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NFL Coaches, CEOs, and VCs Take a Lesson from Your Kids

December 18, 2006 by Liz

We Learned How Business Works When We Were Five Years Old

Strategic Plans logo

I was re-reading “The E-Myth Revisited” last night. It reminded me of a book I read in 1989, called, “The Game of Work.” Both got me thinking about how the idea of work is so much more important than the task at hand. Those thoughts took me to jobs I had, the work I do, and the games I played as a kid.

I looked around at the world and found that everything that is hugely, remarkably successful has the same things that make it work as our back yard games did.

  • The guy who’s house it is — the place we’re playing — sets the culture. That’s how it’s always been. Everyone takes a cue from the owner, that personality has power. He might keep kids out or share his yard with everyone. He might change the rules in his favor or consistently help others win. Steve Farber, Extreme Leader describes what works remarkably on the playground and in life when he says, I’m convinced that the ultimate rule of the Extreme Leader is to make others greater than yourself.
  • Rules and roles give us freedom to act. — Nothing was worse than when everyone wanted to be king in the drama or sheriff in the old west. Forgive me, but it was chaos when kids would get “shot” and refuse to stay dead. Playing baseball was no fun when we argued about what was a fair ball and was what out or even worse, where the bases were. Learning the rules and working with them make us smarter and give us benchmarks. Seth says so.
  • Sometimes a “do over” is the right answer, sometimes it’s not. — But even the smallest kids know that doing everything over is boring and gets you no where. Guy Kawasaki has some great advice on when and when not to respond to mistakes.
  • Whining, yelling, and tuning out make you look like a baby. — Kids soon enough ignore whiners, yellers, and kids who tune out as not worth the time they take away from the game. Kathy Sierra talks about what to do if stress brings out one of these traits when you should be learning.
  • Don’t break a promise unless someone will get hurt. ,

  • You have to CARE for the game to be remarkable and successful. — Kids know that they put their hearts and their heads into whatever they do Christine Kane explains why everyone wants to do business with people who think like she does.

That’s why experts call play the “work of childhood.” It’s true.

So, let’s get playing.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
If you think Liz can help with a problem you’re having with your business, your brand or your blog, check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Related
Are You a Freelancer or a Solo Entrepreneur? Use Guy Kawasaki’s Mantra as He Meant
5 +1 Whole Brain Steps to Believable Strategic Goals OR Find Your Bliss Without Wasting Time

Filed Under: Business Life, Motivation, Strategy/Analysis, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Business Life, five-year-olds, rules-of-business, Strategic-Plans

Net Neutrality 12-18-2006

December 18, 2006 by Liz

Net Neutrality Links

I’m adding this link to the Net Neutrality Page.

Information Policy

You’ve got to hand it to FCC General Counsel Sam Feder. His opinion that supposedly “clears” Commissioner Robert McDowell to participate in the AT&T takeover of BellSouth probably wasn’t what Chairman Kevin Martin had in mind.

The idea of the exercise was to put pressure on McDowell to jump into, presumably on the side of AT&T, and force Commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein into a corner.
[ . . . ]
Feder’s opinion said nothing that should cause the Commissioner to change his view. The opinion made a tepid case at best for Commissioner McDowell to participate. Feder seemed to go out of his way to stress that it was McDowell’s decision to participate. The Feder memo said it was a “very, very close call” whether McDowell should take part, and that reasonable parties could disagree on a decision.

Want to know what you can do?
MA Bell Monopoly Versus the Free Internet — Tell the FCC Net Neutrality Is Not Negotiable

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related
NET NEUTRALITY PAGE

Filed Under: Business Life, Community, SOB Business, Successful Blog, Trends Tagged With: Addlstein, AT+T, bc, BellSouth, FCC, Jonathan, Michael-Copps, Net-Neutrality, Robert-McDowell, Sam-Feder

Hsien Lei Is a B.A.D. Blogger!

December 17, 2006 by Liz

Blogger A Day Call: Hello is Hsien there?

What do I do when I’m up at 4:30 a.m. and my blog is not working? I do my best to figure out what’s going on. I get a post up, if I possibly can. I go through 583 Akismet spam to make sure no one I know has been eaten. Then I get my second cup of coffee and stare at my flat screen, sighing and wishing. It’s along time before I can do anything. I begin wondering whether I have hurt my blog’s feelings.

It’s off to IM Hsien Lei. She’s in the UK, so I know she’s up. She’s on the same network as I am, so I also know she has time to talk. Hsien and I trade comments of woe. We put together a few action plans and pass along a few emoticons. Then I ask, “Would you like to be today’s B.A.D. Blogger?” I say I’ve been meaning to ask. Hsien answers with an ethusiastical yes. I ask her whether she been following the series. She says, “You know I stalk you!.”

I laugh my way into my headset. This is an old friend who knows how to crack me up. Every time we talk there is always serious laughter involved.

As I write this, I look up our first comment shared on on record — November 9, 2004. Hsien had been blogging a whole year before that. I was a pup, only blogging a few months.

First we talked about being mothers of sons. It was surprising how weirdly alike the two boys are. Hsien said it was a comfort to know that hers might get to be 21 if mine did. I told the reasons I was glad I had son and not a daughter. She said what about having a son that was a little strange at first for her. We shared the idea of how having children was like growing up again only niw you’re on both sides of the issue. We also discussed the impact of gene pools.

Then our converation wandered. We talked about Google and people that we knew who worked there. I pointed to their tag like, “Do no evil.” I wondered what that meant.

Hsien talked about the uniforms people “put on” in their jobs. She was referring to how the work a person chooses defines more than just what they do. “When you are a lab scientist you put on that uniform; when you are a blogger you put on that unform.” She wasn’t saying that everyone was alike. She was saying that we have things in common, and do things insimilar ways. I was right there with her agreeing. Maybe that’s why we’ve been friends for so long.

