Posts Tagged 'creativity'

Creative Freedom of a Restrictive Economy

table-vice

The latest issue of Wired has a special feature on design. The subject that they hit upon is one that is close to my heart.  Here is the article. They are designing in a medium that predates embedded video and infographics. It is a blank white rectangle. “At Wired, our design team sees this as our daily bread,” they point out.

The constraint of the page actually inspires more creativity.

It reminds me of a creative writing course in college.  You would think that the most clever and creative work would come from a no-holds-barred approach to expression.  However, that was not the case.   The best work we produced came as a result of placing restrictive guidelines and forcing us to come up with a way to express an idea from inside a cage.  The most inspiring work happened when we had to write in iambic pentameter or rhyme certain lines or begin our stories with some random sentence (I saw the horse in the rain, and I knew I had to leave my wife…who couldn’t write a good story with that line?).

The constraint of the economy can inspire your creativity.

The beauty of our current economic situation is that it forces us to strip down our business into the essential elements.  I am not a neurologist, but it feels like there is a part of my mind that works better under restriction.  Be it real or imagined.

The same is true for many successful companies that I talk to.   They are coming up with ways to still express their value when prospects have less money.  One example is Kuhlmann Leavitt, Inc., a St. Louis-based design firm.  They have spun off a new company, Stax Modular, a mobile display product that can be used for anything .  So far, the response to their new product has been exciting, and they are going to showcase it as trade shows in the Spring.

With markets crashing around us and a breakdown of the financial world, this gives those who have always been on the outside of traditional forms of capital even more reason to innovate.  Small business owners have always had to be creative and design something striking and beautiful out of very little.

The trick now is distilling your idea of what your business is and allowing constraint to design your business better.

THE LIST

Here are questions you can ask yourself to get to the root who your company is:

  1. Who would notice if my business went away? List the people, institutions, etc. These folks are your champions.  Get to know them better. Most people cover up when times are tough. People will be more important than ever now.
  2. What is it that is valuable about my company? Is it people? Is it a product that is unique? You service. Whatever it is, don’t fall into the temptation to cut it lose for budget reasons.
  3. What makes us money or raises our funds? These are revenue streams.  Pour resources to them.  They, as our former commander-in-chief says, “keep food on your family.”
  4. What other talents do I or others on my team have that we have allowed to go by the wayside? These are new revenue opportunities. You have good ideas already. Use them now. See the Kuhlmann Leavitt example above.

This is only a beginning to a job that really should not require a crappy economy.  You probably have some better questions.  Now is always the time to continue innovation.

LET ME KNOW

Send me some better questions to distill a business down to its core.  I will send you a copy of the sestina they made me write in my poetry class. If nothing else, it will be a good laugh.

- Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer, St. Louis Small Business Monthly

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Stop worrying about the credit market…get creative

schlafly_3colorTom Schlafly is one of the most successful business people (and human beings) I have had the pleasure of talking to. He built the St. Louis Brewery in the town that has…um..you, know… THE Brewery. However, since InBev came to town, Schlafly now enjoys status as St. Louis largest locally-owned brewery.

As Tom points out in his witty column Top Fermentation, “In any discussion of local industry in St. Louis, Schlafly is now The Brewery.” The irony is thicker than the head on one of Tom’s stout winter brews.

The man who:

  • claims that he “would never have started his business if he knew anything about business”
  • attracts an entire team of people with liberal arts degrees and no business background
  • had to change Missouri laws on microbreweries to grow his business
  • holds an irrational love for St. Louis
  • continues to bring a creative wonder to his business

…is now wildly successful against all odds and in the shrined shadow of a St. Louis darling – Anheuser-Busch.

