Archive for the ‘Podcast’ Category

February 3, 2013

Gape Into The Void: Podcast Episode 9 with Seth Godin

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Screen Shot 2013-02-03 at 6.11.09 PM

[Direct Link to Epi­sode 9

[Link to the Pod­cast in iTu­nes]

[The gaping­void Seth Godin Store]

[Seth’s blog]

Show notes [com­pi­led by Jeff Sass:]

In this epi­sode of the Gape Into The Void pod­cast, Hugh and Jason have a dis­cus­sion with bes­tse­lling author, spea­ker, and mar­ke­ter, Seth Godin.  Seth has been an ins­pi­ra­tion to many, inc­lu­ding Hugh, and over the years gaping­void has pro­du­ced many popu­lar ima­ges that were based upon, or inc­lu­ded the words of Seth Godin.  We even have a dedi­ca­ted Seth Godin Store!  Most recently, Hugh illus­tra­ted one of Seth’s three new books, “V Is For Vulnerable.

Show Links:

Seth’s Kicks­tar­ter Project

Seth’s New Book

Ignore Every­body

Poke The Box

Linch­pin

imgres

V Is For Vulnerable

Nia­gara Falls…

Rus­sell Davies and Nike

Michael Jor­dan and Bugs Bunny

Nike Fuel Band

Red Bull vs. Coke

Apple Sto­res

Seth at Yahoo.

The Lizard Brain…Extreme Sports

Liz Gil­bert: Eat, Pray, Love

Hugh’s Chan­geThis Manifesto

Don Qui­xote

Tri­bes

Pur­ple Cow

We hope you enjoy lis­te­ning to the talk with Seth.  If you like the show, please tell your friends about the “Gape Into The Void” pod­cast and leave us a review on iTu­nes.

Rock on!

All best,

Jeff

January 17, 2013

Seth Godin and Me on Intrepid Radio

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v.is.for.vulnerable

Thanks to Todd Sch­nick and for having Seth Godin and I on his Intre­pid Radio Pod­cast.

We star­ted off tal­king about the children’s book Seth and I made together, “V Is For Vul­ne­ra­ble”, but the con­ver­sa­tion went way beyond that.

Seth, as always, was his very lucid self. As always, he’s pushing us to raise our game in the mea­ning­ful” and “crea­ting art” departments.

My big takea­way was, that in spite of Seth being very suc­cess­ful and well-known in my circ­les, he really isn’t trying to reach “Every­body”, just the small few who are ready to hear it. It’s easy to think that every­body digs Seth’s mes­sage, that’s not actually true. Most peo­ple just aren’t ready.

But that’s OK. Though Seth fans are a defi­nite mino­rity, the good news is, that’s still enough peo­ple to make a huge impact.

We can all learn something from that…

Todd’s Show Notes:

1. “If Dr. Seuss wrote a book that would make a middle mana­ger cry, that is what we set out to do.”

2. It is about being hope­ful and brave again, like we were as children.

3. Making art is about being vul­ne­ra­ble to the world.

4. “If it is cer­tain to work, it’s not inno­va­tion. And if it is not inno­va­tion, than it is not art.”

5. Too many orga­ni­za­tions are afraid to say to the world “This might not work…” And that fear holds most back from crea­ting art.

6. “Fai­lure is something I look for­ward to, because it shows me I’ve got­ten to an edge.”

7. “Work is love.” Or at least it should be.

8. Imba­lance makes good things hap­pen, and makes real, honest con­nec­tion pos­si­ble. And it’s that fee­ling of almost falling from imba­lance, that you really begin to start fee­ling alive.

9. Hard work vs. Doing something that is hard, risky, meaningful.

10. How peo­ple apply “one-buttock pla­ying” to their daily lives.

11. Hugh and Seth dis­cuss the crea­tive pro­cess in how they crea­ted this book.

12. “Surround your­self with peo­ple who are on a journey…and help them make that jour­ney with more gusto. And to make more of a ruckus.”

