Friday, May 29, 2009
The E Myth Revisited by Michael E. Gerber
This is one of the best books I have read in a long time. It is good for people looking to start a business but probably more appropriate for people that have been in business for a year or two and now need some help. I believe this book is the answer to almost every problem.
In the big picture, the book is a solution to life problems. As Gerber quotes from Rollo May's Man's Search for Himself:
Freedom does not come automatically; it is achieved. And it is not gained in a single bound; it must be achieved each day...freedom is not just the matter of saying "Yes" or "No" to a specific decision: it is the power to mold and create ourselves. Freedom is the capacity, to use Nietzsche's phrase, "to become what we truly are".
And so it is that properly setting up a business is a path for freedom, not just from your business but from all aspects of your life, being in control of them, and adding value to them.
It requires using planning, testing methods, and creating innovations. Having fun in the world, and putting yourself to the challenge. Here are a few quotes I like from the book:
The entrepreneurial personality turns the most trivial condition into an exceptional opportunity. The Entrepreneur is the visionary in us. The dreamer. The energy behind every human activity. The imagination that sparks the fire of the future. The catalyst for change. The Entrepreneur lives in the future, never in the past, rarely in the present. He's happiest when left free to construct images of "what-if" and "if-when".
The managerial personality is pragmatic. Without The Manager there would be no planning, no order, no predictability...If the Entrepreneur lives in the future, The Manager lives in the past.
The Technician is the doer. "If you want it done right, do it yourself" is The Technician's credo. The Technician loves to tinker. Things are to be taken apart and put back together again. Things aren't supposed to be dreamed about, they're supposed to be done. If The Entrepreneur lives in the future and The Manager lives in the past, The Technician lives in the present. He loves the feel of things and the fact that things can get done. As long as The Technician is working, he is happy, but only on one thing at a time. He knows that two things can't get done simultaneously; only a fool would try. So he works steadily and is happiest when he is in control of the work flow.
What is value? How do we understand it? I would suggest that value is what people perceive it to be, and nothing more.
What is he really buying when he buys from you? The truth is, nobody's interested in the commodity. People buy feelings. And as the world becomes more varied, the feelings we want become more urgent, less rational, more unconscious. How your business anticipates those feelings and satisfies them is your product.
But when you live by your own rules, when you 'walk your talk,' when you live as you think, then your business will become a thing to behold.
So what could your Prototype do that would not only provide consistent value to your customers, employees, suppliers, and lenders but would provide it beyond their wildest expectations? That is the question every Entrepreneur must ask. Because it is the raison d'etre of his business!
...people have the unerring ability to forget everything they start and to be distracted by trivia.
In a television commercial, we’re told, the sale is made or lost in the first three or four seconds. In a print ad, tests have shown, 75 percent of the buying decisions are made at the headline alone. In a sales presentation, data have shown us, the sale is made or lost in the first three minutes.
Reality only exists in someone’s perceptions, attitudes, beliefs, conclusions – whatever you wish to call those positions of the mind from which all expectations arise – and nowhere else. So the famous dictum that says, “Find a need and fill it,” is inaccurate. It should say, “Find a perceived need and fill it.
Inquiry, the active solicitation of specific information, and controlled experimentation replaced the guessing, blind hope, and feverish busy work that preceded them. Innovation, Quantification, and Orchestration became the driving forces behind their efforts.
“This marketing thing isn’t nearly as complicated as I might have made it seem,” I continued. “But it’s important that you take it seriously. Because it is most often is regarded by small business owners as merely ‘good common sense.’ And I have seen more often than not that the only definition of ‘good common sense’ is ‘my opinion.’ That most small business owners, suffering as they do from what I’ve come to call ‘willful disinformation,’ simply decide what they want to do without any information at all, without any interest in what’s true, and then simply do it. Stationery designed by the local quick –printer with a logo thrown in. Colors picked by their wives. Signs designed by the local sign guy whose experience is in painting signs, not in determining what colors and shapes are psychographically correct.”
Documentation provides your people with the structure they need and with a written account of how to "get the job done" in the most efficient and effective way. It communicates to the new employees, as well as to the old, that there is a logic to the world in which they have chosen to work, that there is a technology by which results are produced. Documentation is an affirmation of order.
