I'm lost already this year, watching the rubble and ruin of Haiti. Who is this that allows such force to crush people living in the poorest nation in our hemisphere?
Beats me.
Defeats me.
Until I see the TV images of people everywhere this New Year joined in outcry and response.
Here's one outcry from the streets on 13 January from Perard Monestime SJ, a priest with the Jesuit Refugee Service in Port-Au-Prince:
“The situation is very serious...There are thousands of deaths bodies currently on the streets of Port-au-Prince. More than 60 % of houses have collapsed in the metropolitan area of Port-au-Prince. The national Palace, the main building offices of the State, schools and institutions that belong to the Catholic Church no longer exist. Residences of religious, the roof of the Cathedral of Port - in Port-au-Prince, the Archbishop’s house etc.; all have collapsed. The body of the Archbishop of Port-au-Prince was found under the rubbles. Supermarkets, banks, trade houses, radio and television stations Hospitals etc fell also. According to the administrator of the General Hospital, the largest health institution in the capital collapsed with many patients while many wounded and corpses were being brought in. People spent the night in the streets and public places by fear of new replicas of the earthquake. Throughout the night and even this morning there have been many after chocks.
"This morning. -UN headquarters in Bourdon collapsed and left 11 dead; among whom are 8 Brazilians and 3 Chinese. A population of 2 million and a half in the city of Port-au-Prince is in the state of shock. It will be days before they can get an exact death toll; already are thousands are counted dead...In many areas it is not known exactly how many people are dead...The Haitian State agencies that are already weak in resources have not taken any action so far. They have also been affected by the earthquake. The National Presidential Palace, the House of Legislative, the National Police Headquarters, etc. all have collapsed...People are still in the streets and the public places have no water, food, or medication. The dead bodies on the streets are still being exposed.”
I'm lost when it comes to questions about who's behind acts of God, mass hunger, kids with Cancer, deadly addictions. But when I see people, inspired by Something larger than themselves, responding in this New Year as they have across the years, I start to see answers.
You've probably come across many choices to respond to Haiti.
Jesuit Refugee Service is one more option that may be worth your consideration.
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
Friday, January 15, 2010
Friday, January 8, 2010
New Year Questions
I ate a bowl of Cheerios one morning between Christmas and New Year's Day watching the TV and Martha Stewart touting her new Facebook fan page.
The moment of Martha Stewart and Facebook is a mysterious breakthrough toward one thing or another not completely clear, except for being a clear cut away from the age of My Kids and Facebook.
Martha actually spent half her show talking about it. And no wonder when Facebook says 10 million people are becoming fans of brands like Martha Stewart EVERY day. That's only a fraction of the almost 400 million people using Facebook today.
So here's a New Year Question that won't leave me alone: What's the world going to be like with One Billion Facebook people?
Twitter was a big topic at holiday parties this year. Lots of aging boomers say the same thing: "I don't get Twitter."
Ask them if they've ever used Twitter and they say "Nah." Thankfully David Carr of the New York Times wrote a rich column on why he gets Twitter. Now I send it to people who don't get Twitter.
I use Twitter in place of the morning newspaper by following my favorite journos, bloggers and news organizations. I'll never buy another newspaper in my life.
Which makes me ask this New Year Question: Why do people say they don't get Twitter when they've never gone online and gotten Twitter to get the stuff they want and need to know for free everyday?
You know like I know when it comes to the iPhone, there's an app for that. But now word comes from Seth Godin of a place on the web where you can make an iPhone app in five minutes.
It's true. I did it.
Here's the last New Year Question: What's the world going to be like when you can create software apps that reach hundreds of millions of people around the world in five minutes?
How great is it that everything's coming together in a way that nothing's going to be the same soon?
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
The moment of Martha Stewart and Facebook is a mysterious breakthrough toward one thing or another not completely clear, except for being a clear cut away from the age of My Kids and Facebook.
Martha actually spent half her show talking about it. And no wonder when Facebook says 10 million people are becoming fans of brands like Martha Stewart EVERY day. That's only a fraction of the almost 400 million people using Facebook today.
So here's a New Year Question that won't leave me alone: What's the world going to be like with One Billion Facebook people?
Twitter was a big topic at holiday parties this year. Lots of aging boomers say the same thing: "I don't get Twitter."
Ask them if they've ever used Twitter and they say "Nah." Thankfully David Carr of the New York Times wrote a rich column on why he gets Twitter. Now I send it to people who don't get Twitter.
I use Twitter in place of the morning newspaper by following my favorite journos, bloggers and news organizations. I'll never buy another newspaper in my life.
