Tuesday, June 27, 2006

From Motivation To Motive-Action
by Denis Waitley

With the passing of every new year, each of us needs to understand the magnitude of social and economic change in the world. In the past, change in business and social life was incremental and a set of personal strategies for achieving excellence was not required. Today, in the knowledge-based world, where change is the rule, a set of personal strategies is essential for success, even survival. Never again will you be able to go to your place of business on autopilot, comfortable and secure that the organization, state or government will provide for and look after you. You must look in the mirror when you ask who is responsible for your success or failure. You must become a lifelong learner and leader, for to be a follower is to fall hopelessly behind the pace of progress. The power brokers in the new global arena will be the knowledge facilitators.
Ignorance will be even more the tyrant and enslaver than in the past.

As you look in the mirror to see the 21st Century you, there will also be another image standing beside you. It is your competition. Your competition, from now on, will be a hungry immigrant with a wireless, hand-held, digital assistant. Hungry for food, hungry for a home, for a new car, for security, for a college education. Hungry for knowledge. Smart, quick thinking, skilled and willing to do anything necessary to be competitive in the world marketplace. Working long hours and Saturdays, staying open later, serving customers better and more cheerfully.

To be a player in the 21st Century you have to be willing to give more in service than you receive in payment.These are the new rules in the game of life. These are the actions you must take to be a leader and a winner in your personal and professional life. By mastering these profoundly simple action steps, you will be positioned to be a change master in the new century.

Action Step Number One - Consider Yourself Self-Employed, But Be a Team Player.
What this means is that you are your own Chief Executive Officer of your future.
Start thinking of yourself as a service company with a single employee. You're a small company that puts your services to work for a larger company. Tomorrow you may sell those services to a different organization, but that doesn't mean you're any less loyal to your current employer.

Taking responsibility for yourself in this way does mean that you never equate your personal long-term interests with your employer's.
The first idea is resolving not to suffer the fate of those who lost their jobs and found their skills were obsolete.
The second is to begin immediately the process of protecting yourself against that possibility – by becoming proactive instead of reactive.
Ask yourself these questions:
How vulnerable am I?
What trends must I watch? What information must I gain?
What knowledge do I lack?

Again, think of yourself as a company. Set up a training department in your mind and make certain your top employee is updating his or her skills. Make sure you have your own private pension plan, knowing that you are responsible for your own financial security.
Entrusting the government or an employer, other than yourself, with your retirement income is like hiring a compulsive gambler as your accountant.

You're the CEO of your daily life who must have the vision to set your goals and allocate your resources. The mindset of being responsible for your own future used to be crucial only to the self-employed, but it has become essential for us all. Today's typical employees are no longer one-career people. Most will have five separate careers in their lifetimes. Remember, your competition is a hungry immigrant with a laptop.
Action Step Number One is to consider yourself to be self-employed, but be a team player.

Action Step Number Two - Be Flexible in the Face of Daily Surprises.
We live in a time-starved, overstressed, violent society. Much of our over-reaction to what happens to us every day is a result of our self-indulgent value system, where we blame others for our problems, look to organizations or the government for our solutions, thirst for immediate sensual gratification and believe we should have privileges without responsibilities.
This condition is manifested in the high crime rate and in the increase in violence in the work place where employees blame their managers for threatening their security.I have learned how to be flexible in the face of daily surprises, which is one of the most important action traits for a leader.
I really haven't been angry for about 17 years. During that time, no one has tried to physically harm me or someone close to me. I've learned to adapt to stress in life and reserve my fear or anger for imminently physically dangerous situations.
I rarely, if ever, get upset with what people say, do or don't do, even if it inconveniences me. I do react emotionally when I see someone physically or emotionally abusing or victimizing another. But I’ve learned not to sweat the small stuff.

The Serenity Prayer, "Grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the Courage to change the things I can, and the Wisdom to know the difference.", is a valuable measuring tool we can apply to our lives. Simple yet profound words to live by.

Monday, June 26, 2006

CONTRASTING STYLES

A few months ago, at a presentation in Kuala Lumpur,Harvard Business School professor D. Quinn Millsoffered some intriguing insights about the differencesand similarities between Asian and American leadershipstyles.
According to a transcript of his talk published inHBS's Working Knowledge e-zine, Mills told his audience that there are nine key qualities people seeking successful leaders:

passion,
decisiveness,
conviction,
integrity,
adaptability,
emotional toughness,
emotional resonance,
self-knowledge and
humility.

Some of these traits are important everywhere; othersare more significant in the United States and Europe.But even some of the similar traits are demonstrated differently from culture to culture.

Friday, June 23, 2006

Failure is not a single, cataclysmic event.
You don't fail overnight.
Instead, failure is a few errors in judgement, repeated every day.
Jim Rohn

Sales And Leadership: The Differences That Matter
by Brent Filson


Summary: Both leaders and sales people will be more effective when they realize the differences between leadership and sales.

You've heard something like this before: "He's not a leader, he's a salesman." Or: "She was trying to motivate me but gave me a sales pitch instead!"

Being a sales person can provide a poor foundation for leadership. Because leading and selling, though they share certain qualities, are different activities. Most people go along in their jobs and careers without thinking through those differences and thus mix up the two in self-defeating ways.

I've seen good sales people fail when moved into leadership positions; and conversely, good leaders fail when they become sales people or use certain sales techniques to lead.

In both cases, they misunderstood the differences or missed them altogether and so couldn't align their words and actions to take advantage of those differences. You can manifestly improve your leadership and sales skills by understanding what such differences are.

Clearly, on the surface, both sales and leadership focus on ways to influence people to take action. Both sales people and leaders must be knowledgeable, skillful, enthusiastic, and convincing.

However, when we drill down into the functions of the relationships involved in selling and leading -- getting customers to purchase products or services as opposed to getting people to achieve organizational results -- the differences emerge.Here are three defining differences between sales and leadership that can help you both as a sales person and a leader.

Note the differences are variations on a single, decisive theme.

(1) Sales people must satisfy customers. Leaders often have to dissatisfy the people. People in most organizations are in thrall to a powerful force, the status quo. The status quo is simply the existing state of an organization. You might ask, "What's wrong with the existing state of an organization?"

My response is, "A great deal." In fact, the status quo of any organization is almost always wrong.The trouble with the status quo isn't that it gets poor results. After all, if you know you're getting poor results, you can do something about it. You can start taking steps to turn them into good results. The trouble with the status quo is that it gets mediocre results but represents them as good results. And poor results are less harmful to an organization than mediocre results misrepresented as good results.

Leadership is not about maintaining the status quo (as management does), it's about transforming the status quo to achieve big increases in results. Such transformation cannot be accomplished unless and until people are infused with a powerful dissatisfaction with the way things are. Sales people want customers to like them; but leaders may have to get some people angry with them and what they are challenging them to do. (If they don't have some of the people angry with them, those leaders might not be challenging all the people enough. Though watch out when you have ALL of the people angry with you.)

