Go Do – How Hard Can It Be?

Change This – Go Do: How Hard Can It Be?.

If you work hard and love what you do you will find success.  Common sense tells us we all become pretty skilled at things we love to do.  Conversely, you will never get good at things you hate to do.

Hard work alone is not a guarantee of success.  The lack of hard work guarantees failure.

Failure leads to success.  You must fail to learn how to succeed.

 

Do or not do.  There is no try.

Yoda

Tracking the Trackers – Video on TED.com

As you surf the Web, information is being collected about you. Web tracking is not 100% evil — personal data can make your browsing more efficient; cookies can help your favorite websites stay in business. But, says Gary Kovacs, it’s your right to know what data is being collected about you and how it affects your online life.

via Gary Kovacs: Tracking the trackers | Video on TED.com.

George Orwell was right.

Intelligence Is Overrated: What You Really Need To Succeed – Forbes

Research carried out by the Carnegie Institute of Technology shows that 85 percent of your financial success is due to skills in “human engineering,” your personality and ability to communicate, negotiate, and lead. Shockingly, only 15 percent is due to technical knowledge. Additionally, Nobel Prize winning Israeli-American psychologist, Daniel Kahneman, found that people would rather do business with a person they like and trust rather than someone they don’t, even if the likeable person is offering a lower quality product or service at a higher price.

via Intelligence Is Overrated: What You Really Need To Succeed – Forbes.

An Inadvertent Error

CEO Says Sorry to Yahoos for Borked Bio “Distraction” – Kara Swisher – News – AllThingsD.

Yahoos:

I wanted to share some additional thoughts with you related to the disclosure of my academic credentials.

As I told you on Friday, the board is reviewing the issue and I will provide whatever they need from me. In the meantime, I want you to know how deeply I regret how this issue has affected the company and all of you. We have all been working very hard to move the company forward, and this has had the opposite effect. For that, I take full responsibility, and I want to apologize to you.

In my note Friday, I said I would be focused on continuing to do what needs to get done. That’s because I feel I owe it to all of you to make sure that nothing disrupts the progress we’ve made in just a few short months due to all of your focus, commitment, and hard work. As you’ve heard me say many times, we have a tremendous business with incredible assets, and we can win by putting our customers first. The progress I shared with you in the first quarter should make clear that we intend to move fast and deliver on the potential of the business for our customers, shareholders, and all of you.

I know the board plans to conduct the review thoroughly and independently, and I respect that process. I am hopeful that this matter will be concluded promptly. But, in the meantime, we have a lot of work to do. We need to continue to act as one team to fulfill the potential of this great company and keep moving forward. You have my word that all my energy and attention will be on that mission.

Scott

How about a little truth here?  The CEO of Yahoo lies about his academic credentials and the company called it “an inadvertent error”.

Opportunities EVERYWHERE

Exchange of Services and Adding New Business Lines: I have a good friend who is a young MD type doctor. He was loaded down with student loans and he operates his own office in Encino, CA, a fairly wealthy area. It costs him $225 per hour to keep his office doors open. He had to do hospital rounds at night to survive. Radio time is now going begging. So, I worked a deal for him with a local radio station. He gets advertising air time and even has his own medical “show” on that station. He is also now the personal doctor for the station owner and the few employees. This was an exchange of services. I did not charge for putting this deal together but it lead to a new business line for him that I proposed and share in that revenue. He is located in a wealthy area. There are a lot of wealthy older people in the area who do not like going to see the doctor but from time to time, need medical help and attention. So we set up a medical concierge service that also gets advertised on that radio station. We make house calls and the fee is not cheap. We now have eight doctors on call and business is brisk.

via Opportunities EVERYWHERE Market Sniper – Slope Of Hope with Tim Knight.

The example above is one of the real life money making opportunities highlighted in the article.  Go read the rest.  This is tremendous food for thought.

I started to think about my own business after reading the article.  A while ago I recognized my opportunities were similar to the ones described by Knight.  began to understand that I had started working at the intersection of disciplines.  Underwriting and law.  Auditing and underwriting.  Technology and underwriting.

Can you take your expertise to the intersections of disciplines to meet unmet needs?

HT – Michael Panzner at Financial Armageddon

The Case Against Passion – naked capitalism

But the real question is who this vogue for romantic attachment to one’s work really serves. Faking passion in job interviews seems to be as necessary as faking orgasms is in some relationships. On the surface, this long-lived fas appeals to the narcissistic tendencies that are ever more common in American society, that we all have some special talent or destiny and we are supposed to go forth and, to use that horrible New Age turn of phrase, manifest it.

But being emotionally invested in career success as the proof of one’s worth makes people exploitable. That’s the secret of elite firms like Goldman and McKinsey, which hire people who were not simply bright, but have a record of achievements that shows that they care deeply about external validation. When an organizational guru came in to give a look over McKinsey in the 1980s, he was famously told by the head of the firm, “Don’t mess with the insecurity.”

via The Case Against Passion « naked capitalism.

Passion is overrated.  Love is perhaps too strong a term.  I prefer extreme liking.  Are you passionate about your work?  Do you love what you do?  Or do you simply like what you do?

Do or not do.  There is no try.

Yoda

What is Bach Worth? – The Domino Project

What is Bach worth? – The Domino Project.

The real question is how much would you pay for 9 hours of classical music?  Would you pay 99 cents?

I checked Amazon today and the deal is still on.  I clicked and bought.  Amazon is hoping that a lot of people will click and buy.  The company is clearly betting on a social media referral strategy, hoping that enough people will email, link, blog, etc., about this offer to drive sales.

Hopefully Amazon will share the results of their experiment.