capitalism, crisis and cycles
So. I rarely simply cut & paste an existing article but then I came across this interview. I believe all of us think about the current economic situation and is it a recession or a depression and why it happened and what will happen. This interview with Richard Foster is probably one of the most concise down-to-earth every day language discussions on the topic I have ever seen.
In addition. The concept of creative destruction (which is not about advertising) is one I have always been interested in. Simply it suggests that creative minds in a marketplace, think entrepreneurs & innovators, will ultimately destroy the boundaries of the existing marketplace and in the wake of the destruction a new system will be created. And the cycle will resume. Of course, anyone who follows my thinking know I like cyclical behavioral patterns so of course I liked the interview. Below is a nice image I found from an innovations company which simply shows creative destruction concept.
There are a couple of real gems in here if you fight your way through equities and hedge funds.
- The essence of capitalism is capitalizing. Such a simple statement that explains the essence of not only our economy but our ethos as a nation. That means at our core we are “growers.” We are happiest when we see opportunities or innovations or new things and capitalize on them. Literally and figuratively this is a huge thought.
- Creation will happen again and will again leave behind the big guys trying to rely solely on operations. For those of us in the world who talk about brands (and really mean companies) and repositioning and revitalizing this thought is very important. As the marketplace cycles we so often seek to freshen stale imagery when the reality is we should be seeking to refresh some creativity WITHIN the company (that could be attitude, innovation or a variety of things) so that their world becomes bigger than ‘relying solely on operations.” Another huge thought.
Anyway. It’s interesting reading. Enjoy.
A coauthor of Creative Destruction explains how the business world—and the capitalist system—will change in the aftermath of the financial crisis.
Richard Foster, a McKinsey director from 1982 to 2004, is a coauthor of Creative Destruction: Why Companies That Are Built to Last Underperform the Market—and How to Successfully Transform Them. In that book, he and Sarah Kaplan argue that to endure, companies must embrace what economist Joseph Schumpeter called “creative destruction” and change at the pace and scale of the capital markets, without losing control over current operations. In a recent interview with the Quarterly, Foster offered his view of how the current financial crisis might change the business world and the capitalist system.
The Quarterly: How does your vision of creative destruction apply to today’s situation?
Richard Foster: Let’s start by looking back. In the 1970s, we had the “Nifty 50”—invulnerable companies that couldn’t possibly lose, and of course they all did. It will be the same today; there will be surprising losers, and survival will come down to simple things, like cash and margins. If you’re a low-margin company without a lot of cash or perhaps with too much leverage, you will not make it. Someone will figure out how to do better.
In the financial-services sector, the upheaval will create a new generation of leaders. Fifty years ago, we didn’t have 8,000 hedge fund managers. Then somebody said, “We can go short as well as long; we have much better information than people did in the 1930s, and the information comes to us instantaneously rather than days after the event. We can make a lot of money modeling and leveraging that information.” So the hedge funds were born. How many of those guys had been successful at mutual-fund management? I don’t think any. They might have been commodity traders, but few were mutual-fund managers. Today, other kinds of people with no experience or expertise will challenge incumbents from outside the industry, and there will be a lot of them. Most of the challengers will fail, but a few will succeed, and they’ll become the heroes of the next generation. If you had to bet on anything, that’s it because that’s what has happened in the past.
The Quarterly: Could you elaborate on this life cycle?
Richard Foster: In the book, Sarah Kaplan and I show that over the long term, the market performs better than companies do. There can be periods—5, 7, 10, even 15 years—when that isn’t the case, but corporate performance always reverts to a lower level than the market because the economy is changing at a faster pace and on a larger scale than any individual company so far has been able to do without losing control. That’s the challenge: to create, operate, and trade—to divest old businesses and acquire or build new businesses—at the pace and scale of the market without losing control.
The balance among creating, trading, and excelling operationally changes over time. When the economy is in a growth spurt, there’s more creating. Few companies are trading very much and operations are fine. In those circumstances, the newer companies in the economy tend to outperform the index, and the older companies that are only focused on operations underperform the market.
As the market collapses, the weaker upstarts get squeezed out. The survivors are the cash-rich “operators,” which perform at levels closer to the averages, which themselves are lower. Companies that operate well shine in down times, as they are now. Every investor on the planet is looking for companies that have cash left. The turmoil will clear away the weaker companies—the companies that have taken too much risk. This doesn’t mean they’re bad companies; it’s just that they’ve taken on too much risk given their balance sheet resources.