(2) Sales people get people to do what they want to do. Leaders aim to get people to do what they may not want to do and be ardently committed to doing it. Having people get out of the status quo to achieve great results means challenging them to be uncomfortable, do things in new ways, learn new skills, and take on perplexing tasks.

Good leaders live by the rule that it is better to do the new, right things in the temporarily wrong ways than to do the old wrong things in the right ways.

(3) Sales people must counteract bad feelings on the part of customers. Leaders may have to live with and even accept bad feelings on the part of the people while getting them to move toward their organization's greater goal. When you lead people to go to the metaphorical mountain, for instance, many of them will want to go to the nearby hill or to stay where they are. Standing pat is more comfortable and less risky than going to the mountain. But the organization badly needs them to move to the mountain. That's where leadership comes in. In sales, you hop on people's disapproval right away and try to mitigate or eliminate it. However, in leadership getting people to change from standing pat to being the cause leaders of going-forth can involve having to temporarily put up with their initial misgivings or even their outright defiance.

A CEO told me, "The hardest thing I've had to learn as a leader is grace under pressure. How to keep focused on our company's objectives while weathering the criticisms from the inevitable naysayers."Keep in mind that despite their differences, sales and leadership share useful similarities. Many sales techniques, especially with the art of persuasion, can be effectively used in leadership. Conversely, many leadership methodologies can be used in sales.

My article on "Stepping Up Sales Results Using A Leadership Process" shows how.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

The 10 Beliefs of Great Managers

I have started a brand new online coaching program for Managing with Aloha called the MWA Jumpstart, and today I wanted to share the critical first step of MWAJ with you. The program starts with some self-reflection on what you believe in if you have chosen to be in management.

What do the truly great managers of our world believe in?


1. Managers believe that people are innately good. Without this core belief and faith in people, great management is not possible.

2. Managers believe they do not work on their people, they work with them; they enable and empower them.

3. Managers believe that “empowerment” comes from within, and has more to do with self-motivation and innate talent than with the acceptance of authority. They get their cues from the person, not from the task or process.

4. Managers believe that all people have strengths which can be made stronger, and that their weaknesses can be compensated for to become irrelevant.

5. When it comes to training, the great managers do not believe they train people, they believe they train skills and offer additional knowledge.

6. Managers believe they coach and mentor people, and they love doing so — not “like,” love.

7. Managers believe that the people they manage are more than capable of creating a better future. They hold great faith and trust in the four-fold human capacities of physical ability, intellect, emotion, and spirit.

8. Managers believe in the power of positive, affirmative thinking, and they have a low tolerance for negativity. They are confident and eternal optimists.

9. Managers believe it is their job to remove barriers and obstacles so people can attain the level of greatness they are destined for. They believe that “can’t” is a temporary state of affairs, and that everything is only impossible until the first person does it.

10. Managers believe that their legacy will be in the other people they have helped to achieve worthwhile and meaningful goals. They believe that success is measured in people who thrive and prosper.

That’s why managers matter, and why management is vitally important.

Bring Something, Check Your Ego
Here’s a two part suggestion to getting results on proposals, projects, plans in progress, story ideas, and whatever else you might be working on: bring something to the table, and be willing to check your ego.

Bring Something- One thing that really gets any new idea moving is pre-loading the first meetings with an idea. If you’re going to brainstorm a new business, don’t come completely open and empty. Bring a starter concept. If you’re thinking of starting a stationary store, have an idea what you might do to differentiate yourself from the bulk office supply store. It’s a starter idea. It doesn’t have to be the final idea. It’s something for everyone to consider, to grab onto, to hold. Coming with nothing in hand is often too open-ended.

And this can apply to anything. Are you trying to shave hours back to cut expenses at your retail store? Are you talking with your significant other about vacation plans? Do you want a raise? Have something in hand to start the discussion with. Bring your suggested schedule for employees. Have travel brochures and a tentative budget. Show results and differentiation between you and the other employees. Whatever. Bring something.

Check Your Ego- It’s fair to assume that the first idea won’t be the best. Even if you think it is, there’s usually an improvement to be had. This is where the process breaks down fairly quickly if you’re not willing to work hard on checking your ego. What do I mean? Be completely willing to hear alterations to your ideas, even if the original idea doesn’t survive in any obvious way. If the end result is better, and is what everyone (including you) wants, isn’t it worth it to stand back from the whole issue of being prideful in your idea?

Here’s an example. I needed a lot of information on some technical processes and logistics. I asked around. Nothing. No one seemed to know how this work got done, and if they did, no one felt like helping me explain it in a document. So, I wrote my own stab at the whole process. Some of it was fairly accurate, but in other places, I had no clue whatsoever how parts of the process worked. (Usually, at that point, I’d insert something utterly ludicrious: “the cell towers are maintained by talking sheep.”)

Lo and behold, the moment I sent that document out as “the definitive guide” to those processes, I had critics galore! I had people come out of the woodwork via email (some I’d thought no longer even worked for our company), all eager to tell me where I was wrong. I just put my hands behind my head, smiled broadly, and watched the content I needed come in.
Be Open to the Possibilities- Often times, especially with brainstorming, ideas can go from an idea that makes sense from your perspective into something far bigger once you open up the idea to others. It’s the whole “when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail” thing. To that end, always be willing to accept the ways in which your idea might morph into something utterly different than what you started with. In most cases (not all), the end result is much better than the original plan, broad enough to include more than just your own unique abilities, and sustainable for that very reason.

The beauty of working with lots of creative, intelligent people is that you can often grow ideas from something modest into something dynamic and useful. Not unlike exposing your software’s API for further development, consider giving your ideas APIs so that people can further develop them. The results should be much nicer than the original premise (on average).
Have you experienced this first hand? Tell us about it.

–Chris Brogan creates content at GrasshopperFactory.com . Be ready for a new Lifehack podcast tomorrow, 6/21. If you haven’t subscribed to the RSS feed, please do. That will deliver the content right to your reader of choice, into your portable media player, or wherever else you want access to the wisdom of Leon Ho’s Lifehack.org

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Knowing yourself means effective communication
REGAN McPHEE

Personality. Knowing it, understanding it is the key to effective communication yet many of us aren't even aware of what our personality traits look like - not to ourselves nor to others.
Thankfully, scientists like Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung were intrigued by personalities and dedicated their lives to helping unravel the mysteries of these complicated but necessary
components of life on earth.

However, it was Carl Jung, a Swiss-born psychiatrist and longtime admirer of Freud, whose theories proved the impetus for the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), the most researched
and used personality assessment in the world today.

Jung, whose personality theory has a variety of ingredients, is responsible for six of the eight personality typologies explained by the MBTI:
introversion, extroversion, sensing, intuiting, thinking and feeling.

