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Beach Notes: Surf Temple

March 21, 2010 by Guest Author

by Guest Writers Suzie Cheel and Des Walsh

surftemple

There was a big surfing championship recently at the famous Snapper Rocks surfing break at Rainbow Bay, where we walk and swim most mornings. Coming upon this black, cylyindrical structure on the reef, early one morning just before the big event stated, we thought it looked like a temple.

A temple to the surfing gods?

Actually it was a tower built to provide a vantage point for the people filming the event.

Then again, given the semi godlike status some of the champion surfers have in these parts, maybe the temple idea was not so far off the mark.

What’s the vantage point in your life?

Suzie Cheel & Des Walsh

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Beach Notes, Des Walsh, Suzie Cheel

“Is your personal Web site an embarrassing entrance to your online house?”

March 11, 2010 by Liz

A Post on Web Identity by Sheila Scarborough

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If someone wants to know more about you before deciding to do business with you, they do not want to have to sort out your all-over-the-place lifestreaming babble on Twitter or Facebook or your 3 different blogs (at least no one probably wants to dig through mine!)

They want to be able to go to one place and quickly figure out what you’re all about.

The question is, in the fragmented social Web, which is the one site where people can go to find out what they need to know about you and your talents….and is that site an accurate representation of your various talents, skills and current interests?

I’ll bet that place is not your personal Web site.

You know the URL I mean: www.YourName.com that you bought years ago, stuck into a basic site design template with a few links and a photo – WooHoo 2005! – and then ignored because you went off to start a blog (which was vastly more entertaining and malleable than a dumb old static Web site.)

Here’s the problem….if you Google yourself, where does that website show up in the search engine results? If you’re like me, it’s at the very top, sometimes even above the blogs, LinkedIn profile, etc.

Your most disheveled online self is the first one that many strangers see. It’s not only your digital bra strap showing, it’s your pants on the ground!

Google my name, and the first thing that pops up is my clunky, unloved, ignored Web site that I set up to be a freelance print writer’s portfolio exactly 9-12 months before I realized that I didn’t want to be just a print writer. Since I’ve lost interest in the original purpose, I’ve lost interest in the site.

Sure, it is one-stop shopping for all of my projects and I do keep it updated, but it is a visual wasteland and I’m too cheap to spend any money on it. I’m embarrassed to include the URL on my business cards even though it would be easier for my customers to find me there. I have the URL in my standard email signature, but I often erase it before I hit “Send” because the blog URLs that are also in my signature are much more reflective of my best work “here and now.”

This is absurd, but what can one do with the blasted things? There’s probably a solid place for that site in your online portfolio, but you and I both need to figure out how it fits who we are and where we’re going. The answer is to either suck it up and spend time/money on a redesign, or do something now to make it less embarrassing.

One possibility: why not turn it into a nice jumping-off point for your many endeavors? If people are going to show up at that URL, give them something nice to look at and then get them the heck out of there.

Steal this idea – and I probably will, too – a “business card” landing page on your personal name site that only exists to send visitors over to the real party. For example, look at Becky McCray’s site. She has a (professionally made) welcoming photo on one page, with links to all of the other sandboxes where she works and plays. People can scroll down, pick one and launch.

Obviously, control your own domain name on the Web when it is possible to do so, then put a site there that is worthy of you. You’ve worked hard to have a respected name and reputation; ensure that your personal site reflects that as much as the rest of your online “house.”

Is your personal Web site an embarrassing entrance to your online house?

—–
Sheila Scarborough writes at Sheila’s Guide to Good Stuff , for Family Travel Guide and the Perceptive Travel Blog. She also covers drag racing for Fast Machines. Tourism Currents is what she’ll be talking about at SOBCon this year. You’ll find her on Twitter as @sheilas

As always, Sheila, I loved every word of it!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

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Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-design, LinkedIn, Motivation, Sheila-Scarborough

Beach Notes: Not Your Average Surfboard

March 7, 2010 by Guest Author

by Guest Writers Suzie Cheel and Des Walsh

surfboard

In the 5 or so years of walking up and down the beach at Rainbow Bay we have never seen such a unique surfboard as we did yesterday morning.

Creativity Rocks!

Do you put your creativity into what you’re living?

