May 122011
 

I found two great articles in my Twitter feed this week that really struck home for me.

Over the past decade, I have prided myself on how busy I am multi-tasking and having a calendar booked solid. My hard work has paid off as I successfully progressed in my career, learned many new things and served my team and customers to the best of my ability.

But … with this self imposed hectic/chaotic pace, I have seen my commitment to fitness deteriorate, my personal and family life being compromised all for the sake of working harder (not necessarily smarter).

The first article I came across was retweeted by the American Management Association (@AMAnet):

#Leadership & White Space. (RT @mikemyatt) #Management | http://ow.ly/4Rn8i

Mike Myatt (@MikeMyatt) started the article Leadership and Whitespace with a great quote:

I don’t care how busy you are, but I do care about what you accomplish – the former doesn’t always lead to the latter.

After reading the article about creating “white space” in my calendar, I took some time to think about how I could go about doing this. It’s not easy when you have grown up in a management culture of “do more with less” and “deliver, deliver, deliver”.  When I started the management role of my team of 22 analysts, I deliberately chose to take a “servant leadership” approach that focused on setting direction, empowering my team and then managing the inevitable roadblocks, politics and priority changes that come along the way. So do I have an answer today … no but I am committed to work on it.

The first reader comment on Mike’s post was from Tanveer Naseer (@TanveerNaseer) who wrote the second article I mentioned – Learning to Appreciate the White Spaces.  Tanveer provided four reasons to create white spaces:

  1. Provides opportunities for contemplation and review
  2. Shifts our decision making from reflexive reactions to measured, deliberate responses
  3. Allows you to address those unanticipated issues without penalizing other tasks
  4. Even machines need maintenance/repair

These are great guides and really challenge me to rethink my approach to work.  Thank you @MikeMyatt and @TanveerNaseer, you both have given me new insights on how to be a better leader and manager.

ps: For the social media naysayers, this is yet another powerful reason that I believe Twitter is an essential part of my professional and personal development!

Apr 272010
 

Millennial, Metrics and the New Media – John Della Volpe (@dellavolpe)

Millenials are a Big Deal

  • Millenials = 13 to 30 year olds, they are the largest generation in human history and they have a significant impact on the economy
  • This generation has trust issues – especially with traditional media and old institutions and they are not afraid to let you know it.
  • They trust a recommendation from a friend 4x as much as TV and email.
  • Connecting online was not a fluke, millennial’ brains are wired differently.
  • Gen X (latch key kids) – first generation where both parents are working. TV was the primary entertainer
  • Millennial (also latch key kids) – now the internet is the primary entertainer and they interact socially on the web
  • if not for Millennials, Hilary Clinton would be the president of the USA and not Barak Obama (e.g. Millenials voted for Obama 57% to 11% in Iowa) – Obama campaign targeted Millenials, Clinton did not

What are Millenials Thinking about today

  • Politics and Government (latest Harvard IOP Survey)
    • Obama’s job performance stable
    • Republicans eyeing midterm elections
    • US Military most trusted institutions surveyed
  • Economy
    • economic anxiety is palpable
    • majority concerned about keeping head above water
    • half of students concerned about staying in college
  • Service
    • millennials remain committed to community service

Stats on concern about keeping head above water 45% stay in college, 46% ability to live in the city they want, 56% afford health care, 58% affort a place to liver, 60% ability to pay bills

“The Facebook” and Social Media

  • Facebook is the 3rd largest country by population, China, India, Facebook, USA …
  • by next Jan 2011, there will be more people 50+ yo on facebook than <30 yo
  • http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/facebook.com for stats
  • Facebook is mainstream while Twitter skews younger

Mapping Your SocialSphere

  • ORBIT Map http://socialsphere.com
  • 4 categories of sites on the Internet – General News (traditional), Industry News, Social Frameworks (Networks), Blogs and Communities – target type graphic for College Applicants and their interaction with the 4 types

What has Changed in the Last 18 Months

  • College Confidential, College Prowler, Zinch – social ranking sites
  • YouTube is starting to become more relevant and influential – video is really taking off
  • good Facebook site are becoming the ‘state of practice”

We need to see more effort connecting parents of millennials

  • parents are seeking much more information than ever before
  • social software can help deliver information and messages to parents
  • at BCIT, we talk about “Helicopter Parents” – “they are always hovering around”
Nov 162009
 

This morning Jon Ayre (@EnterprisingA) tweeted:

#EAMantra (11) Failing to deliver perfection is not a crime. Failing to deliver is.

Something I totally agree with, especially if you have been following my blog and the theme of building an EA practice that delivers value using a virtual team.

Tyler Gooch (@tylergooch) then sent a response (Thank you Tyler!!) about The Cult of the Done by Bre Pettis and Kio Stark.  This is very cool stuff!  Here are the 13 statements:

The Cult of Done Manifesto

  1. There are three states of being. Not knowing, action and completion.
  2. Accept that everything is a draft. It helps to get it done.
  3. There is no editing stage.
  4. Pretending you know what you’re doing is almost the same as knowing what you are doing, so just accept that you know what you’re doing even if you don’t and do it.
  5. Banish procrastination. If you wait more than a week to get an idea done, abandon it.
  6. The point of being done is not to finish but to get other things done.
  7. Once you’re done you can throw it away.
  8. Laugh at perfection. It’s boring and keeps you from being done.
  9. People without dirty hands are wrong. Doing something makes you right.
  10. Failure counts as done. So do mistakes.
  11. Destruction is a variant of done.
  12. If you have an idea and publish it on the internet, that counts as a ghost of done.
  13. Done is the engine of more.

Brilliant stuff! I will be sharing this with my applications team tomorrow.

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