Make Your Life Flash Before Your Eyes

Guy Kawasaki’s life path Kronomy make your own show details God help me, that's my high-school graduation picture that you see in the second frame. Showing you this picture, however, isn't the reason for this posting. The real reason is to tell you about a company called Kronomy that enables you to create a time [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:34-07:00July 21st, 2008|Categories: Cool Stuff|1 Comment

It’s Not Easy Being Me

Sometimes you just have to do what you have to do--for example, host 250 women bloggers at your house. This is a photo from the Kirtsy ("Digg for chicks") and Alltop ("aggregation without aggravation") pre-BlogHer party. If you click here, you can see many more including White Trash Mom lifting her leg, Jenny the Bloggess [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:36-07:00July 20th, 2008|Categories: Cool Stuff|0 Comments

Alltop Badge Contest Winners

Voters have selected the five winnners of the Alltop badge contest. Each winner will receive a iPod Touch. The winners are: Jesse Pons Glenn Sakamoto Kristen Chase Ben Goheen Cayley Vos You can see the winning entries here. My thanks to everyone who entered and who voted.

By |2016-10-24T14:14:38-07:00July 18th, 2008|Categories: Uncategorized|0 Comments

How to Change Someone’s Mind

There's nothing I like to study more than techniques of persuasion, and I want to persuade you to check out a website called ChangingMinds.org. You can think of it as Robert Cialdini, my hero when it comes to persuasion, on steroids. Here is a direct link to theories of persuasion but do spend time on [...]

By |2015-03-17T09:30:03-07:00July 16th, 2008|Categories: Marketing and Sales|0 Comments

The Wall Street Journal Lesson

A sign of PR cluelessness is writing to a reporter after an article appears because you think that it should have mentioned your product or company. There are two problems with this theory: first, the reporter isn't going to revise the original piece; and second, she's not going to write another article covering the same [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:41-07:00July 15th, 2008|Categories: Marketing and Sales|0 Comments

Free Power

Neuromarketing has another great blog post. This time the subject is the power of "free." Click here to read it. Apparently, a free offer has power that is far beyond what you'd think. There are many marketing and advertising implications, so go read the posting.

By |2016-10-24T14:14:43-07:00July 11th, 2008|Categories: Marketing and Sales|0 Comments

NowPublic Buys Truemors

NowPublic bought Truemors yesterday, and I became chairman of NowPublic's board of advisors. You can read more details here. These are exciting times! Thank you everyone for contributing your stories to Truemors and for visiting our site.

By |2016-10-24T14:14:45-07:00July 10th, 2008|Categories: Uncategorized|0 Comments

The Appeal of “New” is Hardwired

Dr. Bianca Wittman of University College London found that making novel choices activates the ventral striatum of the brain. This area is associated with rewarding behavior. Thus, labeling a product as "new" may increase its sales because of this brain wiring. Also, familiar brands also cause higher levels of brain activation, so the perfect pitch [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:47-07:00July 9th, 2008|Categories: Marketing and Sales|Tags: |0 Comments

The Cleverest Calendar Ever

I love ideas like this: bubble-wrap calendars. You pop each day when it's done. A company from Brooklyn sells them for $50--$50 for bubble wrap! I love the margins as much as the idea. Put this one in the "why didn't I think of that?" category.

By |2016-10-24T14:14:49-07:00July 9th, 2008|Categories: Cool Stuff|0 Comments

Everything You Need to Know About Online Advertising–Advice from 1923

My buddy David Szetela writes a new column for SearchEngineWatch called "Profitable PPC." In his first column, "PPC Advertising: Art or Science?," he mentions a book called Scientific Advertising by Claude C. Hopkins. The book was first published in 1923--long before TV or online advertising. Hopkins is the inventor of test marketing, coupon sampling, and [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:51-07:00July 8th, 2008|Categories: Marketing and Sales|0 Comments

My Debut as a Chef

My buddies at Start Cooking kickstarted my career as a chef. Please click here to watch the video of my teriyaki sauce. I won't get very far as a chef, but I love the video style of Start Cooking. Companies can use this stop-action style to explain many product and services--it sure beats the usual [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:55-07:00July 8th, 2008|Categories: Cool Stuff, Entrepreneurship|0 Comments

The Mismatch Problem by Malcolm Gladwell

Check out this great video of Malcolm Gladwell (The Tipping Point) discussing the shortcomings of today's hiring practices. He cites examples of professional sports that conduct "combines" where teams measure the performances of prospects in the hopes of drafting the future stars. Guess what: this method doesn't work. Jobs--of all types--are more complex, and the [...]

By |2015-03-17T09:30:17-07:00July 7th, 2008|Categories: Events, Human Capital|0 Comments

Contact Lens Personal Display

Babak Parviz, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at the University of Washington, is working on developing contact lenses with LEDs in them. This makes the contact lenses into personal displays--and gives a whole new meaning to "EyePod." There are, however, still issues such as powering the LEDs and the fact that the lens are [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:14:59-07:00July 7th, 2008|Categories: Cool Stuff|0 Comments

The Growth Mindset

"If You're Open to Growth, You Tend to Grow" should be required reading for managers and parents. It summarizes the work of Carol Dweck from Stanford. Key passage: Those who believe they were born with all the smarts and gifts they’re ever going to have approach life with what she calls a “fixed mind-set.” Those [...]

By |2015-03-17T09:30:21-07:00July 6th, 2008|Categories: Innovation, Management|0 Comments

Cool Stuff Monday

A buddy of mine found three cool inventions to share with readers of my blog. These inventions can change the world and illustrate how much can be done with innovative thinking. Pot-in-pot. This is the invention of Mohammed Bah Abba of Nigeria. He is from a family of pot makers and discovered a way to [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:15:01-07:00June 29th, 2008|Categories: Innovation|0 Comments

Slideshare Announces “World’s Best Presentation Contest”

| View | Upload your own Slideshare is running the "World's Best Presentation Contest" again. Entries are due by July 31st. I'm a judge again this year along with Bert Decker, Nancy Duarte, and Garr Reynolds. The prizes include a MacBook Air, Amazon Kindle, iPod Nano, iPod Touch, and copies of Presentation Zen. To learn [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:15:03-07:00June 25th, 2008|Categories: Pitching and Presenting|0 Comments

The Art of Change

Over at the Sun Microsystems blog I published an interview about the art of change. It features Ariane de Bonvoisin, the founder and CEO of The First Thirty Days, Inc. She recently published a book called The First 30 Days: Your Guide to Any Change (and Loving Your Life More). Learn about the crucial first [...]

By |2016-10-24T14:15:05-07:00June 24th, 2008|Categories: Innovation, Management|0 Comments
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