13. Mat­te­ring, is more impor­tant than focu­sing on quality…And mat­te­ring, is doing something that can­not be specified…

Hope you enjoy. Thanks!

[Find out more about Seth here.]

December 19, 2012

Gape Into The Void Podcast, Episode 8 With Tim Ferriss

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[The print I drew for Tim etc.]

[Direct Link to the MP3]

 [Link to Gape Into The Void on iTu­nes] 

[Show notes:]

We had the chance to catch up with the ama­zing Tim Ferriss.  Tim is a fas­ci­na­ting, ins­pi­ring guy, and old friend of gaping­void, and our inter­view with him is full of great quo­tes and memo­ra­ble Ferriss-isms…

Here are links to some of the things touched on in the show… Enjoy!

TimFerriss.com

4-Hour Work­week
4-Hour Body
4-Hour Chef
Book boy­cott?
Ama­zon Publishing
Bit­to­rrent Part­nership
Tim’s Book Trai­ler Video
Direc­tor Adam Patch
Zen And The Art of Motorcycle Main­te­nance
Josh Waitz­kin  - Searching for Bobby Fischer
Mas­tery
Jiro Dreams of Sushi
Mar­cus Aure­lius
Seneca 2.0
Gary Vay­nerchuk on the show
Lift App
Herd by Mark EarlsThanks again for lis­te­ning.  If you are enjo­ying Gape Into The Void, please tell your friends and leave us a review on iTu­nes.  If you have any ques­tions or topics you want us to cover on the show email us at pod­cast at gapingvoid.com.Thanks again for gaping into the void. Rock on.

December 3, 2012

Podcast: Gape Into The Void, Episode 7 — With Gary Vaynerchuk

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[Link to Gape Into The Void on iTu­nes]
[Direct Link to the MP3 of Epi­sode 7 with Gary Vaynerchuk]

In this epi­sode of the Gape Into The Void Pod­cast Hugh and Jason have a chance to catch up with Inter­net phe­no­me­non, Gary Vay­nerchuk, a long-time friend of gaping­void. If you don’t know Gary, you should. He’s an inc­re­dibly smart, dyna­mic and out­going per­so­na­lity, and most of all he’s an inc­re­di­ble salesman.

SHOW NOTES:

Wine­Li­brary — Store
WineLibrary.TV
Vay­ner­me­dia 
Vidd­ler
Kim Kar­dashian
Hugh does “live dra­wing” at events.
Gary’s brother AJ
Plurk and Jaiku
Mic­ro­soft Blue Mons­ter
Robert Parker’s Wine Ratings
$3 wine from Whole Foods
Buying the NY Jets
Grey Goose
$15 Super Pre­mium Gum

Thanks again for lis­te­ning.  If you are enjo­ying Gape Into The Void, please tell your friends and leave us a review on iTu­nes.  If you have any ques­tions or topics you want us to cover on the show email us at pod­cast at gapingvoid.com.

Thanks again for gaping into the void. Rock on.

October 17, 2012

Gape Into The Void podcast: Episode 6 – Office Art & The Wedding Planner

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[The wee ani­ma­tion we did that pretty sums up the gaping­void rai­son d’etre etc]

Gape Into The Void Epi­sode 6 – Office Art & The Wed­ding Planner

[Click here to subsc­ri­beon iTu­nes: http://tinyurl.com/voidcast] [RSS Feed]

[Click here to lis­ten to the indi­vi­dual episode]

It’s time for another epi­sode of Gape Into The Void!  Join us as Hugh, Jason and Jeff talk about gapingvoid’s evil plan to dis­rupt the “office art” industry.  We also are remin­ded about some big events in Hugh’s world and we give you a peek behind the sce­nes of some of our current client projects.