The Quarterly: What happens then?
Richard Foster: New, young companies that have conserved cash and have solid and often expanding margins surge ahead. When this happened in the ’70s, companies such as The Limited, The Gap, Home Depot, and John Malone’s TeleCommunications Inc. sprung from the burned forest. After the crash of 1987, Microsoft, Oracle, and Amgen took off. Then in the ’90s, we had the Internet companies. Creation will happen again and will again leave behind the big guys trying to rely solely on operations.
The Quarterly: To what extent is today’s financial crisis different from earlier ones?
Richard Foster: The granddaddy of cycles in this economy is the equity premium, which is the difference between the longer-term total returns to shareholders and the supposedly risk-free debt rate. It is the premium the equity investor gets for taking the equity risk. Looking back, we can see seven great cycles. During the boom times, when the equity premium goes way too high, everybody hocks everything to get in on the game, and this creates the conditions for a crash. When the crash occurs, the politicians come in and say it was this or that person’s fault. Then they create regulatory institutions, and virtually every one of those institutions—starting with the Federal Reserve, in 1913, as a result of the crash of 1907—has been quite productive for the nation in the longer term. This includes the formation of the Securities and Exchange Commission, in 1934; the Investment Company Act, in 1940; the beginning of the end of fixed commission rates in 1970; and the Sarbanes–Oxley Act, in the early 2000s.
The Quarterly: What happens in the aftermath of the new regulations?
Richard Foster: What do self-respecting entrepreneurs do when subjected to new regulations? They learn the regulations backward and forward and then vow never to start another business that falls within the scope of those regulations. And so off the entrepreneur goes to find a new way. That’s one reason credit default swaps eventually took the form they did—the other options were regulated.
The new entrepreneur often seeks ways to innovate outside the scope of the newly established regulations. In the beginning, all that works out fine. We have innovations, we love the people who created them, they’re great heroes, the returns are strong, everybody says, “I’m going to be one of those guys.” Eventually, all the truly good guys who are going to get into that business have done so. The opportunity starts drawing less savory figures—charlatans who overmarket, cut corners, establish usurious contracts, and do other clever things to generate profit for themselves. They end up bringing the system down. Then guess what happens? At the end of that period, after the equity premium has soared and collapsed again, the government steps in and regulates the systems, this time focusing on the last wave of abuse. And then we start over.
We were getting somewhat better at handling these cycles until 2000, but since then we’ve gotten worse. The collapse of 2008 isn’t like the crash of 1929, because we have the institutions that were created in the last century, and they are very effective. Understanding the differences between the ’30s and today is at least as important as understanding the similarities.
The Quarterly: Capitalism has just taken a beating. What will the future look like?
Richard Foster: The essence of capitalism is capitalizing—bringing forward the future value of cash to the present so that society can grow more quickly by taking risks. It goes back to the Dutchmen in the 16th century, sitting at their coffeehouses in Amsterdam and Leiden, loaning each other money for a guaranteed return. Someone said, “I’ll give you a little higher return if you give me a piece of the action”—and equity was invented. That had the effect of bringing forward, into real cash today, the net present value of future earnings. That levered society and allowed it to grow at a much higher rate than it would otherwise have. Equity was a very clever invention, and we are not going to give it up. This is the way people are. This is the way commerce works and will continue to work unless capitalism ends. And that won’t happen, regardless of what you read in the press.