Suzie Cheel & Des Walsh

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Beach Notes, Des Walsh, Suzie Cheel

10 Critical Skills of Highly Successful 21st Century Leaders

March 4, 2010 by Liz

Adding Unique Value to Earn a Living

cooltext443809437_relationships

We have the wisdom of teachers all around us. They say that when we’re ready to learn the teacher will appear … We can find those teachers in our family, in our friends, great books by our heroes and by people we’ve heard of. Some of those teachers were in our schools. Others meet us daily on the Internet.

But it’s the ability to know which past decision applies to today’s problem and which tool to reach for when something is broken that builds our own wisdom. Practice and experience with our thinking makes the difference between the wisdom a Yoda and a Skywalker.

It takes 10 critical skills to own an outstanding future — to think and achieve personal wisdom to navigate a life and do the passionate work that we are uniquely suited to do.

What follows is an article I wrote four years ago that you may missed if you recently tuned in to my blog.

Thinking, Fitting In, and Living Well

Thinking cannot be separated from who we are. In the 21st century, the age of intellectual property, the way we think is crucial to having a place in society. What we think and how well we express those thoughts determines where we fit and how well we live. Thoughts, ideas, processes, intangibles — all have value in a world of constant change where knowledge is an adjective, a noun, and an asset — in the form of intellectual property — on balance sheets.

In the largest sense, American society is breaking into two classes:

The first class are people who know how to think. These people realize that most problems are open to examination and creative solution. If a problem appears in the lives of these people, their intellectual training will quickly lead them to a solution or an alternative statement of the problem. These people are the source of the most important product in today’s economy – ideas.

The second class, the vast majority of Americans, are people who cannot think for themselves. I call these people “idea consumers” — metaphorically speaking, they wander around in a gigantic open-air mall of facts and ideas. The content of their experience is provided by television, the Internet and other shallow data pools. These people believe collecting images and facts makes them educated and competent, and all their experiences reinforce this belief. The central, organizing principle of this class is that ideas come from somewhere else, from magical persons, geniuses, “them.”

–Paul Lutus, Creative Problem Solving

. . . My purpose in this article is to undermine that belief.

Most Schools Are Not About Lateral, Individual Thinking

In school it’s “weird” not to think like everyone else. The management problems of classrooms lead to social conformity and pathways through an over-structured curriculum. In society, lateral thinking is a prized commodity. Innovative thinking is essential to any change-based leadership brand.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

My experience of school, both as a student and as a teacher was not geared toward developing new ideas. It was centered around teaching and learning what had already been done, without taking that next step to challenge the past with how it might have been done differently or better.

Working with Thoughts and Ideas Is the New Reality

The world economy has changed to one of service and ideas. Conversation is digital and content is king. The ability to work with ideas has become crucial to having a place in society. Thinking outside of the box is no longer a weird personality trait, but something to be admired and valued. It’s a key trait necessary to modern-day strategic planning and process modeling.

  • Intellectual property — content — is an asset that not only gets produced, but reproduced, reconfigured, and re-purposed for variety of media.
  • Those who produce intellectual property are builders of wealth.
  • An original idea — a twist or tweak on an old process or product — that solves a problem or presents an opportunity is worth more now than it ever has been.

Those who develop, mold, and execute original thinking will own the future.

10 Skills Critical to Owning an Outstanding Future

  1. Deep independent thinking and problem-solving — The ability to understand a problem or opportunity from the inside out, vertically, laterally, at the detail level, and the aerial view.
  2. Mental flexibility — The ability to tinker with ideas and viewpoints to stretch them, bend them, reconstruct them into solutions that fit and work perfectly in specific situations.
  3. Fluency with ideas — The ability to describe many versions of one answer and many solutions to one problem set and to explain the impact or outcome of each both orally and in writing in ways that others can understand.
  4. Proficiency with processes and process models — The ability to discuss a problem in obsessive detail and to define a process, linear or nonlinear, that will solve the problem effectively within a given group culture.
  5. Originality of contributions — The ability to offer a value-added difference that would not be there were another person in the same role.
  6. A habit of finding hidden assumptions and niches — The ability to see the parts of what is being considered, including the stated and unstated needs, desires, and wishes of all parties involved.
  7. A bias toward opportunity and action — The ability to estimate and verbalize the loss to be taken by standing still and missed opportunities that occur by choosing one avenue over another.
  8. Uses all available tools, including the five senses and intuitive perceptions, in data collection — The ability to weigh and value empirical data, sensory data, and one’s own and others’ perceptions appropriately.
  9. Energy, enthusiasm, and positivity about decision making — The ability to bring the appropriate mindset to the decision-making process in order to lead oneself or a team to a positive decision-making experience.
  10. Self-sustaining productivity — The ability to use the confidence gained from the first 9 skills to establish relationships with people at all levels — from the warehouse to the boardroom — knowing that ideas are not the pride and privy of only a gifted few.