[Show Notes:]

Social Object Factory

Hugh is The Wed­ding Planner

The gallery GapingvoidArt.com

Follow us on Twit­ter: @gapingvoid@gapingvoidart

@garyvee

Steve Jobs print

Scoble’s Web Page

Peter Dia­man­dis

Aste­roid mis­ses Earth

Brian Solis

Facial Recog­ni­tion – No Smi­ling on ID’s

Miles Davis Ringtone

The New Republic

Bab­son College

Xerox Machine

Art.com

Successories.com

Demo­ti­va­tors

Hugh­Train

Dis­rup­ting The Office Art Market

Racks­pace Brie­fing Center

Rob La Gesse

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!

Thanks again for lis­te­ning.  If you are enjo­ying Gape Into The Void, please tell your friends and leave us a review on iTu­nes.  If you have any ques­tions or topics you want us to cover on the show email us at pod­cast at gapingvoid.com.

Thanks again for gaping into the void!

Rock on.

[Pod­cast pro­du­ced by Jeff Sass.]

October 11, 2012

“Gape Into The Void” Podcast Episode 5  —  “Creativity & Engagement”

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Epi­sode 5 is now live:

[Subsc­ribe on iTu­nes: http://tinyurl.com/voidcast] [RSS Feed]

[Direct link to Epi­sode 5]

SHOWNOTES:

Gape Into The Void Epi­sode 5 – Crea­ti­vity & Engagement

In this epi­sode of Gape Into The Void we talk about Crea­ti­vity and something very impor­tant to mar­ke­ters, and now, to Hugh: enga­ge­ment.  Here are some of the things dis­cus­sed in the show:

Debate night = late night…

Dra­wings for Wired.com

Mike Arring­ton

Punk Rock!

Cloudy Can­di­da­tes

The Daily Car­toon Newsletter

Goo­gle Results: gaping­void Blue Monster

Hugh’s BIG news

Sass gets another gadget

How To Be Creative

Sus­tai­ning your voice is much har­der than fin­ding it…

Steve Rubel’s Tweet about ima­ges

Edel­man.

Thanks again for lis­te­ning.  If you are enjo­ying Gape Into The Void, please tell your friends and leave us a review on iTu­nes.  If you have any ques­tions or topics you want us to cover on the show email us at pod­cast at gapingvoid.com.

Thanks again for gaping into the void!

- Jeff Sass

October 1, 2012

“Gape Into The Void” Podcast Episode 4 — “Disrupt”

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Gape Into The Void — Epi­sode 4: “DISRUPT:

Epi­sode 4 of the Pod­cast is now live.

[Subsc­ribe on iTu­nes: http://tinyurl.com/voidcast] [RSS Feed]

[Direct Link to lis­ten to Epi­sode 4 — “Dis­rupt”: http://traffic.libsyn.com/gapingvoid/Gape_Into_The_Void_Episode_4.mp3]

Show Notes:

We’re back from San Fran­cisco where we atten­ded the TechC­runch Dis­rupt con­fe­rence.  In this epi­sode we Gape Into The Void of dis­rup­tion and share some of our impres­sions of the con­fe­rence and spea­kers.  Here are some of the topics and peo­ple men­tio­ned in the show:

Hugh hates Sass’s Intros… what do you think?

Good Chi­nese Food

Daily Ani­ma­tions gaping­void crea­ted for TC Disrupt

Ben Horo­witz or Jack Dor­sey?

Cory Boo­ker gets “Delusional”

Dave Morin, Path CEO

Marc Benioff or Mark Zuckerberg

Salesforce.com

Anthony Rob­bins

Facebook’s Mis­sion:

 Meet My New Boss Image:

 Mike Arring­ton

David Sacks vs. Biz Stone

Yam­mer

The TC Dis­rupt Win­ner: Your­Mecha­nic

Vinod Khosla

“Soft­ware Is Eating The World”

Mar­ga­ret Thatcher clo­ses the coal pits…

Cool Star­tups: Elec­tric Ska­te­board,  LIT Motors

Pin­te­rest For Cats:

Cen­so­red Animation???

Gaping­void does events.

