Posts tagged “Uncategorized

Priorities

There are a handful of ideas that to me are as elusive as an autumnal breeze.

One of them is the idea of “priority”.

It is not that I don’t know what is a priority.

5611_urgent_vs_important_permaIt is that I have trouble making priorities a priority.

What made me think of all this is a scribbled note of a quote mentioned at a company meeting last week in New York.  The quote was attributed to Tom “The Dean” Watson.  He’s called “The Dean” because of his role behind Omnicom University.

Watson’s dictum:  “The urgent always crowds out the important.”

I’d say that defines the term “trenchant observation.”

Let’s all put aside the urgent and tend to the important.

Gender disappointment disorder: No wonder we’re so screwed up …

I was talking with my wife this afternoon.  It has been awhile.  I was on the road three of every four days over the past two weeks and she’d spent the weekend with the kids in Richmond.

It was good to talk.

And as is usual, my wife did most of the talking.  That’s because she usually has more interesting things to say than I do.

200600100050015003400179679And then she talked about something that floored me.  It is a new mental disorder that, according to my wife will likely be headed to the DSM IV.  For the uninitiated that is the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.  My wife should know.  She’s a licensed social worker who works for the county mental health system.

The disorder?

Gender disappointment disorder.

That is, people getting depressed, anxious, pissed off, and otherwise mentally unbound because the baby was a boy … and they wanted a girl.  Or vice versa.  Yes, friends, this is a real issue with today’s parents.  This, according to an article in Elle magazine by Ruth Shallitt Barrett entitled “Girl Crazy:  Women Who Suffer from Gender Disappointment.”

As one would think given the source, Elle focuses on women.  Specifically, the article is a series of stories of women who are depressed, medicated, and miserable … all because they had a little Johnny instead of a little Jane.  (Apparently most women desperately want girls, not boys.)

You really have to read this stuff to believe it.  And even after I read it I find it difficult to believe.  Here’s one of my favorites …

“The way society is now—I feel there’s a preference for girls,” says Linda Heithaus, a marine biologist from Hollywood, Florida, who has two sons and is contemplating doing IVF/PGD in the hope of getting a girl. “They can do everything a boy can do, plus you can dress them up. It’s almost like, to fit in, you need to have one.”  Girls, in other words, are boys plus. They can play sports and have careers, and you can dress them in pink and take them to tea at the American Girl café. What’s not to like?

There are no shortage of heated discussions on the subject.  Go to BabyGaga, or Just Mommies or the talk on Digg .

It is easy to wonder what is worse — these women having little boys and suffering mental illness … or these women having little girls and having the little girls suffering a mental illness.

Someone needs to tell these people that having a baby isn’t like going to Starbucks and ordering a half-caf latte.

Hey gals, it is not about you!

What were they (or I) thinking?

“Life is too much with us … near and far.”

A line of a poetry was never so true.

homer_dohHaving failed to respond to email in a timely way, been horribly inconsistent in updating my Facebook page, tried and failed to consistently use my Twitter account, and totally spaced out on our corporate blog and Yammer platform.

In the midst of all this and travel three days weekly and a host of other commitments that make sleep akin to a three week vacation.

I — along with my best friend in Washington — launched a new blog.

It is a appropriately named “What were they thinking:  the chronicler of good intentions gone awry, unintended consequences, and simple bonheaded decisions.”

If you like the JuiceBar, I think you’ll love this.

Let me know what you think.

A Tribute to Jody Powell

Jody Powell was a great man.  Not because of his political achievements which were many.  Not because of his business accomplishment and there were plenty of those too.  In a curious way he was a great man in spite of all that.  He was great because despite of his “Washington insider” status, he was totally without pretense and took a personal interest in the many people he knew and worked with.

I was fortunate to be one of those individuals.

jodyI worked for Jody first at Ogilvy and Mather and then as one of the original Powell Tate team.  He was a great mentor and an even greater friend.   He was at the same time demanding and incredibly forgiving.  He was a hard nosed negotiator and also extremely generous.   He was loyal to those close to him but also open to others.   His care for people went beyond the individual.  He made an indelible impact not only on me, but also on my wife and children.