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cell phones and 8 year olds
May 14, 2012 - 5:15 pm
Tags: a generation of concerned citizens, a global education kids initiative, a net education platform, actions today make who i am tomorrow, affecting people’s conflict behavior, aligning generational attitude and technology and consumer trends, augmented reality, augmented storytelling, books, broadcast, building character, business, Business Thoughts, cannot imagine, cell phones, cellphones and kids, cellular industry and reading, change begins in the head, change takes remarkable effort, changed behavior, character, childhood mediated by technology, children and critical thinking, children out of school, children owning cellphones, children’s education, communication, community individualism, conflict and people, content dissemination trends, content odd man out is books, conversations, creating innovation attitude in children, creating the next generation of thinkers, creating the next generation of thinkers using the web, curiosity is the enemy of ignorance, death of paper, death of paper part 3, decision making, developing cross cultural skills, developing minds of next generation of thinkers, developing social and emotional competencies, e books, educating using the net, education to enlighten, effective teaching globally, encouraging curiosity, encouraging understanding of choices, enlightened conflict, enlightened learning, enlightened teaching, enlightened technology, facebook, freedom of choice, Gen X, Gen Y, generation after millennials, generational ideation, generations, global, global collaboration, Global generation, global generation sociological platform, global respect, Google, Harvard, ignorance, ignorance is the enemy, interpreting morality, jared leto, jared leto free your mind, kindle, knowledge, leadership, learning, lessons, libraries, life, life lessons, literature, little access to cyberspace, love will not change the world, marketing, mass mingling impact on Global Generation, measuring exclusion from primary education, measuring generational attitudes, measuring generational behavior, measuring global education, media, meeting the challenges of concentration, millenials, mobile technology impacting education, net enabled education, paper books, paper disintegrates, paper to digital, parenting, peace on facebook, pop up schools, predictions, print, project global generation, redefining children’s education with a global initiative, research, respect, respect for individual choice, responsibility, short term concentration capabilities, social media, social technology, strategy, strength of character to make change, strength of values, Stuff I Like, teaching kids globally, technology and parenting, technology innovation, that i will be tomorrow, the death of libraries, the economist e-communication and society, the growth of the independent library, this i am today, trends, truth, Twitter, twitter triumph of humanity, UNESCO children out of school, using cell technology for education, web based global education, who reads books
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“Adults — digital natives or not — can’t imagine what a childhood mediated by mobile, social technology that didn’t exist 10 years ago is actually like.” – Senior editor The Atlantic magazine I admit. Technology has created a significant new challenge to parenting. I struggle to think of anything since the printing press that would [...]
augmented reality
May 14, 2012 - 5:15 pm
Tags: a generation of concerned citizens, a global education kids initiative, a net education platform, actions today make who i am tomorrow, affecting people’s conflict behavior, aligning generational attitude and technology and consumer trends, augmented reality, augmented storytelling, blurring the lines in a story, books, broadcast, building character, business, Business Thoughts, cannot imagine, cell phones, cellphones and kids, cellular industry and reading, change begins in the head, change takes remarkable effort, changed behavior, character, childhood mediated by technology, children and critical thinking, children out of school, children owning cellphones, children’s education, communication, community individualism, conflict and people, content dissemination trends, content odd man out is books, conversations, creating innovation attitude in children, creating the next generation of thinkers, creating the next generation of thinkers using the web, curiosity is the enemy of ignorance, death of paper, death of paper part 3, decision making, developing cross cultural skills, developing minds of next generation of thinkers, developing social and emotional competencies, e books, educating using the net, education to enlighten, effective teaching globally, encouraging curiosity, encouraging understanding of choices, enlightened conflict, enlightened learning, enlightened teaching, enlightened technology, facebook, freedom of choice, Gen X, Gen Y, generation after millennials, generational ideation, generations, global, global collaboration, Global generation, global generation sociological platform, global respect, Google, Harvard, ignorance, ignorance is the enemy, interpreting morality, jared leto, jared leto free your mind, kindle, knowledge, leadership, learning, lessons, libraries, life, life lessons, literature, little access to cyberspace, love will not change the world, marketing, mass mingling impact on Global Generation, measuring exclusion from primary education, measuring generational attitudes, measuring generational behavior, measuring global education, media, meeting the challenges of concentration, millenials, mobile technology impacting education, net enabled education, new technology, paper books, paper disintegrates, paper to digital, parenting, peace on facebook, pop up schools, predictions, print, project global generation, redefining children’s education with a global initiative, research, respect, respect for individual choice, responsibility, short term concentration capabilities, social media, social technology, strategy, strength of character to make change, strength of values, Stuff I Like, teaching kids globally, technology and parenting, technology innovation, that i will be tomorrow, the death of libraries, the economist e-communication and society, the growth of the independent library, this i am today, trends, truth, Twitter, twitter triumph of humanity, UNESCO children out of school, using cell technology for education, web based global education, who reads books
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Augmented reality is … well … a reality. Augmented Reality: engineers are pulling graphics out of your television screen or computer display and integrating them into real-world environments. This new technology, called augmented reality, blurs the line between what’s real and what’s computer-generated by enhancing what we see, hear, feel and smell. On the spectrum [...]
