirdo. The ones who call will be see me as their kind of weirdo. And in working together, that will make all the difference.

I’m dowsing not for clients but for the kind of clients I want to work for. If I don’t find them, I’ll just keep writing what I want to write, record some podcasts and preach the gospel, and earn the right to do those things by digging ditches if that’s what it takes.

Posted in Business Development, Group Dynamics, Innovation, Life Itself, Persuasion and Influence, Self-care, Seth Godin, Social Organisms, Thoughtcraft, Writing on May 2nd, 2008permalink

Chris Carfi (Cerado) On CNN

carfi

Chris Carfi would have gotten a write-up here on The Alpha Mind in December except that my blog was so badly beaten up by hackers it took me well into the new year to get it cleaned up.

If I’d written about Chris, it would have been because he was in a tie for Best Conversationalist at a geek dinner in San Francisco. (No mean distinction, considering the tie was with Shel Israel.)

But the man doesn’t need me to help make him a star… cuz Chris Carfi was featured in some footage on CNN yesterday.

Congrats, Chris. Alas, the clip says nothing about Cerado and what it does. But hey, any publicity is good publicity, right?

And yet… and yet…

if you had just acted psychotic, you could have gotten a million views on YouTube, where that seems to be what passes for funny.

Posted in Business Innovation, Innovation, Life Itself, Self-care, Social Media on April 30th, 2008permalink

Seth Godin wants me to lend out his book. I dunno.

Seth’s Blog asks: Would you do me a favor? What he wants is for me to lend out my copy of his wonderful book, The Dip.

Oh, Seth, my friend, I’ll happily recommend your book, but I just don’t seem to get the books I lend out returned to me. I’ve already bought at least 3 copies of Gerald Weinberg’s Secrets of Consulting, and I still can’t seem to find one on my own shelves. Why? Because I’m so enthusiastic about the book that I keep lending it to people.

Seth, I’ll lend out the book if you’ll make me a promise: If it isn’t back in 6 months, you’ll sell me a new, autographed copy.

Deal?

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Posted in Friends, Life Itself, Self-care, Seth Godin on April 26th, 2008permalink

» New Neurons: Good News, Bad News « Brain Fitness Revolution at SharpBrains

Well, I have a category on this blog called Brain Care, but I don’t post to it very often. Here, though, is a wonderful, straightforward article about how to keep the new neurons that grow in our brains.

Results showed that lasting increase was restricted to new neurons that appeared between one and three weeks before living in an enriched environment. This corresponds to the time when new neurons are extending their neurons in search of targets and their dendrites are developing synaptic contacts to the neurotransmitters normally used in the hippocampus. The new neurons that developed during this time window survived up to the four months of monitoring, even when removed the enriched environment. It would seem that the learning experiences encountered in a rich environment provide the stimulus needed to help new neurons get established into memory-forming circuits, but there is a limited critical time when this effect occurs.

Read the rest:

» New Neurons: Good News, Bad News   « Brain Fitness Revolution at SharpBrains

Posted in Brain Care, Self-care on April 26th, 2008permalink

Lee Hopkins seems nearly as frustrated with non-functioning technology as I

Just after posting my last post, about how thoroughly up-to-here I’ve had it with stuff that doesn’t work, Google Reader brought me Lee’s feed, with this post.

Lee, my friend, it happens that I do have some advice:

Admit that Mrs. BetterComms is right. For technology that really works, is really mobile, is really supported, you’ll need to pay enterprise prices. I’m afraid that’s just all there is to it.

Full disclosure: I gave up on all of it while I was still on a paltry pastor’s salary, and I suppose I could now pay a bit more and might get some cocktail of ingredients that works. But, for now, here’s what I’ve settled on:

I keep my contacts (a quite large number) in a very old version of ACT!

I keep my calendar and my to-do lists on my Palm, using Palm’s basic, native applications. I don’t use Palm’s to-do list app, because I need too many different lists (they’re context-specific, a la David Allen). So they’re simply in Palm Memos.

I write notes on whatever I find, and I clear all the notes out of my wallet fairly often so they’ll get into the software.

I have to keep using:

  • a linux laptop (for video editing)…
  • a Vista laptop (which is my basic business machine now)…
  • a Win XP laptop (because elements of my podcast rig won’t work with Vista)…
  • and a Palm Z22 because I don’t need anything fancier in a PDA, and even if I bought something snazzy I know full well I’d never get its apps to work across the other platforms.

