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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
I am not working in the field but I am trying to build a network which I thought could handle an event like this. I have never done this before and I am hoping I have a better turn out then what is expected.
I am hoping to learn a lot and grow from this! I know you need to start small but I have been working really hard both online and off but I think the word JOURN might scare people. I am not really trying to scare anyone. I just think an open line of communication would be helpful to all involved.
Thank you for listening.
I have been a fan of #journchat for a while now, never been able to actively keep in touch with the conversation threads during the active discussions! @prsarahevans is doing a fantastic job with it! It's exciting to hear it's now extended into real-world live discussion, be sure to keep me posted on how it goes, email me:
josh@joshchandlerblog.com
Thanks
In addition to the friendship part of this post, I was struck by how much we have all accomplished in three years. How much our world has changed.
1. The ability to recognize fertile ground. Is this a group of people, an organization, a market that has the potential for growth and change?
2. If the ground isn't ready as-is, the ability to fertilize it. What needs to happen for change to take root?
3. Lots and lots of seeds. Never underestimate the power of luck, both good and bad. You may have the perfect seed, and the perfect environment, and some might just not go. More seeds = higher probability of success.
4. Time. You don't get from seed to plant without all the in-between steps. Some plants grow faster than others, but they all have to break from the shell, put down roots, push up to the soil, and grow.
5. Attention. Another word for this might be care. You have to tend your garden. If the environment is drying up, you need to give water. And you need to know when to lay off and let mother nature do her work.
4. Tolerance for failure. I'd rather plant 100 seeds and have 25 fail than plant only 10 with complete assurance they'd all survive. In one case I have a 25% failure rate--but 75 plants. In the other, nothing dies, but only I have 10....
5. For any of the above, know someone who can do it better than you, if you can't. Most of us aren't great at all of these things. But you probably know enough people that when you all work together, you can accomplish great things.
Clearly you, Chris, and CC have the ability to see fertile ground, not just in yourselves, but in each other. We're all luckier for it.
Thanks for hijacking my thoughts first thing this morning! Read your post on the ride in this morning, and couldn't do anything else until I'd responded....
Tamsen (@tamadear, @Sametz)
I mean, in the real-world (offline) situation we have much greater control over our choices, but times that by 1000X in the virtual (online) world and you have a much bigger task to manage!
And, another point you make about "attention; You have to tend your garden. If the environment is drying up, you need to give water.", makes me realize just how important it is to not get distracted by looking for new opportunities when we have to be sure we tend to our own flock (community) first before anything else, otherwise a vast disconnect occurs!
Great points Tamsen, thanks :)
But for those with clarity--crystal clarity--decision making is no more or less hard, as all that's required is evaluating new information against previously established filters (does this fit? if yes, plant. if no, move on). But that's where your second point about attention comes in...it takes enormous discipline to hold focus and not be distracting by the newness and shininess of tools.
It always comes back, however, to your purpose: what is it I'm trying to do, and will this contribute to or complicate those efforts?
Still can't believe the first PodCamp was three years ago-- and lots of people- including the ones you list on the blog- made opportunities for themselves in the months and years since. I'm just tickled to be associated with such a group. I was awed by how you all put together the first PodCamp-- and really, many of you hadn't even done anything yet (your story is a great example)!
Thanks for another thoughtful post-- oh, and thanks for stopping by the blog. will check my stats for "Recent pantloads" (recent joke, long story) and wait for the "Brogalanche." ;P
As you know I've been living this motto for the last 11 months thanks to you and to the amazing people I've connected to because of you.
I've planted lots of seeds in the past few months. Some are growing into sturdy plants that nourish, others have grown into beautiful, exotic flowers, yes a few of them didn't make it but I'll keep on planting the seeds :)
And the thing about sowing seeds is you know certain ones will grow into something good, whereas there are others you could never predict the amazing blossom that will happen.
Two very simple things: 1. Organizing and crowdsourcing millenial ingenuity and hard work at http://dartboston.com (Which we eventually think could create a Y-Pulse type event for the Northeast.
2. Working on creating and engineering The Lost Jacket as a thought leadership platform and potential agency starting point. Keeps looking better and better on that front. :)
Exactly that :)
-Nikki-
Good on you, Chris.
If you connect with competitors on LinkedIn, they can then browse your connections, which means they may try to harvest the names of decision makers at your client's company. LinkedIn doesn't have much granularity in allowing you to prevent this. There is a single switch that allows
- all of your connections to see all of your other connections
- none of your connections to see any of your other connections
I wrote a blog about the details at http://www.the-linkedin-speaker.com/blog/2009/0...