ordinary extraordinary sports fans
May 13, 2012 - 4:22 pm
Tags: advertising, avoiding the trite, believe espn tv, best espn commercials, branding, brilliant in simplicity, business, Business Thoughts, easy creative work, enlightened advertising, espn commercials, espn ordinary michael jordan, life, marketing, not just for sports fans, ordinary dealing with extraordinary expectations, ordinary guy, ordinary person with famous name, relevant to many not just few, smart advertising, Stuff I Like
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Ok. Creating good espn television commercials is sort of an easy task in the scheme of things <in the world of creating good advertising>. It’s not like having to explain how my detergent is somehow better then another detergent <that is 25cents less and claims to do the same thing>. Anyway. As long as you [...]
I have loved the stars too fondly
May 12, 2012 - 7:28 am
Tags: a generation of concerned citizens, action and consequence, action and consequences, actions today make who i am tomorrow, affecting people’s conflict behavior, aiming high, architects of fate, beating the system, builders versus renovators, building character, Business Thoughts, change begins in the head, change forces prioritizing, change takes remarkable effort, character, communication, conflict and people, creating positive touchpoints, creating the next generation of thinkers, creating the next generation of thinkers using the web, curiosity is the enemy of ignorance, dangers and risk tangled in every life decision, decision making, depth of character to face everyday life, developing cross cultural skills, developing social and emotional competencies, difficult lessons, discovery, dreaming is not just for kids, dreaming not just for kids, dynamic beyond our own purposes, encouraging curiosity, encouraging hope, encouraging understanding of choices, enlghtened hope, enlightened conflict, envision the impossible, events are meant to be commanded not feared, every one is an architect of life, exploration not ROI, failure of imagination, finding light in the darkness, finding what is possible from impossible, finding your way is tough, free your mind, generation of measurement, getting rid of dark thoughts, Global generation, going with your gut, good deeds in a weary world, greatest danger is aiming too low, hope, hope and unicorns, hope in learning, i have loved the stars too fondly, ignorance, ignorance is the enemy, imagination, in their emptiness they are everything, innovation is impossible to budget, its okay to break the rules every once in awhile, leaders and character, leadership, learning, lessons, life, life is a winding road, life is tricky, life lessons, living life backwards but still question, look to the stars, looking for hope in strange places, making choices, making the best choice you can, managing perceptions, michelanglo, most things in life are not black or white, moving beyond that which is, never fear the night, next generation of thinkers, nonsense cherished by the wisest men, one can’t believe impossible things, one foot in history one foot in future, only few find the way, paradise is there if you look, people who see unicorns, possibilities, pursuing the way, quotations, quotes, reach for the stars, resiliency, respect, responsibility, risk something to achieve a dream, ROI versus imagination, scan the stars for hope, seeing the other side of choice, seek out events without fear, seek to make someone speechless on occasion, six impossible things before breakfast, smallest actions contribute, speechless. finding the right words at the right time, star gazing, stay or go, strategy, strength of character to make change, stressful decisions, strip away the undoable and identify the doable, Stuff I Like, that i will be tomorrow, that which could be, the moments that words fail, thinking, thinking impossible things, thinking is good, thinking too much, this i am today, thrive on dreams and possibilities, through the looking glass wisdom, to slay a dragon you need to believe in dragons, tough for dreamers these days, transformational people, trapped by fear, truth, unexpected innovation, unicorns symbolize hope, use your imagination, used rainbows for sale, we all have dark moments, what do you do when you get what you want, where danger can look divine, words
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“though my soul may set in darkness it will rise in perfect light. i have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.” Sarah Williams “the old astronomer to the pupil” Stars are special things. I do not know anyone who hasn’t stopped … for a moment on a clear night … [...]