Basically, Jung theorized that we all choose to interact with the world either through our thoughts, feelings, dreams, etc. (introversion) or through people, activities and tangible objects
(extroversion).

Contrary to what most of society thinks of as introverted and extroverted (shy versus outgoing), the two are really about energy and how each of us recharges our batteries.

Me, I'm more introverted than extroverted, while Marilyn, with whom I work, is extroverted. What does that mean? Well, when we were at a conference last year, Marilyn and I went back to
our motel room after a very long day of meetings, seminars and lectures.
I was exhausted. Being around that many people for that long wore me out. I just wanted to watch television and go to bed.
Marilyn, on the other hand, was pumped. She was hyper and full of energy. Instead of wanting to lay her head on a pillow, she wanted to go out for drinks. Introversion versus extroversion.

Jung knew, though, that regardless of where we get our energy we still have to deal with both inner and outer worlds. And, according to Jung, there are four possible ways to function
effectively in these two worlds: sensing and/or intuiting, thinking and/or feeling.

If you obtain information through your five senses then you likely fall into the sensing category. If, like me, you tend to obtain information using a more unconscious method (gut-feel, for example), then you likely fall into the intuiting category.

As for thinking versus feeling, when you're a thinker you evaluate the information you gathered by using logic and rationale. Feeling people will evaluate the same information using their overall emotional response to determine a course of action.

But I mentioned eight personality typologies and have listed, so far, only six. That's because Jung didn't develop the remaining two components of the MBTI (judging and perceiving).
Katherine Briggs and her daughter, Isabel Briggs Myers, who developed the MBTI, added these two essential typologies at a later date.

Careful I am not, so therefore I am a perceiver; spontaneous and unstructured. I like and need options. People who are judgers, on the other hand, tend to be more cautious in their
lives. They want and need organization, structure and a plan of action.

And why do we need to use tools like the MBTI in our businesses? Because they offer us insight that might otherwise take us years to discover. They allow us to learn about our likes and dislikes, our needs and wants, our positive and negative attributes.
When we become aware of our own tendencies, we're able to predict how we will respond in certain situations and with certain personalities. Knowledge of our needs and wants allows us to take the steps necessary to obtain these necessities. The MBTI give us the tools we need to develop ourselves in a variety of areas.

In addition to what it can do for own self-development, when the information from the MBTI is shared with the people we work with, we gain a better understanding of their wants and needs, their behavioural tendencies, their goals for selfdevelopment. So whether you are an ESTJ or an INFP (like me), the more you know about your personality the more effective you will
become as a communicator. And since communication is something we all have to do every day of our lives, in every

http://canadaeast.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050629/TPMONEY10/206290333/-1/MONEY (2 of 3)6/29/2005 4:43:51 AM
canadaeast.com - TP General Business aspect of our lives, why wouldn't we choose to use
assessments at work to enhance the process? Regan McPhee is an independent consultant who works with Profiles Global and Kaleidoscope Management Solutions, human resource consulting firms in Saint John. She can be reached at rmcphee@profilesglobal.com.

http://canadaeast.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050629/TPMONEY10/206290333/-1/MONEY (1 of 3)6/29/2005 4:43:51 AM

Monday, June 19, 2006

CAREER SKILLS

How to Receive Performance Feedback

Remember the following when you're receiving feedback on your work:

Listen carefully. Even if you feel under attack, try not to leap to your own defense until you've had a chance to think about and understand the feedback thoroughly. Be genuinely open to hearing what the other person is saying and try not to interrupt or jump to conclusions. Active listening techniques may be helpful for you here.

Ask questions to clarify what's being said and why. You are completely entitled to ask for specific examples and instances of the types of behavior that are at the root of the feedback. If the atmosphere is becoming tense, introduce a more positive approach by asking for examples of the behavior your reviewer would like to see more of.

Keep calm. Even if you feel upset, try not to enter into an argument there and then; just accept what's being said and deal with your emotions another time. Stay calm and focus on the rest of the feedback.

Giving feedback can be an uncomfortable experience too, and people generally don't do it unless they feel that you can benefit from their observations. Try to remain engaged throughout and don't start a "tit-for-tat" exchange.

Ask if the giver has any suggestions about what you could do differently. You don't have to accept them, but asking demonstrates a willingness on your part to take the feedback seriously.
Thank the person giving you feedback for taking the time to share their perceptions with you.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

#1 Care as if its your own!
by Rajesh Setty on Mon 21 Feb 2005

Late last year we were looking to move into a bigger office space and I was asking my friends for some referrals to good commercial real estate brokers. One of them asked me to contact Jeff . I asked "So who is Jeff with?" This person interestingly did not know where Jeff was working and almost didn't care about the company Jeff was associated with. He said "I have no clue there. But I am confident that he will take good care of you" and handed Jeff's number.

Long story short. We met Jeff Ramirez (who is with Cornish and Carry) and from day one, we had a pleasant experience. We could see that he really cared. He asked a lot of questions about our business and what we were looking in the new office space. After a couple of meetings, we could feel that Jeff almost had a complete understanding of our business and our needs. In the next couple of weeks, he showed us three office spaces and not surprisingly, our management team liked all the three of them. Talk about hit rate - he had 100%. This wouldn't have been possible if he didn't care!!

Jeff is now a good friend I will have no hesitation to do business with him again or to refer him to someone else that is looking for office space.Thanks Jeff - By caring and taking care of us, you have distinguished yourself and set an example for others.

WAYS TO DISTINGUISH YOURSELF

Attitude
#1 Care as if it's your own
Few people care as if its their own. This is a road less traveled
#2 Do your daily work with Passion!
Passion is a great catalyst to increase productivity
#7 Celebrate small victories
You don't always need to win a lottery to celebrate!
#9 Know your values
Values provide the foundation for your decision-making. Get to know them well.
#14 Think long term
The temptation will always be to gravitate towards what is right for the short-term.
#15 Embrace uncertainty with ease
After uncertainty is the only thing thats certain. Why fight it?
#19 Get back on your feet - FAST!
It's not the falling down thats the problem but not getting up everytime you fall down
#25 Walk away from free!
There is *really* no free lunch!
#27 Avoid complacency at all costs
There is nothing like maintaining status quo. You are either rising or falling!
#65 Be grateful
There are so many reasons to be grateful
#62 Stop comparing the ideal scenario
Ideal scenario is just that - it is ideal. No point in comparing to ideal scenario
#64 Smile!
Smile. It improves your face value!
#68 Generalize (very) slowly
Generalizing is easy. Everyone can do that!
#83 Be comfortable being alone
If you can enjoy your company, may be others will too!
#91 Be comfortable to say "I don't know"
It is impossible to know everything, anyways
#96 Let go first!
Sometimes before you reach out for something, you need to let go of what you have!
#98 Clarify your intentions
Intentions have great power. Have the right intentions
#108 Face the problem
If you keep running away from problems, you won't get to learn how to solve them

