
Things are fast and getting faster. Whole industry groups, whole professions, are disappearing from view. Who would have thought 10 years ago that General Motors and Chrysler would go broke? What’s missing, and where’s the opportunity?
It’s not a question that can be answered in quantitative terms, because the answer is a verb, not a noun, and nouns are the things that are disappearing. Verbs - processes, conversations, interactions - are ends as well as means, in the sense that entrepreneurs and business people are developing the capacity (and the confidence) to generate processes in their business, the outcomes of which are unknown, and rather than ‘driving’ outcomes, stepping back to see what emerges.

We often use optical illusions in Edgeware presentations. They break the ice, and they are a good leader into our position that the way we see the world is the way the world becomes.
There’s as interesting, three-stage process to remark : first, you can’t see; second, there’s an ‘Aha!’ moment, a moment of insight and ‘knowing’; and third, there’s the state of knowing where you instantly recognise the image. Particularly remarkable is the fact that once you’ve seen the image, you can’t un-see it and return to stage one. The world has changed.

At Edgeware we have a sneaking suspicion that Twitter is going to turn out to be much more than the kind of life streaming’ we see going on right now. It has to do with the conciseness and simplicity of the medium (text only, 140 characters), its ease of use on mobile platforms, and its capacity to multicast very quickly. A recent case in point: yesterday Yollana Shore, one of my Twitter ‘followers’ (who I hasten to add, I also ‘follow’, as the result of a Twitter intro from a member of each of our Twitter networks), tweeted that she was looking for ideas about dealing with a negative mood. I recalled a teaching from the Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh, who says that negative attitudes like anger and anxiety should be treated like an ‘errant little sister’, a pesky kid who gets on your wick but who you nevertheless love (she’s part of you, right?), so you should consider taking her by the hand, talking calmly to her, soothing her, walking with her, treating her gently until her anger subsides. I replied to Yollana, who liked it and RT’d (re-tweeted) immediately to her network of ‘followers’. One such, Isabel Grant, who I’ve never met, RT’d in turn to her followers, and one of them, Nancy Gray, RT’d it to hers. (I know this because they included my Twitter tag in the messages - goodness knows how much further it went if someone stripped out the tag!) Then, as icing on the cake, Yollana blogged on the experience, and now here we are in this blog, right now. The wisdom of that little monk just focused, multiplied, circled, spiralled and homed in to where it was needed.
A little compassion, it seems, can go a long way.

You don’t ‘adopt’ ethical practices; you can’t operate without ethics, even if you couldn’t name them and you don’t have a code. We make moral judgements all the time and they’re the basis of our actions a lot of the time whether we recognise it or not. The question is: are these good ethics or not so good ethics, is this an action which is good or an action which is not so good? And this ‘good’ concept, that’s an ethical question itself, right?
People say, ‘My business is my baby’ – and babies can get different parenting. Some parents want their baby to grow up faster, smarter, richer than the other kids, some want them to grow up to be loving, compassionate, generous, maybe even happy; some want all of those things.

Smith Magazine invites us to summarise our lives in six words - ‘Six Word Memoirs’. I thought, ‘Easy! I have the Edgeware motto, near enough to six words: make money, have fun, change the world. I could lose the article before “world” and that’s the six.’
But it didn’t sound good, didn’t ring true. So I turned the Edgeware motto into a set of six action-oriented questions: ‘Make money’ became, “Is it economically sustainable?’; ‘Have fun’ became, ‘Is it personally meaningful?’ and ‘Change the world’ became, ‘Is it socially responsible?’ And that gave me a better handle on the ’six word memoir’life-summary exercise.
And this is the first draft. Earned keep; Smiled often; Behaved honourably. I’m sure it’ll change as I give the exercise more thought, but these concentration/focus/decoction games can be very productive, don’t you think?


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