Entrepreneurship is a lifestyle choice and a way of thinking differently about:

  • what it means to be in business
  • what it means to have success
  • what it means to be professional

Many times at the root of this decision (to rip the employee label off your life and think in this manner) is a very emotional and peculiar drive. As my friend Richard Sacks (author, consultant and entrepreneur) puts it, “most entrepreneurs are on plan B.” They are creative, innovative, passionate people who got ticked off at the way that their industry was working, or feel that some population is grossly underserved.

If there is this distinction between an entrepreneur and a manager or executive, then why do entrepreneurs constantly feel they have to behave like the rest of business world when it comes to financing their business?

I have heard many entrepreneurs complain:

  • The banks don’t take me seriously.
  • I don’t have the right contacts.
  • The credit market has dried up.
  • Venture capitalists aren’t giving out money.
  • Angel investors are watching their portfolios dwindle away.

This reaction to our current economy is not an irrational response. This is fear-based thinking that will be a secure lockdown to any growth that your business could hope to have.

To survive the slowdown and the limited access to capital, you must see this fear, name it and move along on the path.  You must be irrational. (For more on this see Dixie Gillaspie’s article on moving through fear.)

You are an entrepreneur…be creative. Here are some practical steps that I have seen the best entrepreneurs take to make long-term financial goals. (All of these steps were taken assuming that you had the right attitude, have had solid business ethics and want to grow your business.)

  • Get skin in the game. This is a battle. If you can’t stomach a big personal loss, you may need to find a job. While it does not sound pleasant, I have yet to meet a financial backer who is comfortable taking on all the risk. Collect up your capital and what you have of value. If it was a comfortable process, then everyone would do it. Two retailers I know have doubled their business in the last year by leveraging collateral to get credit.
  • Negotiate and make terms with your vendors. Make it as simple as possible. “Hey, things are slowing down for me. Can I pay you $x amount per month?” Most folks will allow you some latitude.
  • Find easy ways to monetize what you do. This is dangerous because you may end up going down sales paths that can distract you from a primary purpose. What do you do already do that adds value and you can easily charge for? This could be scaled-back versions of a larger service for a reduced rate. However it looks, find new ways to make money at what you are already doing.
  • Find like-minded folks that share your vision. They may not be instant sources of money, but you can certainly find advise, empathy, friendship and accountability. The monetary value of true friendship is immeasurable. The most successful people that I know found and inner circle that they went to in good times and bad. You start finding these people by becoming an approachable person.

It may seem as though the universe is conspiring against you, but take a look at Schlafly’s situation 17 years ago. You do not face nearly the odds that he did. He made it. You can too. It may not look the way you thought it would, but your company will be better for it.

And, if you are a St. Louis-based entrepreneur, then you have access to at least 49 growth opportunities that are unique to your city.

TRY THIS ONE ON:

If you wanted to hear what it was like for a passionate, eccentric business owner, then read Tom Schlafly’s book, A New Religion in Mecca. There is a great deal of hope in there. It seems that Schlafly contends that the universe conspired to make his business successful, but, someone who knew what she was talking about once said: Luck is the residue of rigorous, persistent action.

- Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer, St. Louis Small Business Monthly


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Helping others understand your innovation

I am not a wine connoisseur, nor do I understand the intricacies of what makes a good wine. I have pretended to know in the past, though. Swirling the Merlot around in the glass, swishing it between my teeth and saying, “hmmm…quite dry…and a faint hint of almonds.”

One thing that I do know is that they are prevalent in the St. Louis area. While many are based in outlying locations, they logically advertise to and service the urban and suburban markets. This means that your average St. Louis consumer encounters many marketing messages about wineries on any given day.

Two friends of mine opened a winery in Ballwin, Missouri that “provides quality wine with your personal touch.” Wine Necessities is a winery for do-it-yourself-ers. They have an area where you can make your own Pinot Blanc or Italian Sangiovese or whatever your palette desires. You can even customize the labeling that goes on the bottle for personal or business use. It becomes your wine – inside and out. They host parties and have social and community events around wine, etc.