Relationships
#3 Build strong relationships
Strong relationships provide a significant competitive advantage
#10 Pursue right memberships
Its not what you know but who you know. Its just not who you know but how you know who you know.
#11 Help people help themselves
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime!
#18 Be relevant
Who will you listen and pay attention to? - the one thats relevant to you or the one thats not?
#32 Focus on service at the core
Service comes before anything else
#34 Focus on increasing ROII
Time is precious for everyone. Ensure that you provide the highest value for anyone investing time in an interaction with you
#36 Reduce "facade diff"
What if your public and private faces were almost the same - wouldn't that be wonderful?
#38 Ensure that WIIFT > WIIFM
If there is no WIIFM, you are sacrificing a lot and if there is no WIIFT, you are being too selfish. We need a fine balance here..
#39 Make it easy for people to help you
One thing is to ask for help. The other thing is to be ready to receive help!
#48 Handle criticism with grace
Or else you may not get ANY feedback
#51 Work on your mile-high factor
Is your network growing or shrinking?
#52 Continue to gain respect from people close to you
People who are close to you know your strengths and weaknesses as well as the good and bad sides of you. So, you need to really work hard if you need to continue to gain respect from them.
#70 Increase "shelf-life" of your power relationships
It takes a while to build power relationships. Once you build them, how long can you sustain them?
#92 Watch with whom you spend most of your time
The company you keep plays an important role in where you are going!
#95 Never forget any help!
Most people do. You can be different!
#99 Forgive and forget!
To forgive, you need great courage. Do you have it?
#100 Get OFF the way!
Ensure that you don't put a lid on someone's growth
#103 Validate your private reasons
We have private and public reasons for many important decisions. While you can justify public reasons, you need to take a hard look at your private reasons
#105 Be entitled for nothing
Entitlement is scary. If not used appropriately, it can be a cause of inaction!
#111 Don't look to get drowned in positive feedback
So, generally whenever you have a reasonably good idea you get a ton of positive feedback - so much that you can drown in it. The key is to not get carried away by the positive feedback. What you need is not a pat on the back but for someone to rip your idea apart and expose the flaws within it. That way you don't burn more money or time on a "dumb" idea.
#112 Drop "One time use" policy
If you drop the "One time use" policy for the rest of your life, I won't guarantee that you will make more friends but you may have a better chance of retaining existing friends.

Productivity
#5 Set the right expectations
The first step in trying to exceed the expectations is to set them right in the first place.
#8 Set higher standards
Raise your standards higher than the general norm and watch miracles unfold!
#13 Plan by outcomes
Activity is not always equal to productivity. You can either have reasons or results and reasons don't matter.
#24 Influence the influencers
To get things done faster, you need the support of influencers
#26 Expect recognition for results and not effort
All effort and no results will get you no points!
#29 Watch your standard practices
Simple things that you do CAN make a huge difference!
#31 Use your "thinking bandwidth" wisely
Observe what thoughts are you recycling day in and day out.
#33 Keep promises that you make to yourself
Making promises to yourself is easy. Keeping them is VERY hard!
#43 Show discipline on small things
Temptation would be to not provide enough importance on small things.
#46 Manage your monkeys
Delegate effectively!
#47 Simplify
Make it easy for you and others around you
#67 Understand the 3T rule!
Things take time. They do!
#89 Avoid the SEABE trap!
Tie up loose ends as quickly as possible.
#89 Avoid the SEABE trap!
SeaBE = Searching for the best excuse
#102 Get off the JIMP syndrome
JIMP = Just Interrupt me PleaseAre you screaming to be interrupted so that you can avoid doing something that you planned?
#113 Fine tune your accountability structures
The accountability structure that you have setup for yourself and people around you will have a big impact on results you produce.What could you and your team members do to fine tune these structures to produce better results?

Learning
#12 Be a reader
They say all leaders are readers. Are you?
#16 Ask the right questions
Its not always the answers!
#17 Engage with a coach
Sportspeople have figured this out long back. Coaching works!
#22 Learn to sell
Everyone of us are in sales - one way or the other. Basic sales skills are a must to thrive and succeed!
#23 Learn systems thinking
Nothing happens in vacuum and things are more interconnected than you can imagine.
#30 Watch the shelf-life of your skills
You MUST set aside time to develop long-term skills
#37 Learn the art of managing multiple projects
You can't avoid getting involved in multiple projects in life. You might as well learn to manage them :)
#40 Learn to estimate well
Estimate wrong and pay a big price during execution of any project.
#45 Increase your rate of learning
There is so much out there to absorb so speed with which you absorb stuff is key
#63 Avoid the CSS trap
CSS = Continuous Spiral Syndrome
#81 Develop cultural sensitivity
The playing field has no borders anymore. Developing cultural sensitivity is a MUST!
#82 Connect the unknown to the known
Fastest way to learn is to connect the unknown to the known!
#94 Learn to meditate
Manage your stress the most economical way
#106 - Increase investments in personal growth
You need to be growing everyday. For that, you need to make investments on your personal growth
#116 Aim to become a transformer
Go ahead, aim to be a transformer. That will be the biggest gift you can give to your teachers.
Leadership
#4 Dream BIG!
If its anyway a dream, why not dream BIG?
#20 Lead a volunteer effort
Most volunteers are there by choice. If they still have to follow you, you must be something :)
#35 Don't take credit when its not due
As we talked before, there is no FREE lunch!
#77 Treat your competition with respect
Good competition will help you to lift yourself up. Competition is good!
#90 Question the question
Temptation would be to answer the question. Sometimes it may be wise to question the question
#115 Get to the real question please...
Remember that even if you get the right answer for a wrong question, it's still of no use :(
#124 Don't rush to a solution
New problems or opportunities of a reasonable size and especially those that extend longer time horizons need a different kind of treatment. There is no point in rushing to a solution quickly. You won't find a good solution and you may dismiss the whole thing prematurely or find an alternative that is not good in the long run.
Innovation
#21 Balance innovation and continuous improvement
Innovation and continuous imporovement are not mutually exclusive.
#55 Commoditize your work at regular intervals
You don't have to wait for someone else to commoditize your work
#69 Balance home runs with small wins
Home runs are great. But small wins are important too!
#107 Detach the idea from the source
Don't let your perceptions on the messenger taint the value of the message
#121 Learn to exploit innovations
If your competitor is not innovating but is great at exploiting innovations you are still at a disadvantage.
Personal Branding
#42 Maintain visibility
Out of sight is out of mind!
#49 WAG
WAG = Watch your attention-getters!
#53 Always be ready to win the boxing game
Whether you like it or not, people will "box" you. If you are prepared, you can ensure that they put you in the right box.
#54 Expand your "100% Trust Network"
How many "100% Trust" relationships do you have?
#66 Keep "Your story so far.." ready
Everyone has a story. What is yours?
#118 Make a difference, however small it is...
Next time, when you find yourself in that situation think about the starfish story and make it a point to make a difference, however small it is...
#119 Avoid the "0.9 Extra Mile Syndrome"
You usually don't get credit for partial "extra mile" journeys that you take.
#120 Create memorable experiences
Everyone is busy in their own lives. Unless you work very hard to create significant value in that interaction for the other person, there is no reason for that person to remember that interaction.
Leverage
#44 Connect your projects
You automatically get higher leverage by connecting your projects.
#50 Imagine!
Imagination may sometimes be more powerful than knowledge
#56 Craft a compelling elevator pitch for yourself
Every business has an elevator pitch. If you treat yourself as a business, what would be yours?
#78 Think!
Set aside time to "think"
#79 Gather the right puzzle pieces
You can't do everything alone. But do you know what all resources you need to get where you want to go?
#80 Don't chase exclusivity without a clear plan to leverage it
You need to pay a price for exclusivity. So before paying the price, determine whether you need that exclusivity
#84 Stretch payback cycles
Think about the payback cycles for your current projects. Can you stretch them?
#86 Spread your payback horizons
Design your projects so that you spread payback horizons.
#97 Use power appropriately
One thing is to get power. The other thing is to use it appropriately!
#109 Fight the right battles
Before you answer the question "How do I win this battle?" ask yourself "Why am I fighting this battle in the first place?" You may be surprised :)
#110 Contribute to the growth of your entire network
If you contribute to the growth of everyone in your network, you will automatically grow!
#114 Improve your Net "Caring Critics" Score
Net "Caring Critics" Score = "Caring Critics" - "Non-caring Critics"
#117 Understand the power of incentives
Incentives are extremely powerful. There are incentives for you to behave the way you do and there are incentives to make the people around you behave the way they do. Understanding the power of incentives will help you to understand people's behavior.
#123 Find a second reason to do anything significant
Find a second, third or fourth reason for any significant initiative in your life. This will help you gain higher leverage.