observation of the day: people power
May 10, 2012 - 10:12 am
Tags: a generation of concerned citizens, action and consequence, action and consequences, actions today make who i am tomorrow, affecting people’s conflict behavior, aiming high, architects of fate, beating the system, builders versus renovators, building character, Business Thoughts, ceo compensation, change begins in the head, change forces prioritizing, change takes remarkable effort, character, communication, conflict and people, creating change, creating positive touchpoints, creating the next generation of thinkers, creating the next generation of thinkers using the web, crisis creates a new generation of leaders, curiosity is the enemy of ignorance, dangers and risk tangled in every life decision, decision making, depth of character to face everyday life, developing social and emotional competencies, difficult lessons, discovery, doing something, doing something that may truly matter, doing what must be done, dynamic beyond our own purposes, education to enlighten, encouraging curiosity, encouraging hope, encouraging understanding of choices, enlightened conflict, envision the impossible, events are meant to be commanded not feared, every one is an architect of life, failure of imagination, finding light in the darkness, finding what is possible from impossible, free your mind, Global generation, going with your gut, good deeds in a weary world, greatest danger is aiming too low, hope, hope in learning, ignorance, ignorance is the enemy, imagination, in their emptiness they are everything, inflated pay packages, innovation is impossible to budget, its okay to break the rules every once in awhile, leaders, leaders and character, leadership, learning, lessons, life, life is a winding road, life is tricky, life lessons, living life backwards but still question, looking for hope in strange places, making choices, making the best choice you can, managing perceptions, most things in life are not black or white, moving beyond that which is, next generation of thinkers, nonsense cherished by the wisest men, one can’t believe impossible things, one foot in history one foot in future, only few find the way, paradise is there if you look, people can create change, people power, possibilities, pursuing the way, quotations, quotes, resiliency, respect, responsibility, risk something to achieve a dream, ROI versus imagination, salary disparity, seeing the other side of choice, seek out events without fear, seek to make someone speechless on occasion, shareholder activism, shareholders vote, six impossible things before breakfast, smallest actions contribute, speechless. finding the right words at the right time, star gazing, stay or go, strategy, strength of character to make change, stressful decisions, strip away the undoable and identify the doable, Stuff I Like, that i will be tomorrow, that which could be, the moments that words fail, thinking, thinking impossible things, thinking is good, thinking too much, this i am today, thrive on dreams and possibilities, to slay a dragon you need to believe in dragons, tough for dreamers these days, transformational people, trapped by fear, truth, unexpected innovation, use your imagination, we all have dark moments, what do you do when you get what you want, where danger can look divine, words
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“A wave of shareholder activism is shining light on ….” – subhead in The Guardian “A new kind of outrage: Investors kick out against inflated pay packages” – headline in The Economist So. The issues America (and many countries) is having at the moment are complex but I wanted to make an observation of one [...]
comment of the day: elections and governing
May 10, 2012 - 10:11 am
Tags: actions today make who i am tomorrow, america repairing it’s faults, America’s character, behavior in new economic world, better than every other country, buy as soon as possible, cannot function because always fighting for job, capitalism and morals, capitalism communism, change begins in the head, change forces prioritizing, change takes remarkable effort, changed behavior, changing objectives to make change, character, clarity of ideological thinking, communism, communism embracing capitalism, consumers are complicated, country geography, country mortality, decision making, democracy in america, democratic uprisings, depression versus recession, do elections ever end, economic inequality, economy, effect of recession, elections, enlightened conflict, enlightened reading, enlightening reading, excellence in brevity, generations changing behavior, geopolitical wars, give consumers a choice, global economic superiority, global unrest, government, government imbalance, great manifestos, have and have nots, haves, haves versus have-nots, history, ideological thinking, ignorance, impact of recession, it is tough but how tough, job insecurity, job responsibility, keenly aware of america’s flaws, learning, letting go is difficult, letting go is not simple, life, life lessons, Lost Ground, making shit is good, marketing, marx and engel and founding fathers, middle east, middle east is complex, moral fiber, no easy steps in middle east, nothing lasts forever, optomism versus pessimism, optomistically cynical, perspective, Pew Research, pluralism, poverty, proud patriots, quotes, recession, recession affecting shopping behavior, redistribution of power, redrawing boundaries, relationships, resiliency, respect, responsibility, rethinking elections, seeking new experiences, self determination, social imbalance, social revolutions, social unrest, social upheavals, socialism, spending money as soon as we have it, story of two americas, strength of character to make change, Stuff I Like, switching but not satisfied, that i will be tomorrow, the constitution, the decline of europe, the economist, the have nots, the haves, the story of a fragmented america, the story of fragmented middle east, this i am today, time magazine, tocqueville, today’s economy, truth, uncertainty of nations, understanding the middle east, unreasonable solutions, well written documents, words
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I saw this comment in The Guardian: The French elections lasted for what? A month and a half, now they have a new President. Our elections begin 2 years in advance and don’t end until super tuesday which sounds like a sporting event. Our leaders cannot function because they are always fighting for their jobs [...]