This business presents interesting marketing challenge. How do you cut through the clutter of all the other wineries, appeal to wine lovers/wine makers and present an innovative idea (a wine-making, fun, social experience) to potential patrons?

How would you communicate what you do in a short and concise way to capture your innovation? To help people understand you are not just some other winery?

One place that I would look for help is from Chip Heath and Dan Heath of Made to Stick fame. In a recent Fast Company article, they outlined a great way to do just that. They call it the anchor and twist.

According to Chip and Dan, the best way to help others understand your new, innovative idea, is to start them with something that they already know, the anchor. Then, you hit them with what makes it different, the twist.

The challenge is that you sacrifice some amount of accuracy for the sake of helping people understand your company, product, etc.

One example that they give has to do with cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

The “cardio” part — pumping on the chest — forces blood to circulate. The “pulmonary” part – mouth-to-mouth breathing — gets oxygen to the lungs. CPR has been ingrained in mass culture for the past 35 years, but what if a new innovation came along that supplanted it? That’s precisely what happened in March 2007 when a team of Japanese researchers published a surprising paper in the prestigious Lancet medical journal. It tracked 4,068 adults who’d gone into cardiac arrest with bystanders present but not in a hospital. The shocker: Victims who received only the chest-pumping part of CPR had slightly better health outcomes than those who received full CPR, including mouth-to-mouth. For most victims, then, mouth-to-mouth was pointless.

The American Health Association had to take an old idea (CPR) and get the word out quickly about the new one (no more mouth-to-mouth). How could they communicate this new innovation to so many who were used to good ol’ CPR?

Eventually, “Hands-Only CPR” was the term that they decided to use to express the new idea. CPR serves as the anchor, and “hands-only” is the twist. This is not completely accurate…really there is no longer the “P” since there is no mouth-to-mouth. But, for the sake of helping an audience understand, they let some inaccuracy go.

Here are some attempts at doing that for Wine Necessities from my feeble mind:

  • Wine Necessities is the Build-a-Bear of wineries.
  • Wine Necessities – the DIY winery.
  • Get your hands dirty winery.
  • The you-too-can-crush-grapes winery.

TRY THIS ONE:

Do you have better ideas for my friends at Wine Necessities? Can you come up with one for your company or organization that you would be willing to share?

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What word cloud would your customers write about you?

When I meet someone for the first time, I have often wanted to hand them a preface. This would contain a few key moments from the past, failed relationships, funny/tragic stories, a songlist and a stack of DVDs (mostly bad 80s movies).

That way, when I say something like, “well, at least I have that going for me,” people would immediately recognize what I was talking about. Whether they would find me funny or not is another story.

Instead, what usually happens is that I get a few minutes into conversation, I say something that sounds inappropriate or misguided. Then, I attempt to explain my choice of words or reasoning for the placement of a story.

Personally, I am waiting for the folks at Google to come up with the iCloud. This is a digitally generated keyword cloud that would display above your head at all times. This way people would know what is important to you, how you define yourself and what your personality is like.

Here is what I think mine would look like:

This is how your iCloud may look after you realized you deleted all your episodes of your favorite reality TV show from your DVR:

You’re ready to make a killer sales presentation:

While you are dreaming at night:

All that would be required for this to come to fruition is some form of brain scanning device. This should be easy to come by for the Google folks. Aren’t they the royalty of the Inter-webs?

All of this is leaving out the possibility to tie this in with the social networking software and text messages. The Twitter people could grab a hold of this and the need to constantly update people on where you are and what you are doing. It could be the iCloud autoTwitter.

TRY THIS ONE OUT:

Go to wordle and create a word cloud for yourself and for your organization. Then, make one using the text from the last reviews of you or your company. You may notice a discrepancy, and that creates an opportunity to change what words your customers associate with you.

Really, the people at Google don’t need to create these. Everybody already sees them anyway…for better or for worse. They are writing one for you right now. As much as I would like to have a preface to make things easier for folks that I meet, people are already writing one for me. The cloud that we create for ourselves is pretty useless in relation to how others interpret who we are.