Innovative, imaginative, inventive, mind-expanding, playful-wondering, what-if, how-come, dramatic-difference, find-the-wow, visionary, killer-app, I-want-one, no-more-stupid-stuff, nothing-in-moderation, bet-the-farm, incredibly-sexy, please-please-can-I, that’s-so-cool, couldn’t-knock-it-off-if-they-tried-to, able-to-see-better-than-the-best, no-more-move-here-today-move-it-back-tomorrow, stupid kind of thinking happens outside of the box.

The skills that you develop from deep, individual thinking stay with you for a lifetime and are transferable from one job to another.

You don’t need them to write every shopping list, but you’ll have them whenever there’s a problem to solve or an opportunity to take advantage of.

It doesn’t take a genius to become a fluent, flexible, original, and creative source of ideas. It takes a person who can develop habits of thinking in new ways.

Imagine what you might do if you find out how you really think and use that.

You become uniquely you — BRAND YOU — the only one — priceless.

Who wouldn’t want to work with a person like that?

Be irresistible
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

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Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, critical thinking, LinkedIn

Half Empty, Half Full, or a New View on an Old Question?

February 28, 2010 by Liz

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about new views on old questions …

All we we’ve been looking out the window watching the harbor. It’s not completely frozen.

half-frozen_harbor_by_liz_strauss

Though I’d like to think that it’s a sure sign that spring is coming soon. With the temperatures sitting at the freezing point it seems that another cold snap could take the harbor back in short order.

I can’t help but think of the question about the half glass of water … is it half empty or half full? View the question from a different direction, it could be that the glass is the wrong size … The answer could be “full: if the glass were smaller.

It’s got me wondering how I might look at a half-frozen harbor with a different view.

New views on old questions lead to new answers. Ever solved a problem by changing your view?

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Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, lateral thinking, LinkedIn

Use the Power, Wonder Working Power in the Words

February 25, 2010 by Guest Author

A Guest Post by Hollie Pollard

cooltext443809437_relationships

This week a christian hymn has rung in my head. The refrain goes like this “there is power, wonder working power in the blood”. With that song ringing in my head I got thinking about power and the power we have as bloggers. The dictionary defines power a couple of ways that I think applies to us as bloggers.

” ablitity to act or produce an effect” and “possession or control, authority, or influence over others”

Each of us who sit down to our computers to write has a power. Have you ever thought about the power behind your typed word? I have learned there is a power to words I and other bloggers use. We tap into that power each and every time our fingers hit the keyboard.

Every time we type we have the ability to become educators, entertainers, comedians, sharers, reporters, engagers, healers, builders of community and the list goes on. As a fairly new blogger I have realized there is power in the word and I have a responsibility with that power:

1. I must be authentic. My words have to be mine. I must share my way. I try hard not to compare myself to others in my niche. I think my story is pretty unique thus my perspective and twist may be different and may connect in ways others would not and with that comes power.

2. I want to inspire. I want to move people to action or at least engagement. In almost every post I try to achieve this goal. For me it is about finding ways to make life a little easier, a little simpler, a little less expensive but then I am a frugal mom blogger. I share how I am doing it. If I can get you to do something then I have tapped into that power.

3. I want to encourage. Every day there are enough trolls and critics. I find there is a real need for encouragers. We need more people willing to lift up others. After all don’t we all need our own cheering section. When I reach out to others I want to build community and lift it up and for me that is the best use of my power.

I have recognized that there is power in the word, wonder working power. Have you? What do you do to utilize the power that is your typed word and how can it make you more successful? For me, I feel successful as a blogger if I am able to tap into that power to be authentic, inspire and encourage.

How do you use the power of your words?

_____
Hollie is a solo flying frugal mom with a love for all things Internet related. You can find her blogging at Common Cents Mom or SimplyHollie.
You can find me tweeting at as well as @CommonCentsMom.

Hollie is also the winner of the FREE trip to SOBCon2010!

Thank you, Hollie!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz to become more visible on the web!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Register Now!! for sobcon-vmc

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, relationships, Writing

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