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Suzanne Pinckney

Good Deeds Attract Top Millenial Talent - 0 views

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    "Millennials are willing to turn down jobs at Fortune 500 companies to work for companies that better reflect their values."
Suzanne Pinckney

Seth's Blog: Where are your assets? - 0 views

  • Your choice: intentionally build and nurture your assets, or ignore them in the pursuit of the next thing...
  • Now that everyone has the ability to own a slice of the attention paid to media, now that everyone can build and nurture a network, assets are no longer off limits to people who work for a living.
  • Your brand.
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  • Permission.
  • Expertise.
  • In just three words, then, there's the huge chasm between the trusted, experienced freelancer, the one you're happy to hear from when she has a new idea, and the newbie or the short-term maximizer. Those guys have to start from scratch, each and every time.
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    read it to the end. so good.
Suzanne Pinckney

Mission in a Bottle - The Story of Honest Tea - 0 views

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    Good example of book pitch page
Suzanne Pinckney

Owl, Fox & Dean - 1 views

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    good friends from BGI - love their use of images
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    Yes, loved the simplicity. Inspiration for us...
Suzanne Pinckney

Recline! - 1 views

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    "When a workplace is full of employees who always lean in and never lean back, it's full of employees who are exhausted, brittle, and incapable of showing much creativity or making good decisions."
Suzanne Pinckney

Driving sustainable transformation via the power of design | Guardian Sustainable Busin... - 0 views

  • Shaw Industries, an early adopter of cradle-to-cradle principles, is committed to making only C2C certified products by 2030. Currently more than 60% of its $4bn in total annual sales comes from certified carpet and hardwood flooring.
  • Numerous benefits accrue from values-first leadership. It clarifies and broadens, in the best way, how a company views itself. It changes how others view it. The products the company sells, its way of doing things and, indeed, its very existence, can be a living testimony to its support for a world of prosperity, social equity and environmental health.
  • most successful companies embrace good design by loudly and clearly stating their positive intentions.
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  • When a CEO declares that his or her company will improve the water quality of an entire community or build a workplace that will generate more renewable energy than it requires, this statement alone can unleash enthusiasm, creativity and innovation
  • . It stresses the good, such as 'we will use and generate only renewable energy,' rather than the more common
Suzanne Pinckney

CEO survey is gloomy reading for the corporate sustainability movement | Guardian Susta... - 0 views

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    Really interesting article on CEO survey with insight as to why sustainability is a challenge still. Good fodder for our messaging
Suzanne Pinckney

Creativity - Extended Interview - Peter Sims - 0 views

  • So, improvisation and humor really lubricate the skids for creativity as a group, and then, also, allow people to not censor their ideas too prematurely, which is obviously really important.
  • if you’re laughing, you’re more likely to have a more relaxed state of mind and you’re more likely to be in a creative state of mind. Humor removes some of the barriers and some of the self-consciousness.
  • make it so people are very comfortable working with ambiguity and fighting through setbacks and failure, in order to solve problems in more creative ways.
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  • Luck Isn’t Random. It’s A Skill.
  • people who tend to be more lucky have a much more open stance to their world. They interact with people at gatherings or parties who are different from them. They’re just more open to different types of people, and unlucky people tend to just stick to their very own type, people who are of similar backgrounds, similar educational backgrounds, etc.
  • “I’m going to try this for a few weeks and I’m going to see where it gets me. Then I’m going to check in again and I’m going to measure the progress. I’m going to take stock and I’m going to make a decision then about whether to keep going in that direction or to shift.”
  • The willingness to spend 5 to 10% of your time doing experiments will, over the long run, really open up that part of you that can be more creative and entrepreneurial, and yield, hopefully, some new opportunities that you hadn’t thought of before trying something.
  • “Yes. That looks good and what if we did this,” instead of saying, “I don’t like that idea,” and just throwing it out completely.
  • you take the good elements and then you make them better and you constantly do this until you get to perfection.
  • The term for these people is “experimental innovators” – those who learn from each little mistake and piece together what ends up being something great, whether it’s a comedy act or a building or a piece of music. It just doesn’t come without lots of setback and toil.
Suzanne Pinckney

Bridging the Behavioral Gap for Recycling Success · Environmental Management ... - 0 views