SXSW

 

Sco­ble & Shel’s “Naked Conversations.”

gaping­void wall at TechC­runch office:

We’re all in the Create or Die business…

Deco­rate. Motivate.

If you have been enjo­ying the Gape Into The Void pod­cast please tell your friends and leave a review on iTu­nes.

Rock on.

- Jeff Sass

September 22, 2012

Gape Into The Void Podcast, Episode 3: “Culture”

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Gape Into The Void — Epi­sode 3: “Culture”.

[Subsc­ribe on iTu­nes]
[Direct Link to epi­sode 3 MP3 (lis­ten now)]

Show Notes:

Recor­ded just before we left for San Fran­cisco for TechC­runch Dis­rupt, in this epi­sode of Gape Into The Void we tac­kle the topic of “cul­ture” and the impor­tance of a busi­ness arti­cu­la­ting its purpose.

Here are links to some of the things we men­tion during the show:

Robert Owen

Mark Earls — Wel­come to the Crea­tive Age

Simon Sinak — Start With Why

Blue Mons­ter Tattoo

Empe­ror Diocletian

Racks­pace

Zap­pos

In the next Gape Into The Void we’ll talk more about our expe­rien­ces at TechC­runch and Hugh’s pas­sion for “Live Too­ning.” Stay tuned! Tooned?

If you have been enjo­ying the Gape Into The Void pod­cast, please tell your friends and leave us a com­ment or review on iTu­nes. You can also email us with your com­ments and feed­back at podcast@gapingvoid.com.

Thanks for listening!

Rock on.

–Jeff Sass

August 31, 2012

Gape Into The Void podcast, Episode 2: “Effective Visual Strategies”

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Gape Into The Void — Epi­sode 2: “Effec­tive Visual Strategies”

[Link to the pod­cast in iTu­nes]  [Direct Link To the MP3 of Epi­sode 2]

In this epi­sode of “Gape Into The Void” the gaping­void team talks about “Effec­tive Visual Stra­te­gies for Busi­ness” and why car­toons work etc. Approx. 23 minutes.

Peo­ple Mentioned:

Sli­deshare: “Effec­tive Visual Stra­te­gies” deck

Neu­ros­cience Expert Robert Cooper

Len Sch­le­sin­ger, Bab­son College

Char­lie Brown

Mark Earls

Mic­ro­soft Blue Monster

Wer­ner Herzog

David DeAn­gelo

Enjoy, and if you like the show, please tell folks about it and leave a review on iTu­nes. Rock on.

August 27, 2012

Our new “Gape Into The Void” podcast

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[Subsc­ribe here.]

We laun­ced a new pod­cast– “Gape Into The Void”. A behind-the-scenes look at gapingvoid.

Epi­sode One is me and my busi­ness part­ner, Jason Kor­man, yak­kin’ about how we got star­ted wor­king together, eight years ago and the how and the why of what we’re doing now etc. !5 minu­tes long. Rock on. [Subsc­ribe here.]

May 1, 2011

The Future Of Publishing: What Really Matters

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Radio Lito­pia has a TERRIFIC audio inter­view with my friend, Seth Godin, on the future of publishing,  and how his latest enter­prise, The Domino Pro­ject, is attemp­ting to embrace it.

Seth’s take on the future of publishing is simi­lar to what I’ve been saying for a while: “The book doesn’t mat­ter. The con­ver­sa­tion matters.”

A book, as an object, has no inhe­rent, objec­tive power. Which is why it’s so hard to pre­dict bes­tse­llers, why you can’t judge a book by its cover.

The REAL power of a book comes from lots of peo­ple rea­ding it and, MORE impor­tantly, peo­ple tal­king about it.

Or as Mark Earls would say, what makes any object REALLY  inte­res­ting (in this case, a book) is how it chan­ges the human inte­rac­tion around it, not the actual object itself.

Again, “The book doesn’t mat­ter. The con­ver­sa­tion matters.”

But this has always been the case.