Which makes me ask this New Year Question: Why do people say they don't get Twitter when they've never gone online and gotten Twitter to get the stuff they want and need to know for free everyday?
You know like I know when it comes to the iPhone, there's an app for that. But now word comes from Seth Godin of a place on the web where you can make an iPhone app in five minutes.
It's true. I did it.
Here's the last New Year Question: What's the world going to be like when you can create software apps that reach hundreds of millions of people around the world in five minutes?
How great is it that everything's coming together in a way that nothing's going to be the same soon?
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
Labels:
Facebook,
Innovation,
leadership,
Martha Stewart,
Seth Godin,
social media,
Twitter
Friday, January 1, 2010
New Year Words
A few words from my friend, Michael Sheeran, S.J., who serves as leader of Regis University, the Jesuit school in Denver, came the other day in his Christmas card.
These are the words of fellow Jesuit, Pedro Arrupe:
What you are in love with, what seizes your imagination, will affect everything. It will decide what will get you out of bed in the morning, what you will do with your evenings, how you will spend your weekends, what you read, who you know, what breaks your heart, and what amazes you with joy and gratitude. Fall in love, stay in love and it will decide everything.
Here's to a New Year, a New Decade becoming full of what you love.
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
These are the words of fellow Jesuit, Pedro Arrupe:
What you are in love with, what seizes your imagination, will affect everything. It will decide what will get you out of bed in the morning, what you will do with your evenings, how you will spend your weekends, what you read, who you know, what breaks your heart, and what amazes you with joy and gratitude. Fall in love, stay in love and it will decide everything.
Here's to a New Year, a New Decade becoming full of what you love.
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
Friday, December 25, 2009
Mystery
Something I read from James Scott Bell the other day said we each get about eight decades in this world. Which made me stop and count on my fingers how many decades I've gone through, and how many I may have left.
I've cleared past one full hand of fingers and just started into a new one on my other hand.
Yikes. That's a lot of fingers I've gone through. And seems there aren't many leftover. Double yikes.
It's Mystery to me what all these fingers are adding up to, where they are pointing. I used to think that was a bad thing. That was back when I was living on the other hand.
But ever since getting a new hand I'm thinking Mystery's not so bad. Especially when I'm aware that much of life is nothing but Mystery.
Think about the first decade of this new century. Geez, what a Mystery it has been.
Letterman, Tiger and Bernie? Oh my.
Iraq and WMD? Beats me.
Washington and Wall Street? No clue.
Why is it the more sophisticated and certain and omnipotent we act, the more mysterious life becomes?
What if we cut to the chase and embrace Mystery? How fun might that be? Even better, what relief might come from not having to know the weekend weather forecast or the difinity of pundits or the payback scenario or whether the next thing is really going to be The Next Big Thing?
When someone's trying to make sense of stuff and all the talk turns to nothing but answers with few questions or the debate over ROI or just loud, hot hootin' and hollerin', try asking So why the hangup with mystery?
Five fingers in and three more to go makes me wonder if all is Mystery? If so, fine with me.
So long as we're working together toward good, and no one despairs, come win, lose or draw and the mess that goes with it, isn't it easier and less of a burden to believe in Mystery where all will be well?
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
I've cleared past one full hand of fingers and just started into a new one on my other hand.
Yikes. That's a lot of fingers I've gone through. And seems there aren't many leftover. Double yikes.
It's Mystery to me what all these fingers are adding up to, where they are pointing. I used to think that was a bad thing. That was back when I was living on the other hand.
But ever since getting a new hand I'm thinking Mystery's not so bad. Especially when I'm aware that much of life is nothing but Mystery.
Think about the first decade of this new century. Geez, what a Mystery it has been.
Letterman, Tiger and Bernie? Oh my.
Iraq and WMD? Beats me.
Washington and Wall Street? No clue.
Why is it the more sophisticated and certain and omnipotent we act, the more mysterious life becomes?
What if we cut to the chase and embrace Mystery? How fun might that be? Even better, what relief might come from not having to know the weekend weather forecast or the difinity of pundits or the payback scenario or whether the next thing is really going to be The Next Big Thing?
When someone's trying to make sense of stuff and all the talk turns to nothing but answers with few questions or the debate over ROI or just loud, hot hootin' and hollerin', try asking So why the hangup with mystery?
Five fingers in and three more to go makes me wonder if all is Mystery? If so, fine with me.
So long as we're working together toward good, and no one despairs, come win, lose or draw and the mess that goes with it, isn't it easier and less of a burden to believe in Mystery where all will be well?