I encourage everyone from the Juicebar community to read some of the tributes to Jody.

Don’t be impressed with the names of the celebrities on the list.  Focus on the content of what they are saying.  Read how many people he mentored.  Read about his loyalty to friends.   Read about his genuine interest and concern for people regardless of their status.  About his intense love of family.

And from that, begin to think about what “great” really means.

I suggest that it is not about achievements, trophies, records, or money.  Look around.  A lot of mediocrity can achieve acquire such.

Great people — like great brands — are about much higher and more important things.  Like working hard.  Being honest.  Helping people who need a hand.  Making a difference in someone’s life.

Jody did that for many.

What about you?

Communications lessons from Rep. Barney Frank

I must admit that I’ve never been a big Barney Frank fan.  It is not that I didn’t like him.  It is just that I never was a big fan.

Until now.

portsmouth-protesters-thumb-380x311If you want a lesson on how to defuse outrageous claims with a combination of simple language, mild put-downs, some humor, and compelling logic, watch and listen to how Rep. Barney Frank dealt with town hall protesters claiming that President Obama was a facist and that health care reform was akin to Nazi policies.

First start with the mild put down that comes in the form of a question.  Typically it is something like:  “You can’t be serious.”  In this case Barney Frank uses a more provocative variation, “What planet are you from?”  Then, once you’ve gotten someone to admit that they are truly serious about this outrageous claim, highlight the stupidity of it by applauding the right people to be stupid.  In Barney Frank’s diagnosis, being free to be stupid is what America is all about.  Then, when there is persistence the persistence of the screams and rants mount, state the obvious — that dialogue is useless.  Or akin to having a conversation with furniture.

This is superior thinking and communication at its best.

Words matter: “Capitalism” sucks; “free enterprise” is great …

You’re a free market,  capitalist, Milton Freidman, private enterprise, Ronald Reagan, market-driven type of person.

rich2Then along comes the great market meltdown.  Unregulated capitalism goes crazy.  Markets melt down.  Some capital owners get dinged but most capitalists do well.  Meanwhile consumers take it on the chin.  CEOs still pull down healthy checks but blue collars are standing in welfare lines.

Capitalism is under attack.

What to do?

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce decides to launch a campaign to defend capitalism.  Only one problem.  People think capitalism sucks.  Capitalism is greed.

So what do like? They like “free”!  Specifically, free enterprise.

“Free” is so much more compelling than the “enterprise.”  Capitalism is dead.  Long live free enterprise.

Only one caveat.

What then are enterprises “free” to do?  Anything?

Isn’t that capitalism?

Blogging and the todo list blues …

It has been a month.

An the JuiceBar just sat there.  Staring at me.  Staring at everyone.  Doing nothing.  Just sitting there.

to-do-list-nothingLike the towel rack in the first floor bathroom that fell off its delicately secured latches sometime during the winter that you always said you were going to put back …

Or the mildewed lumber stacked up in the back yard that you’ve been meaning to cut up and set out for next Monday’s trash pickup ..

Or the retirement account that you’ve been meaning to rebalance …

Or the stack of New Yorker magazines that you’ve been meaning to read …

Or the dental appointment that you had to cancel and never found time to reschedule …

Or the work project that you know would only take 30 minutes and would have great return but you’re never able to get to …

Or the personnel reviews at work that you still haven’t filed, because you still haven’t done them …

Or the thank you notes that were written several times in your imagination but never were able to make it to your hands and on paper …

Or the meaningful talks that you wanted to have with people you love but somehow never took place …

And the promises you never kept.

Well, it is never too late.

Creating a sense of urgency

Creating a sense of urgency in your life leads to success.  And there’s a study out that proves it.  A good friend of mine, Greg Schneiders, recently sent to me a NYTimes story about a study on the issue of motivation, fear, and something economists call “loss avoidance.”

The question is this — when your back is up against the wall and you MUST do something or risk losing, are you better at doing what you do than when you simply have an opportunity and CAN do something to win.

national-lampoon-73For the Wharton professors, question was this:  “All other things being equal, is there a difference between a putt for a par and a putt for a birdie?”  For folks not skilled in the rules and scoring of golf, a par is the number of shots set as a “standard” for a particular hole.  A “birdie” is one less than par.  So a hole that is set on the scorecard as a “par 4” is a hole that you’re expected to complete in four strokes or shots.  If you do it in three, that’s a birdie.