Your marketing does not belong to you, and you don’t get to write your word cloud.

So, what words are you putting out there? Please email me or comment below with your word cloud.

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Now we are just blatantly bragging

I received an incredible honor last month, and, in my usual fashion, failed to give thanks where thanks is due. The folks at HR World seem to think that this little CEO experiment is worthy of recognition.

Thanks to the intelligent humans that bother to read this thing, Creative Energy Officer was recognized as one of “The Top 100 Management and Leadership Blogs That All Managers Should Bookmark.” It was in the section on Creativity and Inspiration.

That’s right, I made a list that will NOT be posted at the Post Office or on the Men’s bathroom stall. While I am still on those lists, it was awesome to see someone take interest in what I write.

I am flattered at this recognition especially for a project that is so young. Also, the fact that I am listed with some of my favorite blogs such as, Mavericks at Work, Tom Peters, Seth Godin, Chris Anderson and many others makes this a special honor.

But, what I am curious about is this:

  • Have you ever received recognition for something you felt was no big deal? How did you feel?
  • Have you ever been passed over for a raise or award and knew that it was due to you? How did you feel then?

If you answered “yes” to both of them, welcome to the human race. Most of us, it seems are ego-maniacs with an inferiority complex. The trouble is being who we are – authentic.

HOMEWORK

How do you recognize people on your team for a great performance or a big win? Do you hold a ceremony or quietly drop something off? When are rewards not appropriate for employees? What type of awards have you or others received that absolutely bombed?

Curious to see your ideas.

*************

Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer, St. Louis Small Business Monthly

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What is blocking you from more creativity?

“We’ve already done that.”

How many times have you heard that at supposed “brainstorming” sessions for your organization? Perhaps, you have even been responsible for starting these meetings.

These often involve post-it notes, a guy with gelled hair and leather patches on his sport coat, fired-up talk of “creativity,” and dishes of candy. The meeting becomes a veritable business term BINGO game.

Let’s see…”paradigm shift”…”synergy”…BINGO!

This has to do with a skewed perspective on what creativity is. Creative thinking is not something bestowed upon a certain group. It can be learned.

To do so, you have to begin to understand a few simple things:

1. You don’t know everything. This has to do with things that we assume to be true. So often, we get wrapped into our ideas. Creativity has to do with the idea that you don’t have all the ideas. There is no end to how deep you can take this idea. Even the way that you think about creativity has to be changed.

2. The “been there, done that” model has no place. What you have done is your experience. You have had it for a reason. Be willing to look at the past in a new light. Just because one marketing tactic did not generate much in the way of results does not mean that it never will. Use experience as an opportunity to see what was behind those decisions. What motivated you to make the decisions that you have in the past? How commited were you to those ideas? This will allow you to see a different truth about the same circumstances…that is, after all, what we are after since…(see #3).

3. Creativity is an ability to see more of the truth. Some people that I have worked with in the past have tossed work on my desk. “Jeremy, we need some creative eyes on this thing. Can you take a look at this and give us some of your creative notions.” Well, no. Not really. Creativity is not a magic wand that I can hover over a set of numbers, ad campaign or article. It is just a truth that underlies a set of ideas. Often it takes more than one set of eyes to do that. Thus the reason for things like Pixar Studios‘s collaborative approach…or the way that most national chemical labs work. The truth requires more eyes than just two to see.

Creativity is an energy or a willingness to toss aside what is commonly understood to pursue a deeper truth. It is not a virtuous or noble pursuit, and engaging in creative thinking does not make you a superior human. However, it is necessary to grow a business, organization, project or a happy life.

A recent article that Adam sent me from Copyblogger does an awesome job of outlining the major blocks to creative thinking. I think that I have been the perpetrator of all of these at some point or another.