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
Friday, December 18, 2009
The Movies
You ever wanted to go to a holiday movie because everyone you know is saying they want to go to that movie. Even though you don't know exactly what you're all in for?
That's the way it is for all Next Big Things. Everyone wants in. Even if they're not sure why.
This is the moment when everyone's getting swept up. And it's a moment when great opportunity is at hand.
Here are a couple of thoughts that may come in handy at times like these.
First, is simple awareness that everyone wants in. As in the case of stuff like Facebook and Twitter these days. These are movies everyone wants to see right now.
How can you tell? The Odd Factor helps me. I start seeing swept up moments when I hear odd chatter in odd spots. Like when I heard two seniors in a Starbucks talking about connecting on Facebook. That ranked high on my Odd Factor. And helped me see everyone wants in on this movie.
Second thought is if you're aware of all the people going to the movie sweeping up at the box office, how great would it be if you're the one selling the popcorn?
Who wants to be the guy selling liver and onions at the movie everyone wants to see?
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
www.facebook.com/tjmorin
That's the way it is for all Next Big Things. Everyone wants in. Even if they're not sure why.
This is the moment when everyone's getting swept up. And it's a moment when great opportunity is at hand.
Here are a couple of thoughts that may come in handy at times like these.
First, is simple awareness that everyone wants in. As in the case of stuff like Facebook and Twitter these days. These are movies everyone wants to see right now.
How can you tell? The Odd Factor helps me. I start seeing swept up moments when I hear odd chatter in odd spots. Like when I heard two seniors in a Starbucks talking about connecting on Facebook. That ranked high on my Odd Factor. And helped me see everyone wants in on this movie.
Second thought is if you're aware of all the people going to the movie sweeping up at the box office, how great would it be if you're the one selling the popcorn?
Who wants to be the guy selling liver and onions at the movie everyone wants to see?
--tim
http://twitter.com/tjmorin
www.facebook.com/tjmorin
Friday, December 11, 2009
What Job Is Your Product Being Hired For?
This is the million dollar question asked by Harvard business guru, Clayton Christensen.
He's a big thinker when it comes to the art of innovation. Whether working on The Next Big Thing or simply trying to figure it out, this is a guy I love to learn from.
FRIDAY'S POST just came across a recent talk by Professor Christensen to a group of educators. Lordy, if there's a category ever in need of disruptive innovation, our schools, from kindergarten all the way through university, have to be among those most in need of serious transformation. Maybe it ought to be required viewing for every educator drawing a paycheck today.
Professor Christensen's research suggests that the job kids hire schools for is to help them feel more successful, and have time and a place to enjoy their friends. When schools fail to do the job, the Professor says kids will look to fill unmet needs by eventually dropping out or video-gaming or mallrat-packing or gang-banging.
In my state, Minnesota, only about a quarter of today's ninth graders will make it through college. That's a troubling statistic in this global high-tech knowledge economy of ours. Makes you wonder if schools get the message they aren't doing the job they're hired for very well anymore.
Oh, by the way, if you believe technology in the classroom is the answer, it's not says Professor Christensen. He says don't look for much impact from all those spiffy new computers in the classroom, unless it's accompanied by new models of teaching.
This brings to mind our friend Fred the Math Teacher and his model of doing school backward, featured in one of our November posts. Would that The Professor and The Math Teacher could meet. That'd be a great mash-up of 21st century theory, practice and what-job-is-school-being-hired-for-re-definition in one room.
Clayton Christensen's recent talk runs about 50 minutes and it covers innovation in business as well as government and education.
It is Must-Watch TV.
No matter if you are a leader in business or government or education or not-for-profit, you will find tremendous value watching this presentation. So, FRIDAY'S POST highly recommends you treat yourself to an hour with Clayton Christensen.
How great would it be if your customers someday said The Next Big Thing you invented did exactly the job they hired it for?
--tim
twitter tjmorin
He's a big thinker when it comes to the art of innovation. Whether working on The Next Big Thing or simply trying to figure it out, this is a guy I love to learn from.
FRIDAY'S POST just came across a recent talk by Professor Christensen to a group of educators. Lordy, if there's a category ever in need of disruptive innovation, our schools, from kindergarten all the way through university, have to be among those most in need of serious transformation. Maybe it ought to be required viewing for every educator drawing a paycheck today.
Professor Christensen's research suggests that the job kids hire schools for is to help them feel more successful, and have time and a place to enjoy their friends. When schools fail to do the job, the Professor says kids will look to fill unmet needs by eventually dropping out or video-gaming or mallrat-packing or gang-banging.
