Seth's Blog : Meeting vs. making

Meeting vs. making

As I was scurrying to meet someone coming in on the 11 am train, I realized that there's a huge difference between meeting a train and making one.

If you're rushing to make a train, you have to be there before the last moment. Five seconds too late is too late. The cost of error is absolute.

If you're hurrying to meet a train, though, there's a soft deadline. Five seconds is no big deal. Thirty seconds might be annoying, particularly for someone returning from a long journey. And five minutes is really rude.

Too often, we treat our obligations as meet, not make. We impose a sliding scale, a soft penalty, and we not only show up just a bit late, we show up a bit behind on quality or preparation.

Making is a discipline. Meeting opens the door for excuses.

 

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Get Lost On YouTube

http://www.twistimage.com/)">Get Lost On YouTube

Link to Six Pixels of Separation - Marketing and Communications Insights - By Mitch Joel at Twist Image


Get Lost On YouTube

Posted: 10 Feb 2012 06:48 PM PST

It's one of my favorite past-times and guilty pleasures.

After all of the work is done and the house is quiet, instead of sitting back and letting the television waft over me, I go and get lost on YouTube. I usually start with some cheesy hair metal bands from the eighties, but it quickly devolves into this amazing world of acoustic music discovery that traipses across genres and generations. It takes me back, it pushes me forward and it moves me into directions I could have never imagined possible back when I was much younger and much more interested in music.

Long live serendipity.

Many people feel that the Internet kills serendipity simply because we're only consuming or connecting to content that we're looking for. I think YouTube has done an amazing job of changing that with their related videos. It inspires more discovery and over the past couple of years, YouTube has been the number one reason that I have been purchasing music... and a lot of it. Better than that, it has helped me discover and support musicians I would have otherwise never been exposed to. People like Mike Masse who plays his acoustic guitar at the Pie Pizzeria in South Jordan, Utah...

I am not alone.

Mike's videos have over five million combined views. He launched a Kickstarter project (Mike Massé will record his first original CD!) and raised over $10,000 for his music project. This isn't a Blog post about YouTube or the viability of a career in music. This is a Blog post about just how much (and how dramatic) our world has changed in a few short years. It affects everything from culture and creativity to business and technology. It's simply amazing to think about how much this interconnectivity and access to content is making our lives that much richer. I could go on and on about how much joy I get from discovering new things each and every day because of the Internet, but I'm a little busy right now getting lost on YouTube.

Do yourself a favor: go get lost on YouTube...

Tags: acoustic music blog business content creativity culture discovery guilty pleasures igor presnyakov internet kickstarter mike masse music industry online videos related videos serendipity steve winwood technology television toto youtube

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Posted via email from Jos Essers

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A very quick request for help

Van: Heather Townsend Verzonden: zaterdag 4 februari 2012 10:14
Aan: Jos
Onderwerp: A very quick request for help

I'm tickled pink to be able to tell you that 'The FT Guide To Business Networking' has been nominated in Small Business Trends' Small Business Book Awards.

If you've read the book and enjoyed it, I would be exceptionally grateful if you could register your support by voting on the site. (And maybe ask a few friends to do this as well!)

It's literally just one click. The great news is that you can vote daily between now and 16th February, for as many books as you like!

To vote for the FT Guide To Networking then click on this link: http://bookawards.smallbiztrends.com/marketing_2011/the-ft-guide-to-business-...

The top 5 books from each category will win - and I am lucky to already be in the top 10 of the marketing category, but need a little help from my friends to get me into the top 5.

Thanks for all of your support

Kind Regards

Heather
The Efficiency Coach
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Courtesy at work: Your colleagues will thank you

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Harvey Mackay's Column This Week

Courtesy at work:  Your colleagues will thank you  

 

By Harvey Mackay

 

jello 

Most of us work with relatively sane people who try to behave during the eight hours or so that they're in the office.  And we attempt to do the right things and avoid offending our co-workers as well.

 

But some people just don't get it.  As part of a survey on workplace etiquette, the Robert Half organization asked employees to share some of the most outrageous workplace scenes they'd witnessed or heard about.  Here are some of the "winners" - although I would more accurately call them losers:

  • "A employee fell asleep at her desk and another team member took a picture of her snoozing and sent it to the boss."
  • "Someone was stealing other people's lunches from the lounge area."
  • "A colleague purposely sneezed in the boss's coffee cup."
  • "After asking me a question, a co-worker talked excessively for 30 minutes without letting me get in one word."
  • "I once heard an employee screaming at a customer."
  • "Someone thought he put a customer on hold and then used inappropriate language within earshot."
  •  "Employees were walking around the office barefoot."
  • "A person took a cell phone into the restroom while still talking."

Don't join this club.  Studies have shown that rude behavior at work hurts productivity, job commitment, job retention, morale and working relationships.  Even worse, it threatens the health and well-being of employees.

The word "courtesy" literally means "the way of the court."  This means acting like you would in the king's court.  Displaying the same actions and attitudes appropriate in the presence of royalty is a good guide for all of our everyday dealings with others.  Because when you treat others better than they are accustomed to being treated, their response is almost always positive.

Here are ten simple tips for proper -- and more productive -- workplace behavior:

  1. Watch your language.  Crude language, naughty jokes and insensitive comments don't belong in the workplace.  If you question whether something is safe to say, it probably isn't.
  2. Don't criticize or complain in public.  Trashing a colleague, customer or boss where others can hear makes you look petty and unprofessional.  If you have a problem, deal with it in private.
  3. Stay cool.  Take a moment to collect your thoughts and control your emotions before responding to a difficult co-worker or an annoying situation.  If you gain a reputation for losing your temper, few people will want to work with you.
  4. Use technology appropriately.  While email helps avoid face-to-face confrontations, it's still important to maintain a civil tone in your communications.  Think twice before you hit the send button, and use the "reply all" feature sparingly.  Make sure the recipient of your forwarded jokes, recipes or celebrity gossip really welcomes that computer clutter.
  5. Respond as promptly as possible to requests and questions.  Making co-workers wait for answers unnecessarily disrupts their schedules.  If someone is relying on you for information, be cooperative.
  6. Minimize interruptions to others.  Ask "May I interrupt you?" or "Is this a convenient time for a question?"  And if someone barges into your office when you are especially busy, politely ask when you can get back to them.
  7. Leave a signed note when leaving something on a co-worker's desk.  Leave a note when borrowing items too.  Be sure to return items when you finish with them.  
  8. Be aware of the workloads of other staff.  Remember, just because it's a priority for you doesn't mean it's a priority for others.  And when you have a lull in your schedule, the person in the next cubicle may have just been assigned a major project.  
  9. Remember to say "please" and "thank you."   So basic, but so important.     
  10. Respect each other.  Leave paper in the copy machine.  Clean up after yourself in the break room.  Don't pry into personal information.  Beware of office gossip.

As I like to say, little things don't mean a lot -- they mean everything.  Common courtesy is becoming all too uncommon.  Help reverse the trend.  

Mackay's Moral:  Good manners are never out of place in the workplace.

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