Archive for June, 2008

Are You A Creative Meathead

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Remember Archie Bunker’s description of what a Meathead
was on All in the Family?

Dead, from the neck up!

When it comes to creaivity, innnovation, coming up with
ideas that magically turn into money - are you alive?

Ever wonder how some of the big names in business are able to
continually come up with new, innovative product ideas,
marketing programs and publicity projects?

New ideas are the lifeblood of leaping to the top of your
field.

Without diving into the bowels of scientific theory, it
is absolutely true that to fuel creativity, your brain needs
new input.

Great ideas are not developed out of ether, but rather are
the result of multiple experiences, thoughts and knowledge
combining to trigger new offshoots.

The more you feed your brain, the more great ideas it will
reward you with.

Here’s a couple of tips to become more creative - even in
the busiest of lifestyles:

1. Get Tuned In. Notice everything around you and how
it could relate to your business. You will find that hundreds
of things pass us by each day because we are just not tuned
in. Live IN the moment - suck up everything. Feed your brain
and it will respond by automatically becoming more creative.

2. Break Your Rouine. Most of us follow a very regimented
routine (how we wake up, morning routine, route to work,
when we take breaks, etc…). Routine, while comforting,
lulls the mind into a sleepy blob - break routine and re-activate
you mind.

3. Believe you are Creative. Deep down, most of us believe
we are creatively inadequate. Using affirmations, meditation,
exercises, visualization - you can break down those beliefs.
Write positive statements about what you want to be and go over
them each and every day for 2-weeks - you’ll see results!

There are some great books on this topic - the best one I
come back to again and again is “Thinkertoys” by Michael Michalko,
you can pick it up on Amazon or through your local bookstore.

If you are looking for a resource to help you generate and test
ideas for your next information product, then we’ve put together
The Ultimate Information Entrepreneur’s Success Package” over at
http://www.infoproductcreator.com to help you do just that.

Turn Your Ideas Into High-Profit, Information Products You Can
Sell Online! Net’s Largest Online Resource Center For Information
Product Publishing Is Open To You Right Here:
http://www.highertrustmarketing.com

Tags: business idea, , , , , , creativity, innovation, Jeff Smith, online marketing, writing

Blackberries, Bluebonnets and Buttercups

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Today started out stressful but ended up stress-free even though it cost me two skinned knees and a torn off fingernail.

I’ve had a killer headache for the past 3 days, guess its allergies, but I haven’t been able to sleep worth a damn lately. As a result I woke up this morning in a foul mood to say the least. Got up late, couldn’t find anything to wear and I knew everything on my desk at work was “problem shit” that needed to be taken care. Yep, one of those days and it’s only Tuesday.

Headed off for work, rushed down the stairs of my apartment and as I stepped off the bottom step I looked down and realized I had on two different shoes. One brown oxford and one black pump. Nice. Had to go all the way back up two flights of stairs and change one of the shoes. (Stress levels up already).

Long story short, the day was crappy, everybody was a jerk (couldn’t possibly be me) everyone had to have everything yesterday, etc, etc. By 5 o’clock I was a raw nerve. If I was a drinking person today I would have been a drinkin’. Heavily.

Got home and at least my little dog Benji was happy to see me. I take him for a walk everyday so today I thought I’d walk farther and longer, maybe work off some of this tension. We went outside the apt complex this time and down by the bayou. I couldn’t believe all the bluebonnets and buttercups! How beautiful! I’d never noticed them before but the entire side of the bayou is covered in them! Benji’s never seen a buttercup before so he stuck his nose in a few of them and sniffed, he turned around and grinned at me with a yellow nose. He looked so cute I couldn’t help but laugh (stress level going down a notch). We kept walking along and I decided I’d go down the concrete incline of the bayou down near the water, maybe see some fish or a frog or something.

We were walking on the cement along beside the water and as we got near the bridge of the overpass I saw some blackberry vines covered in big juicy blackberries! I love blackberries, I didn’t even know it was blackberry season. I started picking and eating berries right off the vine. I haven’t done that since I was a kid, this is great! (stress level way down). I didn’t have anything to put the berries in so I just put them in my mouth, I’m sure I looked like a little chipmunk with my cheeks full of berries, they were so good! Benji didn’t care for them though. I suddenly realized I was under the bridge alone. Totally out of eyesight and earshot of anyone. It was creepy. I looked up in the eaves of the bridge where homeless people sometimes sleep but I couldn’t see anything but shadows. What if some crazy homeless person was up there watching me? I just got really creeped out. Time to go home Benji, right now.