HOMEWORK

Read through the copyblogger article and find new ways to discover the truth about your organization or your team. Ask yourself which ways you are blocking creativity on your team, and find ways to stop or work around them.

*************

Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer, St. Louis Small Business Monthly

Millennials don’t really exist

There is a great amount of creativity and effort that goes into finding ways to sell books. Most of the time the effort is to try, through articles, media or blogs, to create some kind of pain.

Business books are notorious for this. They create more pain in an effort to make a need for their solution. Just run to the bookstore. You will never feel more inadequate in your life…you can’t sell, talk, think, write or manage correctly.

Emerging from the pop-business media dust cloud is a hot, new source of pain for business leaders – the Millennial.

There are organizations devoted to understanding millennials, managing millennials, politics for millenials, conferences devoted to millennials and ideas about how this group is going to rock the political structure of the United States.

My Gawd! It appears they will soon take over the world. Somebody alert Homeland Security.

So, what the H-E-(double hockey sticks) is a Millennial?

According to my trusty “Internet,” a Millennial is someone born between the years 1980 to 2000. Others have ’82 to ’97. Basically, it is anybody right now from the ages of 8 to 28.

I’m sure that if we got all those folks in a room that they would have the same views on politics, religious tolerance and work ethic. Yeah, right. I have a 9-year-old. When all of his friends of the same age get together, they can’t even decide on what movie to watch.

Here are some of the things that were so eloquently (do you speak sarcasm?) outlined about this generation on a recent 60 minutes spot:

  • Tech-savvy. They like their iPods and Facebook. At times, this is associated with a lack of emotional intelligence or face-to-face human interaction. Really? Hasn’t this been true of every generation? Isn’t the next set of whippersnappers a bit irritating because they adopt and use technology? Try this one, though. Go to your local mall or airport. Everybody is on a cell phone, Crackberry or something…most of them are in their 30′s and older – not millennials.
  • Lazy. They want to set their own work schedule and have a family/work balance. They may be pushy in asking for this. They won’t be in the office at 5:30 or looking at emails at 8pm. Really? Good for them. Somebody had to do it. Would we rather them encourage companies that want blind, open-ended allegiance? I thought we were past that. Just because they may not work 60-plus hours a week does not qualify a person as lazy. Have we forgotten about the “slackers?” Didn’t depression-era adults view their kids as lazy? I see a pattern here.
  • Narcissitic or praise-hounds. Blame Mr. Rogers. He told them that they were special. Now, they think everything should be handed to them. They need constant praise and attention. Really? What is more narcissistic than pointing out narcissism in younger people? Young people need immediate feedback, praise and attention. That is the name of the game. If you are not prepared for that, then you should not be in the business of raising children or managing employees. They want to learn the ropes and they need good mentors who understand.
  • Environmentally conscious and religiously tolerant. These folks care as much about how a company or a group does business as much as what it does. The how is important. People need to be authentic and welcoming to all people. Really? This is partially due to the fact that the world has not beaten it out of them yet. Don’t worry. They will lose hope soon if we keep on telling them that they fit into some manufactured generational bucket.

Here’s the problem: They may want your advice on business or life questions, or they may disdain your advice. They may IM their parents in the middle of a meeting, or they may not even know who their parents really are. NEITHER of these situations makes them of a certain generation. All of them make them human and in a Western culture.

Generation Y.2.0 or Millennials or People-Who-Lives-on-the-Interwebs are not unique…not any more so than anybody else in your organization. For the time being, they are one thing – young. People of a certain age have certain concerns in their effort to create happy and productive lives.

Much of my cynicism at the whole division into generations has to do with the fact that every generation in my family falls into some kind of gulf. I was born in ’78. My father was born in ’54. Where is our category? We have nothing with great or boom or x in the title. Maybe I just feel a little cheated. Can I make one for myself?

Here is the best analysis that I have seen of the generations.

