Some people, every time they engage with others, are an energy drain. They take persuading, cajoling and enthusiasm to get going, and require ever more of it to keep going.
And some people are a faucet, an endless pipeline of possibility, potential and forward motion.
Who do you work with? Who are you hiring?
It’s possible to turn a drain into a faucet. It’s mostly a choice, a decision to dance with the fear of contribution.
March 16, 2019
That is where breakthroughs lie.
If you keep poking around the expected, it’s unlikely you’ll be surprised by what you find.
March 15, 2019
…because ‘breaking things’ isn’t the point of your work.
How about, “Move fast and make things better,”
or
“Move fast and create possibility”?
The reason we hesitate to move fast is that we’re worried about what that implies.
Move fast and learn something.
Move fast and take responsibility.
Move fast and then do it again because now you’re smarter.
The alternative is to move slow. To move slow and to hide.
Which means that those you sought to connect, to help and to offer something to will suffer as they wait.
Don’t hoard your work. Own it and share it.
March 14, 2019
When your day gets made, how long does it last? A made day–is that different from a normal day?
Perhaps it would be more accurate to call it a made hour or, if we’re going to be quite truthful, a made minute.
When something bad happens, we can revisit the humiliation and anxiety for months. But the good stuff, if we don’t work at it, can pass right by.
We get what we remember, and we remember what we focus on.
March 13, 2019
It’s not that difficult to write a headline that people click on.
But a headline that people click on is rarely one that earns trust, sustained attention or action.
Which means that if you’re looking for more than a click, you’ll need to walk away from the bait and switch that’s now so common.
Just because you can trick people and swindle a click doesn’t mean you should. Because, as we know, measuring the wrong thing is worse than measuring nothing at all.
March 12, 2019
If you believe in the benefits of the free market, then the logical conclusion is to oppose policies that a market-dominating monopoly decides are in their best interest.
Adam Smith and his descendants all understood that monopolies undo the benefits of the free market.
Data portability, open marketplaces, net neutrality, campaign finance reform–all of these steps make it more likely that innovation occurs and that people have choices.
Free markets work because ideas and processes can quickly evolve. When the system gets stuck, it doesn’t get better.
Without choice, we’re left with bullies and whatever is on their agenda.
March 11, 2019
…doing things that they don’t understand, for managers who have no sense of strategy, in an organization that measures all the wrong things.
Everyone involved unable to honestly answer the simple question: “Why?” Why are we doing it this way? Why is it like this not like that? “Because I said so,” is no way to lead.
This is the unmistakable symptom of a bureaucracy that has gone too far.
PS back in the old days, I used to incorporate a PS in blog posts about Daylight Savings Time. A public service because we didn’t have computers that automatically changed all of our clocks. But it’s still up to us to spring forward. It won’t happen automatically.
March 10, 2019
Rarely true.
“Everyone loves it.”
“No one wants to be my friend…”
More effective and accurate to replace these words with, “someone.”
March 9, 2019
The world is better because industrialism made it better.
The world is worse because industrialism made it worse.
When a factory makes something that people want, they buy it. When a competitor improves it, it gains in market share. When a third competitor becomes more efficient and lowers the price, even more is sold.
And so we have safe, clean, cheap food that can sustain us. We have antibiotics that can save a life. We have transportation systems that just a hundred years ago would have seemed like a fantasy.
The ratchet of industrialism is tied to the fast-moving cycle of the market, fulfilling needs and wants and making a profit.
That same system, though, is insulated from the damage it causes. When a factory makes a product but pollutes the river that flows by it, the factory doesn’t pay for the pollution unless required to. When a marketer seduces people with short-term delights that cause long-term health problems, the marketer doesn’t pay for it, the customer does. And when the weapons manufacturer produces ever more lethal weapons, it’s the person who stepped on the land mine who pays the price, not the person who made it or purchased it.
The opportunity is simple to describe but requires real effort to achieve: the community must enforce systems that build the external costs into the way that the industrialist does business. Faced with an incentive to decrease bycatch, waste or illness, the industrialist will do what industrialists always seek to do–make it work a little better, a little faster, a little more profitably.
Industrialism can’t solve every problem, but it can go a very long way in solving the problems that it created in the first place.
When facing a long-term, chronic challenge, we can look for a ratchet, a long-term positive cycle that helps us overcome that challenge.
Externalities aren’t external, and we shouldn’t treat them that way.
March 8, 2019
“I can’t afford it.”
“I don’t have the time.”
…almost always means, “this is not a priority.”
When we care, it’s amazing how much we can get done. One way to choose to care is to be clear about your priorities, which means being clear in your language.
And so we can say to ourselves, “I’d love to do that, but it’s not a priority.”
Remarkable work is usually accomplished by people who have non-typical priorities.
March 7, 2019