I was at the bottom of a sloped incline of concrete. I could hear the cars going by above, but I couldn’t see them and they couldn’t see me. I started running up the incline towards to top of the bayou to get back into public view again, but when your 45 years old it’s not easy running uphill. I started hearing footsteps running behind me. So I ran faster and the footsteps sped up too. Shit, I knew it. Some crazy drunk bum is after me. I was eating his berries and now I’m gonna die for it. Just before I got to the top where someone could see me I tripped, landing hard on my hands and knees. I still had a hold of Benji’s leash so when I fell my pinky finger was crushed under my weight and most of my nail got torn off. I just sit there for a minute waiting for the jolt of pain to wear off. I slowly looked behind me and nothing. No bum, nobody was chasing me. Just quiet. I sat up and both my knees were skinned and bleeding but nothing serious. My pinky nail was ripped and bleeding a little. I slapped the cement with the end of Benji’s leash. Damn it that hurts. I heard an echo. When I realized the footsteps I heard were my own I started laughing. I guess the echo of my footsteps were bouncing off the steal beams and concrete underneath the road above.

I still had a mouth full of berries and I was laughing so hard berry juice was running down my chin. If anyone, bum or otherwise saw me they would have ran like hell, I looked like the deranged crazy person. Benji was sprawled out in the grass in the sun a few feet away on his back just looking at me. I’m glad I was completely shaded under the bridge so my neighbors couldn’t see me, though they would have gotten a good laugh. I swallowed my berries, got up and dusted off my knees best I could, wiped the berry juice off my chin and headed home with my blue stained teeth.

The day started stressful and ended painful but it took my mind off the tension I was feeling, physical pain has a way of doing that. Sort of puts things in perspective. At least I can laugh about it now. I think sometimes God gives us a friendly reminder saying “hey, it’s not that bad, get over it!”

Alice Conwell, owns and writes for http://resource99.com

Tags: funny stories, , stress stories

It’s Not All About Cheese The Missing Component in Employee Development (Part 2)

Monday, June 30th, 2008

In part one of this article I told you about how perceptions are changing in the workplace. In part two, I want to tell you more about the “Merge Point Method” and how it helps you create training programs that lead to stronger collaboration between individuals and teams.

The Wrong Focus

It is fascinating that the first thing we do when identifying human resources needs is list the job skills for the position (cognitive and technical). But when given the choice between two equally qualified applicants we tend to choose based on their level of “personal maturity”. Traits like self-confidence and other characteristics (like guiding awareness of values, goal orientation, awareness of their strengths and weaknesses, evidence of self-development, decisiveness, etc.). We say that we choose the best fit for the team or the company culture.

What we really mean is that we found traits in that person that really appealed to us. Traits that sometimes aren’t clear or tangible. We just like them based on their personality and character. You just know that you want people like that in your department and your company. We choose our friends, softball teammates, and our mate similarly; perceiving a connection and an attitude that supports collaboration.

Incidentally, as we base our decisions to hire people solely on skill or technical competence, we also resort to the same thinking to correct unexpected behavior (diversity training, disciplinary action, and sometimes termination). Yet, fewer employees are fired for not knowing their job than for problems like: lack of trust and motivation, failure to adapt, lack of initiative in work performance, and apathy towards customers. The same can be said about thousands of failed marriages in the United States. The number of divorces filed under dissolution of marriage increases at an astonishing rate every year. And it isn’t because they lack marriage skills. The shortcomings are in their lack of personal skills; skills necessary for resolving problems.

So if the problem is so obvious; if our inability to collaborate is the result of a lack in personal and social skills, then why aren’t we addressing the problem at the source? Perhaps it is because of our insistence in applying quick intellectual fixes to our collaboration problems. One of my favorite quotes by Fyodor Dostoyevsky reads, “It is not the brains that matter most, but that which guides themthe character, the heart, generous qualities, progressive ideas.” I find myself talking with clients about things like generosity, courtesy, and respect, which I know our culture promotes, but seldom ever talks about in the workplace. I emphasize that customers won’t care about web design, slogans, or product features (and employees won’t care about your tactics and business initiatives) until they are clear about your values and until they trust your character.

