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Suzanne Pinckney

Email Signup Forms: The 7 Key Places to Add Them for List Building - 1 views

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    Ones I want to remember / integrate : #3 After Single Post need to ensure that all content is linked to sign-up, duh. ;) #5 On Your About Page surprised we need at least 3 here and ready to implement! Xo C
Suzanne Pinckney

If you struggle to keep in touch (and network) with people, THIS is the solution - 0 views

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    Not only is this a dead simple and smart tip for follow up when you meet something, but the simplicity of this tip reminds me of how many hundreds of little tips like this we can provide online through video and/or blogs. We need to learn how to line up the copy to pitch it effectively.
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    yes, agree. sent comments via email. sorry - diigo is not very intuitive for me, for some reason. will have you give me a tutorial at some point...
Suzanne Pinckney

Seth's Blog: Two people you might need in your professional life - 1 views

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    very nice
Suzanne Pinckney

Empower Others with Your Book | Balboa Press - 1 views

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    We need to keep this on the radar when the manuscript has come along.
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    agree. wrote "hay house" publication under goals in weekly practice this month! ;)
Suzanne Pinckney

What Is Backcasting? | The Natural Step - 1 views

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    Thanks for the refresher. This is how I use it when teaching TNS to clients, and I'd like to understand what the principles would be for personal susty (the equivalent of 'decrease use of synthetic chemicals that persist in nature'). Know what I mean? Can we invent those principles??? :) The makings of a super cool idea . . .
Suzanne Pinckney

A Conference Call in Real Life - YouTube - 0 views

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    Hilarious video to use in courses on virtual communication
Suzanne Pinckney

Is sustainability a dangerous myth fuelling over consumption? | Guardian Sustainable Bu... - 0 views

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    i see this as a classic example of the evolution of the language of sustainability; and possibly reinforcing of our own need to move away from the word in our name and branding...though not in all messaging
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

The Green Issue - Why Isn't the Brain Green? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • rames are just one way to nudge people by using sophisticated messages, mined from decision-science research, that resonate with particular audiences or that take advantage of our cognitive biases (like informing us that an urgent operation has an 80 percent survival rate).
  • Nudges, more broadly, structure choices so that our natural cognitive shortcomings don’t make us err. Ideally, nudges direct us, gently, toward actions that are in our long-term interest, like an automated retirement savings plan that circumvents our typical inertia.
  • Whatever you design as the most cost-effective or technologically feasible solution might not be palatable to the end users or might encounter political oppositions,”
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  • the tax frame affected the outcome
  • I think there’s an attractive version of the carbon tax if somebody thought about its design,”
  • The crucial question, at least to her, is whether (and when) we want to use the tools of decision science to try and steer people toward better choices. If our preferences aren’t fixed the way we think they are — if, as Weber has argued, they’re sometimes merely constructed on the spot in response to a choice we face — why not try new methods (ordering options, choosing strategic words, creating group effects and so forth) to elicit preferences aligned with our long-term interest? That has to be better, in Weber’s opinion, than having people blunder unconsciously into an environmental catastrophe.
  • “Let’s start with the fact that climate change is anthropogenic,” Weber told me one morning in her Columbia office. “More or less, people have agreed on that. That means it’s caused by human behavior. That’s not to say that engineering solutions aren’t important. But if it’s caused by human behavior, then the solution probably also lies in changing human behavior.”
  • we have a “finite pool of worry,”
  • which means we’re unable to maintain our fear of climate change when a different problem — a plunging stock market, a personal emergency — comes along. We simply move one fear into the worry bin and one fear out. And even if we could remain persistently concerned about a warmer world? Weber described what she calls a “single-action bias.”
  • Prompted by a distressing emotional signal, we buy a more efficient furnace or insulate our attic or vote for a green candidate — a single action that effectively diminishes global warming as a motivating factor. And that leaves us where we started.
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