A famous author has always been a glo­bal mic­ro­brand. A publisher’s power has always been in its abi­lity to pro­vide a plat­form for the author, not in its abi­lity to chop down trees and create prin­ted paper products.

And an author’s power has always been in her abi­lity to affect human inte­rac­tion through her wri­tings, not in some magi­cal, superhu­man quality.

And of course, all the Inter­net has done is make these truths even more self-evident than they already were.

“The book doesn’t mat­ter. The con­ver­sa­tion mat­ters.” That, my friends, is the future of publishing. The actual media– be it Kindle, iPad, hard­pack, paper­back, wha­te­ver– is irrelevant.

And if your publisher doesn’t really get that, then find another one. Seriously.

PS: Seth men­tions me about eight minu­tes into it as a case study of what he’s tal­king about (Thanks, Seth!).

[Check out my two books here etc.]

March 31, 2011

My Interview With Paul Barron

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Ear­lier this year, the res­tau­rant busi­ness guru, Paul Barron inter­vie­wed me in Miami. One my my bet­ter inter­views of late IMHO. So far it’s been vie­wed over 38,000 times! Thanks to Paul for a great afternoon.

[Offi­cial Blurb:] “Ever­yone has an Evil Plan, maybe it’s tuc­ked away inside your mind or maybe you are deve­lo­ping one this very minute. But for the lucky few, we are exe­cu­ting it daily! Join us in this epi­sode as we talk with the artist, inno­va­tor and evil genius Hugh Mac­Leod him­self about the book “Evil Plans”.

June 23, 2008

hugh & the rabbi, episode 6

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untitled449.jpg
Down­load the Pod­cast
Pod­cast RSS feed

John­nie Moore, Mark Earls, Rabbi Pinny and myself all met the other week and tal­ked for 70 minu­tes. It was fun. It was ram­bling. It was all good. Hope you have a lis­ten etc.

May 12, 2008

hugh & the rabbi, episode 4

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0711untitled446.jpg

Rabbi Pinny, John­nie, Euan Sem­ple and myself recor­ded a new pod­cast a cou­ple of weeks ago. John­nie wrote the show notes and ori­gi­nally pos­ted them over on his blog. It was a lot of fun.
Down­load the Pod­cast
Pod­cast RSS feed for Hugh and the Rabbi pod­casts

SHOW NOTES:

0.00 Intros, Hugh for­gets who “the Scot­tish guy is” and isn’t sure what Euan does but sett­les for rock star.
1.00 Hugh sets up the idea of love, reca­lling a talk about this by Euan at Reboot.
1.45 Euan talks about the L word, and people’s reac­tions to it. It’s about people’s basic desire to con­nect to each other, caring about things, get­ting pas­sio­nate about things. So much of the busi­ness world sani­ti­ses pas­sion out of things.
3.15 Pinny won­ders about how com­pa­nies show love. Refe­ren­ces Love­marks. In rela­tionships, if you don’t go to the nth degree, everything else doesn’t count. Talks about how mis­ta­kes by Face­book and Apple get poun­ced on by the blo­gosphere.
4.40 Love­marks pro­ves a red rag to Johnnie’s bull. Love means dif­fe­rent things to dif­fe­rent peo­ple. John­nie wary of the fana­ti­cal idea of love, the pur­suit of per­fec­tion. It’s more about being human, falli­ble.
5.50 Euan chi­mes in against fixa­tion on the roman­tic idea of love. Ins­tead favours “the pas­sion that grows out of day-to-day stuff”.
6.45 Hugh asks Euan about his World Ser­vice expe­rience at the BBC.
7.30 Euan: Roughly 47 dif­fe­rent lan­guage ser­vi­ces in the same buil­ding. Lots of cha­rac­ters, dif­fe­rent cul­tu­res. “If you were clim­bing lad­ders, they were all against dif­fe­rent walls.” — so less ego and tri­ba­lism than in the rest of the BBC. You had to get on quickly with peo­ple, the abi­lity to engage and con­nect, and move ideas round the buil­ding was a for­ma­tive expe­rience.
9.00 Pro­duct of World Ser­vice is ideas but also the kind of inti­macy you can create on radio.
9.50 Hugh talks about the pur­pose idea — what are we here for, why are we doing this. Trying to get a sense of pur­pose going.
10.30 Euan: pur­pose is good, so is obli­que­ness. Says what he likes about pod­casts is that they are not like broad­casts. Mean­de­ring semi-conversations that get under skin in a dif­fe­rent way than stuff pro­jec­ted at you in broad­casts. Con­ven­tio­nal radio out­put sounds inc­rea­singly patro­ni­sing.
12.20 Euan on how he pays each month to sup­port Leo Laporte’s pod­casts, more than half he pays in the BBC licence fee. “That’s me doing that to an indi­vi­dual because I really don’t want him to stop pod­cas­ting.” Peo­ple will pay for stuff that’s pas­sio­nate and acces­si­ble.
13.00 Hugh con­trasts Euan’s story with a UK show, News­night Review and its affi­lia­tion with the Not­ting Hill cul­tu­ral elite. New media is a threat, not so much to cash as to old media pri­vi­lege.
14.30 Euan recalls David Wein­ber­ger saying con­ver­sa­tions can only take place bet­ween equals.
15.00 Hugh on fan­boys.
15.20 Hugh asks Pinny a ques­tion “as the only guy here with a real job”: does this pod­cast affect your busi­ness.
16.10 Pinny: it’s not affec­ting the busi­ness… what it affec­ted is how peo­ple view him. Dis­cus­ses impact on his emplo­yees with Hugh.
18.45 Hugh on pod­casts as dis­rup­tors. Euan says dis­rup­tion is a word with all sorts of bag­gage but we get invol­ved in this stuff because it makes a dif­fe­rence. How can gover­nance cope with these chan­ges? It’s going to change power dyna­mics and who is suc­cess­ful and why.
21.10 Pinny returns to the theme of love, ins­pi­red by his nephew’s wed­ding where a Rabbi tal­ked about what hap­pens when you aren’t in love with love, but with the other. Com­pa­nies need to own up to mis­ta­kes.
23.00 Hugh: gosh, act like a human being, not a robot. John­nie: inti­macy an impor­tant word in Euan’s story. There’s something about “ordi­nary small­ness”, the abi­lity to have a real con­ver­sa­tion; how mee­tings that strive to be effec­tive often fail. The need to feel each other as human beings.
24.30 Hugh on how small town, West Texas expe­rience has affec­ted him. How it’s safe to have a guy wal­king round with a ten inch knife, because ever­yone knows who he is and what the knife is for. Euan remi­nis­ces about Glas­gow and Pinny, Israel.
27.20 Euan: the dan­ger of homo­ge­ni­sa­tion of suc­cess. Quote Doc Searls about things being valua­ble without being impor­tant.
28.00 John­nie on spen­ding Sun­day mor­ning with the papers and someone else, where you don’t talk but there’s a fee­ling of com­pa­nionship. You can’t put that on a spreadsheet.
29.15 John­nie on a twitter-related expe­rience of fin­ding work in a very acci­den­tal way. If fell out of a con­ver­sa­tion where he wasn’t trying to make something hap­pen.
30.30 Pinny: the unplan­ned as the eureka moments of our lives. Get­ting beyond ego.
32.10 Pinny on the online course Oprah is doing with Eckhart Tolle. This is why the web was crea­ted: to spread good­will.
33.00 Hugh: a lot of peo­ple are trying to use the web to do busi­ness the way it’s usually been done, which mis­ses the point.
34.00 Euan won­ders about how these chan­ges con­nect to our spi­ri­tua­lity. Hugh recalls a Catho­lic priest who influen­ced him. God as a metaphor rather than a bear­ded sky fairy.
35.40 Pinny the web is teaching reli­gion to say it’s about human beings, not about God. It’s teaching com­pa­nies it’s about what the cus­to­mer wants to pull, not what the com­pany wants to push. Strip away the disease of entit­le­ment and learn humi­lity. Con­nects to the rise of Barack Obama.
37.20 John­nie on the dif­fe­rence bet­ween Clin­ton and Obama. Clinton’s posi­tio­ning as the lea­der, Obama’s empha­sis on us.
38.20 Euan: autho­rity used to mean autho­rity as con­fe­rred; now it means having a com­pe­lling argu­ment or idea.
39.00 John­nie on autho­rity as being the authors of our own expe­rience. You don’t take autho­rity from the BBC any more, you par­ti­ci­pate.
40.00 Hugh wraps by asking what advice we’d give cor­po­rate man in light of all this. Euan: be brave. Pinny: don’t be stu­pid (“Be brave but have a day job”) Empty your mid once a day for oppor­tu­nity to hap­pen. Hugh: be com­pas­sio­nate to those above you. John­nie: you already know what to do.
44.35 Ends