In my state, Minnesota, only about a quarter of today's ninth graders will make it through college. That's a troubling statistic in this global high-tech knowledge economy of ours. Makes you wonder if schools get the message they aren't doing the job they're hired for very well anymore.
Oh, by the way, if you believe technology in the classroom is the answer, it's not says Professor Christensen. He says don't look for much impact from all those spiffy new computers in the classroom, unless it's accompanied by new models of teaching.
This brings to mind our friend Fred the Math Teacher and his model of doing school backward, featured in one of our November posts. Would that The Professor and The Math Teacher could meet. That'd be a great mash-up of 21st century theory, practice and what-job-is-school-being-hired-for-re-definition in one room.
Clayton Christensen's recent talk runs about 50 minutes and it covers innovation in business as well as government and education.
It is Must-Watch TV.
No matter if you are a leader in business or government or education or not-for-profit, you will find tremendous value watching this presentation. So, FRIDAY'S POST highly recommends you treat yourself to an hour with Clayton Christensen.
How great would it be if your customers someday said The Next Big Thing you invented did exactly the job they hired it for?
--tim
twitter tjmorin
Friday, December 4, 2009
Hope and Fear and The Next Big Thing
We're at a moment when we need lots of Next Big Things. Those things and the jobs they bring aren't coming from GM or BofA or AOL or BHO. No, they'll come from us, We The People.
Trouble is hope and fear are getting in the way when it comes to getting after The Next Big Thing.
Who wants to step up and step out with some high-impact innovation when you're constantly feeding Fear the Beast with "Better not hire just yet" or "I'm not good enough" or "What if I fail" or "My boss will think this is stupid" or "You guys aren't big enough to be a good credit risk."
Oh my. Not me. That's for sure.
On the other hand, Hope unchecked can carry you quickly away. Next thing I know I'm swept up by my own genius or avarice or omnipotence.
These storylines hold the stuff of bad endings, the last thing needed when crafting a better way for, say, health care in America. How sad when Hope gives way to hype and then to the tartuffe and the thousand-page fix-it plan that becomes law of the land.
Here's the deal, Hope and Fear in proper measure can fuel each of us to The Next Big Thing. Hope dwells within inspiration coming from Something bigger than ourselves. And Fear, in the right dose, spurs positive change.
But, lordy, how do you find the right balance?
Maybe all it takes is being aware of moments when Hope and Fear are at work in our lives. And consciously responding to their movements on a path toward passion, purpose, growth.
Maybe it means balancing Hope with humility. And Fear with the trusting embrace of mystery, this thing we call Life.
You got an idea and passion for the next killer social media app, or an opportunity to buy a distressed company, or underwrite a small business loan, or desiring a career change, or looking for a new job? You're probably hanging around Hope and Fear a lot these days.
I wonder if becoming aware of how they hang around us is the first big thing we should do when getting after The Next Big Thing we do?
--tim
twitter tjmorin
Trouble is hope and fear are getting in the way when it comes to getting after The Next Big Thing.
Who wants to step up and step out with some high-impact innovation when you're constantly feeding Fear the Beast with "Better not hire just yet" or "I'm not good enough" or "What if I fail" or "My boss will think this is stupid" or "You guys aren't big enough to be a good credit risk."
Oh my. Not me. That's for sure.
On the other hand, Hope unchecked can carry you quickly away. Next thing I know I'm swept up by my own genius or avarice or omnipotence.
These storylines hold the stuff of bad endings, the last thing needed when crafting a better way for, say, health care in America. How sad when Hope gives way to hype and then to the tartuffe and the thousand-page fix-it plan that becomes law of the land.
Here's the deal, Hope and Fear in proper measure can fuel each of us to The Next Big Thing. Hope dwells within inspiration coming from Something bigger than ourselves. And Fear, in the right dose, spurs positive change.
But, lordy, how do you find the right balance?
Maybe all it takes is being aware of moments when Hope and Fear are at work in our lives. And consciously responding to their movements on a path toward passion, purpose, growth.
Maybe it means balancing Hope with humility. And Fear with the trusting embrace of mystery, this thing we call Life.
You got an idea and passion for the next killer social media app, or an opportunity to buy a distressed company, or underwrite a small business loan, or desiring a career change, or looking for a new job? You're probably hanging around Hope and Fear a lot these days.
I wonder if becoming aware of how they hang around us is the first big thing we should do when getting after The Next Big Thing we do?
--tim
twitter tjmorin
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