This post by Bob Miglani (author of best selling book Embrace the Chaos) is the way I want to be in leading the Studio--leaning in with ideas (because we don't have many resources right now), plowing ahead (taking action), and not letting my over-analytical DNA slow me down too much (so that we get lost in the marketplace trends moving ahead of us). I especially love the one line review of his book at the end--"...shows you how to relax and enjoy the messiness of life."
So theoretically, it all fits well for me. But where is the $? :-)
Great blog post on how to start your productive day by at workawesome.
1. Well-begun is half-done
2. Spend more time in the shower
3. Eat a proper breakfast
4. Stay away from negatives--thoughts, people, and actions
5. Do what makes you happy, and be proud for it
"Of the array of skills that comprise leadership, the ability to craft and communicate strategic vision is simultaneously the most valuable and least well-practiced. The value part is obvious; leaders adept at inspiring their teams achieve high-impact business results faster, more easily, and more compassionately. But, why do so many leaders struggle with building shared vision? In this article, I'll outline three root causes and suggest ways to address them based on best practices from TED Talks."
Linda Stone's blog, April 20, 2012. Runs something called The Attention Project.
New terms: conscious computing, email and screen apnea, continuous partial attention
Excerpt:
"Thirty years ago, personal computing technologies created a revolution in personal productivity, supporting a value on self-expression, output and efficiency. The personal communications technology era that followed the era of personal productivity amplified accessibility and responsiveness. Personal technologies have served us well as prosthetics for the mind, in service of thinking and doing.
Our focus has been on technologies as prosthetics for the mind, and human-as-machine style productivity. This has led to burn-out, poor health, poor sleep, and what I call email apnea or screen apnea. We wonder where our attention has gone. Turns out, it's right where we left it - with our ability to breathe fully.
We can use personal technologies that are prosthetics for our beings, to enhance our lives. I call this Conscious Computing.
We can use technology to help enable Conscious Computing, or we can find it on our own, through attending to how we feel. For advice from a musician on how to do Conscious Computing, I interviewed the organist, Cameron Carpenter.
Conscious Computing with the help of passive, ambient, non-invasive Heart Rate Variability (HRV) technology is poised to take off over the next few years. It has the potential to help all of us learn the skills that musicians, athletes and dancers have, that immunizes them from email apnea."
Great short post by Oprah on getting unstuck. The quote by Turecki is so true: "Nothing happens until you decide."
Excerpt:
When our expert, Dr. Stanley Turecki, finished watching, he said something that made the hairs on my arm stand up: "Nothing happens until you decide." The reason her 3-year-old didn't sleep in his own bed was that the mother had not decided it would happen. When she did, the child would go to his bed. He might cry and scream and rant until he fell asleep, but he would eventually realize that his mother had made up her mind.
Well, I knew he was speaking about a 3-year-old, but I also knew for sure that this brilliant piece of advice applied to many other aspects of life: Relationships. Career moves. Weight issues. Everything depends on your decisions.
For years I was stuck in a weight trap, yo-yoing up and down the scale. I made a decision two years ago to stop wishing, praying, and wanting, wanting, wanting to be better. Instead I figured out what it would really take to improve my life. Then I decided to do it.
When you don't know what to do, my best advice is to do nothing until clarity comes. Getting still, being able to hear your own voice and not the voices of the world, quickens clarity. Once you decide what you want, you make a commitment to that decision. One of my favorite quotes is from mountaineer W.H. Murray:
"Until one is committed there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves, too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his way. I have learned a deep res
Blog post by Deborah Shane
"According to a CareerBuilder survey "hiring managers are using social media to get a glimpse at the candidate's behavior and personality outside of the interview, and are most interested in professional presentation and how the candidate would fit with the company culture.
Here are five strategies anyone can use to 'advance and own their professional development'."
First three of five strategies are online:
1) Use Facebook in a hybrid way.
Facebook can be one of the most effective and diverse self marketing, branding and networking assets of all of the social platforms. Posting professional questions, article linking, Facebook chats and using the Notes Feature are all great ways to brand yourself on Facebook.
2) Brand your LinkedIn and Twitter pages content and information.
Having a content rich, branded landing page on LinkedIn and Twitter can make a strong first impression. Complete your profiles and tell your story in your job history. This makes you more personable and shows people you are serious, professional and you want to be remembered.
3) Launch your own blog or guest blog for other strategic sites.