We talked about the self-promoting nature of the blogosphere. We didn’t seem to think it was such a bad thing, though we saw instances where we both thought it went too far. That led us to remember times last year when things were more emotional. when life in the blogosphere had a more Wild, Wild, West feeling. I told her I thought of it as almost Shakepearian — some of the young men seemed to have taken on the junior-high girl parts.

There we were laughing again.

We talked for 1 hour and 46 minutes. Then the server was fixed. It was one time that I wished the server might have stayed down just a few minutes longer . . .

I guess Hsien knew that because a little while later, I received a video. It came with an email that said, “This is what I look like when I talk to you.”

She looks just as I imagined, only better if that’s possible.

B.A.D. Blogger Quote

“You really know that the people who come, come to read what you write. If you don’t take advantage of that . . .” — Hsien Lei

Stop by Hsien’s Blog, Genetics and Heath, and say hi!

Thanks, Hsien, you B.A.D. Blogger!

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Want to be a B.A.D. Blogger see the. . . a B.A.D. Blogger? page in the sidebar

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: B.A.D. Blogger, bc, Blogger-a-day-call, Hsien-Hsien-Lei, Play-Library

Bloggy Question 34: Time Is Money, but Content Is Free for the Paraphrasing!

December 17, 2006 by Liz

Creative Problem Solving

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week. I offer this bloggy life hypothetical question. . . .


Your friend has recently broken through the barrier and gotten her first client. You’re delighted for her. She’s just delighted. Things seems to be going smoothly with everything. Her client likes her work. Her blog is getting traffic. You like to see people succeed.

You were feeling happy for her too. Until yesterday.

Yesterday you were listening to a podcast she used to talk about regularly. In the middle of it you started thinking, “Gee, this sound familiar. I must have listened to this before.” But you know you haven’t, because you haven’t listened to a podcast in over two months and this one is 3 weeks old.

You start to remember something. A bad feeling comes with it. Still it bothers you enough that you have to check it. You pull up your friend’s blog to find the same content is there in print. It’s paraphrased sure enough, but there’s no denying that the ideas are in the same order.

You think back to how you friend used to talk about that podcast all of the time and now doesn’t. You think about how she used to complain about having no time between meeting client deadlines and keeping up with her blog to get new clients. You think that the two might be related.

How do you respond?

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related articles
Bloggy Question 33: You’ve Changed, Man — DON’T Look at Yourself
Bloggy Question 32: Blogger Alert! Where Is She? What Should You Do?
Bloggy Question 31: Do You Send Away the Idea of a Lifetime?
Bloggy Life Question 30 — How Does He Get the Book to Readers?
Bloggy Life Question 29 — Will You Sell the URL to the Porn King?

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, blogging-hypothetical-question, blogging-life, Bloggy-Questions, personal-branding, problems

Welcome Sandy Renshaw!

December 17, 2006 by Liz

Sandy Said Yes!

Today, I am delighted to announce that Sandy Renshaw of Purple Wren Communications takes on a role as a contributing editor.

Sandy’s main role will be a column we’re calling Sandy’s Great Graphic Find. She’ll be finding and sharing graphics tools, short how-tos, and ideas — stuff that nongraphical folks, folks who look like Chris and me, can use to tweak blog designs and make presentations cool. The tools Sandy finds will be ones that are free or under $200, ones that most bloggers might use at home or in their small business. The how-tos and ideas will be ones that we can use immediately.

Sandy is also going to be building the Tuesday Open Comment Announcement Posts to help keep Successful-Blog moving smoothily and efficiently every week!

Perfect Timing!

While Sandy and I were discussing how her arrival, Chris — without knowing that Sandy had said, “Yes,” — left a question in the comment box of yesterday’s Great Find post I wrote about Photoshop Tutorials. At the very moment when Chris’s question came, Sandy and I were talking about how her column would work. Answering questions like the one asked was just what we had been talking about . . . blogger synchronicity!!!

Chris’s question became Sandy’s first Successful Blog Post.

Welcome Sandy! Thanks for coming!

–ME “Liz”Strauss

Filed Under: Community, Successful Blog, Tools Tagged With: bc, Chris-Cree, contributor, purple-wren-communications, Sandra-Renshaw, Sandys-Great-Graphic-Finds

Sandy’s Great Graphic Find: Photoshop Elements

December 17, 2006 by Liz

Want a light version of Photoshop?

Great Find: Adobe Photoshop Elements

Permalink: http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopelwin/

Target Audience: Computer users who edit photos

Content: The latest Great Find postabout Photoshop tutorials sparked discussion about photo editing tools. While Photoshop is the industry standard for image editing, and an excellent professional tool, the full version is expensive at around $600, and it’s complicated to learn for the average computer user.

Chris inquired whether there was a stripped down, less expensive version.

Yes, there is! The light version is called Photoshop Elements. At around $100 for the Windows version and $80 for Mac, it’s an affordable alternative that’s powerful. Click the screen shot to take you there.

Photoshop Elements

Here are three features I like:

  • Quick Fix mode: rotate and crop, size, sharpen, fix red eye, adjust color and contrast
  • Enhance photos: convert color to B&W or sepia, apply special effects and filters
  • Create composites: combine photos, erase backgrounds

Take advantage of the 30-day trial. Let me know what you think!

Next time I’ll write about another alternative. Wait until you see itl!

–Sandy, Purple Wren Communications

Related articles
Great Find: Film Loop
Great Find: Wufoo — Form-making Tool
Great Find: Color and Font Codes

Filed Under: Design, Successful Blog, Tools Tagged With: bc, Great-Find, Photoshop-Elements

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