And I will absolutely not attempt to get my do-lists, contacts, and calendar all working across all these machines until I have at least US$4K and a full week to throw at the problem. And I won’t put my data online until I find Internet service that’s truly ubiquitous and fully trustworthy (I believe this is a long way off.)

I’ll be curious to see how others advise you. For now I’m happy with a non-integrated, somewhat low-tech solution.

BTW, Lee, I think you meant U3, not E3.

P.S. New additions to my list of stuff that doesn’t work:

  • Enidicia electronic postage (U.S. only) doesn’t work with Vista.
  • Twitter
  • Jaiku (gave up on that piece of trash a month ago, should have been 5 months)
  • URLtea, which went down for days last week, after I’ve sent out a lot of URLS using the service. None of those URLs worked, of course, because the whole URLtea server was MIA.
Posted in Business Innovation, Friends, Innovation, Life Itself, Persuasion and Influence, Self-care on April 24th, 2008permalink

Maintain Your Energy

Heidi Miller is an ace. I’ve been a fan of her Diary of a Shameless Self-Promoter podcast for a long time.

Today she posts about Getting your passion up. Passion is the product of energy, and she’s talking about how to stay energetic in a high-demand, long-haul situation like a multi-day trade show. Well, it’s been some years since I “boothed,” but I remember some of what I learned. After you go read Heidi’s five tips, come back here for mine.

Back already? Great.

Before I give you my list, I’ll just say that my tips, unlike Heidi’s, are mostly about what not to do. Because for me, one of the secrets of being up is avoiding what gets me down.

Ok, here are my 5:

  1. Live a normal life. Keep as close to your normal routines as you can. If you don’t normally stay up all night, don’t try it at trade shows. (Yes, there are important schmoozing ops, but most of these are high-value only while folks are still sober, which means you can skip the rest and get to bed on time). And if you’re a person who exercises (which should be a normal part of everybody’s brain care), keep as close as you can to your normal workout routine.
  2. Take care of your feet. Remember Forrest Gump? Remember Gump’s platoon commander telling him about the importance of clean socks? Well, in a trade show environment, support matters even more than cleanliness. If you can get away with wearing support hose, do it. If you need more arch support in your shoes, get it.
  3. Use sugar wisely. Some of us are more sensitive to this than others, but nearly everyone has a bit of a slump after getting a sugar high. Best to let your high come from tricks like Heidi’s and not try to jolt yourself with sugar, which lots of booths will offer. Avoid, avoid, avoid.
  4. Use stimulants wisely. As with sugar, so with stimulants. If you have to stay really-up for a long time, you have to pace yourself. A strong dose of coffee early may give you a great morning but a less lovely afternoon. For many of us, the typical Chinese approach is better: cups of mild green tea several times a day, or half-cups of half-caf.
  5. Know thyself. These tips are the things that have been most important to me. It took me years to learn them. (And I’d be vastly wealthier if I’d learned about my sugar sensitivity decades earlier.) Learn what works for you, and apply it. Start with lists like Heidi’s and mine, and customize for yourself.

And I have a special bonus trade show tip for those who, like me, are night persons:

  • 5.5. Save your energy for after hours, and hire a pro like Heidi to be passionate on your behalf during the day.

Of course, the first 5 tips aren’t only for trade shows, but for any kind of mini-marathon you’re faced with in your business life. Any situation where it’s day & night, for multiple days in a row. And where, when you have to be up, you have to be really up.

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Posted in Brain Care, Communications, Self-care on December 3rd, 2007permalink

No, chocolate is not better than kissing.

From the BBC, we get the news that Chocolate is ‘better than kissing’.

What’s “better”? How about “different”?

The article defines “better” as “a more intense and longer lasting ‘buzz’.”

I did a little interview with the loser of this competition, and I think he makes a very valid point in his own defense.

“I didn’t train for this contest,” said Kissing. “If I did, I’d be dead meat for what I’m actually meant to do. Sustained satisfaction? Dude, what kind of criterion is that? ‘Sall well and good if you ain’t got no stake in propagating the species. Look here, does chocolate care about making human babies? Not last I heard. I do, so I’ll be doggoned if I’m gonna leave folks satisfied with kissing! Getting folks’ lips together don’t get the job done, knowwtI’m talkin’?”

I know what he’s talkin’. I love theobromine, and chocolate helps me blog. But if it’s something bigger than a post I want to produce, kissing just might be the better stimulant, knowwtI’m talkin’? Y’all who want families, please don’t get confused about this.

Posted in Brain Care, Life Itself, Self-care on April 17th, 2007permalink