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Suzanne Pinckney

Leaving an Impact After You're Gone - 1 views

  • “If everything you do, you do for yourself, then when you die it all disappears. If everything you do, you do for others, it all lives on.”
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    ""If everything you do, you do for yourself, then when you die it all disappears. If everything you do, you do for others, it all lives on.""
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

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).
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

Don't Spin a Better Story. Be a Better Company - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

  • We started by encouraging the organization to get out of its defensive crouch and listen to its critics. It wasn’t easy to open up to the outside, but the learning opportunity was clear. Ten NGO leaders around the table bring you 100 years of experience.
  • Implementing recently announced energy initiatives will eventually save $1 billion a year.
  • Walmart gets its story out better these days. But the reason the story resonates is that it’s a story of real change.
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  • So here’s my advice: If a drumbeat of criticism starts up against your company, don’t rush to raise your voice above it. Stop to listen. And commit to getting better.
Suzanne Pinckney

It's time to start taking responsible investing seriously | Guardian Sustainable Busine... - 0 views

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    "On its newest assembly lines BMW produces less than 50g of waste per vehicle. Less than the weight of keys and still the company has plans to reduce it further. "
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