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That Philiping ‘Sound-Bite Wisdom’

17 Friday Aug 2018

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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#philipedchart, broadsheet, Chartered Manager, Institute of Managers and Leaders, Leadership, linkedin, long-form journalism, meme, Obama, procrastiworking, sound bite wisdom, tabloid, Trump, Twitter

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I haven’t done a blog so far in August and yet I smashed out six in June and two in July. The reason? Well partly a dearth of material, but primarily because I have got into very short-form posts to LinkedIn. They are pithy (some might say pissy) little truisms or nuggets of wisdom that pop into my head from time to time; sometimes at the most random moments. I write them on a flipchart, take a photo, post it and Bob’s your Uncle. I call them #philiped chart – a play on the word ‘flip’ and my name ‘Philip’. Clever huh?

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So over the weekend I paused for breath and had a moment to reflect. This reflection time had me pondering the sort of nano-second world we now live in. Everything seems to be about speed and expediency, meaning activities that are more contemplative in nature tend to get relegated to the ‘too hard basket’ or ‘can’t find time basket’.  We’ve all seen examples of the glib sound bite wisdom, especially LinkedIn memes with some words of wisdom, be it for life and happiness, or how to manage our company or make a million in a week. I’m dismissive of such banality but over the weekend it dawned on me (somewhat late you might think) that I’m caught up in perpetuating the very thing I dislike.

So instead of just lamenting the near demise of long-form and considered written matter, I thought it might be worthwhile considering the implications of the new normal and how it came about.

It probably started before texting and Twitter. The beginnings of this demise can probably be charted back to the advent of television where entertainment was brought to us in a lazy fashion. At least with radio there is the engagement of the imagination. Less books began to be read and before long newspapers – a very good example of long-form journalism –  were flirting with the idea of shortening their pages. First cab off the rank were the tabloids in the belief that their readership wanted their news in more bite-sized chunks. You are hard-pressed today to find even the quality newspapers (broadsheets) produced in the old large format. Necessarily this means more considered long-form journalism is less evident.

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With texting came the expediency of getting a quick message off while the thought or conversation was hot. The days of the well-penned letter well and truly behind us at this stage. Then Twitter forced us to be deliberately succinct to the tune of 140 characters although 280 are available to some. In business there is a tendency to applaud such focus. No-one likes a meandering meeting with no real purpose right? Caution is needed though because not only can little thoughtful communication be conveyed in such a few characters, but the compunction to be brief can deliver dire consequences. The infamous Trump tweets have wreaked havoc across the globe with traditional allies often getting flamed by him. Were Trump to pen his thoughts in a broader manner and expound on his reasoning for the position he was taking, then no doubt the end result would be less inflammatory. As a result of the current trend to brevity, world tensions are now much higher.

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Then came the memes and LinkedIn which was my starting point. A few words placed beneath a  picture of a tranquil lake, while on the face of it harmless enough, can often  be anything but calming for someone experiencing grave difficulties in their life. A glib line that pays no homage  to the travails, scars and complexities of difficult situations does little good and is patronising at best. Knowing that ‘culture eats strategy for breakfast’ for example  is not really that helpful. It kinda suggests to me that the person dispensing this ‘wisdom’ has actually got that sorted and is reaping all sorts of benefits from doing so…a certain smugness comes through. What would be more helpful is a detailed exploration as to how one might get strategy implementation through developing and nurturing a culture whereby everyone knew the strategy, and was clear in their role to achieve it and worked assiduously to make it happen. Sure longer words but, more importantly, a lot harder to make happen.

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Recently I saw on LinkedIn the employability skills required to make us thrive in the age of digital disruption. Rather surreptitiously they all began with C. They were:

C – creativity;

C- critical thinking;

C- collaboration; and

C – communication.

That’s how this whole sound-bite wisdom works. There has to be some short sharp pattern. Like they all begin with ‘C’ for example. Life and management are much more complex than that, but perhaps that upsets the narrative and pattern too much. That had me thinking. Perhaps other letters of the alphabet might also be applied to the skills of the future. Here’s what a quick bit of procratiworking got me:

A

A  – agility (agile’s very much on trend right now!);

A – adaptability;

A – ambition; and

A – awareness.

I got on a roll and then thought ‘hey what about B’. Bit tougher this one but came up with:

B – bold;

B – businesslike;

B – big data; and

B – build partnerships.

C’s already been covered so what about ‘D’

D – diplomacy;

D – decision-making;

D – delegation; and

D –diligence.

So you see it’s not that hard to be glib. The fact of the matter is that the complex nature of managing in an organisation, or leading it, requires just three things (isn’t this me being reductionist?):

  • A complex battery of skills, competence and experience;
  • Self-awareness of your own shortcomings to be able to recruit to cover these; and
  • A mix of determination, sheer luck and creativity.

As suggested, this incorporates a huge array of skills and experience that cannot be contained within one letter of the alphabet.

If we are to achieve in improving our business delivery and leadership, it is unlikely that this will occur as a result of a nano-second eyeball capture on LinkedIn. In fact, most genuine entrepreneurs will talk about the hours of hard work and risks taken in order to become the ‘overnight success’ from their ‘genius’ idea. The same is true of effectively managing people and strategy. This can only be done effectively through life-long learning and having a raft of theoretical and practical skills that are constantly added to and updated. At times LinkedIn appears, in management terms, to be the equivalent of classified pages of old newspapers that carried remedies for everything from baldness to hearing loss. There are no simple one silver bullet fixes all ailments here. There ain’t no Rawleighs for management ailments!

The best solution to improving your business outcomes and managing your people for mutual advantage is to have a means by which best practice is available to you in long-form. Having peers with whom you can discuss issues and challenges with face to face, rather than a ‘like’ or ‘comment’ from one of your 800 odd connections, is much more enlightening. That’s why I have joined the Institute of Managers and Leaders and that’s why I sought the Chartered Manager status. The access to quality advice, peers, long-form research and insights provides a great opportunity to keep current in a world increasingly bombarded by little snippets of ‘wisdom’; not unlike what I contribute to most days that distract and dumb down the complexity of modern management. Sometimes too much condensed wisdom makes me want to ‘philip my lid’!

It’s None of Your Business

06 Friday Jan 2017

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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AIM, Australian Institute of Management, British East India Company, business, Executive bonus, GFC, KPI, Larry Cata Backer, Management, Pauline Hanson, Penn State, Trump, Trump University

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The word ‘business’ seems ubiquitous. We have ‘show’ business the ‘music’ business, agri-business, actual business and so on. But what do we really mean by business? I recall having a bit of a stoush with the head of Queensland’s Australian Institute of Management (AIM) when I said it needed to concentrate less on business and focus more on management. It took them a few years to understand the difference. Management is the tools you use to make your business happen. Often times though, and this is especially true of entrepreneurs and so called ‘self-made-men’, there is little observable good management practice in the way they run their companies. They are suspicious of executives who do not have their own capital (‘skin’) in the game. They often run the business through force of personality and layer family around them primarily out if issues of trust. Sound familiar?

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The public seem to laud such individuals, especially when they make pronouncements in areas in which they hold no greater gravitas than the ordinary person in the street. The business person’s foray into politics rankles with me because they have no greater knowledge most times than anyone else but seem to think they know better. The fact is their solutions are often proposed for the benefit of their interests and not the general good. That’s why lobbyists have grown exponentially. Everyone seems to have a vested interest they want pushed and secured. The implication of the business person waffling about politics is that, given a chance, they could do much better because ‘hey’ politicians have never run a business. I’ve even heard it from people who have said the good thing about Pauline Hanson is the fact that she was a successful business woman. I think that’s a bit of a long bow to say that running a fish and chip shop gives someone an insight into running a country. I would say running a fish and chip shop equips you to …well … run a fish and chip shop.

Politicians, generally in opposition but sometimes in power, especially when trying to ‘sell’ some cuts in spending, will dumb down government referencing the household budget and the need to make sure that they can balance the books. This is apparently meant to appeal to some demographic or other who will think that they are, at last, being understood by the political elite. To my mind running a country is nothing like running a business. I’ve run businesses for some 25 years and I’ve never run a country. I’m not sure if I suddenly became PM of Australia I could hit the ground running drawing on my many years of experience. I guess two things I have learnt from the world of management though, is that you need to know where you are not strong and know who to ask to find out what you need to know. Actually that is great advice for Trump. Not sure he will follow it. Experts scaffold politicians; it’s a safety net that ensures that hopefully the best policy at the time comes to the fore. Trump’s dismissal of the expertise and conclusions of his intelligence advisers because he knows how difficult it is to trace a hacker in the business world, doesn’t bode well for him seeking advice to make up for his lack of expertise in the world of politics or economics for that matter. The cadre of business people he is surrounding himself with are of equal concern; many of them in that elite coterie of ‘self-made-men’.

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So are the world of politics and business actually that different? Quite often the lines are blurred and increasingly big corporations are acting as quasi political states. In fact historically the lines were really blurred. The British East India Company for example had its own army which was the reason it came to rule large parts of India. Larry Cata Backer of Penn State Law wrote in 2011 that transnational corporations are at the centre of extraordinary and complex governance systems that are developing outside the state and international public organisations and beyond the conventionally legitimising framework of the forms of domestic or international law. Such frameworks one can safely assume are to make it easier for the company to do business and provide benefit to their shareholders. So business is blurring the lines from corporate to geo-political governance.

But I would argue there are elements to running a business that cannot match the complexity of running a State. For one I cannot recall any fish and chip shop (well in Australia at least) that has its own defence force. Nor one where they provide the means by which the road which carry the cars of their customers are funded directly by the shop owner. I don’t recall them creating a network of foreign embassies or trade offices in a range of countries (although that might be good to get cheap Basa off the Vietnamese). The fact is you don’t need to think too long, or too hard to come up with a huge list of things business doesn’t do. Trump University does not mean Trump educates America. Hanson for one did not have a school attached to her Ipswich fish and chip shop. A first aid room at my company does equate to running a national health system.

Business nowadays increasingly focuses on short-term gain in order to maximise the remuneration of the senior executives. Those companies that are publicly listed will go ‘hell for leather’ to try and maximise returns for shareholders. On some occasions they will even borrow to pay dividends. Actually that does sound like government! Share market performance is often a KPI that is linked to bonuses, plus where bonuses are paid in shares it’s good to have a buoyant share price right?

In government we should be looking at the much longer term to provide a boost in prosperity for all, not just one segment of the population. Governments require significant data capture and modelling and analysis especially in the realm of economics. Governments are held to account in a way that oftentimes companies aren’t. You hear of politicians being unceremoniously dumped from office much more frequently than you hear of a businessman going to jail. In fact I think the sum total of business people who did ‘time’ for their role in the GFC was two. This needs fact checking though as it could be half that!

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The stakes are high in government. You have the lives of millions in your hands. You can’t just do what you can in business when it ‘goes south’ by winding the company up (and the workers with it), having secured your own fortune along the way with no collateral damage to yourself through a web of trusts and arms-length company structures (a number based in the Cayman Islands). I’d much rather see politicians using the principles of management to run the State and not use the often blunt tools of business to carve out a name for themselves. We wait with baited breath to see what Trump does with running his country rather than his company. We all hope he does well because his success is very much our business.

From 9 to 1 – let the countdown begin

23 Friday Dec 2016

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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2016, 2017, 5th Beatle, Alan Rickman, Billy Paul, Daniel Berrigan, David Bowie, Gary Shandling, George Martin, Jo Cox, Lakshmi, Leonard Cohen, liberals, Merle Haggard, numerology, Prince, progressives, Ronnie Corbett, Shiva, Space Oddity, Terry Wogan, Trump, Vicotira Wood, Zaha Hadid

Those of a numerological bent will know that 2016 was a ‘9’ which is the number of completion and endings. So we look forward to 2017 with a huge sense of relief and anticipation now that the year is almost behind us. 2017 is a ‘1’, which is about renewal – a new cycle. Words associated with ‘1’ are vitality, union and discipline. I can think of no greater watch words for the British and US leadership than these three as they navigate Brexit and the US Presidency; both ‘surprises’ sprung upon us in the year just closing.

In reflection mode it is also time to pause and think of those no longer with us. For each reader there may be deeply personal partings, but in terms of ‘famous’ people it has been a ‘stellar’ year if that’s an appropriate turn of phrase for those who have re-joined the stars. I would like to reflect on a few who have inspired me, or left some impression on this earth on their way through.

France David Bowie

David Bowie:

Very few knew he was ill, but this charismatic and constantly evolving musical chameleon used his own death-bed in a video that addressed directly the inevitability of our mortality and how art can transcend the mortal world and create legacy that means we become immortal. His musical catalogue, without a doubt, leaves some of the greatest songs of modern music to this and future generations. It just surprised me that it took so long for an astronaut to take a guitar into space and sing Space Oddity!

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Gary Shandling:

A comic genius, Shandling is best known for It’s Gary Shandling’s Show and the Larry Sanders Show. He was a forerunner to Seinfeld and I have the feeling that Shandling cleared a path enabling the success that Seinfeld has become, particularly breaking the fourth wall. One of my favourite witty lines by Shandling, who was brilliant at stand up as well as sitcom and writing, goes something like. ‘I once made love for an hour and fifteen minutes, but it was the night the clocks are set ahead.’

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Billy Paul:

Philadelphia born soul man most famous for ‘Me and Mrs Jones’ whose complete discography was better known to hardened soul fans like myself. Subject to an earlier blog this year, Paul was also an activist on race issues. Check his back catalogue on You Tube.

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Prince:

Symbolic, magical and mercurial are three words to describe what now looks like a troubled soul, whose rivalry for the top slot with Michael Jackson seems to have extended to the dramatic trauma of their demise.

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Terry Wogan:

Unless you grew up in the UK in the 1980s-2000s you may not know of Wogan, but he graced BBC TV every week night interviewing celebrities. What distinguished Wogan, an Irishman in ‘enemy’ territory, was the quickness of his wit and his authenticity. To see him at his best was to listen to his ‘commentary’ of many Eurovision Song contests. His hilarious summation of the scoring system, whereby centuries old connections or animosities would bubble to the surface, was a delight to hear. It’s no coincidence that Brexit happened because Terry wasn’t there to lampoon it.

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George Martin:

Often known as the 5th Beatle, Martin had a significant role in shaping the Beatles sound. He is probably most known for the strings on Yesterday and the trumpet part on Strawberry Fields Forever. I used to work in Liverpool not far from Strawberry Field so I feel an affinity with anything associated with the Beatles. Claims over the 5th Beatle status caused a rift between Lennon and McCartney, but as Lennon softened so did his attitude to the notion of the value of Martin’s contribution.

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Zaha Hadid:

Iraqi born, British architect Hadid changed the face of modern architecture and her influence will live on for many decades to come, partly because of her leading the way as a woman in a predominantly male field. She was subject of a previous blog of mine.

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Daniel Berrigan:

Radical Jesuit priest, activist, educator and poet lived his life as an example of radical spirituality which offers a template for those who find our obsession with wealth vacuous. Subject of a previous blog of mine.

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Merle Haggard:

You don’t have to like country music to know that The Hag played a seminal role in the American music landscape of the 60s to 80s. He had 38 number one hits on the Billboard Country Charts and has influenced many a modern writers including the Bruce Springsteen, John Fogerty, George Thorogood and Keith Richards. He famously attended the San Quentin concert of Johnny Cash in 1958 as an inmate but turned his life around.

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Ronnie Corbett:

One of the great comic pairings of all time, in the Two Ronnies with fellow British comedian Ronnie Barker. Scottish-born, he had that marvellous self-deprecating story-telling style often joking at his own expense about his diminutive stature. His cameo in Ricky Gervais’ Extras where he does cocaine at an award ceremony is priceless and created the memorable line. ‘Corbett. It’s always bloody Corbett.’

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Victoria Wood:

2016 was a good year for dead comedians! Wood was a staple on British television in the 1980s. She was across all genres of comedy and was accomplished at writing, sitcoms, screen-writing, directing and song-writing. Her funny musical ditties still delight and age better than you might think. Immensely likeable she received 4 BAFTAs from an amazing 14 nominations.

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 Leonard Cohen:

Subject of a previous blog, there aren’t many superlatives left to describe one of the greatest singer-songwriters of the modern era. Had Cohen been alive it would have been a close run thing for the Nobel Prize for Literature between he and Dylan.

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Jo Cox:

In the lead-up to Brexit Yorkshire politician Jo Cox lost her life, killed by a voter not happy with her ‘remain’ stance for Europe. Young, full of energy and by all accounts the politician you really want as your own, she will forever remain the face of what could have been and what actually was: a campaign so vitriolic that an allegedly sane person saw fit to bring he life tragically to an end to make a point.

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Alan Rickman:

An actor of real quality, particularly on the stage and particularly of Shakespeare, he had a depth that took him seamlessly from romantic comedy (Love Always) to drama (Sense and Sensibility). Many will remember him for his role in the Harry Potter opus as Severus Snape. Now I have all of the Christmas TV re-runs to work out was Snape a ‘baddy’ or a ‘goody’?

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Un-named Progressive Liberal:

It has struck me with the rise of populism that we also saw the death of the progressive or socially liberal in 2016. Politics should at the very least have some degree of equality or improvement manifesto or ideology that underpins it, be it equality of opportunity through access to education, or improvement of one’s position through ‘trickle-down’. Today it would appear that no-one wants to be worse off to assist others. There are times when someone has to be worse off and it is increasingly clear that very few want themselves or their ‘tribe’ to be that person or that cohort.

Without some loss there cannot be reform, nor paradoxically can there be equity. Those sick of losing in 2016 struck back and we now face a year of uncertainty with Trump staring down Putin and Xi Jinping. Maybe the much needed stability in the world order will come when the ‘haves and have yachts’ give a little for the benefit of others. After all, the best way to secure one’s private wealth is to have political and economic stability to establish a solid investment climate.

As my regular readers know I’m not long back from India so it’s still playing on my mind. One of the ‘1’ words is also Goddess of which there are hundreds of thousands in India. There are two prime ones you can choose from depending on your state of mind. One is Shiva, the Destroyer and the other is Lakshmi, the Goddess of wealth, fortune and prosperity. It’s my new year’s wish for us all, especially in business and politics, that we see the rise of the latter and not the former.

By (Bye) the Numbers

09 Friday Dec 2016

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Betsy DeVos, Bill Gates, Borat, Dick Smith, Facebook, Google, Harvard Business Review, HBR, Kazakhstan, Mike Moore, Nate Silver, OECD, Ricahrd Branson, Steve Jobs, Trump

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A few things have happened recently that have had me look again at numbers and as usual I shall try to pull the threads together. While our near neighbours New Zealand might be reeling from their seismic events of late (7.6 on the Richster Scale), a less dramatic but no less significant event has happened in Australia in the last week or so. The much-vaunted Australian education system took a further hit with the announcement of the OECD education rankings which showed for mathematics we are now behind the nation glorious of Kazakhstan (of Borat fame). Sobering news indeed.

Then there was the spectre of the Trump election and the appointment of Betsy DeVos (just one ‘S’ from being a quirky 1970s art rock band). Part of the Amway family by marriage it’s pretty certain she will know how to do numbers so perhaps math in the US education system will get some heft. In fact it’s looking like the Trump Cabinet will be pretty well endowed numbers-wise. According to NBC News net worth of $14.5B between them. The Australian national debt only sits $44.5b by comparison.

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Under DeVos there will certainly be lots of math tutoring vouchers available that’s for sure. And the US needs to be up the rankings as well because it, too, falls beneath Kazakhstan AND Australia. Strange that, given when it comes to R&D and real smarts, the US seems to out-rank just about every other nation (Israel aside). Perhaps the quality of school-based education doesn’t count for too much after all? Maybe it’s our University sector that’s all-important? But oh yes we are dropping in those stakes as well (refer previous blogs).

Reflecting on the US Presidential race at a safe distance now, I, and am sure a lot of pundits, are trying to work out what went wrong with the predictions. Nate Silver, the guru amongst pollsters, got it completely wrong. Pollsters got Brexit wrong and even though they were armed with that aberration they still somehow crunched their US pre-polling numbers incorrectly. So when we are told to focus on the numbers and cast aside feelings and impressions we find that the numbers don’t really yield the right answers. In fact the pundit who seemed to predict the election result most accurately did it on ‘gut instinct’ and that was Mike Moore. If you read his website you will see that his assessment based on grass roots discussions was eminently more accurate than Silver’s.

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We are constantly reminded of the presence of big data and I think few of us understand what it is, other than it involves data and it is ..err big! I wonder sometimes whether the glib reference to this is because the data isn’t that big, or that special? Take analytics. The intelligence that sits behind our social media presence and our buying behaviour is now highly sought after with mainstream retailers paying lots for a more acute analysis of our expenditure patterns. Facebook and Google charge huge amounts (cumulatively that is) for Adwords etc. to promote your website and your brand/presence. I’ve done a lot of this and I cannot say that it has been that successful. Apparently the backend of these social media platforms can, with great precision, reach a highly targeted market. What if the models being used were as accurate as Nate Silver’s big data analysis?

When it comes to feelings and hunches the business world stands aghast. We are meant to use data, increasingly available in larger volumes thanks to super-computing, to make decision. Managers are taught to be all knowing scrutineers of numbers. Stock market analysts are great runners of the numbers and yet they seem to, time and again, fail to spot the complete dog that goes down the toilet – your money with it. Take Dick Smith. That turd was finely polished and the analysts got it sold to even the reasonably sophisticated investor and yet if you ever shopped in one of their stores you would immediately call your broker shortly thereafter and relinquish your holding. I can think of no clearer case of going with your gut and avoiding the numbers.

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The latest November edition of the Harvard Business Review ranked the world’s top 100 CEOs. The top three Martin Sorrell, Lars Rebien Sorenmson and Pablo Isla were interviewed in depth. What they said may surprise you. Isla, CEO of Inditex, is one of the world’s largest fashion retailers where one would suppose sales data and customer buying behaviours would be the absolute touchstone of the company. Rather he says ‘I’m gradually learning to be less rational and more emotional.’ He’s not alone. Entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Richard Branson all placed or place a lot of emphasis on the ‘hunch’. For them it would appear that the gut instinct is more of a business guide than a complex data set.

So next time someone has done the numbers, be it a TV pundit, a politician or a business consultant be very wary. What does your ‘gut’ tell you? Don’t be misled by the whole ‘post-truth’ shtick that’s oscillating around at the moment. Perhaps the lack of respect certain sectors of the population have for ‘experts’ stems not from their lack of understanding of numbers, or the scientific method, or even from a  ‘chip-on-the-shoulder’ reaction to a burgeoning well-educated demographic but a lived experience where the numbers don’t quite stack up on many occasions. For example the economy has been growing, employment has been improving but their standards of living have declined.

So next time you are confronted with a league table, like our ‘dive’ in the math sweep stakes, it might be worth asking what method was used to determine the relative positions, what sample size was used, how was validity and reliability achieved and what vested interests existed for some counties to ‘fluff’ the figures? We might not be as bad as we are told. Go figure!

Hello Donald & So Long Leonard

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

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alt-right, China, Donald Trump, Elizabeth Warren, Hallelujah, Hillary Clinton, NATO, Pocahontas, Putin, so long Marianne, So Long Maryanne, South China Sea, Steve Bannon, Trump, Whitewater

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In the space of roughly a week we saw Donald Trump elected to the most powerful position on earth and the death of poet, writer and musician extraordinaire Leonard Cohen. As difficult a task as I am setting myself here I’m going to try to draw a thread between these two events.

For many of us I think the win of Donald Trump was shocking but not a surprise. After Brexit many realised the unreliability of polling and also after the election of Duterte in the Philippines, the appetite of some to stick it to traditional, legacy or dynasty politicians. This isn’t revolution a la ‘First we take Manhattan then we take Berlin’ this is anarchy. The anarchist movement which featured very powerfully in Portugal and Spain in the late 1920s concentrated on tearing something down without too much regard for what to put in its place, believing that out of the destruction comes possibility. It is the bushfire  approach to forest regeneration. As we know from this there is every chance things may not turn out as you wish for. Fate is a very fickle mistress in which to place all your reliance.  What I fear many voters have done in that moment of sobriety in the booth is think about teaching the establishment a lesson, not realising that collectively everyone voting the same way brings out an unintended consequence – the candidate of your worst nightmares.

I don’t particularly blame American voters though because they had a tough choice. As ‘leader of the free world’ there is not only the prosecution of your agenda but also POTUS provides world leadership, including, I would argue, moral leadership. In the case of Election 2016 US voters were confronted by two candidates neither of whom had any particular moral strength. With regard to Trump he’s most probably a narcissist but definitely sexist and racist. His two clear failings are lack of a sound IQ and temperament. I suspect that he will be the President known for the thinnest skin and the lowest resilience. I hope I am wrong. While Trump’s flaws are there in plain sight (or at least we hope he has no shortcomings we aren’t already aware of) Hillary’s are a bit more opaque. There has always been a taint over the House of Clinton going way back to the 1970s and 80s with Whitewater (a failed real estate investment). Then there was Bill’s indiscretions, the emails and the Clinton Foundation. When we talk about moral authority I don’t think there was much on show with either candidate. Hillary had money and the entitlement and this may have turned many off. Makes you wonder whether the result would have been better with Elizabeth Warren at the top of the Democrat ticket, ‘Pocahontas’ jibes aside?

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It was clear in the run up to the election that Trump really wasn’t the mouthpiece of anyone. Sure he had Steve Bannon of the alt-right at his side but I doubt they pitched in much cash.  He wasn’t bankrolled by big business; in fact Clinton outspent him by many millions $898m v $430m if Bloomberg has its figures correct. Take a moment to reflect on the amount of money we are talking about here. No wonder blue collar America feels out of the loop. Clinton on the other hand had funds from sources that made America uncomfortable. The feeling that she had been ‘bought and paid for’ by Corporate America, especially by the investment banks like Goldman Sachs, never went away. Nor did she adequately douse those flames. To have – on record – public speeches saying that investment banking practice would be put under the microscope, only to say in a $200k a time paid for address to the very same bankers that she would look after them, smacked of hypocrisy. Which it was. America sensed this and on top of the fact that ‘we ain’t having no woman in the White House pushing us around’ Trump took the prize many said he could not claim.

So now we live with the consequences. One of the key ones is the ‘America first’ aka isolationist policy that was Trumpeted during the campaign. To paraphrase the saying about Wall Street…’when America sneezes the whole world catches a cold’. We have all seen what happens in a vacuum. In Libya with no thought to who would replace Gadhafi we ended up with real chaos and the likely new base for ISIS. When America creates its own vacuum in focussing on domestic ‘America first’ policies its foreign policy void will be filled – make no bones about it. China will become more aggressive in the South China Sea if no Asia-Pacific pivot is there to counterbalance that. Putin is likely to be more aggressive towards ex-Soviet territories who have cosied up to NATO. NATO without the ‘attack one-attack all’ rule will be toothless. The world will become a much more unstable place and that is coming from our current position with a number of serious conflagrations including Syria and Yemen which aren’t that stable.

Employees work in a factory of Babylon Garments in Dhaka

So while the international scene might re-align with a more distracted President (and some would say this is a good thing) we are likely to get a whole host of domestic politics filling our screens streamed live from the US. Journalists around the world will be hanging off every throwaway remark, every tweet to goad or ridicule. The ‘victims’ are likely to be the very blue collar workers that brought Trump to power. With little opportunity to exploit the primary labour market they are unlikely to get enough ‘jam’ to be kept quiet. It’s just not possible to have a T Shirt under $5 and previously outsourced jobs brought back to the US. That genie’s out of the bottle and won’t fit back in.

Then there is the fissure created within American society occasioned by Trump’s divisive campaign that will take years to heal if at all. Black lives matter when you have a black President. Do they still matter when you have a white President who has open support from the KKK? With Bannon as key adviser many rightly wonder just how far  race relations will retreat. Remember they didn’t advance that much under a black President. For many minorities I suspect, under Trump’s Presidency, they will ask whether  ‘Democracy is coming, to the USA.’

Canadian singer and poet Leonard Cohen i

It’s easy to be pessimistic, but remember this –  society is nothing more than the aggregate of people living together in a more or less ordered community. Last week our society was the poorer for the passing of Leonard Cohen. Where Donald Trump is a self-confessed lady’s man pest with a mouth full of tic tacs, Cohen was an acknowledged lover of women in the best possible sense. His final words of farewell to Marianne, a former lover, on hearing of her impending death are testament to a great poet and all round nice person. ‘Come over to the window my little darling’ feels very different if it is Trump or Cohen saying it!

Cohen had a lot to be genuinely bitter about given his retirement was rudely interrupted by the knowledge that his manager and purportedly long-time friend Kelley Lynch had stolen his money and money left in trust funds for charities. Without an ounce of bitterness Cohen took to the road and blew the world away (including me on two occasions) with the most sublime musical and poetic performances, in his late 70s and 80s no less. Now that is true stamina!  Where Cohen shows humility and stature as a true man in these circumstances, Trump would be all over Twitter trying to exact revenge.

I leave the last observations on Cohen to those of his son writing on his father’s official website.

‘My sister and I just buried my father in Montreal. With only immediate family and a few lifelong friends present, he was lowered into the ground in an unadorned pine box, next to his mother and father. Exactly as he’d asked. As I write this I’m thinking of my father’s unique blend of self-deprecation and dignity, his approachable elegance, his charisma without audacity, his old-world gentlemanliness and the hand-forged tower of his work. There’s so much I wish I could thank him for, just one last time. I’d thank him for the comfort he always provided, for the wisdom he dispensed, for the marathon conversations, for his dazzling wit and humor. I’d thank him for giving me, and teaching me to love Montreal and Greece. And I’d thank him for music; first for his music which seduced me as a boy, then for his encouragement of my own music, and finally for the privilege of being able to make music with him. Thank you for your kind messages, for the outpouring of sympathy and for your love of my father.’

Maybe Donald Trump can rise to the occasion and address his spiritual vacuum in the way that Cohen was able to constantly remain positive through his embrace of spirituality through his music, art and life. If this happens we may for the first time in Trump’s reign be able to say ‘Hallelujah’ to that!

RIP Leonard Cohen 1934-2016, hello Donald Trump 1946 – present.

Scaling Everest with Hillary

29 Friday Jul 2016

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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Burning Man, DNC 2016, Donal Trump, Dynasty, Elizabeth Warren, Everest, Hillary Clinton, RNC 2016, Sir Edmund Hillary, Trump, values

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Having commented on Trump and the RNC 2016 last week I find with just an hour to go before leaving work I must rush off a blog about the DNC 2016. To not do so might have me subject to a charge of sexism or bias. It came as no surprise that Clinton got the nomination. What may well have been a surprise from many months ago was that the Democrat nomination process which started out with so few candidates went all the way and the Republican campaign which started with 15 or so in the running fizzled out before the end.

Where Trump remains an enigma (and possibly as crazy as a cut snake) Clinton is on the face of it  anything but. Her soft side and lack of rapport aside, we do know she is no stranger to the corridors of power. She is no stranger to the actual corridors of the White House too. With heavyweight endorsements from the most powerful person in the White House, as well as one from the President and her erstwhile rival Bernie Sanders, the deck is being nicely stacked in Hillary’s favour. And maybe that’s the problem. I haven’t been close enough to the Sanders campaign to really understand why he appeals so much to the younger demographic other than he represents a break from the political dynasties. Clinton’s selection was not entirely a one way street.

The ‘obvious’ winner of the RNC 2016 in 2015 was predicted to be none other than Jeb Bush. Never has a candidate been so well funded with better political networks. The Bush v Clinton dynasties once again in a tussle for the White House had all the hallmarks of Carrington v Colby showdown. It wasn’t to be. The public’s tolerance of dynastic ‘born to rule’ politics has grown thin over the years. So while Obama and others ring out with the refrain that never has anyone been so well prepared to run the Country I can’t help but think this doesn’t resonate with the electorate at large. Maybe the US voting public want someone not steeped in the politics of Washington but a fresh face with new ideas. I still think Elizabeth Warren would have fitted the bill. Once again not to be.

Trump has stolen a bit of a march on Clinton with the earlier timing of his nomination. As I write this it extends to a 3 point lead. Trump, of course, is going to use the fear theme (already covered in my last blog) while indications are that the Clinton/Kaine team will provide a much more upbeat message. I was interested in Trump’s acceptance speech where he regaled the audience for one hour fifteen minutes noting it was very short on detail. There appeared to be little or no blueprint for how he would fix the ails that he identified in the American economy and way of life. It was something of a shock then to read critiques of Hillary’s speech to find she was herself light on detail. If the Presidential campaign is going to be waged on fluff then it will be anyone’s guess as to who will win. If it comes down to a battle between ‘I alone can fix it’ and ‘we can all help fix it’ then the electorate is likely to turn itself off and a legion of young people stirred on by the promise of a Sanders vision of the future will turn off politics for good.

We know little about what Trump really thinks outside his one liners and zingers. He was once a Democrat and now a Republican. His values can change over time and we should welcome fundamental change in values in people over time. That might suggest insight and even wisdom. We don’t know enough about his fundamental beliefs to get a sense for him and his compass. While Hillary is a more open book, the secrecy that lies just beneath the surface of the Clinton household from Whitewater to private server emails might suggest that we don’t have 20/20 clarity on her true values either.

This made me reflect on what might a good set of values for the next President of the free world look like. They must be right for the times, be clear and provide the sort of roadmap that gives a sense that America is heading in the right direction. They must be able to be grasped by all so that the ever-widening gap between those who have and those who have not can be bridged. Trickle-down sufferers and big business barons alike need to be able to embrace them with equal gusto. Shit I’m sounding like a political speech writer now!

Over the years I’ve looked around for values and compasses that resonate with me. I’ve toyed with my own value systems and have written more than one manifesto for how I wish to manage at work and how I wish to live my life. They remain fluid documents. They are beliefs lightly held. That had me wondering if I was standing in one of those President-to-be spots would the electorate be any clearer about what I believe in, what guides and motivates me? Hand on heart I cannot answer that with the assurance I would like.

 Where might one go for guidance? I would look no further than the organisation from whom I derived my blog name; Burning Man. I was online the other night looking to see whether I could book for Burning Man 2017 when I was reminded of their underlying values:

 10-principles

 I can think of no better manifesto to take to the office, your daily life, or the nation.

 

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