March 15, 2008

hugh & the rabbi, episode 3

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image12345690zzz.jpg
[LISTEN TO PODCAST HERE.]
John­nie, Mark and Rabbi Pinny all gathe­red for our semi-regular pod­cast. It was so far my favo­rite show, by a long shot. I think we’re slowly get­ting the hang of it. Rock on.
The Show Notes:
The con­ver­sa­tion begins with a docu­ment from 2002 that Mark e-mailed us all, entit­led “Beyond Sel­fish­ness”. So why did he send it to us?
1.10 Mark: I was recom­men­ded this docu­ment a few years ago by a client, and I found it really expres­sed pas­sio­na­tely the ideas I was star­ting to have, about where we were going wrong with Capi­ta­lism.
1.45 Mark: The docu­ment con­tra­dic­ted cer­tain very com­mon ideas in busi­ness– “The Heroic Mana­ger”, or “Sha­rehol­ders are the only peo­ple who mat­ter in a busi­ness” etc.
2.18 Pinny: The docu­ment reflects something much lar­ger going on in our times: The ever-growing need and demand for peo­ple, espe­cially lea­ders, to be more “trans­pa­rent” and “acces­si­ble”.
3.15 Hugh asks the ques­tion: Do y’all see this hap­pe­ning all over in real life, or is this something most of us are just paying lip ser­vice to?
3.40 Pinny: It’s something that really star­ted with the inter­net com­pa­nies, but sprea­ding out­wards. Men­tions Mark Zuc­ker­berg: Some­body worth $15billion yet still shows up for work wea­ring no socks.” The big com­pa­nies will still stay the same, but the change will come from the newer, youn­ger com­pa­nies.
4.30 Hugh talks about a con­ver­sa­tion he had with a few peo­ple inside Mic­ro­soft– how there’s a gene­ra­tion gap gro­wing within the com­pany, bet­ween the Old Guard, and the new gene­ra­tion of Mic­ro­sof­ties, who see their com­pany in much more open, orga­nic terms.
5.45 John­nie talks about how all these “Web 2.0” tools [that simply were not avai­la­ble 10 years ago] allow peo­ple to con­duct busi­ness on a far more orga­nic, natu­ral and HUMAN man­ner, in a nim­ble and agile way that big com­pa­nies simply will not be able to com­pete with. “The Revo­lu­tion will not be tele­vi­sed, because it’s already hap­pe­ning around us.”
8.00 Pinny: The inter­net allows human beings to “Tap into the Infi­nite”.
9.15 Hugh: I’ll always go back to Euan Semple’s com­ment: “What makes the inter­net inte­res­ting is Love.”
9.30 Mark: The inter­net is about peo­ple, not tech­no­logy, not machi­nes. Howe­ver the “machine” is the abi­ding metaphor for busi­ness and govern­ment.
11.00 Hugh asks Pinny: Being a guy who has a large busi­ness, how do you balance the need to “Grasp The Infi­nite” with the more pro­saic rea­li­ties of run­ning a busi­ness– mee­ting pay­roll, paying sup­pliers etc etc.
11.30 Pinny: The way to make the balance to unders­tand what the “Pur­pose” of the busi­ness is, and then make sure the wheels under­neath are run­ning.
12.30 Pinny tells a great story about “The Fif­teen Hats”, when he, his brother and two others first star­ted the com­pany. They lite­rally put ele­ven hats on the table, each one labe­lled with one of the ele­ven exe­cu­tive job tit­les, and then they sha­red the hats out amongst them­sel­ves. Now Pinny’s com­pany has 100 emplo­yees, ergo “100 Hats”. In 8 years, their com­pany has never had one per­son quit. Which for an inter­net com­pany, is a “pretty big deal”.
