One Work-Life Balance
Work-life balance is something I’ll write about more soon. In the meantime, I just stumbled across this quote that is thought-provoking:
“Every one of us can send emails on Sunday night, but how many of us know how to go to the movies on Monday afternoon? If you don’t know how to go to the movies from 2 to 4, you’re in trouble because you’ve just taken on something that unbalances life, but you haven’t rebalanced it with something else.”
Ricardo Semler
What Companies can Learn from Political Campaigns
Great read from Mark Penn. I particularly liked this thought:
Make it a Choice, not a referendum on you. Campaigns and consumer choices share one important thing in common: they are about alternatives, not ideals. Too often incumbent politicians and brands face a referendum on their policies even though the alternative remains untested. In these situations you have to make it a choice.
CommBank Kaching is Here
Very excited that CommBank Kaching is now here. You can download from the iTunes store – for this version you will need to have CBA/NetBank account and also be in Australia. Lots more innovation coming from us in this space.
I’ve been using Kaching for the past month and is makes shopping a breeze. Simply tap and go with an iPhone and iCarte. Let us know how you find the experience.
One Day We Will All Get Over This Social Technology Thing…
Neal Stephenson says it so well..
“I’ll tell you what I’d like to see happen,” he said, and began discussing what the future was supposed to have looked like, back in his 1960s childhood. He ticked off the tropes of what he called “techno-optimistic science fiction,” including flying cars and jetpacks. And then computers went from being things that filled a room to things that could fit on a desk, and the economy and industries changed. “The kinds of super-bright, hardworking geeky people who, 50 years ago, would have been building moon rockets or hydrogen bombs or what have you have ended up working in the computer industry, doing jobs that in many cases seem kind of ignominious by comparison.”
Again, a beat. A consideration, perhaps, that he is talking about the core readership for his best sellers. No matter. He’s rolling. He presses on.
“What I’m kind of hoping is that this is just kind of a pause, while we assimilate this gigantic new thing, ubiquitous computing and the Internet. And that at some point we’ll turn around and say, ‘Well, that was interesting — we have a whole set of new tools and capabilities that we didn’t have before the whole computer/Internet thing came along.’ ”
He said people should say, “Now let’s get back to work doing interesting and useful things.”
Thanks to John for the pointer. Here is the longer piece on Innovation Starvation.
For me the big question is how and when will we pause?