  • The most effective way to affect change in personal ownership is a combination of education and guilt.  Guilt (and a little positive encouragement) changes behavior. It is known that guilt can be a great motivator for environmentally responsible behavior.  The Green Guilt survey also showed that 29% of Americans admit to suffering from “green guilt,” defined as the knowledge that you could and should be doing more to help preserve the environment. The findings also show that Americans increasingly feel an obligation to recycle.
  • The right combination of knowledge, access and personal responsibility is the foundation needed to move from apathetic to active participant.
  • The most challenging hurdle is apathy. When consumers feel disconnected from the benefits of environmentally responsible behaviors—or from the dangers present in its absence—it is easy to just not care
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  • A durable product may require investigation of disposal options, which delays action.
  • With this, good intentions fade, resulting in recyclables that are tossed into the trash or hoarded for lengthy amounts of time. 
  • he perceived value of a product can determine many aspects of its lifecycle, from how long it is kept to how it is disposed.  Not surprisingly, more expensive products are perceived as “more valuable” and less disposable, even at the end of their usable life.
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    not sure exactly where to save this but the highlights kind of make me sad...yuck. we are so much more into the carrot than the stick!
Suzanne Pinckney

Hay House | Your Writing Life - 0 views

  • New ideas come to me all the time. I always have a Google Doc up on the screen so that I can write whenever I’m inspired. I intend to get at least 500 words in a day to stay connected to the process.
  • I think Twitter is where it’s at! If you enjoy writing, use Twitter as a tool for expressing yourself in fun 140-character messages. Twitter is also a great way to engage with a larger audience and get feedback about your writing. If people are retweeting your posts, you can trust that the content is good. Follow other writers and people whose work you respect, interact with them, and get in the mix. You can learn a lot from Twitter if you want to! In addition, having a strong Twitter following will greatly benefit your book launch, since you have a built-in network of supporters who can help spread the word fast.
  • Gen X and Y readers want clear messages. They are used to reading cut-to-the-chase tweets and concise, 400-word blogs. The key is to get to the point, fast!
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  • Listen to Gabby LIVE every Wednesday (9 am Pacific/noon Eastern) on her call-in talk show on Hay House Radio.Meet Gabby in person and learn more tips on how to build your branding at Hay House’s Writer’s Workshop in New York this June.
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    newsletter from hay house on writing, featuring gabby bernstein and nick ortner in the same month!
Suzanne Pinckney

How to win the sustainability story wars: Q&A with Jonah Sachs | GreenBiz.com - 0 views

  • because the media marketplace is going to start wanting more messages of passion."
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    Editor's note: Free Range Studios will be presenting storytelling workshops at the GreenBiz Forum in New York (Feb. 19 to 21) and San Francisco (Feb. 26 to 28), where they'll guide participants through a five-step strategy in how to best tell their sustainability story. There's a good chance you've seen some of Jonah Sachs' work.
Suzanne Pinckney

Women in CSR: Alison DaSilva, Cone Communications - 0 views

  • clearer communications of impact. Consumers are confused and overwhelmed by claims and promises of good intentions. Companies need to find the balance between aspirational statements and hard data.
Suzanne Pinckney

Fantastic First Impression - tips for website - 0 views

  • If you’re using white text on a dark background, don’t do anything else with your site before fixing that. It makes for a miserable reading experience, and it will cut down dramatically on the links and shares you receive. Your text should feel like black text on a white background, even if the colors are actually very dark gray with very light gray. If you’re using one of those fancy textured backgrounds that’s taking forever to load — replace it. Site speed is an essential element of reader-friendly design. Bump your font size up. How big will depend on the typeface you choose, but 14 pt is a good starting point. Speaking of typeface (what most of us call font), choose readability before anything else. No matter how much you love the look of that fancy, hard-to-read font, replace it. Don’t use 20 different typefaces all over your site. Choose one for your headers/subheaders and one for your body text. Links should be underlined. Designers love to play with more attractive ways of indicating links — sadly, none of them is as clear to the reader as underlined text is. When you’re writing content, break it up into fairly short paragraphs. Avoid very wide or very narrow columns for your text: both are hard to read. Columns that are 450-550 pixels wide tend to work well (here’s an article explaining why).
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