Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Thursday, December 17th, 2009
Lyrics for The Spirit of Football theme song, written by an English songwriter living in Erfurt, Germany, who wants to remain anonymous (how’s that for a change?), who has donated the song to the SOF project.

FANS WILL BE FRIENDS
The ball is in motion …
The ball has been set free …
This ball crosses borders …
Suddenly we feel …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Borders can be broken …
With words never spoken …
The ball is the ball, my friend …
The language everybody speaks …
Fans will be friends, my friends …
Playing football in the streets …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A child reaches forth …
Another child calls …
Dusty streets, the sound of running feet,
Suddenly applause …
Cobbled roads and stones as posts …
In different towns, on different coasts
A grinning face …
A lively joke …
These little things they give us hope …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Borders can be broken …
With words never spoken …
The ball is the ball, my friend …
The language everybody speaks …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hands across the ocean …
Hands across the sea …
Hands greeting hands, my friends …
Singing songs is free …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Out of reach of sun’s morning rays …
In narrow winding alleyways …
On an old stone wall …
A chalk goal is drawn …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Borders can be broken …
With words never spoken …
The ball is the ball, my friend …
The language everybody speaks …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A spinning ball …
A child slips and falls …
… a dive, a save …
And almost scores …
A flick, a kick …
A simple trick …
A shot, a save …
The game’s the same …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Borders can be broken …
With words never spoken …
The ball is the ball, my friend …
The language everybody speaks …
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Anonymous, November 2009, Erfurt, Deutschland.
The song will be recorded in a studio in January by professional musicians (word is that it’ll be with a Ska/Reggae melody), and will be taught to and sung by schoolchildren along The Ball’s route to Johannesburg. The lyrics may get sung in different languages, but the game, the ball and music itself speak a universal language.
In the Networked World, it will be helpful for brands to find their ‘musical voice,’ and not just in a commercial jingle or a melodic slogan, but with a library of music that can stand on its own artistic merit and at the same time is in some way analogous to the brand.
Data alone cannot define structure or create meaning in the networked environment. It takes art to do it. Consequently, opportunities for musicians and artists of all stripes to align themselves with brands consistent with their art will be exponential. And the opportunities for socially-conscious entrepreneurs to define themselves as artists will be equally abundant.
Tags: Art, Branding, Content, English, Erfurt, Fans Will Be Friends, Games, Germany, Lyrics, Music, Narrative, Song, Spirit of Football, Theme
Posted in Communication, Education, Games, Gifts, Narrative, Themes, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, November 29th, 2009
I attend a session on Improvisation and Biomimicry conducted by Belina Raffy from the U.K. As if there’s any doubt that improvisation is the most natural thing in the world, consider these points from one of Belina’s slides:
1) Nature creates freedom within structure;
2) Nature recycles everything;
3) Nature rewards cooperation;
4) Nature demands local expertise;
5) Nature curbs excesses from within.
Yet how many organizations and brands attempt to circumvent biology? The new organizational model, as we point out at GameChangers, is more biological than mechanical. Only by embracing what is natural and biological can a networked organization stay in sync and in tune with its environment. Humans, are, after all, biological organisms, and participants in the Ecosystem, Gaia, God’s Plan, The Grand Experiment, or whatever you want to call it. It is our obligation to play along. Thank you Belina!
Tags: Behavior, Bellina Raffey, Biomimicry, Cooperation, Excess, Fundamentals, Improvisation, Issues, Nature, Organizational Model, Rules
Posted in Education, Environment, Fundamentals, Issues, Networked World, Themes, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, November 19th, 2009
Part of a series about the Applied Improvisation Network’s world conference, Portland, Nov 11-16, 2009:

OYF Panel Discussion with Intel's Zabel (second from r.), Nike's Dodge (third from r.) and the State of Oregon's Gardner (second from l.)
I am blown away by the work being done by Julie Huffaker, Gary Hirsch, Brad Robertson and OnYourFeet, with clients like Nike, Intel and the State of Oregon. The scope of their engagements, the value they create, and their ability to collaborate with their clients and speak the client lexicon is easy to see.
Karl Zabel (who today works with Nike but was a product manager at Intel at the time) hired OYF to train presenters for an Intel conference in Vegas in which lead engineers present new products to audiences of their peers. The program paid off with positive results for Zabel and his product team. Scores the audience gave presenters who’d had improvisation training left those who didn’t in the ditch. (my word for the outcome; he had Intelspeak for it…4.2 to 4.7 positive variance, e.g.)
One presenter, says Zabel, got up in front of the audience and impulsively tossed his entire PowerPoint presentation aside at the last second in favor of improvising his pitch. An audience numbed by days of PowerPoints loved the move, and this was reflected in scores that were well above the conference norm.