This is one of the best ways to share how you think and show your knowledge and expertise, as well as highlight others in your field that you admire or want to emulate. Some of the free sites you can use are WordPress, Weebly and Wix.
An article for BBC by Maggie Jackson, September 2009, about our inability to pay attention in an age driven by speed through technology
"Still, I'm worried. These digital age wonders will be squandered if we can't think critically, research well, and evaluate the data-floods we now have at our fingertips - and these are precisely the skills alarmingly lacking among both digital natives and older generations. Half of college students can't judge the objectivity of a website. Workers now switch tasks every three minutes, half the time interrupting themselves. As David Nicholas points out, we spend our time online 'power-bouncing' from info-snippet to data-point. And this propensity to rely on point-and-click, first-up-on-Google answers, along with our growing unwillingness to wrestle uncomfortably with nuances or uncertainties, keeps us stuck on the surface of the 'information' age. We're too often sacrificing depth for breadth in the ways we make sense of the world.
Yes, we've always had 'power bouncing' and distraction. And surfing or multitasking may have an important place in 21st-century society as strategies of learning. But going forward, we need to do much more than hopscotch across the web, split-focused and pulled this way and that by choice distractions. We cannot mistake fragmented, diffused attention as avenues of higher thought. Instead, we need to do better at cultivating - perhaps resuscitating? - deep focus, keen awareness and meta-cognitive 'executive' attention - the skills crucial to creativity and problem-solving. "
Another global initiative to help women become leaders, advocate for rights, democracy and peace as well as economic development. Interesting to us is the use of stories as the core of some trainings.
Great infographic on the use of smartphones by age as well as by type of phone (iPhone, Android, Microsoft, RIM). Highest smartphone penetration rate is 62% in age group 25 - 34.
Great resource by Idealware for nonprofits to use to use social media well for different purposes such as events, outreach, volunteer recruitment, etc.
Oddly, professional development or learning by staff/volunteers/across organizational boundaries is not mentioned. Wonder if we should reach out to Idealware's authors to discuss adding another section to guide next year?
Stumbled into this blog post on why kids need to learn to code by Doug Belshaw, November 28, 2013 on Digital Media + Learning: The Power of Participation
Love this rationale for why learning to code is important because I believe these arguments apply to adults acquiring greater digital literacy as well--it makes the reasons explicit. Coding is defined as learning to read and write a machine language; some are easier than others just like spoken language is.
Reasons to learn to code
1. Problem-solving
2. (digital) confidence
3. Understanding the world (realizing that you can not only change and influence things but build things of value to others)
In the comments, readers suggested these additional reasons: design thinking, understanding systems, knowing when to amend or break them and soft skills such as sharing your work, receiving feedback and critique to build diplomacy and negotiation skills.
Wonderful infographic on how to market your business, posted December 6, 3013, Michael Nelson on Social Media Today, with examples of these rules.Well worth taking a look at.
1. Keep it simple
2. Be unexpected
3. Be concrete
4. Get Credible
5. Be emotional
6. Tell a story
Here are five ways to successfully tap into the women's market:
1. Provide good quality information. Producing a newsletter and Web site are excellent ways to
demonstrate your expertise and to keep your image in front of clients and prospects. Include
plenty of strategies and tips that will help guide women to be more successful in running or
growing their businesses. Conducting free seminars or workshops is another good strategy for
imparting your knowledge and has the added benefit of serving as a networking forum.
2. Build relationship marketing strategies. Develop and sustain relationships with women and
cultivate a sense of community.
3. Host networking events. Historically, women have not had the same opportunities to network as
their male counterparts. You can create your own networking events for women clients and
prospects. Featuring a guest speaker in your industry can be an excellent addition. Just be sure
to build in enough time for networking as well.
4. Sponsor women's business associations or events. If you are looking to target this market and
build awareness, consider sponsoring one of the many women's business associations and
events. These range from something as specific as mentoring programs (such as the Step Ahead
One-on-One Mentoring Program - www.stepaheadonline.com ) to associations for women
exporters (such as the Organization of Women in International Trade - www.owit-toronto.ca ).
Most hold regular meetings and special functions. Some provide opportunities for sponsors to
speak and showcase their expertise. Contributing material to their newsletters, publications and
Web sites is another good way to build your identity among members, as these associations often
welcome good quality, educational submissions of interest to members.
