Vision Comes First

5 Jan

Chimney Rock

A good friend recently mentioned to me that one day he would like to start his own business…to be his own boss and do his own thing.

Having been in the business start-up/growth phase for some time now I offered him some advice on the subject. I told him that in my opinion, the hardest part of growing a business from scratch was learning to operate without a road map. Learning how to make your own decisions about what to do and how to best use your time.

After thinking about this for a few days, I’d like to amend my statement. The hardest part about building a business is not learning how to work without a road map, it’s defining and maintaining your vision.

Chimney Rock

Last summer the family and I vacationed in Colorado. The last part of the trip entailed visiting some family living in Durango. On a stretch of east/west highway between Pagosa Springs and Durango you’ll drive through the Southern Ute Indian Reservation. Driving either direction you can’t help but notice a huge rocky land formation to the south of the highway. You can see it for miles. It’s the most significant landscape in an environment full of significant landscapes.

This rocky outcrop I learned, is called Chimney Rock. The site was home to the ancestors of the modern Pueblo Indians 1,000 years ago and is of great spiritual significance to these and many other native tribes. Generations of native peoples visited this place from far and wide and many took up permanent residence in its shadows.

Do you think that the native people always knew about Chimney Rock? Do you think they always knew about its presence and its exact location? No. I’d guess not.

Chimney Rock had to have been discovered by somebody. Some enterprising brave or nomadic tribe probably saw it from a distance and said, “I don’t know what that is, but I’m going there. I don’t know what lies between me and it, but I’m going there.”

What’s this Have to do with Business?

The ancient natives didn’t have a road map to Chimney Rock. But they had a vision. They saw a beacon in the distance and said, “I’m going there.”

The same is true in business. Once the vision or end goal is defined, the path to get there, the steps you need to take to accomplish your goal really become self-apparent.

Now keep in mind that self-apparent does not necessary mean easy. But when you know where you want to go, when you have a destination in mind, the tasks necessary to get there become more clear.

What am I Supposed to do Now?

I ask myself this question a lot. At least once a day.

You see the easy part about having a job is that there is always someone there to tell you what to do. Someone is there to say, “More of this. Less of that. Quit wasting time doing that activity.”

Building a business is different. No one is there to tell you what to do.

I think that when you’re uncertain about what to do, the underlying cause is usually a loss of vision. A temporary lapse in where you’re at with respect to the big picture.

Vision Comes First

The next time this happens, the next time I’m uncertain about what to do, I’ll take a minute to reflect on what it is I’m trying to accomplish. I’ll think about Chimney Rock and then hopefully, even though I won’t know exactly how I’m going to get there, I’ll be reminded that “there it is…and I’m going there.”

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Do More

28 Nov

Thinking is easy….

Talking is easy….

Promising is easy….

Doing is hard!

The World Needs More Do-ers

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You Must Be Present to Win

23 Nov

Melbourne Sound Relief - Raincoat Brigade

To borrow a phrase from raffles across the world…you must be present to win. This is the rule for winning competing in the social media sphere. The old Ron Popeil tagline of “Set it and forget it” doesn’t suffice in the new social space.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, tools such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and even your corporate or personal blog are strategies not solutions I’m afraid too many people still view social media tools as one-and-done answer rather than just a piece of the entire puzzle.

But Wait…There’s More!

I had a conversation with a colleague the other day about how to best promote the current project he is working on. In keeping with my view of things I suggested a strategy that involved using a corporate blog to position himself as an expert in the field. His response was that it wasn’t possible to establish a voice amongst all the other experts in the field and all the other noise on the Internet.

My answer: Bullshit!

It Takes Work

If all you do is create a blog and never post, then yes…your voice will get lost. If all you do is create a new Twitter account, Facebook page or Google+ Business page and never participate, then yes…you’ll drown in the noise. But if you’re willing to put in some time and effort, you can succeed.

Some time ago I put together a social media strategy for a client I was working for. Below is a modified version of that strategy that can be used by any small business or person looking to establish a social media footprint. I’m happy to share this with you.

A Social Media Strategy

  1. Determine Your Goal(s)
    • Create awareness about company project/services?
    • Solicit new business?
    • Attract new talent/employees?
    • Engage community?
  2. Assign one person in the organization to be responsible for maintaining the social media efforts. Make adding updates and maintaining social a part of that person’s job responsibilities but be careful not to assign success metrics as a function of job performance (i.e. person should not get in trouble if Page does not have 5,000 ‘likes’ in 3 months)
  3. Give person executive sponsor (a person in management that supports the cause). All questions regarding propriety and permissions should be directed to executive sponsor.
  4. Create posting schedule and stick to it. For example, at least two updates a week.
  5. Updates should be 90% sharing/caring and 10% self-promotion
  6. Mix up content types. Content types are:
    • “How-To” articles (related to industry technologies)
    • News articles (about industry topics/trends…NOT the company)
    • Opinion articles (about industry news, regulations, new technologies…)
    • Review articles (about new technologies or products)
    • List Posts (i.e 10 ways to… or 7 tricks to…)
    • Interview Posts (video, audio or transcribed)
    • Other multimedia (related YouTube videos or relevant podcasts)
  7. Create an update schedule. Using the 7 content types above, take a few hours one day to think about 4 possible articles for each content type (for example, 4 “how-to” articles, 4 people to interview, 4 products or technologies to review, etc.) Doing this will result in 28 article ideas. If posting twice a week this will be enough content for over 3 months (14 weeks)
  8. Company content updates are:
    • Job postings (posted as often as necessary)
    • Company related news (only 10% of updates should be company news)
  9. Original articles should be written and hosted on company website/blog. Updates should be posted on third party social media sites and linked back to article source on company site.
  10. Articles should be written for different audiences (i.e. more technical for business-to-business or less technical for business-to-consumer)
  11. Encourage employees, vendors and customers to ‘like’, ‘retweet’, ‘add to circles’ etc.
  12. Integrate social buttons on website for sharing and data-tracking.

Now What?

Here’s the blueprint..get to work. No more excuses. The lesson here is that social media takes work but it produces results. You can’t dial it in. You can’t set it and forget it. You must be present to win.

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Five Links for Friday #3

4 Nov

On (occasional) Friday’s I try to share five links with you that I encountered in the previous week. Some will be helpful, some will be funny, others just things that I found interesting. I hope you enjoy.

  1. Share Your Desktop – Join.Me is a great desktop sharing tool. It doesn’t require an account (who needs another login and password right?) so you can literally start sharing is just seconds. Great tool for troubleshooting the computer problems of clients and relatives.
  2. Cool Photoshop Action Filters – Sometimes I suffer from Mac envy. Lately it’s been the cool pics I see from Instagram. Here are some neat Photoshop actions that will mimic the cool effects you see on Instagram photos. I’m sure the same effects can be created with other image editing software…but if you’ve got Photoshop, why not grab it?
  3. Color Inspiration – This color scheme picker is great for designing new websites, PowerPoint presentations or anything else that requires a multi-color approach. My favorite part is the ‘light page’ and ‘dark page’ examples in the preview pane.
  4. Pimp your Twitter Background… – and other things. A collection of great (free) downloads from ‘Fuel Your Creativity’ to get your social sites/profiles rockin’.
  5. Chrome Web Store – I’m this close to ditching my long love FireFox completely for Chrome. It’s just a great browser. Don’t believe me? Check out this link for all the cool extensions and add-ons available.

What about you? See any good links this week?

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Symmetry

19 Apr

This video comes from RadioLab:

Balance?………..Yin and Yang?………….Symmetry?………….Is it real?……………Is it crap?

What do you think?

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