Again from Toffler: "...for many people, a job is crucial psychologically, over and above the paycheck. By making clear demands on their time and energy, it provides an element of structure around which the rest of their lives can be organized." *Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave, P.389 (pg 104 in E-Myth)
“Most people today are not getting what they want. Not from their jobs, not from their families, not from their religion, not from their government, and most important, not from themselves.
Something is missing in most of our lives. Part of what’s missing is purpose. Values. Worth-while standards against which our lives can be measured. Part of what’s missing is a Game Worth Playing.
What’s also missing is a sense of relationship.
People suffer in isolation from one another.
In a world without purpose, without meaningful values, what have we to share but our emptiness, the needy fragments of our superficial selves?
As a result, most of us scramble about hungrily seeking distraction, in music, in television, in people, in drugs.
And most of all we seek things.
Things to wear and things to do.
Things to fill the emptiness.
Things to shore up our eroding sense of self.
Things to which we can attach meaning, significance, life.
We’ve fast become a world of things. And most people are being buried in the profusion.
What most people need, then, is a place of community that has purpose, order, meaning.
A place in which being human is a prerequisite, but acting human is essential.
A place where the generally disorganized thinking that pervades our culture becomes organized and clearly focused on a specific worthwhile result.
A place where discipline and will become prized for what they are: the backbone of enterprise and action, of being what you are intentionally instead of accidentally.
A place that replaces the home most of us have lost.
That’s what a business can do; it can create a Game Worth Playing.”
The curtain is your Comfort Zone. And your Comfort Zone has been the false mask you put on when you were a little girl, because it was safe when your spirit was not. Your Comfort Zone has been the tight little cozy planet on which you have lived, knowing all the places to hide because it's so small. Your Comfort Zone has seized you before, Sarah, and it can seize you again, when you're least prepared for it, because it knows what it means to you. Because it knows how much you want to be comfortable. Because it know what price you are willing to pay for the comfort of being in control. The ultimate price, your life...if this new path, if living with your spirit means anything to you at all, if you truly care about it, then guard it with your life. Because Comfort overtakes us all when we're least prepared for it. Comfort makes cowards of us all.
This book is a MUST READ if you are own a small business or are thinking of starting one.
Buy from Amazon.com
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Charlie Chaplin - Limelight
The movie limelight was written, directed, and produced by Chaplin, and like other movies where one person reigns in full control it was beautiful, poignant, and somewhat ego-centric.
The movie itself seems autobiographical of Chaplin. A person who once enjoyed fame finds himself suddenly in a different time. He is not the it thing anymore, no one wants to work with him, association with his name is death.
The Chaplin character in the movie (Calvero) finds solice from his new life status by helping another struggling artist Terry. (Played by Clair Bloom) Terry is a ballerina, failing, suicidal, and psychosomatically paralyzed. (How else?)
Thus Calvero comes to the rescue, full of inspiration to heal and help the young artist. Through the process Calvero himself finds new life again, he sheds all past notions of fame and returns to the street, to keep it real and be happy.
I think one of the most interesting parts of the film is when Calvero gives a comeback performance and lets the segment run in silence while he performs some classic Chaplin. It is painful to sit through the two minutes of silence and it seems like Chaplin is giving us all a nod to how much times have moved on and how he got left behind.
Buy from Amazon if you wantbut I give this film a 50-50. It is a good film, but probably one better caught on T.V. or borrowed from a friend. Leave a comment and I might just mail you my copy. ;)
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Story of India by Michael Wood
The Story of India by Michael Wood takes us on a historical journey from the first human migrations to present day. The book contains interesting and surprising facts, like Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin all appear to have originated from one common root.
Indeed, listening to the story, one can’t help but feel India was affected by the presence of many empires, British being the most recent.
Interestingly the story goes on to Muslim(Mughal) rulers in the 1500-1700s who actually tried to unite religions, and even dreamed of instituting a state under the rule of reason and not religion. Quite a dream, and arguably one that has yet to be achieved in our more enlightened times.
The 1500-1700s was a time when India was powerful and presided over some 100 million people, quite a contrast to England’s then 3 million. Quite amazing that colonization ever occurred, though India's disparity of class, wealth, and religion, probably played a part in their fall to the British.
India, however, came out of colonization with its culture intact. Indeed, one could say that commonwealth of nations of the former British empire is almost a kind of joke to India, now a nation that has come into its own still rich with all the diversity of its past.