Teamwork
#6 Ask for help!
Everyone needs it. Why pretend that you don't?
#59 Avoid passive resistance
Passive resistance is a nightmare for any change management initiatives.
#60 Recognize and respect potential
It takes special talent to recognize and respect potential
#75 Provide early warning signals
Bad news is not all the bad if delivered on time.
#76 Follow up
Try again!
#85 Bring the right puzzle pieces into the game
What can you bring to others to help them in their quests?
#101 Master the art of handling disagreements
It will be odd to even expect everyone to agree on everything that you have to say. The question is - "Do you know how to handle when they disagree?"
#122 Overestimate people with potential minus experience
If you want to get the best out of these people, best is to "overestimate" what they can do. That will make them stretch and reach beyond what they could do if the expectations were "normal" or "watered down."

Communication
#58 Understand the law of the bucket and the glass
In simple terms, remember that you can't pour a bucket of water into a glass.
#61 Package information for easy consumption
How can you package information so that the other person spends minimum time to get what you are trying to say?
#73 Watch how you say "what you do"
Do you take pride in your job?
#87 Manage your filters well
We all have filters. The key is to manage them well.
#93 Be comfortable contradicting yourself, sometimes!
We all make mistakes. When you make one, just admit it!
#104 Setup and use anchors and triggers
Anchors and triggers act as catalysts. Are you using them appropriately?

9 Reasons for Reading Business Books
by Rajesh Setty on Mon 12 Jun 2006 12:00 AM PDT

I read about one business book a week. I get to about 80-100 in an year. Not all are good but I get my fair share of good business books every year. I have been doing this for more than ten years now and it has served me well. People ask me why I am obsessed with books. I am providing my reasons with a sincere hope that some of you will identify them as your reasons too:

1. Saving time: My first company was the fastest company on earth. It started and crashed in a matter of months. I experienced the value of experience first hand. I don't have time to learn all the lessons through my own experience. It might be costly.

2. Saving money: The first thing to know is we may not be able to afford bringing in the thought leader to consult for us. Second, the thought leader may not have the time to consult with us. Reading their books may be the simplest way to get inside the mind of the thought leader. Thinking about this, you will see that its a steal to pay a $20 or $30 for a book.

3. Research for a song: Good business books are well researched. I know of several authors having reasonably sized research times that spend months or years before they have enough material for the book. Two great books that come to mind immediately are:
a. Good to Great by Jim Collinsb. Re-Imagine! by Tom Peters

4. Deal with change: Change is the only thing that is constant they say. The time has now come to upgrade the saying. We have to now say "Change at breathtaking speed is the only thing that is constant." You need (lots of) help to deal with that change. Business books can be great resources to start preparing yourself for the change.

5. De-commoditization Insurance: Knowledge workers are getting commoditized at a rapid rate. If you are a knowledge worker, your competition is now global. If you are doing commodity work, there will be someone else in the globe that can do for a fraction of your cost. You HAVE to do something special to NOT be displaced. You can try to invent what you should do differently on your own or you can learn from thought leaders.

6. High ROII: The return on investment for an interaction (ROII) for a good business book is very high. For a few dollars and a few hours in total, the kind of education that I can get is just awesome.

7. Keeping my mind sharp: A good business book makes me think. Just like the body needs exercise, the brain needs exercise too. Reading a goob business book or two per week is like taking your mind to a gym.

8. Relationship Building: There is a saying that all great leaders are readers. While there is no research to prove that conclusively, in my experience I have found that this is true. Since I want to build relationships with great leaders, reading helps me start an intellectual conversation and continuing to read helps me keep the conversation going.

9. Insights on current business concerns.Business books become famous for several reasons. One of the reasons is the topic of the book. People buy a book because they have concerns in that area and they think that reading that business book will take care of those concerns. By looking at the themes of business books that are getting "hot" I can get an insight into what topics are of prime interest to business people. Being an entrepreneur, these insights helps my own ventures.

Hopefully I have made you think about investing a few more hours of your time to read business books :)

PS:---Now, how much returns you will get from a non-fiction and/or business book will depend on how much you put into this exercise. A while ago, I wrote a note on my thoughts about reading a non fiction book.

Here is the link:
Link: How to read a non-fiction book?For a list of books that have inspired me recently, you can take a look at my squidoo lens

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

My father gave me the greatest gift anyone could give another person, he believed in me.
Jim Valvano

My father gave me the greatest gift anyone could give another person, he believed in me.
Jim Valvano

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

The Best Sales Advice I’ve Ever Received

1. If you throw enough $#@% against the wall, something's gotta stick. Prospecting is the most important part of the sales process. The single biggest reason salespeople don’t do enough business is because they don’t talk to enough people. They don’t “show up.” As long as you keep getting in front of prospects, the law of large numbers says you’ll eventually be successful. You might have a lot of clients today, but if you don’t constantly keep that pipeline filled, somewhere down the line your business will collapse. Ten percent of your client base will leave you every year for reasons totally beyond your control. So no matter how busy you are, a portion of every day must be spent looking for new business.