Teaching People to “Fake It”

We have been teaching employees for the last 20 years to fake their way through collaborating with others. We have forced them into an irrational pattern of isolating who they truly are and behaving by the law of the “corporate land”. But the idea of separating personal values from corporate behavior is hypocritical at best; irrational for sure. We do it most often by teaching “teamwork” but not the character that drives sincere collaboration; by asking employees to embrace innovation, but quenching the emotional qualities behind “being” innovative. We tell employees to “care” for customers, but do not teach them empathy. Our marketing and advertisement tells people that our company is “world-class”, while employees walk out the back door to work for the competition. We talk big, but the heart of your customer service and retention strategies is missing the same component that has been missing from the heart of your employee development strategies for a long time: heart-felt service.

Tactics, technical skills, and expertise are only a part of what will make your company succeed. Interpersonal ineptitude is killing companies (even with the best products and services in the market). It is degrading performance, it is corroding motivation and commitment, building hostility and apathy, and subsequently it is preventing us from growing as human beings.

We have created a culture where people act with the same disregard for each other as they do on the road. It is a pattern of pushing mission statements based on goals instead of on values; explaining integrity instead of exemplifying it; assigning responsibilities without promoting accountability; expecting good service instead of heart-felt, giving service; demanding trust instead of earning it.

Building a MERGE Training Program

So, if you are serious about building a training program that has a strong values framework, let me suggest that you use the Merge Point Method to create it. At a minimum, include training that addresses:

1. Mission based on Values: Individuals can build a common mission based on shared values. Even in cultures driven by conflict, values can serve as the foundation for every interaction. Working from a platform of common values is not enough, though. People should also learn to become aware of their behavior (their “driving strategies”), understanding the impact of their agreements with others, and dealing with conflict when there is a lack of alignment between values and behavior.

2. Exemplifying Integrity: Explaining integrity is different from exemplifying it. Teach people what integrity looks like and they will know the right behaviors to emulate. Integrity is living by your values and managing risk. It is demonstrating consistency of values-driven behavior and building a safe environment to practice those values. Integrity is about the agreements you make with yourself and about clearly defining the right attitudes and actions to pursue, even if you have to make personal sacrifices to behave appropriately. People who behave with integrity not only act in accordance with their values, but also communicate that they are acting according to them.

3. Responsibility with Accountability: There are two aspects of daily behavior and collaboration that need definition: responsibility and accountability. Start by ensuring that people understand their roles; your expectations for what they do and how they do it. Then teach them to develop a sense of ownership that leads to accountability. This includes understanding ownership, rewarding accountability, and describing liability for blind-spots.

4. Giving Service: Beyond our practices for providing great customer service to internal and external customers is another criterion for service: developing a servant’s heart. Quality service is a great goal that improves our relationship with customers and helps them feel rewarded for doing business with you. But when you go beyond the practice and tap into the “heart” of service you develop genuine service orientation. Incorporate the ideas of reliability, credibility, responsiveness, and empathy into your training program.

5. Earned Trust: Build a program where trust is earned rather than automatically expected based on title, position, or experience. Edward Marshall, in his book “Building Trust At The Speed of Change”, identifies something called “The Transaction-Based Organization”. Within the Transaction-Based Organization, the emphasis is on fear and blame with no willingness to take risk. People are nice, but not honest. Groups of people form conflicting turfs based on their mutual struggles. Competing cultural norms are based on negative drivers like control, power, and self-promotion rather than positive drivers like openness, honesty, trust, and service. As a result, individuals create false or unclear expectations and behavior which they feel powerlessness to address. The first four components of MERGE will help you defeat the “transaction-based” mentality. But you should incorporate the definition of trust and methods for gaining / regaining it into your training program.

If you strive for excellence in every aspect of your life, you are probably already practicing many of the principles taught by MERGE. The principles are nothing new. They are simply organized to give you a fresh perspective in achieving collaboration in work and personal life. You have the unique opportunity to make a difference where you live and work by practicing these principles and by training every member of your company to practice MERGE. Amidst the frustrations you experience every day, you can now make an educated decision to change the patterns that keep you from enjoying a successful life and career.

Julio Quintana is a writer and speaker based in Weston, Florida. Learn more about his practice and The Merge Point Method at http://www.merge-point.com

Tags: accountability, , , , , , , , , , ethics, integrity, Julio, leadership, mission, Quintana, service, trust, vision

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