Interestingly, Zabel changed the game to help OYF’s work reflect its real value. Previously, scores for these presentations had been an aggregate number. They included a score for the catering, a score for the air conditioning, a score for the quality of the audio and projection…and oh yeah, a score for the actual presentation, let’s throw that into the mix, too, why not? Zabel convinced the scorekeepers to separate the presentation scores, which meant that weak presenters couldn’t compensate with good sushi. Improvisation for business offers objective criteria for performance, kudos to Karl for seeing it, and clearing the way for Intel to see it, too.
Shelly Dodge, head of Gobal Learning and Development for Nike, says that value creation for her training programs is “largely anecdotal.” This is an brand that knows itself and trusts its instincts. Dodge says OYF’s training helps bridge cultures within the company, particularly with many of its Asian employees, for whom improvisation can be a means to communicate more openly and get more in tune with the ‘just do it’ vibe of the brand. (Note to all orgs that want to be like Nike: Cross cultural communication is yet another area in which improvisation can bring immense value to a brand.)
Lucy Gardner, head of employee training for the State of Oregon, says that given all the layoffs and cutbacks the state government has experienced of late, OYF’s work gives people a much-needed time when they can laugh about something, and also keeps them engaged and thinking positive when there’s a lot of negative news in the network. Cheers to Lucy for understanding the good ROI the state gets on its investment in improvisation.
Any story that begins, “For the price of one television commercial…” has the potential to become a success story for improvisation in business.

Exercise in the OYF Workshop
Tags: Acronym, Communication, Humor, III, Intel, Invest In Improvisation, Karl Zabel, Las Vegas, Lucy Gardner, Nike, OnYourFeet, OYF, Portland, Presentations, Shelly Dodge, State of Oregon, Vegas
Posted in Branding, Coaching, Communication, Education, Sales, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, October 8th, 2009
The energy generated by the Creativity in Business Conference in Washington D.C. on Oct. 4 was, and continues to be, exhilarating. The conference was populated by people who are inquisitive, open to learning, and restless about solving problems of all kinds. It almost doesn’t matter what the problem is, if there’s a problem, these folks are interested in contributing to its solution.
I got to the location of the conference, Boston University’s Center for Digital Imaging Arts in Georgetown, at about 10:30 Sunday morning, in time to sit in on the last third of Paul Scheele’s session. When I got there, five participants were on stage wearing masks and funny hats and were juxtaposed with one another in interesting ways. I had fun playing catch-up, and trying to figure out what the scene was about. (It was about tapping into the unconscious mind for creative inspiration–and how to hold onto that, both individually and organizationally.)
I attended Dr. Win Wenger’s session on creative problem solving. He gave us a problem-solving exercise my friend Rasul Sha’ir and I did together. What the exercise revealed to Rasul and me is that there is a transition that takes place in your process if you ‘peel open’ a problem via relentless answering of a simple question like “How can I build strategic partnerships for my brand? ” In Dr. Wenger’s exercise, we spent 11 minutes answering the same question non-stop. It works! Rasul and I both experienced a transition in the way we were answering our questions. Our answers went from obvious and surfacey to unexpected and insightful. This occurred, for both of us, between 6 and 7 minutes into the exercise. We went from addressing what was outside of us, what we had little control over, for example the root causes of the problem, to answers that were more about what was within us, what we personally could do to help solve the problem. The problem is without. The solution is within.
Before the plenary session I visited briefly with Dr. Wenger. His name tag said “Win Win Win”. It was like getting to sit down with one of Disney’s Nine Old Men of animation, because the dude is a classic. He is so insightful, and has such a strong desire to be of service by helping people solve problems, particularly in the realm of sustainability, it was palpable, and I hope some of it rubbed off on me.
The event’s organizer, Michelle James of the Center for Creative Emergence, and I co-hosted the plenary session, which was attended by a majority of the 150 people at the Conference. I talked a lot. Maybe I shouldn’t have, but I was feeling it, and I expressed some things pretty well, I think. I reminded the audience that for many people in business, creativity is the enemy. I spoke about what we can do to help make creativity more accessible to individuals and teams who spend most of their time in their left brains. For one thing, we can point out how a creative move can always be a very short step from the status quo. It does not have to be a quantum leap or a masterstroke or a gamechanger.

Those attributes can only be ascribed after the fact, anyway. Creativity does not have to be outside any box. It does not have to go barefoot or bring its dog to work or inhabit a workstation lined with toy robots . Creativity is always present and accessible, and always right next to our self-conscious selves. As musicians say, there’s always a good note right next to a bad one.
I attended Michael Margolis’ session on authentic storytelling. This is a subject of which I never tire, and it is inspiring to be in a workshop with someone like Michael, who brings a sense of excitement and discovery to the subject. In one of the exercises, Frank Gruber and Jen Consalvo, who have a start-up called ThankfulFor, and I brainstormed ideas for their brand narrative. Not only did we come up with some fresh takes, Jen and I discovered we have a mutual friend in Jim Crosby. I texted Mr. Jim to that effect, and have since heard that he and Jen reconnected after a couple years of not being in touch. I’m ThankfulFor that.