2. If you sell enough dresses, you can burn down my office. This was a direct quote from my old boss in the Garment Center in New York. It taught me a number of very valuable lessons.
Great salespeople are worth their weight in gold. Just like superstars on a baseball team, superstar salespeople can pretty much do whatever they want. What are they going to do? Fire you? Every competitor would be at your doorstep in a minute. Of course, just like the superstar athlete, you better be ready to put your money where your mouth is and keep producing. Remember, a superstar ballplayer who’s a pain in the butt is called a “flake,” but a mediocre ballplayer who’s a pain in the butt is considered a troublemaker.
The beauty of sales is that your numbers are on the board for everyone to see every day, which means no one can ever tell you you’re doing a poor job if you’re not, and, conversely, you can’t convince anyone you’re doing a great job if you’re not.

3. The way you break them in is the way they’re always going to be. It’s human nature to try to take adavntage of people. Who do most of us take advantage of? Our friends and family usually. And it's simply because we can. Clients and prospects are always looking for salespeople who can be kept waiting or who can cut their price in return for a vague promise of future business.Let clients and prospects know up front that you will not be one of those salespeople. Establish the ground rules for a win-win relationship right off the bat and you’ll be amazed how easy it will be to get the clients to fall in line. They’ll just go and find someone else to be their patsy. And believe me, there are plenty of them out there.

How New Managers Become Great Managers
August 18, 2003

Newly minted managers must commit themselves to lifelong self-improvement. Read an excerpt from HBS professor Linda A. Hill’s update of her classic, Becoming a Manager.



Linda Hill's book for the star performer-turned-new-manager, Becoming a Manager: Mastery of a New Identity appeared a decade ago to much acclaim. Much of the original book is still fresh today. But a new edition, Becoming a Manager: How New Managers Master the Challenges of Leadership, adds chapters and a more prescriptive style to reflect today's world of expanding globalization, accelerated change, and increased complexity. This excerpt discusses the importance for young managers to continue to develop as professionals via wise career choices and self-examination. —Ed.

Through my research, teaching, and consulting over the past ten years, I have come to understand more deeply than ever that the best managers are those who have an appetite for learning and are willing to work on themselves. Management is very hard; even the most gifted people must commit themselves to lifelong learning and self-development. In the course of my work, I have had the privilege of developing teaching materials about many experienced leaders and their career development. This chapter builds on stories from some of the talented managers I've encountered who are out there making a difference in their organizations. We can learn vicariously from their experiences.

Consider the example of one manager who was about to undergo a critical transition in her career, only four years after first becoming a manager. When she was about to step into an executive role as senior vice president of marketing at a nationwide office supplies superstore, she recalled:

I'm not a good example of how to manage your career. I've just been willing to raise my hand several times for new opportunities. I've taken a lot of what others would perceive to be career risks, which fortunately have worked out.... I have proven myself in several different kinds of functional areas. I brought breadth, if not depth, of experience, coupled with knowledge that I enjoyed operating in a high-stress environment. From my perspective, this was the biggest job I'd had. It would require me to learn to deal with the top levels of the organization and across a broader span. 1
This manager is much too modest. She is an excellent role model for how to manage our careers if we hope to move into ever more important managerial positions. From her story, we see that leadership can be an exciting but arduous journey of self-development. Over the course of her first years at the company, she made a series of upward and lateral moves that entailed a number of tough assignments across many functional areas.

Beginning as the director of regional operations in New England, this manager had profit and loss responsibility for fifty underperforming stores. Hiring a strong team of direct reports, she set store standards, instituted training programs, and rejuvenated performance. Due to her success in operations over the next two years, this manager received two more challenging assignments. First, she became director of sales for 150 stores on the east coast, and then, a year later, she was promoted to vice president and divisional merchandise manager for furniture and decorative supplies. There she had profit and loss responsibility for $350 million and twelve people in an area with poor assortment of merchandise, flat sales, and low direct product profitability. She and her team turned over 75 percent of the assortment, tripled net direct product profitability, and increased sales. When she advanced again, she moved back into the marketing department as senior vice president of small business and retail marketing. Three years later, based on her performance, she was appointed president of the company's e-commerce business, a key strategic initiative for the future success of the company.

The best managers are those who have an appetite for learning and are willing to work on themselves.
This manager, like the other effective leaders I have studied, is a self-directed learner willing to reinvent herself time and again. In the pages that follow, I will build on the previous discussion of power to present a framework for lifelong learning developing a successful managerial career. I will address four challenges: choosing the right position; getting off to the right start; landing stretch assignments; and building a network of developmental relationships. In framing each of these four challenges from the point of view of the emerging leader, I hope to underscore my belief that management, especially the leadership functions, cannot be taught. Instead, managers who want to take on more and more responsibility over the course of their careers must ask themselves: Am I preparing myself to manage and lead?

How can we learn to manage and lead?
Although some of the qualities of effective management are "innate" or acquired principally through pre-work socialization (personal integrity, high energy level, and a drive to lead), much of leadership is learned.2 Management is primarily learned from on-the-job experiences—by doing, observing, and interacting with others. As unsettling as it is, we have found that the essence of development is diversity and adversity.3 Warren Bennis, a renowned leadership expert, has concluded that it is the "crucibles," or tests and trials, in an individual's life that profoundly shape them as leaders.4 As many have observed, however, people do not always learn from their experiences.5 To make meaning from their experiences, managers need to reflect on and consolidate the lessons of those experiences. To change and grow, they must be prepared to engage periodically in introspection—to collect feedback on and analyze their behavior, attitudes, and values. The difficulty in remaining objective about oneself, however, is well documented. There are mechanisms that keep people from honestly evaluating themselves.6 The more candid feedback that managers can obtain from varied sources, the more accurate and precise their assessment will be.

The best assignments from a developmental perspective are ones in which the fit is imperfect—it is a 'stretch'...
Indeed, people find it nearly impossible to accomplish their development alone. To grow and develop, individuals must be prepared to seek assistance. They must devote time and energy to building a network of developmental relationships (superior and lateral, internal and external to the organization). From these developmental relationships (e.g., mentors or sponsors), potential managers can better learn from their own experiences by receiving feedback, advice, and emotional support. These relationships can be helpful only if the managers are willing to take some risks, disclose some of their shortcomings, and open themselves to constructive criticism—admittedly a tall order.