From the long view, the increase in India’s economy is not so much something new, but more a returning to its former state of 200-300 years ago.
India is home to many religions and cultures including Hindu, Muslim, Jain, and Parsee. I enjoyed this read and strongly recommend it. The Story has also got made into a BBC (and PBS) series, which I plan to watch some day. Though in my mind the T.V. series are often slower than books with less information, but being able to see all the sights, people, and landmarks will be great.
Buy the Book from Amazon
Buy the DVD from Amazon
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Leaving Cheyenne by Larry McMurtry
My foot's in the stirrup,
My pony won't stand;
Goodbye, old partner,
I'm leaving Cheyenne.
Leaving Cheyenne is beautiful heartfelt novel centered on themes of polyamory, marriage, responsibility, and life-style choice. The novel is gripping and difficult to put down. The story is set in the early 1900s and full of stories that seem disconnected but are so real they let you know the characters as if you knew them all your life.
Here are a few quotes that I love:
"Don't be a damn fool and marry young," he said "Specially not to no poor woman. Work about thirty more years and make you lots of money. Then go off somewhere and marry a rich widow. Don't never marry somebody who's as broke and ignorant as you are; marry somebody who knows a little about it. The you might have a chance to enjoy yourself a little." That was Dad for you. I didn't pay him much mind. He never could understand that he wasn't me. pg.16
"I don't want to marry you or nobody else. Girls who get married just to do a lot of things with boys ain't very nice. I don't like it. I'd just as soon do all those things and not be married, and I mean it. I ain't gonna marry till I have to because of having a baby, and I mean that too. And I wish I didn't even have to then." pg.29
"Just because he don't spend money don't mean he ain't got any. I don't spend much myself, and that's one reason I got so much more than most people." pg.44
"I never realized how lonesome I stayed till I got close to Molly...When I realized it was when I had been close to her and one of us was leaving. Then for a day or two the world would look twice as bad as it was." pg.95
"The homesickness was the worst part of it...It wasn't that I liked being in Archer County so much --- sometimes I hated it. But I was tied up in it; whatever happened there was happening to me, even if I wasn't there to see it. The country might not be very nice and the people might be onery; but it was my country and my people, and no other country was; no other people, either. You do better staying with what's your own, even if it's hard. Johnny carried his with him. I didn't. If you don't stick with a place, you don't have it very long." pg.106
"The best way in the world to get poor is to start living rich." pg.110
"A woman's love is like the morning dew, it's just as apt to settle on a horse turd as it is on a rose." pg.122
“If a feller has to be lonesome, he’s better off being lonesome alone.” –pg.130
"What kind of crazy are you?" Johnny said. "Just plain crazy," I said. "I haven't got enough brains to be any other kind."pg.158
"I hadn't got a car till 1941. Besides being expensive and dangerous, I thought they was just plain ugly. I couldn't understand why so many people took such an interest in them." pg.187
"He had the highest standards of any man I ever knew - to this day Gid worries because he can't live up to those standards of his dad's." pg.203
"Well," he said. "Some have to take and some have to give, and a very few can do both. I was always just a taker, but I was damn particular about what I took, and that's important."..."I don't guess I've ever done much of either one," I said. "Aw hell," he said. "You could take a million dollars' worth, if you would. But instead you'll give out twice that much to sorry bastards that don't deserve it. And they won't put much back. I'm glad you and Gid won't marry. You'd smother him in sweetweed and he'd loaf the rest of his life. Misery makes a man work." I was embarrassed, and he went on and ate his biscuits. "Anyway, it ain't hurt your cooking," he said, and he looked up and gave me one of the longest looks I ever had in my life. I remembered that look a hundred times, whenever Gid or Jimmy looked at me across a table; they both had Mr. Fry's eyes. "Molly, if I was just ten years younger I'd take your whole two million myself," he said. "The rest of the pack could go hungry. Gid would probably be the first one starved."...I thought that when I seen him in his coffin that if he had been ten years younger he would probably have done just what he said.pg.204
Gid never could appreciate how hard some people worked to fool themselves.pg.261
He just wasn't able to understand that I loved him and wanted him to enjoy himself -he got it in his head, but he never got it in his bones. Old Johnny did though. He had more pure talent for enjoying himself that Gid and Eddie put together...The right or wrong of it seldom entered Johnny's mind.pg.203
"There will never be a way right enough for you," she said. pg.282
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