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Tuesday 29 November 2011

Transformation from the Trenches

There are a number of clichés in the business world, but the one that irritates me the most is the concept that:

Business = War

I have never been to war, thank goodness, but I think we all know the analogy is an exaggeration.  Business is business. It can be tough and it can be nasty, but it usually isn't fatal. And yet, I slipped right into the business is war cliché yesterday when the firm I work for went through a round of restructuring-related terminations yesterday.

My team experienced its losses early in the morning, which was bad enough. I suppose you could even say we even felt a little shell-shocked. As the day progressed, word of cuts in other departments slowly made their way through the staff grapevine. I felt like someone waiting on the home front as the casualty lists percolated in.

Sunday 27 November 2011

Radio Free Griot: Senegal Fast Food

I love music. I love all types of music played by all types of musicians. I can't imagine even a day without music.

I love music so much that I thought I'd go in a different direction today and share one of my favourite songs. I listen to it in the car on the way to work. I listen to it at my desk on my MP3 player. I listen to it when I'm at my computer at home. It's a great song and it never fails to pump me up.

The song is called "Senegal Fast Food" and it was recorded by Amadou et Miriam (with the rather extensive assistance of Manu Chao). As if the song isn't awesome enough on its own, there is also a fantastic official video.

Sunday 13 November 2011

The Tyranny of Ten

The last webinar I attended got me thinking, but not in the way the presenters had intended. The session offered to teach me about ten social media skills that learning and development professionals should know. It started on time; the obligatory “commercial” at the beginning of the session was not too long; and the facilitator kept the discussion focused on the topic. And yet the discussion about the last three or four skills was hurried and, dare I say, incomplete.

Blame it on David Letterman. Or maybe Moses is at fault. Perhaps evolution or an intelligent designer is culpable. In the end, it doesn’t really matter – trainers seem to be tyrannized by the number ten. How else can you explain the surplus of seminars, workshops, and webinars offering participants “Ten (fill-in-the-blank-with-the-word-or-words-of-your-choice)”?

Don’t get me wrong – I’m not exactly a “deca-virgin”. I’ve been known to take the easy way out myself on occasion. I’ve done my share of lame Letterman-inspired count downs. I’ve come down from the mountaintop with my own list of pseudo-Mosaic commandments. The thing is, though, I’m beginning to wonder why it’s always ten.

Sure, ten is attractive. It’s a nice round number. We can count it on our fingers. We’ve been conditioned to think in terms of lists or commandments, so a session that offers ten magical fixes is bound to attract an audience. Ten just feels right. I mean, what would people think if we only offered them seven best practices, six lessons, or five proven strategies?

Maybe that’s the problem – ten just feels right. But don’t you think that learners would feel even better if we were able to finish a workshop or a webinar without rushing through the last third of the material?