5. Share core information on a regular basis. Email or mail information that is considered to be "in
our mutual interest." News clippings, industry data, notes from indus
A PDF presenting the mission and strategic plan for Association for Women in Science 2011-2014. Well done in design and content. Look at these goals and objectives:
Increase awareness of issues that impede and endanger American
competitiveness by limiting progress in STEM careers
Promulgate results of important national studies on gender inequity
in learning environments and workplaces
Work with federal and local agencies to show how gender equity
aligns with their goals for workforce development
Actively seek out opportunities for positive coverage in the media of AWIS activities and positions
Highlight ways to restructure STEM environments to foster diversity
and inclusion to advance national competitiveness
Focus on career transitions and special needs of women of color and other underrepresented groups
Actively propose and support federal legislation and initiatives which are consistent with AWIS policies and position statements such as, but not limited to: 1. Economic equity; 2. Flexible work options; 3. Parental leave; 4. Improvement of post-doc employment status; and 5. Title IX compliance.
Develop mechanisms to engage individuals and chapters in
advocacy
Identify opportunities for innovation and systemic change across
multiple work sectors
Promote best practice models for employers and educators by
gathering and highlighting examples from different disciplines,
work sectors, and industries
Highlight the central role of professional societies in advancing
women's careers
Expand our voice through strategic alliances and partnerships
"Running a blog is so much more rewarding when you know people are reading, enjoying and sharing your work. If you're managing a blog as part of your business, you probably want people to find and buy your products through your blog, as well. So increasing subscribers is an important task for bloggers.
These are some fairly simple hacks that you can implement without too much fuss, which should boost your subscriber numbers.
1. Lower your bounce rate - here is how"
Blog post identified by Brenda Kaulback for CPsquare Inquiry 2013. Blog by Scott Jaschik, August 19, 2013, focuses on the DOCC, a MOOC feminized with different values and pedagogy.
Excerpt
"The DOCC aims to challenge MOOC thinking about the role of the instructor, about the role of money, about hierarchy, about the value of "massive," and many other things. The first DOCC will be offered for credit at 17 colleges this coming semester, as well in a more MOOC-style approach in which videos and materials are available online for anyone."
Excerpt:
"A DOCC is different from a MOOC in that it doesn't deliver a centralized singular syllabus to all the participants. Rather it organizes around a central topic," Balsamo said. "It recognizes that, based on deep feminist pedagogical commitments, expertise is distributed throughout all the participants in a learning activity," and does not just reside with one or two individuals.
Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2013/08/19/feminist-professors-create-alternative-moocs#ixzz2xY8xLHur
Inside Higher Ed
""We do our best work when we're physically connected," says Roy Hirshland, CEO of T3 Advisors, a commercial real estate advisor. Dialing in on Skype will work in a pinch, but it's not a substitute, he says. "When you're in the same room, you can see facial expressions, you can feel energy in a room."
The idea is based on Media Richness Theory, which posits that some tasks require face-to-face interaction. Skype doesn't fit the bill. "Skype is a great, free way to communicate with sound and picture, but with glitchy connections, awkward camera angles, the limitations of webcams and cheap microphones, etc.," says Dr. Matthew Lombard, a professor at Temple University and president of the International Society for Presence Research. "It's far from the same experience as talking to someone in person. Face-Time and other tablet and phone methods have the advantage of mobility, but they suffer in terms of the vividness of the experience."
"Narrow-bandwidth tech like text-based chat rooms and messaging, and email, are great for specific, relatively straight-forward, 'dry' cognitive tasks but not so good for things that involve ambiguity and emotion," Lombard says. "So there are an awful lot of tasks people need to complete in business (and certainly in life generally) that don't lend themselves well to these technologies.""
Unusually good assessment IMO by Jane Hart of how modern learning differs from traditional training practices, 4/28/2014.
She identifies six key features:
autonomy
small and short
continuous
on demand
social
anywhere, anytime, on any device
Are these features then the new standards for learning concierges, learning coaches, learning stewards and facilitators? As well as for the learners themselves?
Survey by Seth Kahan of 135 executives of trade associations and professional societies among others.
Listed innovation priorities for future: educational offerings mentioned 101 times (135 survey participants), member experience--78, meetings--65, ...technology--56
Interesting innovations identified by survey participants on page 17 starting with this one: identifying a unique way of delivering women's leadership programming. Many organizations do it, most for their internal staff development, but don't do it well. We want to drop anchor in a crowded ocean and dive deep below the surface for our reach. Another one: creating an institute to advance the profession: research, human capital and practice management.
Yet another: practice Portal www.asha.org/practice-portal/