Posts Tagged ‘Networked World’

Pheromone Engine

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

GameChangers is a pheromone engine.

Pheromones are chemical triggers given off by animals, humans included, usually in the form of scents that induce certain kinds of behavior such as flight, sexual arousal, aggression, passion, and the herd instinct.  Researchers have done a lot of work with pheromones in small animals–bees, bugs, moths, rabbits and so on, and surprisingly little with human beings.  The one human study cited by Wikipedia is about menstruation cycles syncing up via pheromones, and there are a number of perfumes and colognes on the market that claim to put sex pheromones into play, but that’s about it. (more…)

Mass Animation

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

MassAnimation1Facebook, with sponsorship support from Intel and AutoDesk, is hosting an online collaboration called Mass Animation designed to produce a short animated film entitled Live Music directed by Yair Landau (The Chub Chubs), about the ‘unlikely’ romance between a guitar and a violin. Now, absolving the story itself of criticism except to say that it’s like something Disney would’ve done in the 1940s, or Pixar in the 1980s, the noteworthy aspect of this project is the distributed production model.

The production of animation, as I have long maintained, will point the way toward new models for production for all sorts of products and brands, just as television animation led the way in outsourcing manufacturing to Asia in the early 1980s, ten years before American industry embraced the model en masse. How it works is going to be a key to the creation of jobs and the generation of new wealth in the networked economy. (more…)

Best Answer #1

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

I sometimes answer business-related questions on LinkedIn that can be addressed with the principles of improvisation. This is one in a series of responses that was deemed ‘Best Answer’ by the questioner…

THE QUESTION: How do you feel about your career?

In June 2000, I felt incredibly “not good” about my job working as account manager for a firm voted as one of the 50 best managed firms in Canada. Even though I was surrounded by wonderful coworkers and supported by the best boss I ever had, I felt intuitively, without being able to explain it, that I was not in my “right” place.

So I committed what could only be called “career suicide” and began an exciting journey to find my true self. Took me 5 years to figure out I truly wanted to become a creative knowledge writer!

What I’ve learned is that one’s inner guidance (which is mostly emotional) cannot fail. Hence, my question above. (more…)

Heather Champ, Improviser

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

HeatherChamp2BHeather Champ, the Director of Community for Flickr, was the subject of Chris Colin’s Sept 29 On the Job blog on SFGate. Ethan Bauley, social networking entrepreneur for the online marketing company, M80, sent me the link, as he often does when business improvisation makes news.

Heather Champ and her team at Flickr improvise for a living. A big part of their job, according to the article is deciding whether certain photos belong in Flickr or not. The guidelines are not etched in stone. In fact, aside from a few Flickresque sayings like ‘Don’t forget the children,’ guidelines hardly exist at all. Rulings by Champ and her team arise more from the dialogue they have about an issue than from strict black-and-white policies. Policies are riffs on a theme; the rules of the game can change from scene to scene. (more…)

Vaillancourt’s List 3.0

Monday, September 15th, 2008

 height=The extraordinary improviser and improv theater teacher, Paul Vaillancourt, gave me a list of sayings compiled and passed around the improv community over the years. Legendary teachers Mick Napier and Del Close get some of the credit, though the exact origins of most of these are as hazy as the roots of any folk wisdom. Here are a few of the sayings from what I call ‘Vaillancourt’s List’, with my comments following. As you go about your business, keep these concepts in play: (more…)

Entrepreneurs Improvise

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

To introduce her students to the concept of improvisation, Viola Spolin, the godmother of modern improv, used to summon half a dozen students onto the rehearsal stage, and then say nothing to them. Literally nothing. No direction. No reason for them to be there.

Nothing.

Nothing…

Still nothing… (more…)

‘App’rovisation

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

ComputerWorld.com runs an interesting piece, Five Web 2.0 App Dev Lessons for Enterprise IT, this week by Heather Havenstain about how an agile approach to application development permits an almost constant evolution of feature sets that are in line with users’ needs and suggestions. Dynamic scripting languages like Ruby, Perl and Python (sounds like a hoochie-coochie act at the 1908 Chicago World’s Fair, don’t it?) short-cut long lines of code, letting developers be faster, more creative and more flexible with their work. ‘Permanent beta’ the article calls it.

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The ComputerWorld article underscores yet again how vital improvisation is to business in the Networked World — after all, what is improvisation if not ‘agile development’? The article also shows how ‘performance’ in business does not refer solely to folks standing up and holding forth in front of other folks. Apps are performance for an audience, too. The Five App Dev Lessons cited by ComputerWorld are straight from the improvisers’ playbook. Here they are. Our comments are in italics: (more…)

Context is King

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

June, 1985: At a conference on film financing, a banker from First Boston asks a crowd of film industry executives to name the most valuable thing in the movie business. None of them have the answer she’s looking for, an answer that was prescient at the time, and never more relevant than it is today. “The most valuable thing in the movie business,” the banker informs them, “is 52 weekends a year.” In the banker’s opinion, it is the film studios’ ability to capitalize on the 52 yearly opening weekends that determines their status in the marketplace. Not long after the banker makes this observation, the Weekend Boxoffice Report begins appearing for the first time in newspapers around the country. For better or worse, who ‘wins the weekends’ becomes a new metric for a film’s success, a new context for audiences to consider, and a driver of a film’s revenue in ancillary markets.

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In the Networked World, as the costs of producing media and other forms of intellectual property dwindle, and your blog about your dog has the potential to reach as many people as Maureen Dowd’s column in the New York Times, the big business opportunities for brands and entrepreneurs are not so much in the creation of content, but in creating and owning context. (more…)

Three Business Scenes Analyzed

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Scene #1: Bad Games in the U.K. According to the BBC, criminal fraud cases in the U.K. are up by 14% in 2008 over 2007. The top crooked games are boiler room scams, credit card fraud, tax cheating and identify theft. The Beeb says the total yearly cost to victims is over 504 billion Euro. Analysis: First of all, it’s a statistic, so there are several ways it can be read. Maybe cheating is up, but it’s just as likely prosecution is up 14% while crime remained steady. Or maybe crime has dropped by 5% but prosecution is up 19%. And this is the crime we know about. Maybe the crime we don’t know about is up 200%. Who can tell? We don’t know about it. My guess, just from what we’re learning daily about the games the financial industry has been playing, is that crime we don’t know about is hockey-sticking. (more…)

Neologizing

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

As the Networked World continues to define and influence the business environment, there is a need, evolving in parallel, for language to describe the new memes. The website Wordspy, which came to my attention courtesy of my friend Elif Beall of Brand Neutral, does a great job of crawling the web for fresh lexicon. As a longtime Thesaurus junkie with a Scrabble habit, I found Wordspy to be a very cool resource. So maybe a Scrabbler can’t score with words like ‘requel’ (a film that shares subject matter with previous films in a series) or ‘staycation’ (a stay-at-home vacation). There’s a river of language flowing through the Networked World. Wordspy helps keep it fresh.

Wordspy1

Wordspy inspired me to coin a few words myself, to describe concepts and behaviors that currently (that I know of) have no word of their own: (more…)