Choosing the right position
Establishing a management career begins with choosing the right positions along the way. Managers should take into account two factors when making decisions about which job opportunities to pursue: How good is the fit between who they are and the position (and the organization)? How good is the fit between who they are and who they want to be? That is, what types of learning opportunities does the position offer? To the extent that the fit is "perfect"—that the manager has the requisite talents and characteristics (personal values that match the corporate culture) to do the job—the manager will be in a better position to make an immediate contribution to organizational performance.7

Admittedly, "fit" is subjective, and all too often women or minorities have been excluded because others have not found them to "fit." One way individuals have coped with this reality is to hide who they really are or how they really think until they get a foot in the door. This can be a dangerous tactic. If an individual's values are not consistent with those of the company, the compromises demanded may be considerable. Besides, becoming a credible leader of others when acting out an inauthentic self is very hard.8

The best assignments from a developmental perspective are ones in which the fit is imperfect—it is a "stretch" (in terms of talent, not values). These assignments are riskier, since the manager is more likely to make mistakes that might set back his or her career progress or have a negative impact on organizational performance. But they are also the kinds of assignments from which managers can acquire new knowledge, skills, perspective, and judgment.

People should look for jobs in which they can leverage initial fit to establish a self-reinforcing cycle of success whereby, year after year, they acquire more of the sources of power necessary to be effective and successful. They should pursue situations in which their strengths are really needed, important weaknesses are not a serious drawback, and their core values are consistent with those of the organization; in other words, the stretch should not be too big or the risk too great.9 Risk should be commensurate with the individual's ability to cope with and responsibly manage it (for the sake of both the organization and individual). As a general rule of thumb, the risk is probably too great if it will take more than six months to progress far enough along the learning curve to produce meaningful results in a particular job.10

Those early in their careers can glean important self-insight through careful and systematic introspection.
People should seek out diverse experiences to facilitate and balance their development in multiple areas. This is precisely what our manager mentioned at the beginning of this chapter did; she rotated through operations, sales, merchandising, and marketing. Those who are able to grow beyond their initial strengths and develop a broad repertoire of talents are more likely to progress in their careers because they have the requisite abilities to meet the ever-changing demands of their jobs. In this regard, studies that compare high-potential managers who have "derailed" (become plateaued or terminated) with high-potential managers who have made it to senior executive positions are enlightening.11 One characteristic of those who derail is that initial strengths (e.g., a "hands-on" style or technical virtuosity) later become "fatal flaws." When faced with new and different challenges, these managers continue to rely on their initial capabilities, even when they are no longer sufficient or appropriate. They are unable or unwilling to develop other complementary capabilities.

In terms of developing leadership talents in particular, it can pay to look for stretch assignments involving change. Some examples include introducing a new product or information technology system, revitalizing a mature business, or starting up a subsidiary in an international market. These sorts of assignments, almost by definition, require individuals to establish direction, communicate that direction (vision and strategies) to diverse stakeholders, and figure out how to motivate the stakeholders to implement the strategies and fulfill the vision. The more revolutionary—as opposed to evolutionary—the change, the more powerful the leadership learning opportunities.

Getting off to the right start
Managers must be aware of their strengths, limitations, motives, and values in order to make the appropriate trade-offs between fit and learning opportunity when selecting a position.12 However, they only become aware of who they are and who they want to become through experience. As they accumulate work experience, they have an opportunity to make choices and test those choices, and begin to clarify what they are good at and what is important to them.13

Hence, those early in their careers may have only a vague sense of their talents, motivations, and values. All too often, they get off to a bad start by selecting jobs and organizations that simply do not fit their capabilities, motives, and values very well. Because they are not clear about who they are and the kinds of jobs to which they are best suited, they are easily seduced by the money, glamour, or prestige associated with a given job. Some define the "good" opportunities as those that are popular in the social milieu in which they find themselves. These individuals end up taking jobs because the jobs are the popular choice and not because they are excited by the people with whom they will be spending time or the products or services with which they will be working. For those in the minority, given the special challenges of building developmental relationships (discussed below), it is best to pay particular attention to how comfortable they are with their potential colleagues.

In other instances, people choose jobs that are too demanding for them. Because they do not fully appreciate their strengths and weaknesses, they get themselves into situations where they are simply in over their heads. For example, newly minted MBAs who have never had subordinates reporting to them before may take jobs in which they will have considerable people management responsibilities, with little sense of the risk in doing so. Professional school graduates should be cautious about accepting jobs in highly politicized environments where only those who are very skillful at handling difficult work relationships can prosper.

Those early in their careers can glean important self-insight through careful and systematic introspection. In particular, they should look for pervasive themes in their past and current experiences that say something about their key strengths, important limitations, and core values. For example, in trying to decide whether or not to move into a leadership role, people should ask themselves the following questions about what kind of work they find most interesting and fulfilling:

Do I like collaborative work?
Do I tend to become the leader of groups in which I find myself?
Have I ever volunteered to coach or tutor others?
Do I find it intriguing to work on thorny, ambiguous problems?
Do I cope well with stress (e.g., extended hours, tough personal decisions)?
If they cannot answer most of these questions in the affirmative, it may suggest that they have neither the personal qualities, character, nor motivation required to be an effective manager.14

If people choose an appropriate position, they will be able to convert their general competencies into company- and job-specific expertise, develop relationships, and make a contribution to organizational performance in relatively short order. Once they begin to make a contribution to organizational performance (perhaps in a limited way at first), their track record and credibility in the organization will begin to grow. Therefore, people will begin to seek them out and be more eager to work with them; in other words, their network of relationships will grow. Some will be willing to sponsor and perhaps even mentor them, taking risks on their behalf and promoting them into stretch assignments. From these assignments, they develop more expertise and more relationships and therefore are in an even better position to contribute to key organizational objectives.

Soon, this cycle of success becomes self-reinforcing; their track record and credibility continue to flourish. As they acquire more power and establish relationships with a broad range of people, they find themselves holding a more central position in their network of relationships—and thereby they gain even more power and access to currencies.15 Once they begin to advance, they acquire more formal authority and can consolidate their power.

Reprinted by permission of Harvard Business School Press. Excerpt from Becoming a Manager: How New Managers Master the Challenges of Leadership. Copyright 2003 Linda A. Hill; All rights reserved. To order, please call (800) 988-0886.

[ Order this book ]

Linda A. Hill is a professor at Harvard Business School.

Women's World!

Be sure to catch the Economist, 15 April. Leader, page 14. "Forget China, India and the Internet: Economic Growth Is Driven by Women." (Headline.) "Even today in the modern, developed world, surveys show that parents still prefer to have a boy rather than a girl. One longstanding reason boys have been seen as a greater blessing has been that they are expected to become better economic providers for their parents' old age. Yet it is time for parents to think again. Girls may now be a better investment." "Girls get better grades in school than boys, and in most developed countries more women than men go to university. Women will thus be better equipped for the new jobs of the 21st century, in which brains count a lot more than brawn. ... And women are more likely to provide sound advice on investing their parents' nest egg: surveys show that women consistently achieve higher financial returns than men do. Furthermore, the increase in female employment in the rich world has been the main driving force of growth in the last couple of decades. Those women have contributed more to global GDP growth than have either new technology or the new giants, India and China."

