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    Escape From Cubicle Nation

    Escape From Cubicle Nation is your personal key to freedom!  Like a weary soul who scraped, clawed and crawled his way across the desert in search of water, I smoked Pamela Slim's most excellent book in search of liberation.  From the tiny molecule in my soul who is standing atop the mountain screaming "no more bosses!" to my entire and collective soul who is getting dry heaves even thinking about Monday mornings, I simply cannot make a more heart felt and direct recommendation: Buy Pam's book today!

    Escape from cubicle nation

    Escape From Cubicle Nation is a treasure and as such, I will dip in and review parts of this book with care and reverence.  I will treat it like a fine wine or a seminal Clint Eastwood classic, to be sipped and reveled upon.

    Visit Pam's new format at Escape From Cubicle Nation for more info.

    April 30, 2009 in Books, Books-Smoked-n-Signed, Business Coaches, Change / Innovation, Culture, Design, Dream Jobs, Finding The Right Work, Life, Marketing, Most Excellent Writing, Personal Branding, What's Your Design?, Work, Writing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

    Learning From Books

    I wrote a book review of John Wooden's Wooden on Leadership over at Joyful Jubilant Learning. In the comments that followed, Rick Cecil and Rosa Say inquire about how Coach Wooden learned his lessons. Throughout the book Coach talks about lessons in leadership.  Rick and Rosa are asking, not what those lessons are, but how did he learn them in the first place.

    Rick and Rosa's question was a spark to a hungry, dry thought that had been bouncing around in my head for some time. The how answer is right there in the book.  This answer however, does not have a chapter devoted to it nor can it be found in a checklist, diagram or a set of bullet points.  The only way it can be found is if you are actually looking for it.  In Coach Wooden's case lessons are learned from his dad, coaches, players and opponents.  And they are learned through a process that the Coach developed, enhanced and fine tuned over the years. 

    The process of actually looking for how type answers is what has piqued my curiosity. If you are an Abstract-reader, Cliff Note, bullet point, cut-to-the-fact aficionado-type dude, stop here.  I will be wasting your time.

    Design Intent - I first learned of this term from the engineering world fifteen years ago.  What do you intend to build?  I love it!  How does the engineer's design intent match up to the project outcome?  (This gap was so horrific in my industry that a whole new profession was created by it).

    I approach learning from books with both design intent and design intent modified through the process by an open mind.

    Design Intent - When I first read Wooden on Leadership, I was a manager.  So I read the book with the intent on learning stuff to make me a better manager.  When I read it for the second time I was no longer a manager.  So I read it with the intention of developing my own personal leadership.  I learned, albeit separate lessons each time.

    Design Intent Modified - I'll use the book Ogilvy on Advertising as an example.  David Ogilvy was a big time, big company advertising legend-icon.  Popular thought might be that this book is targeted for upcoming advertising executives.  And it most certainly is.  But I am not.  I read the book with the intent on becoming a better writer.  As I journeyed through the book, I took David's lessons and modified to fit my own learning intent.  Another example is What Color is Your Parachute?  This book is targeted towards job seekers.  As a manager, I used the author's lessons to help me be a better interviewer.

    The second part of this last method involves allowing metaphors or similes to pull up a seat right next to your comfy reading chair.  You will not come close to enjoying the benefits of metaphorical learning if you approach the book with; GOTTA LEARN; GOTTA LEARN; GOTTA LEARN!  You need to be in a relaxed, anxiety free state.  Lets say an author is teaching a lesson on the difference between marketing and selling.  For this demonstration my author is Theodore Levitt.  According to Ted (from his book The Marketing Imagination):

    Selling focuses on the needs of the seller, marketing focuses on the needs of the buyer.

    In a parent-child relationship; do you sell or do you market?

    "Uhhh Dave?  What's that got to do with business?"

    Exactly my point!

    See?  If you were ripping through the book with the a blinders-on-GOTTA LEARN-mindset , you would have blown right past the opportunity to reflect on a very meaningful thought.

    Rich learning opportunities abound in books.  What is your design intent?

    March 28, 2009 in Books, Change / Innovation, Joyful Jubilant Learning, What's Your Design? | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

    What's Your Design? A Sense of Place

    What's your design?  Who is the person that you are today? 
    What's your design intent?  Who is the person that you will be tomorrow?

    We can define our design by way of our culture, family, education, work, friends, spirituality, leisure activities, sense of place, mind, body and soul.

    A Sense of Place

    A sense of place is our connection to the land.  We make this connection by what we see; by what we smell; by what we hear; by what we taste; by what we feel; by what we know; and by what we can know.  A sense of place becomes a living and breathing part of us when we become aware that it is there.  It has been with us our entire life.  As a kid did you play: On ballfields, in the woods, in a tree house, on the playgrounds?  As you became older did you: take picnics, go hiking, ride in a boat, cut your grass, paint your house...did you, do you, get in a car, plane, train or bus and go to work?  You've always been out and about the land. 

    A sense of place develops when we connect our awareness of the land to our senses and mind.  Do you remember as a kid visiting your relatives on the farm?  Do you remember the smells in the air... of the grass, animals and woods?  Do you remember the 49 Ford parked out behind the chicken coup?  The mouth-watering taste of Aunt Emma's biscuits and gravy?  The whistles from nearby trains?  The smooth and worn down surfaces of Uncle Bob's rocker?  Folks on the farm lived a simple life.  You went back home, back to school and thought about the simple life.  After ten summers of visiting a part of that simple life was a part of you.  A part of Aunt Emma and Uncle Bob's land was inside of you.

    Or maybe you lived on a farm and visited with Aunt Anna and Uncle Bill in the city...

    A sense of place is embedded in the design of who you are.  You've only to reconnect.  And when you do, you'll be one step closer to creating a sense of place that you will enjoy in the future.

    Drink deep of your environment and surroundings today.  Take pictures.  Journal notes on your sense's experience.  Research who and what used to occupy the land you are living on.  Understand that you are an important cog in an eternity of those who've been privileged to use the land.  Care for it, engage in it and leave it a better place for those who will follow you.  To design a sense of place that you will one day look back upon and cherish, is to develop and hone a sense of awareness today.

    October 14, 2007 in Design, Life, What's Your Design? | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

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