Really want to know how to relate to the younger people on your team? Ask yourself these questions:

  • Do you remember what it was like to be young and unsure of things? Who did you turn to?
  • Do you remember when your friends and parents were important? How did that feel?
  • Do you remember the wonder that used to surround your life?
  • Can you understand an individual on an individual basis?

As soon as we look for the ways that we are similar and not how we can separate, I think that we will come to a better place as humans.

HOMEWORK

As I said, there is a great amount of creativity that goes into creating ways to sell books, conferences and other materials. What if you took that same amount of creativity and found ways to understand people on your team as people? They have fears, values, joys, etc. As a leader, your role is to grow in understanding of people, and, not to buy into half-baked ideas on how to neatly categorize them.

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Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer (CEO), St. Louis Small Business Monthly

Why your organization needs a wienie

I was in an airport recently and trying to get some quick lunch before getting onto a connecting flight.

For those who have not flown in the past decade, let me translate that sentence:

I was in an out outer ring of hell with thousands of other disconnected souls, and I decided to get indigestible chunks of preservative-laden, fried stuff on a stick to grant me some release from my misery.

Airports suck, and airport food sucks even more.

I know that there are folks out there that always look for the positive…well, I would encourage you to spend sometime in these way-stations. Travelers are away from their families, in a hurry, and angry about all the security. On top of that, I was nearly unable to get my fatty sustenance because the person at the taco-themed counter hated being there too.

In the midst of this suffering, here is what came to mind:

Airports are an awesome opportunity for a breakthrough approach to doing business. Imagine if you had a fresh idea to offer the most vibrant service. Your only mission would be to make people smile while in something called a terminal…using nearly whatever (reasonable) means possible. Plus, you could charge a fortune and business-class travelers could expense it.

All around me, though, I see managers taking the opposite approach. Instead of empowering employees to think differently and to make their business more approachable, managers punish their employees for exhibiting behavior that is welcoming and magnetic…or just plain human.

Airports desperately need a wienie.

Seth Godin recently posted about Mark Ramsey’s take on the necessity of a wienie.

Mark retells a story about old man Disney working on a draft plan for the 1964 World’s Fair “Carousel of Progress.” The GE executives loved the preview of the show, but Walt wasn’t quite satisfied – “It doesn’t have a wienie. Come back in a few weeks, and I’ll show you,” he said. Upon their return, the executives noticed that Walt added an animatronic dog with a wagging tail.

Here is Mark’s take on the wienie:

It was the “wienie.” The “finishing touch.” The delightful, magnetic bonus. Wienies are extra. Wienies are what you give the audience after they think they’re already satisfied. Wienies are what you add when what you have is good – but not good enough.”

Airport vendors have the awesome opportunity to offer something beyond expectation because really expectations are quite low. There is plenty of room for a wienie.

Your organization needs a wienie.

In the midst of an economy where people are slashing budgets, leaders can make their company stand out by offering that something extra that helps people understand more about you and how you do business. Plus, a wienie helps your customers to understand that you don’t take yourself so seriously.

HOMEWORK:

  • What’s your wienie?
  • What are you doing that no one else can touch in your industry?
  • How are you adding a magnetic bonus?

WARNING:

This is not about wearing an obligatory 15 pieces of flare. This is about a genuine way to engage your customers beyond their expectations in a way that they may not even notice…a subtlety that is authentic to you and your business. Be proud to be a wienie.

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Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer (CEO), St. Louis Small Business Monthly

 

A framework for innovation

As a species, it is in our nature to adapt. That, along with the whole opposable thumb thing, has lead to incredible creation and innovation.

However, there are people like me stuck in today’s world of rapid innovations that constantly find themselves saying, “I don’t get it.” If my brain has any “elasticity,” then I am feeling it stretched to the brink.

This pain point is an awesome opportunity for entrepreneurs to design ways to interpret this constant innovation.

