November 13, 2004

consolidating gapingvoid

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[PART ONE:]
I’ve been doing gaping­void for over three years now. Recently I’ve been geting a lot of e-mails telling me how I should turn the whole enter­prise into a busi­ness.
As I see it, it breaks down into three main parts:
1. How To Be Crea­tive. Books, semi­nars, guest spea­king etc.
2. The Hugh­train. Mar­ke­ting and adver­ti­sing con­sul­tancy etc, though I think I’ve moved well beyond that. I’m more inte­res­ted in the aspect of mana­ging cul­tu­ral dis­rup­tion [see PART TWO below]. In my mind, this SHOULD be a cen­tral job for the adver­ti­sing agency, but quaite frankly, the industry as a whole is simply not inte­res­ted.
3. The car­toons. Publishing, merchan­di­sing and what­not. Hard as hell to make money (in rela­tion to the effort requi­red) but it’s good for get­ting one’s name out.
All three aspects I’m trying to har­ness under a sin­gle umbre­lla, “The Sex & Cash Theory: How To Be Crea­tive In A Non-Creative World”.
This is a star­tup idea in the making, don’t you think?
[PART TWO:]
Ear­lier I wrote:

My current pet Ego­fric­tion gripe: the ina­bi­lity for 

10 Responses to “consolidating gapingvoid”

  1. Davezilla says:

    You

  2. Andy Polaine says:

    I would think so too, if the num­ber of peo­ple I’ve poin­ted towards your site recently, par­ti­cu­larly, How To Be Crea­tive, are anything to go by. Nobody has e-mailed me back saying “what a load of bollocks”, quite the oppo­site.
    Hey, at the very least I’d get my uni­ver­sity to buy your books…
    By the way, I emai­led you a few days ago regar­ding inter­vie­wing you for a maga­zine. Not sure if you got it or not, but I would be inte­res­ted if you are. You can get hold of me through the URL I’ve inc­lu­ded in case “gaping” gets fil­te­red out by various spam fil­ters. (Don’t use the email address I’ve pos­ted, it goes straight to the trash — sorry, trying to clamp down on spam).

  3. Andy Polaine says:

    I would think so too, if the num­ber of peo­ple I’ve poin­ted towards your site recently, par­ti­cu­larly, How To Be Crea­tive, are anything to go by. Nobody has e-mailed me back saying “what a load of bollocks”, quite the oppo­site.
    Hey, at the very least I’d get my uni­ver­sity to buy your books…
    By the way, I emai­led you a few days ago regar­ding inter­vie­wing you for a maga­zine. Not sure if you got it or not, but I would be inte­res­ted if you are. You can get hold of me through the URL I’ve inc­lu­ded in case “gaping” gets fil­te­red out by various spam fil­ters. (Don’t use the email address I’ve pos­ted, it goes straight to the trash — sorry, trying to clamp down on spam).

  4. Cameron says:

    I think gaping­void is about per­so­nal frus­tra­tion, and vali­da­tion of ideas that should be com­mon­place. It is the per­so­na­lity that comes through which makes me reload the page day after day. The sub­ject mat­ter also has the effect of democ­ra­ti­zing an innac­ces­si­ble industry for those who ‘get it’. Car­toons make it fun to read, and rein­force what you’re saying.
    Hell I dunno… please keep a blog going because you are per­fect for the medium. The con­tent is abso­lu­tely strong enough for stif­fer mediums though.

  5. G says:

    If you ever need IT or a web mon­key for your new busi­ness call me :)

  6. G says:

    If you ever need IT or a web mon­key for your new busi­ness call me :)

  7. Jon Husband says:

    “mana­ging cul­tu­ral dis­rup­tion” … quite a mouth­ful and a mind-full.
    To manage something means cau­sing it to unfold in a desi­red direc­tion, non ? Which then means having a sha­red vision and sha­red values, non ? Which means pro­bably something more than yaw­ping and rai­ling against the pre­do­mi­nant culture(s), non? (something I’m good at, in my own mind).
    Do you mean “ena­bling and sup­por­ting the dis­rup­tion of obso­lete or overly-rigid cul­ture” ? or something like that … or do you indeed mean “mana­ging cul­tu­ral dis­rup­tion”, which somehow seems a bit pre­sump­tuous or gran­diose to me.

  8. Drinnan says:

    There are more mar­kets that feed off the hungry than those that do other­wise.
    The hungry are weak. Why not take their money?

  9. John says:

    oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, oh yes, Hugh Mcleod. You ARE on to something. Really, really, really.
    Seriously though.
    I think you should publish a book of car­toons and com­ments. I think it’d be good. You could pro­bably figure out how to brand it.
    Sorry.
    As for the cul­tu­ral dis­rup­tion mana­ge­ment thing, um, not so sure. I expect youre having a good time in Paris, good on you, we all enjoy your stuff.

  10. Ben says:

    Coming from the IT/Tech side of things, I think the whole ‘cul­tu­ral dis­so­nance’ thing defi­ni­tely exists, but it can be very, very hard to arti­cu­late in such a way that peo­ple will fork over money to ‘fix’ it.
    ‘Change Mana­ge­ment’ has been a buzz­term in the industry for a long time, and (in my expe­rience) tends to alie­nate users more than ever. I agree with Jon that if you can arti­cu­late it well, and perhaps dis­tance it from ‘mana­ge­ment’ (change or other­wise), then you might make it fly.