Back to the question.  Is there any difference between a 4 foot birdie putt and a 4 foot par putt?

Apparently there is.  According to the study:

Even the world’s best pros are so consumed with avoiding bogeys that they make putts for birdie discernibly less often than identical-length putts for par, according to a coming paper by two professors at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. After analyzing laser-precise data on more than 1.6 million Tour putts, they estimated that this preference for avoiding a negative (bogey) more than gaining an equal positive (birdie) — known in economics as loss aversion — costs the average pro about one stroke per 72-hole tournament, and the top 20 golfers about $1.2 million in prize money a year.

What does that mean?  It means that faced with two identical putts — one for birdie and one for par — the pros are more likely to make the par putt because they have to and miss the birdie putt because … well … because they can.  According to  Justin Leonard:

“When putting for birdie, you realize that, most of the time, it’s acceptable to make par. When you’re putting for par, there’s probably a greater sense of urgency, so therefore you’re willing to be more aggressive in order not to drop a shot. It makes sense.”

So there it is … the key phrase … “a greater sense of urgency.”

Reminds me of the National Lampoon cover.  If you don’t buy this magazine then I’ll shoot the dog.

A greater sense of urgency.

So don’t get fat and comfortable.  You’ll miss the putt.

Create a greater sense of urgency … we’ll all perform better.

Finding Out that Your Professor Was a Spy

The name sounded so familiar.  It was the Walter that threw me off.  I didn’t know any Walter Meyers.

Ever find out something about someone way after you knew them that really threw you for a loop?  More to the point, find out something that was happening to someone way back when and you NEVER knew what he or she was going through?

Welcome Kendall Meyers, the newly discovered Cuban spy.

Kendall was my European Studies professor at Johns Hopkins SAIS.  Now I find out he was a spy.  Not only that, it appears that we was being “turned” – isn’t that what they call it? – right when I was studying and working with him back in the early 1980s.

My, my, my.

spy-vs-spy-without-bombs-775529Here’s how I rememer Kendall.

He had a more-than-slight resemblance of Donald Sutherland.  He was tall and lanky and bearded.  He spoke in well-rounded words with a certain intensity and glee that got young minds excited.  He was extremely curious with a razor-sharp logicians’ reckoning that meant you had better thought a few moves ahead if you were going to make a challenge.  I remember him to be kind, but firm.  He didn’t hide his liberal views (this was the first Reagan Administration) but I didn’t find him militant or bitter — only challenging.  He’d be the guy who’d have that “challenge authority” bumper sticker on his car.

He loved the Zebra Lounge off Mass Ave. which he would constantly remind us has the best pizza / beer combination in Washington DC.

But most of all I remember his curiosity and his emotion.  He was the type of instructor (I can’t remember whether he was working on his PhD or had just finished with David Calleo) that would ask you why you thought something and seemed to really  be interested in the answer you gave.  He would be the one to say “I’m curious why you say that.”  But he’d also be the one who’d as passionately simply say that the conclusion you’ve come to is wrong.  And say that with a zeal and conviction — but no malice! – that betrayed a passion in convictions.

That was the Kendall I knew at SAIS.

I had plenty of professors at SAIS that I suspected as a spy.  But I suspected them all of working for the CIA.

How odd that Kendall would be Castro’s eyes and ears in Washington.

Books and covers.  A reminder of all the secrets we keep.

Quote of the Day

Folks who have followed the JuiceBar know that I’ve a love/hate relationship with social media.

I love it. It is wild, dynamic, open, refreshing, democratic, transparent, exciting … and just plain fun.

nothing-blackI hate it. It is elusive, confounding, over-hyped, out-of-control and overwhelming.

So here’s my quote of the day from Brian Mazzaferri, the lead singer of I Fight Dragons from a great story by Walin Wong of the Chicago Tribune.

“There’s so many things you can do online that make you feel you’re doing something, when in reality you’re doing nothing.”

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve thought the same.

Then something happens.  You get curious.

And you say to yourself … log on one more time!