I ran across an article in Seed magazine that discusses the importance of elasticity and design as it relates to creativity in today’s culture (I know it’s a bit long, but, dammit, it’s worth it):

Adaptability is an ancestral distinction of human intelligence, but today’s instant variations in rhythm call for something stronger: elasticity. The by-product of adaptability and acceleration, elasticity means being able to negotiate change and innovation without letting them interfere excessively with one’s own rhythms and goals. It means being able to embrace progress, understanding how to make it our own. One of design’s most fundamental tasks is to help people deal with change. Designers have the ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and social mores and to convert them into objects and ideas that people can understand and use. Without designers, instead of a virtual city of home pages with windows, doors, buttons, and links, the internet would still be a series of obscure strings of code, and appliances would be reduced to standardized skeletons of functions.”

What does this mean for leaders of businesses and organizations?

To thrive in today’s marketplace of ideas – entrepreneurs, leaders and professionals need to understand the importance that design language plays in relation to innovation and creativity. The sheer amount of innovation is too much. If you can offer people a framework through which they can view, categorize and better understand it, then you will thrive.

I don’t think that this means that we need to run out tomorrow and become “designers.” What this means is that the framework is actually equally important to the content of innovation. Teach someone how to interpret all this data in a different way that helps them solve problems or achieve greater success, and you are bound to succeed far better yourself.

Great companies that I talk with have an interesting view of change. They understand its importance in sustainability, however, even more importantly, they had a purpose – a clear design – that allowed for change to be interpreted. The struggle is in making the design clear and understandable – making it sticky enough so it can be applied.

HOMEWORK

If you want to see someone who is really shaking things up with visual thinking, then check out XPLANE CEO David Gray’s blog. Through visual thinking, people are given a framework to interpret change. My friend, Matt Homann works there are well and doesn’t do such a bad job at blogging either.

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Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer (CEO), St. Louis Small Business Monthly

It really is all “about you”

So, they (whoever they are) say that you should give credit for using someone else’s words or ideas the first couple of times you use them and then, after that, those ideas are yours.

One idea that is not quite mine yet is the About You page. I shamelessly stole this idea from my friend Adam. He writes about my theivery here. I got the idea from a story that he wrote for the Small Business Monthly.

Here is what creating an About You page did for me and what it can do for you or your company’s literature:

  • Took my eyes off me. So many times, when I am asked to talk about myself, it tends to make me uncomfortable. Rather than put myself or my company through the interview process or discuss features and benefits of Jeremy, Inc., I would rather think about you. It puts me at ease.
  • Made me think about who you really are. This exercise forced me to think in some detail about who in world would find value in something like this blog. The “about you” exercise has given me a framework for what to leave out of the blog as much as it has informed what to include.
  • Gave me the perfect forum to talk about me since I’m talking about you. The things that I say about you actually tell you more about me than if I just tried to write about myself (if you followed all of that, then you may need some psychiatric help…don’t worry, I know someone). You get to know me better by my description of you and the things I value about you.

This simple exercise has broad applications for companies and organizations. At the outset of a project, website, new product or service, ask yourself what information would be on the “about you” page. Who is this serving? Who would find value in this?

Stephen Covey says to “Begin with the end-goal in mind” and the “about you” execise does just that. It forces you, your team or organization to look outward to what effect you hope to achieve by first figuring out who it is for.

Having the humility to take the eyes off yourself and think about your target audience – their fears, desires and needs – can do nothing but make your next idea or project more successful.

Thanks, Adam. Keep the good ideas coming. There are plenty of theives like me willing to harvest.

HOMEWORK

The next time you feel the urge to start a new project, whip out a blank piece of paper and a No. 2 pencil. Begin to write the About You page for that particular idea. The real strength of the “about you” exercise comes from the process of doing it. Your customers, readers or team members will thank you.

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Jeremy Nulik, Creative Energy Officer (CEO), St. Louis Small Business Monthly

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