January 26, 2005

feasting

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Looks like my Malay­sia trip is coming together nicely. Plan to be there by March 1st, though I might leave ear­lier.
The main pur­pose is to leve­rage The Hugh­train into a very sophis­ti­ca­ted mar­ke­ting pro­duct. Got some inte­res­ting stuff hap­pe­ning. Watch this space etc.
When this web­site first star­ted get­ting hea­vily read, I noti­ced that it was star­ting to get a lot more atten­tion from the Paci­fic Rim than from the Atlan­tic Rim. I noti­ced more and more of my e-mail exchan­ges were star­ting to come from there, less and less from the Atlantic-Rim pla­ces I had lived in pre­viously.
In retros­pect it doesn’t sur­prise me; Clue­train was a pro­duct of the US West Coast, so are a lot of the brands that really hel­ped cul­tu­rally define the last 20 years– Mic­ro­soft, Apple, Nike, Star­bucks etc. And let us not for­get the rise of the Asian eco­no­mies during this time.
I star­ted fin­ding myself sud­denly clic­king with these people’s ideas, far more than the thoughts of the Anglo-Saxon cor­po­rate world I grew up around.
Having spent the last 5 years in “Atlan­tic Rim” pla­ces like New York, Lon­don, Edin­burgh, Paris etc, I’ve more and more star­ted noti­cing well-entrenched cul­tu­ral resis­tance to change. “Pre­ser­va­tion Agents”, I called them, as oppo­sed to “Change Agents” etc.
Pre­ser­va­tion Agents are simply not inte­res­ted in The Hugh­train. And kno­wing what I know about my rea­ders, I doubt they’re very inte­res­ted in what you’re doing, either.
If the ratio of Pre­ser­va­tion Agents in a cul­ture exceeds a cer­tain cri­ti­cal mass, it makes it far more dif­fi­cult to get new ideas off the ground. And the peo­ple who are inte­res­ted in the same things as me, our busi­ness is all about new ideas. It’s all about cul­tu­ral re-invention. Change, not Pre­ser­va­tion.
On a lar­ger scale, any cul­ture with a top-heavy ratio of Pre­ser­va­tion Agents is basi­cally dying. And there’s nothing any amount of “crea­tive thin­king” can do about it. Crea­ti­vity is just there, not to make things bet­ter for every­body, but as a tasty, life-enhancing des­sert to be feas­ted upon by a lucky few.
The good news is, I believe the world is chan­ging for the bet­ter. The bad news is, a lot of peo­ple I care about are going to be left behind.
They don’t want to hear about it until after the feast runs out.
[BONUS LINK:] Cluetrain/Hughtrain encoun­ters ground-level cul­tu­ral resis­tance:

“Does it mat­ter to you at all that there are honest peo­ple just trying to do an honest day’s labor to feed and house and edu­cate their fami­lies inside the com­pa­nies you want to des­troy? Truly, I’d like to unders­tand this. Do you not get the con­nec­tion or do you not care that gun­ning after com­pa­nies is gun­ning people’s jobs? Is this just “war” and that makes “colla­te­ral damage” okay?”

Shan­non pos­ted a much more con­si­de­red reply that I would have. My days of wai­ting for peo­ple to “get it” are over.

12 Responses to “feasting”

  1. I think it could also be argued that collec­ti­vist cul­tu­res (which are more likely to be around the Paci­fic Rim) are going to be gene­rally more recep­tive to oppor­tu­ni­ties to inc­rease dia­lo­gue whe­reas indi­vi­dua­lis­tic cul­tu­res (more likely to be on the Atlan­tic) are a bit put off by the idea of recog­ni­zing we don’t live in iso­la­tion. (VERY basic over­view on Wiki­pe­dia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individualist)
    You might be inte­res­ted in a com­pa­ra­tive study of trust for­ma­tion in the dif­fe­rent socie­ties that was done at the Uni­ver­sity of Hawaii (http://marketing.byu.edu/htmlpages/ccrs/proceedings99/huff.htm). After all, your mar­ket for something to believe in relies on trust in that belief, right?

  2. mamagiggle says:

    Oy the hyper­bole!
    re: the blog­card
    Ideas are inte­res­ting, the peo­ple having them are secon­da­rily inte­res­ting.
    Brands are sym­bo­lic and a good sym­bol can ins­pire the right kind of mind.
    pur­pose is what pur­pose does.
    Cheers.