Then came the GameChangers Workshop. Here’s what one of the attendees, Jennifer Lee, founder of Artizen Coaching in San Francisco, said about it:
Mike gave some great examples of companies who use improvisation principles to enhance their business success and facilitated exercises to help us embody the learning:
* Companies tend to focus on the successful outcome. They try to re-create the next innovative product/outcome but fail because they really should’ve tried to institutionalize the successful process. The game is the process.
* Mike defines games as engines for exploring the theme of your narrative. They help create focus and discipline and they energize and invite team members to perform. Good games attract the good players.
* He had us play with the improvisation principles directly by inviting us to co-create a message around a random thing. It was amazing to see what our group came up with to market cookware. It was even more fun to get up in front of the room and “perform” it!
* Improvisation asks us to be very present with each other and to look for what we can build on. What a great way to leverage creativity in the workplace.
Thanks, Jenn, thanks Michelle and everyone at the Conference. Even if we didn’t get a chance to meet personally, we are now only a degree away.
Tags: Center for Digital Imaging Arts, Creativity, Creativity in Business Conference, Frank Gruber, GameChangers, Georgetown, Jen Consalvo, Jennifer Lee, Jim Crosby, Michael Margolis, Michelle James, Paul Scheele, Problem Solving, Rasul Sha'ir, Storytelling, ThankfulFor, Win Wenger
Posted in Coaching, Creativity, Education, Entrepreneurship, Games, Issues, Narrative, Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
Monday, August 17th, 2009
In 2006, newspapers took in $49.5 billion in advertising. In 2008, it was about $38 billion, a 23% decline.
After losing 42% of their value between 2005 and the end of 2007, publicly traded newspaper stocks lost 83% of their remaining value during 2008.
Most surveys show that 13,000+ U.S. newspaper jobs vanished in 2008.
In 2007, 70% of college Communication and Journalism majors had jobs six months after graduation. In 2008, 60% did.
No doubt about it, the print journalism profession as we’ve known it is fading fast, and its future is as hazy as the crystal ball of a boardwalk fortune teller.
So why put stock in university students who, in these uncertain times, choose to major in Journalism?—as opposed to, say, the point of view expressed in Sarah Lacy’s smug, self-congratulatory April 09 TechCrunch story that disses journalism schools and anyone majoring in journalism these days.
Here’s why we ought to be bullish on Journalism majors:
1. They’re optimists. Feeling good about the future is the first step toward making it so.
2. They’re self-reliant. They realize there’s no ready-made career track waiting for them at the end of the diploma. Their career will be one they carve out for themselves.
3. They’re creative. They’re putting themselves in a position where they have no choice but to be creative. Some of the most creative people I know have used this strategy throughout their careers to grow and prosper.
4. They’re following their fear. Garrison Keillor, the writer and radio host, once told me that he built his career by “doing the thing that scared him most.” Majoring in Journalism is a bold move in the face of a fearsome job market. On the other side of your fear is potential you cannot discover until you do the thing that scares you.
5. They’re entrepreneurial. An entrepreneur sees opportunity where others do not. Something in these Journalism majors relishes the wave of negative news coming from the marketplace, because it means they can position themselves at the bottom of the market to ride it up.
Educators at the University level, many of them celebrated veterans of old school journalism, share their students’ appetite for the unknown:
Kevin Klose, Dean of the University of Maryland Journalism School, admits he doesn’t know where people will get their news in coming years. “It’s like the early days of radio,” he says. “There was a tremendous amount of feverish invention, trial and error that went on in the 1920s and 1930s. The outlets or platforms are unclear now — they’re being invented.”
Klose describes himself as a “participant in an ongoing experiment” to find formats for independent journalism.
Geneva Overholser, a Pulitizer Prize-winning editor and journalist, who today is director of the School of Journalism at USC, says, “We seem to feel the only way we can work is to work the way we’ve always done it. That’s just not true. We will ride these yearnings for the past right down the tube.” She sees her work as an exploration that will lead to “a reinvention of journalism that is richer and better than the old.”
Raymond Roker, founder and publisher of URB, a print and online publication dedicated to hip-hop and urban culture, believes that the calling of journalism is the one constant in a changing business environment. “The allure,” he tweeted in a 137-character response to my question, “is wht it’s always bn–regardless of the dramatic changes in the economy of media–to develop, explore & lead the conversation.”
Roker tweet #2: “The quality of our journalism, in whatever form it takes in a post-print world, will remain a barometer of how informed we are as a society.”
Any brand would be wise to include journalism majors in its conversations about What’s Next and Whom to Hire. There are lot of reasons why these students, in particular, will be productive players in the changing game.