life formulas
May 9, 2012 - 10:50 am
Tags: a full life, a human defect or a flaw, a severe shortcoming, accountable decision making, actions today make who i am tomorrow, aligning perceptions and behavior creates satisfaction, alignment, analysis paralysis, analyzing actual behavior, anything that can go wrong will, architects of fate, astonish people, at some point you are accountable, attacking doubt, attaining levles of good, attitudes and behavior, averting chaos, avoid the gray, be who you are, behavior management business, being accountable, being distinct, being honest to yourself, being soft in business, believe, bell curve, big mistake big succcesses, big mistakes, black or white, boundlessness of friendship, brand, branding, breaking life decisions down, breeds an aspect of complacency, bull in a china shop living, business, business is messy, Business Thoughts, can someone really give 110%, capacity of the human mind, change begins in the head, change forces prioritizing, change is easier if you simplify, change takes remarkable effort, changed behavior, changing objectives to make change, chaos, chaos control methods, chaos creates opportunities, character, choice between alternatives, choice by numbers, choice cannot be made with statistics alone, choices, choices leading to full life, choices we make or do not make, choosing to be true, collaboration, collector of moments, committed to showing up everyday, communication, complex simplified, concept of chaos, consensus, consistency, consistency is underrated, consistency of character, consistency of character is underrated, consistency of values, consumer attitudes, consumer buying system, controlled chaos, courage and faith, courage doesn’t always roar, courage is about resiliency, cowardly decision making, creation means destroying something, creativity, creativity process, crushed by doubt, cynicism, days of thunder and chaos, dealing with adversity, dealing with everyday life, dealing with extenuating experiences, death is a forever nap, deceiving others, deceiving yourself, decision making, decision making under uncertainty, decision utility, defining happiness in moments, depth of character to face everyday life, designing perfect systems, desire everything at the same time, destroying the personal baggage you carry, differentiation, difficult to discern good guys from bad guys, difficult to manage expectations, disappointment created by expectations, disappointment in yourself, discerning the difference between attitude and behavior, discipline but freedom, disciplined chaos, discovery is messy, do not go gentle, do not go quietly, do whatever you need to do, doing the right thing, doing the right thing is hard, don’t worry about people stealing an idea, doubt, doubt resides between certainty and uncertainty, doubt something, doubt something once unquestionable, doubts of words, dreaming is not just for kids, easier to quit, ee cummings, effective communication, embellishment, embracing failure, employees, energy, enlightened conflict, enlightened people, every minute is another chance, every moment counts, every one is an architect of life, every one plays a role in fate, extraordinary cruel logic, facing overwhelming responsibilities, facts and truth, failure is a reflection of a flaw, faith in oneself, fear, fear of choices, fearlessness, few words, fight the hardest battle to be yourself, finagle, finagle’s law, finding the right words to say, finding what is possible from impossible, finding your way is tough, flame inside, follow the truth, freedom of, gain some new identity aspects, generalist, generating ideas, generations changing behavior, geting thru chaos unscathed, getting a grip on life, getting a new start means destroying some old things, getting kicked in the gut, getting kicked in the gut by questioning, good people, groups, growing up is tough, guilt and obligation, happiness, hard choices, hard decisions, having a personal defect, heightening value in life choices, hiding behind statistics, hope, i am fine, i am fine is the biggest lie, I fail, i like numbers, I think opinions, identifying who you are, ignorance, illogical decision making, imperfection implies opinion, in chaos we found safety, inability to manage expectations, inaction, increasingly popular words, individuals, inefficient processes, informing a decision, inserting myself into tangled moments, intentions, investing energy when appropriate, is anything back or white anymore, isolating variables using statistics, it is okay to fail, it isn’t process it is the work, judgement, judging failure needs context, judgment is not easy, juggling versus balancing, just this once, kindness in words creates confidence, knowing what is right is not enough, kodak, lack of responsibility, lack of self confidence, lacking hope, lazy decision making, leadership, learning, lessons, letting go is difficult, letting go is not simple, lies, life, life formulas, life gives you a bazillion second chances, life is a string of minutes, life is a struggle, life is a winding road, life is about making choices, life is complex, life is not a mission, life is not a straight line, life is not as simple as it seems, life is often not lived best gently, life is tough, life lessons, life not defined by meeting objectives, life thoughts, Life truths, life’s white lies, listening, little failures versus big failures, live life to the fullest, living life backwards but still question, logical decision making, logical versus illogical, lying to your friends, lying to yourself, making changes personally, making choices, making the hard choice, management, managing perceptions, marketing, Maslow, maslow and decisions, maybe it is better to admit we failed at something, maybe life is not that complicated, measurement of failure, measuring life, messaging, moments are like a balance sheet, moments of passion, moral fiber, most things in life are not black or white, motivated by a desire to achieve, murphy and finagle, murphy’s law, no one says you failed any more, no one wants to trust chaos, no substitute for judgment, not a quantity of words person, not meeting an objective is not failure, nothing is original, numbers are facts, numbers are facts crap, numbers are facts nonsense, numbers are not accountable, numbers can play a role, numbers have a role, numbers show possibilities, numbers will confess anything, obligation to do, obligation to do the right thing, once doubt enters it takes on huge proportions, ongoing search for the right words, only few find the way, ordinary life with extraordinary responsibilities, ordinary people don’t think they are remarkable, organizations, organizations are living orgamisms, organizing chaos, original ideas, original ideas are typically nuances of existing, people confuse process and disciplined thinking, perfection is crap, perfection is the thief, personal creative destruction, personal thoughts, perspective can help with the complex, power of words, prioritizing actions, process is a means to an end, productivity, providing perspective, pursuing the way, put failing in perpsective, questioning the unquestionable, quotations, quotes, randomness of life, reason for being, relationships, resiliency, resiliency and character, respect, responsibility, right is right, right words, safe, say it is happening when it isn’t, say that something is happening when it is, saying it is fine when it is not, scared, see your own reality, seek truth, seeking the way of truth, self actualization, self doubt, self esteem through problem solving, self truth, self worth, shades of gray, shortcomings leading to consequences, simplicity in life, simplicity seems too chaotic, simplifying to make choices easier, six impossible things before breakfast, slippery slope, slippery slope of despair, slippery slope of I am not fine, slippery surface of irrelevant brilliance, small gestures in trivial looking moments, smallest actions contribute, soft choices, something more important than fear, sometimes systems work that should not work, sorting out the truth, soyoufailed.com, speaking, specialist, stand for something within yourself, standing on the uncertainty pedestal, standing up every time we fall down, statistical decision theory, statistics, statistics cannot make the decision for you, statistics getting in the way of a good decision, stimulus reponse, stop and think, straight lines, straight lines are rare in life, strategy, strength against adversity, strength of character, strength of character to make change, strip away the undoable and identify the doable, struggle between energy and indolence, struggle between vitality and decay, Stuff I Like, stumble upon doing it right, stunning grace in the face of overwhelming life, subconscious influences behavior, swallowing nonsense, symbolic dynamics, systems remain stagnant, take revenge on doubters, talking, tangled ball of string, tangled up people, teens, that i will be tomorrow, the answers are within you, the butterfly effect, the grocery shopper, the most powerful weapon in life is not a mission, the myth of original, the myth of the proprietary process, the numbers told me what to do, the subconscious, the word failure is tough love, there is no formula for good choices, thinking, thinking impossible things, thinking is good, this i am today, thomas jefferson, thoughts, to be sure of you, to slay a dragon you need to believe in dragons, torture numbers, torturing numbers, trivial moments, trivial moments in bigger life, trust, truth, truth and expectations, truth goggles, truth is rarely simple, truth is what really happened, truth or lies, truth or nothing, truth to oneself, trying to preserve will lead to stagnation, tween strength, uncertainty is a bitch, uncertainty takes on geometric proportions, unintended results, unquestionable, untangling people, use your imagination, we all fail, what I know opinions, what is the alternative, what is the place of words, what looks like chaos, what we have is not what we need, what we need is impossible to get, what we need to get us through, what we want is not what we need, whatever it takes, whatever it takes to cross that dark bridge, woefully inadequate data, words, words that become deeds, words worse than nothing unless they do something, work is often up to people, work nevertheless, worry about implementing a great idea versus protecting it, yhprum’s law, you are not a failure because you fail, you cannot dwell on every moment that slipped by, you fail
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Life is not as simple as it seems. Or maybe it isn’t as complicated as it seems. Shit. Maybe its both … at exactly the same time. I cannot remember where I found all these awesome “life formulas” but I love the way they take complex life things and simplify them into basic equations (note: [...]
no secret to life
May 7, 2012 - 4:03 pm
Tags: 37 seconds well used is a lifetime, a full life, actions today make who i am tomorrow, America’s character, architects of fate, astonish people, be who you are, being a collector, being soft in business, career, change begins in the head, change forces prioritizing, change takes remarkable effort, changed behavior, changing objectives to make change, character, choice, choices, choices leading to full life, choices we make or do not make, collect stories, communication, creation means destroying something, decision making, destroying the personal baggage you carry, doing the right thing, doing the right thing is hard, enlightened conflict, enlightened listening, every one is an architect of life, every one plays a role in fate, everyone has a story, everyone has had some life changing event, everyone has some experience of note, fear, fear of choices, gain some new identity aspects, gain something more than words, getting a new start means destroying some old things, good people, hard choices, hard decisions, hesitate to tell, hope, identifying who you are, if i only had time, ignorance, ignore people, in those moments, inaction, intentions, interesting stories, just this once, knowing what is right is not enough, lacking hope, leadership, learn someone’s character, learning, lessons, letting go is difficult, letting go is not simple, lies, life, life changing event, life lessons, listen more, listening, making changes personally, making choices, making the hard choice, managing perceptions, marketing, moments, moral fiber, motivated by a desire to achieve, ordinary people don’t think they are remarkable, our minds create, overcoming ignorance, people have a story, personal creative destruction, personal perspective, purpose to learn, quotations, quotes, relationships, resiliency, resiliency and character, respect, responsibility, right is right, secrets to collect, see your own reality, self truth, slippery slope, slippery slope of despair, smallest actions contribute, so you can be better, soft choices, some experience worthy of note, stories, stories we will never tell, stories you want to hear, story they never want to tell, strategy, strength of character to make change, Stuff I Like, teaching, that i will be tomorrow, there is no formula for good choices, this i am today, time, time and choices, trust, truth, trying to preserve will lead to stagnation, unlocking the story, wacky wisdom, waiting or living, we all have stories, we should all listen a little more, what you do with your time, when people do not listen, words, you have to work to get these stories, you may gain something
Posted in Favorite Quotes | No comments
“There are no secrets in life just truths that lie beneath the surface” – Dexter I love this quote. To me it seems to put a highlight on the inner struggle we seem to have with trying to make life so‘mysterious’ (or some invisible hand) and a lack of desire to control, or assume responsibility [...]
marley and me
May 6, 2012 - 9:42 am
Tags: addictive songs, bob marley, bob marley's son, contemporary reggae, damien marley, evolution of reggae, fun music, fun music to listen to, good music, marley affairs of the heart, music, raggae music, reggae hip hop, Stuff I Like, tough love reggae, welcome to Jamrock
Posted in Music | No comments
Well. This is about Damien Marley but … to begin with … I am not sure I know one person who doesn’t like Bob Marley’s greatest hits cd. You may not like to listen to reggae day in and day out but taking time for an hour of the ‘best of the best’? … once [...]
build to burn
May 6, 2012 - 9:41 am
Tags: addictive songs, architects of fate, bands I should hate but love, build to burn, building it only to burn it down, burn it down linkin park, chester and shinoda, communication, growing up through music, ignore Linkin Park at your own eril, it is a mistake to not listen, learning, linkin park, Linkin Park 2012, linkin park has something to say, Linkin Park In the End, loud music, message is worth listening to, music captures voice of a generation, music not for everyone, music questioning what is happening in the world, music that says I have something to say, music that says listen to me, music with a message, old people call it noise, older more thoughtful young men, older people call it angry music, personal is part of the social, power to build, power to do something, power to tear down, powerful music, powerful to listen to, screaming questions, social awareness, social awareness in music, somewhere I belong, songs about fear and insecurity, songs about self doubt, songs captured how young people feel, Stuff I Like, the voice of their children, this i am today, voice of a generation
Posted in Music, Rants and Observations | No comments
So. I have been thinking of writing about Linkin Park for some time. They have a new song called Burn it Down that actually got me thinking this is the time. They are the band I should hate but I love. I should hate them because they scream a lot <instead of singing> and the [...]




July 25, 2010 - 7:12 pm
Hadn’t seen this article/interview, and think it’s terrific — thx for passing along! Am now going back to see more of the “creative destruction” idea.