Continuing on page 73: "A Guide to Womenomics: The Future of the World Economy Lies Increasingly in Female Hands." (Headline.) More stats: Around the globe since 1980, women have filled "two new jobs for every one taken by a man." "Women are becoming more important in the global marketplace not just as workers, but also as consumers, entrepreneurs, managers and investors." Re consumption, Goldman Sachs in Tokyo has developed an index of 115 companies poised to benefit from women's increased purchasing power; over the past decade the value of shares in "Goldman's basket has risen by 96%, against the Tokyo stockmarket's rise of 13%." A couple of final assertions: (1) It is now agreed that "the single best investment that can be made in the developing world" is educating girls. (2) Also, surprisingly, nations with the highest female laborforce participation rates, such as Sweden and the U.S., have the highest fertility rates; and those with the lowest participation rates, such as Italy and Germany, have the lowest fertility rates.

Quite a story, eh?

Tom Peters posted this on 04/19

=================================================================
The Great Woz Tells All
With his memoir due out soon, Apple inventor Steve Wozniak explains how luck and passion led to creating the breakthrough personal computer
As the inventor of the Apple I and Apple II, along with Apple's original software, Steve Wozniak is a living legend. Legendary, too, is his complicated relationship with Apple (AAPL ) co-founder Steve Jobs, as well as the practical jokes that "Woz" played on colleagues in the headiest moments of the company's formative years. This fall, Wozniak will publish his memoir, I Woz: How I Invented the Personal Computer and Had Fun Along the Way, written with tech journalist Gina Smith (Norton). BusinessWeek associate editor Hardy Green interviewed Wozniak on May 20 at the book industry's annual extravaganza, BookExpo America, in Washington, D.C. Your story, however fascinating, has been the subject of many previous books and articles. What prompted you to write a memoir now?Parts of my story are well-known and parts are not well-known. A couple of times I've been asked to write a book and have not had the time, so I've had to return the money. Then, a little over a year ago, a friend asked if she could write my book. Now we're in it together. So that guaranteed it would happen. The amount of time spent was equal to that needed for two books. First, I would tell stories into a microphone, and then she would rewrite them. Then we had to redo everything all over again to put it back into my voice. What is an example of a story you have included that is not well-known?There's the account of the TV jammer that I built during my first year in college. I was able to get students at the University of Colorado to move their bodies around thinking that was what they had to do to get better reception. One time, a guy left his hand on the middle of the screen and a foot on a chair for the last half-hour of Mission Impossible, thinking that was necessary to complete the ground loop. I also describe how we'd work on projects for days at a time, going without sleep. But I found that I could come up with the clearest ideas in that sleepless state. For instance, I realized that color, if you could think of a way of doing it for no cost, might be good for computer games. The exact date and time when the world changed is in the book. That took place back when I was working on the Apple I. Every previous computer had a panel that looked like an airplane cockpit. Every computer afterwards had a keyboard. That was the change. Are there larger lessons that you have drawn about creativity and innovation?That schools close us off from creative development. They do it because education has to be provided to everyone, and that means that government has to provide it, and that's the problem. Also, we've trained kids in schools to only do things certain ways, not to get out of line, not to go off into other topics. Every time you do something for the first time in your life, you're going to do a better job than other people who have done it before. You're aware of the most modern components. I was aware of the best chips that existed and used them for jobs for which they weren't intended. Poor design is a result of people not wanting to work hard. By working very hard, you can make devices that operate more simply. Then there's the iPod. Its success is due to the fact that it's a satellite to a computer: The computer has become absolutely central to our lives. Do you feel that your past has at times been misrepresented?Yes. The press tries to make it look like I'm at odds with Apple. They made it sound like I left Apple because I was mad. But I was leaving to start a company that made a remote control -- and I really remained an employee of Apple, too. To this day, they try to bring up big conflicts between me and Steve Jobs. But we have never argued -- there's not one person that has ever seen us in an argument. We are different types of people, but I'm a non-conflict person. Do you feel that Jobs ever ripped you off, perhaps in the case of the game Breakout that you invented and he claimed credit for with Atari?He was more concerned about money. In the case of Breakout, all he had to do was ask me. I had a job at [Hewlett-Packard] (HPQ ) and didn't need the money. He was always into business, and I was into designing. And that's not a good vs. bad thing. Steve turned down doing the foreword for the book. But there's nothing really bad about him in the book. He may have misinterpreted something. This spring, you and former Apple CEO Gil Amelio formed Acquicor Technology, essentially a public venture capital fund. What's the latest with that?We went public in a short time frame and raised something like $200 million. For now, there's a bunch of money sitting in a trust, and we have a time limit to make an acquisition deal with 80% of the money. The shareholders have to approve any acquisition. Will the book help the new company, perhaps bringing you back in the public eye?Not really. But maybe I will get asked questions on television about Acquicor. Someone might hear about the company and be interested. Our plan is to find some kind of troubled division, buy it, and make a big turnaround. How do you regard the state of innovation in the computer industry?The industry is so mature at this point that there just isn't that much room for innovation. There are lots of little companies around, but they don't get noticed. Apple kind of owns the movie program, the photo program. There's a lot of feeling that instead of 50 companies making computers, maybe there should be only a dozen and only room for a couple of operating systems. So there aren't so many areas that haven't been swamped. Still, Google (GOOG ) and Yahoo! (YHOO ) are very innovative. I gather that you have been involved some with teaching.I taught a fifth-grade class, sixth through ninth graders in another class, and I taught teachers, all just in the local schools. It got to where I was teaching seven days a week. I'm looking forward to the day when a computer can be a teacher. We're not there yet, since we haven't yet conquered artificial intelligence. Once we've made a robot that can make a cup of coffee, then we've probably got enough artificial intelligence. Then we can have 30 teachers in a class of 30 kids, and the computers can go at different rates with different students. Have you ever thought about why it was you, and not somebody else, who was able to invent so many things?That's what the book is all about. I took a lot of lucky, accidental directions, and they all converged on the Apple II computer, the greatest product of our time. I was in the right environment, Silicon Valley, I had a supportive father, I stumbled on to the right manuals -- I stumbled into it so accidentally. But you know in your heart when you've stumbled into the right thing and that this is what you want to do for the rest of your life. I did this for no other reason than a love and a passion, and I wanted to do it better than any other person.


Green is books editor for BusinessWeek
http://www.businessweek.com/print/technology/content/may2006/tc20060523_522669.htm