  3. hugh macleod says:

    Damn, Mama­gig­gle, I wish it WAS hyper­bole ;-)

  4. Sivin Kit says:

    one thing for sure .. you’ll defi­na­tely be feas­ting in Malay­sia. Enjoy! I’m a Malay­sian we know how to feast!

  5. Peter Cooper says:

    Plan to be there by March 1st, though I might leave ear­lier.
    Ah, but you are going to the Geek Din­ner on the 24th, right?

  6. Peter Cooper says:

    Do you not get the con­nec­tion or do you not care that gun­ning after com­pa­nies is gun­ning people’s jobs?
    Oh, and regar­ding this.. let’s for­get all the mar­ke­ting speak for a minute and rea­lise that things some­ti­mes have to be dis­mant­led for the com­mon good. The above defence has been — and is still — used by ciga­rette com­pa­nies, oil com­pa­nies, and all the rest ;-) Sure, talent­less adver­ti­sing hacks need to eat, but perhaps they should look at more who­le­some career choices.

  7. Roman says:

    I am French and I unders­tand your worries about pre­ser­ving agents. Some­ti­mes I find it really hard to ima­gine a future in France, and some­ti­mes I looks very clear.
    My country is cer­tainly not chan­ging as fast as deve­lo­ping coun­tries in the Paci­fic rim.
    At least in appea­rence for an occa­sio­nal tra­ve­ller with a super­fi­cial look, France is loo­king at the past more than the future.
    Actually your ques­tion­ning is more: What is moder­nity ?
    If moder­nity is get­ting more tech­no­logy in your life, I must admit that we are a few years behind, say, the Japa­nese.
    If moder­nity is thin­king about the mea­ning of life, we are cen­tu­ries late com­pa­ring to indian gurus.
    What I like about my country is that you are allo­wed to pur­sue what you want.
    If you are run­ning after money or the latest tech­no­lo­gies, you are free and encou­ra­ged to do so.
    But you also have the right to be what you want to be, espe­cially because many of us learn to deal with eco­no­mic pres­su­res.
    Our moder­nity is just dif­fe­rent. Actually, cul­tu­ral mind­sets evolve much slo­wer than appea­ren­ces.
    I think we are in France more inte­res­ted in art, music, lit­te­ra­ture, movies, cul­tu­res, nature, science. And we still gently try to be crea­tive in these fiels. I must admit we could be more crea­tive for sure.
    Sin­ga­pore looks very modern; Sin­ga­po­reans are very con­ser­va­tive (sorry, they are just dif­fe­rent, and I like Sin­ga­po­reans a lot any­way)
    We are all very dif­fe­rent
    We live in a very diverse world and the glo­ba­li­za­tion won’t change that.
    I try not to worry about the future, It’s just a loss of time.
    It’s our wes­tern (ame­ri­ca­ni­zed) mins­tet that tells us there are win­ners and losers on this pla­net.
    You can see where this leads.
    What are you run­ning after Hugh ?
    http://www.quotationspage.com/subjects/worries/

  8. Dick says:

    I have done busi­ness in Sin­ga­pore, Japan, China, Hong Kong (while still HMS colony), Tawian & Malay­sia — inc­lu­ding pro­du­cing part of the hand-over cere­mo­nies in HK and the dedi­ca­tion of the Menara KL (Kuala Lum­pur Tower). Although a sponge for ideas, I have found that the cul­tu­res as a whole are somewhat resis­tant to change.
    I could go on for hours, if you want more let me know.

  9. David Parmet says:

    Pre­ser­ving agents.. hehe … sounds like pre­ser­va­tive. As in enbalmed.

  10. Andreas says:

    U r coming to Malay­sia? I would be honou­red to meet you in per­son!!! Send me a mail, if you are inte­res­ted in some great food pla­ces outside the “nor­mal” tou­ris­tic environment!

  11. Geoff says:

    The inc­re­di­ble thing that I noti­ced in Mala­ya­sia was that all the books in prime spots in the book sto­res were all self help manuals as oppo­sed to novels etc that you find in the UK.

  12. AcouSvnt says:

    On the “honest day’s labor” quote:
    An honest day of lying to peo­ple, you mean? God for­bid you need to brush up your truth-telling skills.