Tags: Careers, Change, Communication, Entrepreneurship, Geneva Olberhoser, Journalism, Journalism School, Kevin Klose, University of Maryland, University of Pennsylvania, USC
Posted in Communication, Education, Entrepreneurship, Leadership, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Saturday, July 4th, 2009
A memory is only as good as our ability to turn it into action. We remember what we want to keep alive.
It has never been more important than it is on July 4, 2009, that we remember the founding of the United States of America as a Revolution, an overthrow of a distant ruling elite that had lost touch with the people.
Because today we need another Revolution.
We need a revolution against the kinds of businesses the U.S. has invested in way too heavily for the past 125 years, the businesses that sustained the oil-and-war economy built by people like George W. Bush’s granddad, businesses that President Eisenhower in the 1950s labeled the military-industrial complex. Today the news media is complicit in the complex. After all, what is more likely to keep you glued to the feeding tube than something scary happening right outside your front door? (more…)
Tags: 2009, Business, Change, Environment, George W. Bush, Green, Growth, Harry Reid, Indpendence Day, Innovation, John Boehner, July 4, legislation, Mitch McConnell, Nancy Pelosi, Obama, Revolution, Sustainability, Themes
Posted in Branding, Coaching, Communication, Creativity, Education, Entrepreneurship, Environment, Focus, Games, Innovation, Narrative, Speed, Themes, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009
Today, Earth Day, at 1:30 PDT at the Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood, a group of five people, including me, will meet with the ten members of the Hollywood Sign Trust to propose the installation of solar paneling on the Hollywood Sign. I can’t think of a better or quest for Earth Day than this one.
‘Solar Paneling the Hollywood Sign’ exemplifies what we at GameChangers call a productive game. Here’s how the game has played out before today… (more…)
Tags: Deep Patel, Disney, El Capitan, Joe Greczkowiak, LaBonge, Myra Vides, Paraquat Kelley, Productive Game, Rafael Quezada, Solar Paneling the Hollywood Sign, Trust, Weitzer
Posted in Environment, Games, Initiations, Innovation, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Sunday, January 11th, 2009
Over the holidays, our friend Dean Read, the national sales director for RedDot, loaned us his copy of Young@Heart, an outstanding British-produced documentary about a singing group of old folks from Massachusetts who inspire audiences by rocking out on young songs. Formed by its musical director, Bob Cilman, in 1982, the group originally sang lots of old standards, but has steadily gotten younger with its music over the years. In their concerts today, they perform numbers by the likes of the Talking Heads, The Clash, and Coldplay. The film deservedly got a lot of attention when it was released in 2008. (more…)
Tags: Bob Cilman, Coldplay, Community, David Byrne, Games, Massachusetts, Music, Narrative, Outcomes, Productive Game, Seniors, Sundance, Talking Heads, The Clash, Themes, Young@Heart
Posted in Branding, Coaching, Games, Gifts, Initiations, Narrative, Themes, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Monday, January 5th, 2009

Taylor Davidson had a good job as a product developer and strategist for one of the large financial services institutions that didn’t get swamped by the ‘Butchers in Crazy Town’ scene that characterized many such companies in 2008. His employer did everything in its power to get him to stay. Flex time. More money. They gave him the license to work from anywhere he wanted. But finally, he knew he had to hit the road. There were too many conversations, too many sights and inspirations that he would not experience if he confined himself to the role he was playing. So in November, with no particular route in mind, and a general idea of arriving on the West Coast, Taylor changed the game. He left the safety net of Richmond, Virginia, for the uncertainty of gallivanting cross-country. (more…)
Tags: Charlotte, conversations, cross-country, December 2008, Entrepreneurship, Ethan Bauley, failure, financial services, GameChanger of the Month, Gen-Why?, Improvisation, Innovation, Learning, Obama Inauguration, Taylor Davidson, trek, Unstructured Thoughts
Posted in Character, Creativity, Education, Entrepreneurship, Games, Narrative, Networked World, Speed, Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008
Our November GameChanger of the Month selection was a slam dunk. Barack Obama is going to be America’s first baller president, and he’s going to be its first Improviser-in-Chief.
His and his team’s ability to improvise their way to an election victory against rivals who were, initially, much better funded, more networked and more familiar brand names proved beyond any doubt how skillful improvisation can change the game. Obama is the epitome of what it means to be a gamechanger. (more…)
Tags: Barack Obama, Chicago, Economy, Follow the Follower, GameChanger of the Month, Hyde Park, Improvisation, Inauguration, Innovation, Lincoln, Listening, McCain, November 2008, Palin
Posted in Agreement Principle, Branding, Casting, Character, Communication, Creativity, Education, Entrepreneurship, Focus, Fundamentals, Group Mind, Innovation, Listening, Narrative, Networked World, Objectives, Themes, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »