Paul Sizemore

Paul Sizemore  //  

Oct 24 / 2:51pm

Book Report: Rise of the Creative Class by Richard Florida

This is a very deep book and deserves to be read, and reread, as I've done. Instead of trying to summarize the entire book, I'm simply going to summarize the motivations, the work needs and life of the Creative Class. 

Motivation of the Creative Class
They are motivated by respect from piers
find status in merit
want to get ahead because they are good at what they do
need organization that values input, lets them be creative, challenging, can mobilize resources
driven by internal motivators 
find it difficult to deal with bullying bosses and incompetent managers
cultivate qualities that confer merit like technical ability & mental discipline (those are socially acquired traits
value active outdoor activity highly
have a passionate quest for active, authentic and participatory experiences
motivation is much like that of the volunteer, motivation has to come from within
motivators are challenge, enjoyment, to do good, to make a contribution, and to learn

Work of a CC
a domain expert, even their boss doesn't understand their work
bail out as quickly as possible if unhappy
favors hard work, challenge and stimulation
value Diversity and Openness
upgrade their own skills, in NYC they spend 13 hours per week doing it
Organization stifles creativity 
put their best foot forward
respond well to organizations with solid values, clear rules, open communication, good working conditions and fair treatment
do it for the responsibility, challenge, recognition and respect
needs to work with talented peers
trade job security for autonomy 

Life of a CC
Identify myself by the experiences I have (cyclist, clubber, community organizer, photographer, electronic & female vocalist lover) Create a unique creative identity 
Work and play is blurred. 
have a creative community
form few close ties, they form more loose ties
have strong preference for individuality & self-statment
most valuable resource is their time 
Time Deepen / Speed up activities. substitute shorter, faster / multitask / time planning
realize everything interesting happens at the fringes

To summarize the summary: 
Satisfying & meaningful work has to have Autonomy, Complexity and Relation of effort to reward

 

Filed under  //  Book Report  

Comments (0)

Oct 24 / 2:51pm

Book Report: The Art of Mingling by Jeanne Martinet

First, I'd like to lead with a figure from the book: 90% of people have a fear of mingling. That's a lot of people not mingling to their full potential. This was a quick and easy read and I got a few key take-aways. I live in Louisville, and it's a very close knit and closed environment. One of the first things you are usually asked in conversation is 'What high school did you go to?' I even heard this asked to a woman who was celebrating her 50th birth day. Think jack hammer when you think breaking the ice here in Louisville.

In addition to opening lines, the book gave a few other suggestions. Look at what people are wearing, and you will find your best traction with people dressed as you are dressed. Easy targets are two people that are arranged in a crescent, looking out into the crowd. Body language is key. Larger groups are easier to approach; people usually drift in and out unnoticed. When 'breaking in' to a group, don't introduce yourself, don't shake hands, just start talking. Most of all, look for extroverts or people with energy.

Ice braking advice:
• Tell a white lie if you have to
• 'Excuse me, I hope you don't mind, but I don't know a single soul here, I'm Paul"
• Entry with flattery - kids, pets, comments on accessories (ear rings)
• Sophistication test - only one, two people at time, "How did you get here?" - "what do you think" "what's your connection here?"
• 'This music reminds me of ...'
• Compliment the food

The last ice breaking advise I tried at a Jazz Jam party I went to, and I was complimenting a woman on her queso dip, and I asked what is in it, and she blankly stared at me and said, 'Cheese.' Be prepared, or at least be able to think on your feet.

Filed under  //  Book Report  

Comments (0)

Oct 24 / 2:51pm

Book Report: Living a life that matters by Harol S. Kushner

This book was recently recommended to me by a spiritual guide and leader, Rabbi Susan Lippe, and it's one of the most impactful books I've read in a long time. It helped me come to better terms with myself, my place in ethical dilemmas, and have greater confidence that I will continue to lead a moral life despite the thoughts of immorality. 

Humans live in two worlds, the world of spirit / faith and the earthly world of competition. In the past, I've lived predominately on the side of the spirit. As humans, we have two basic needs. We need to feel 'good' about ourselves, is the first. Everyone needs to feel as though they are 'good and just' in their lives. The other basic need people have is to feel successful. We shape our thoughts and actions so that we can meet these two basic needs we have. 

There is Mother love, then there is Father love, and we need both to realize a full potential. Mother love is nurturing and unconditional - love from the beginning that is consistently carried through life. Fatherly love is love that grows through the life and starts to plateau as the child's independence is realized. 

Our souls are split, one chasing goodness, the other fortune & fame. The people we admire are the ones that have closed the gap between the two worlds. 

Key take-aways on relationships: 
   • We can not live without the knowledge that someone cares about us
   • We need to feel like we can not be replaced
   • Sometimes marriage fails b/c one partner is frustrated in his need to give love, to make a difference in another person's life - we need to feel important to someone

God plants what's called the yetzer ha-ra within each one of us, 'the evil impulse" or " the will to do evil" / 'the will to selfishness' or the 'egotistical principle.' A definition of sin is ''rejecting relationships, both private and public, in which we affirm our own dignity and respect the dignity of the other.' Sometimes we do the wrong things for self protection, out of desperation, fear or anger and we override the voice of conscience.

We strengthen our moral fiber by the exercise of resisting temptation: 'You must be tempted or you can not be good.'

Resolving the yetzer ha-ra with your faith so both can exist in harmony is the only way to morally live.

Filed under  //  Book Report   Judaism  

Comments (0)

Oct 24 / 2:51pm

Book Report: Words that Work by Frank Luntz

In the book Luntz speaks of ten basic principals. 

They are: 

1) Use small words / speak the language of your intended audience / simple is more credible / product tag lines that even kids can remember / use alliteration 
2) Short sentences / Brevity / 
3) Credibility is as important as philosophy / words have to have sincerity / 
4) Consistency / keep saying it until you get traction /
5) Offer something new / novelty / like accidental manslaughter 
6) Say what people want to hear / personalize and humanize / people will not forget how they feel / make them relate it to their life / be aspirational /  sell the 'you' that will be / 
7) Speak Aspirationally / say what people want to hear
8) Visualize / paint a vivid picture / 
9) Ask a question / 
10) Provide Context & explain relevance / give people the why of a message

Good words to use:
Imagine Hassle-free lifestyle
Accountability results can-do spirit
innovation renew restore
reinvent Efficient the right to ...
Patient-centered investment casual elegance
independent peace of mind certified
all-american prosperity   spirituality
financial security balanced approach    a culture of...
Filed under  //  Book Report  

Comments (0)

Oct 24 / 2:51pm

Book Report: Work 101 by Elizabeth Freedman

Success on the job boils down to building trust. 

This book was broken into three sections: Etiquette, Relationships, and You. 

Business Etiquette at Work
Rule 1) When it comes to making a great impression at work, take action immediately
• Think reputation not impression: your reputation is a series of impressions.
• Strong introductions count: Take your time and make a list of people you want to meet. 
• Get comfortable breaking the ice: Know why you want to meet the person. Have something to give to them. 
• Outclass the competition with a polished look.
• Create a long-term plan to ensure ongoing reputation success: It's your attitude that keeps your reputation going in the right direction. Show that you care about the job at hand. Listen to constructive criticism, and take action on it. Your attitude is reflected in everything. 

Rule 2) Dazzle them with a fork: Manners do matter, and when someone asks you to lunch, it's not about the food. Be a good conversationalist. 
Rule 3) Use the meeting to showcase your strengths.
• Do your homework. Who is going to attend? What is the agenda? 
• Show up early to get the seat you want, be proactive, and follow-up. 
• Get invited to the right meetings by taking responsibility. 
• Be prepared for impromptu meetings; have some ideas in your pocket.

Relationships at Work
Rule 4) Don't assume you said or wrote what you meant
• Create emails that get read
• Avoid bad emails
• Understand why they aren't reading your emails. Create a strong subject line. 
• Play it safe with IM at work
• Deal with difficult communications. Escalate to the Manager or HR when someone crosses that line. With the oversharer, let them know that there are other people that are more qualified to talk to them about what they are talking about. With the people that need to prove their intelligence, use as little words as possible, don't give them what they need. With the Cubical Invader, let them know what your boundaries are, because they don't pick up as fast as others. Pass the buck when you are dealing with a Whiner. 
Rule 5) Don't network, build relationships instead
• Forming & maintaining relationships are the most important thing for your career
• Having a deliberate & systemic approach to meeting the right people 
• Avoid common blunders: Keep in touch with the right people (this demonstrates the commitment to the relationship and builds trust). If you make a ask, be specific, not 'do you have any jobs there.' Protect your time from the networking opportunities that you don't want; don't be a serial networker (going after everything). Organize gatherings. 
• Be available to people, and invite them places. They will get to know you on their own schedule. 
• Build a circle of contacts by having conversation after conversation. 
Layer 1) Tell friends, family and friends about your goals/objectives
Layer 2) Reach out to coworkers, clients, business to learn more about your industry
Layer 3) Reach out to alumni from programs that interest you
Layer 4) Contact former supervisor & coworkers to update them on what you are doing now
Layer 5) Reach out to people in journals, blogs, associations
• Break down the process into five stages: the gathering stage, the emailing stage, the follow up stage, the meeting stage, the thanking stage
• Stay on the radar screen. Periodic emails. Do research and send it out. Invite people to events. 
Rule 6) Do what it takes to build the relationships that matter the most to your career
• Get to know each other the right way. Listen and observe the person. Sync up to the manager. Learn how and when they are stressed. This will let you know when to approach them. Look for the major pain points. Your manager needs to know three things about you: you are ready to contribute, you appreciate the opportunity to learn from them, that you want to make their life easier. 
• Manage the manager. The Micromanager needs a lot of updates, to reassure them. Leave voicemail, detailed emails, daily updates. If the manager is absentee, get them to agree to weekly meetings and get her to sign off on stuff. 
Ways to say no to a manager: Offer to come up with other ways to accomplish the work, ask the manager to prioritize, ask for more help. 
• Be the employee loved by the manager. Gain the manager's respect. let them learn to count on you. Know what really matters to the manager. Do the job you were hired for. If you want to get to the next level, ask "What do I need to do to get there?" Admit what you don't know. 
• Avoid relationship breaking mistakes. Show patience. Don't lack courage and confidence. 
• Become a master of the employee-manager relationship. Help the manager look good. Doing good work helps you and the manager. Don't forget to keep a written accomplishment log. 

You at Work
Rule 7) Climb the corporate ladder with subtle, but shameless, self promotion
• Self promotion means mastering the concepts behind getting ahead
Self promotion means mastering the concepts behind getting ahead. It's the savvy wheel that gets the grease. Define success, and only success can promote a good product. Success means showing enthusiasm. 
• Make self promotion a habit on the job
Advertise yourself. Share testimonials. Measure your progress with facts and figures. Managers are moved by numbers. Keep track of your accomplishments. Conduct meaningful research. 
• Avoid self promotion disasters. Be the best product you can be. Be visible. 
• Self promote where it matters most. Do an annual review. 
Rule 8) Burning bridges is for arsonists 
• Don't let misery cloud your mind when it comes to jumping ship
• Begin your next career chapter with a job search that brings results
• Develop marketing materials that break through
• Fix what isn't working to Land a job you love
Rule 9) It's what you do with what you know that counts
Filed under  //  Book Report  

Comments (0)