13.50 Mark: Every man­ger would LOVE to have their emplo­yees loving their work, love coming into work, but simply won’t have this by trea­ting peo­ple like “num­bers” or a “piece of resource”.
14.20 John­nie: How we’re sadd­led with this idea of “Homo Eco­no­mi­cus”. If we’re not going to buy into the “Ratio­nal Man” model, then we have to get used to tal­king about con­cepts like “Love” and “The Infi­nite”.
15.45 Pinny: I believe the com­pa­nies that “get this mes­sage across” are going to be the ones that will suc­ceed.
16.25 Hugh asks John­nie: So when we’re tal­king about things like “Love” and what­not, how do you edu­cate your big cor­po­rate clients with all this stuff?
17.00 John­nie: I remain opti­mis­tic. Most peo­ple who work at a com­pany know the com­pany works not because of their rigid models, but people’s willing ness to work around those models. Most peo­ple are “just one inter­ven­tion away” from a more human rela­tionship with the com­pany.
18.30 Hugh talks about The Blue Mons­ter, and how it came about. “I didn’t invent something for them to believe, a-la mis­sion sta­te­ment, I just arti­cu­la­ted a belief that was already there.”
20.45 Mark talks about wor­king with a client of his, a large TV com­pany. How he got them to arti­cu­late a sha­red sense of pur­pose, rather than a “mis­sion sta­te­ment”.
22.00 Hugh: If you look at all the great brands that have emer­ged in the last 2 deca­des [Nike, Starbuck’s etc], one thing they have in com­mon: They’re all GREAT at “arti­cu­la­ting belief”.
22.30 Mark: A lot of the current mar­ke­ting sch­tick is about impo­sing something that isn’t there. Which what makes so much of it false, sha­llow and objec­tio­na­ble in the real world. Maybe the job of mar­ke­ters in the future will be to “arti­cu­late what’s already there”.
23.00 Hugh talks about wor­king on the McDonald’s adver­ti­sing account in 1997. “Stay Hungry”. Conc­lu­sion: The stuff that makes com­pa­nies inte­res­ting is the same stuff that makes the Bible, the Torah and the Iliad inte­res­ting.
27.00 Pinny: When a com­pany grows, the thing they must remem­ber is the beliefs they had that got them there in the first place. Not always an easy thing to do.
28.00 Mark talks about the disas­ter of Qua­ker Oats buying the Snap­ple brand. The got into serious trou­ble because “They didn’t know how to handle a com­pany built on belief”.
31.00 Mark: The mar­ke­ting myth of “Best Prac­ti­ces”.
31.45 Pinny tells a great story about one of his favo­rite mar­ke­ting cam­paigns. Adver­ti­sing for Zap­pos Shoes, inside the plas­tic buc­kets they use in Ame­ri­can air­port secu­rity, of all pla­ces.
33.00 Hugh talks about being a Jeff Buc­kley fan­boy re. Play­ful­ness and vir­tuo­sity– a power­ful combo– in mar­ke­ting, as much as in music etc.
35.30 Hugh talks about “Inno­cent Drinks”, a brand that comes up pretty much in 90% of all Bri­tish bran­ding con­ver­sa­tions. “Minor Inter­ven­tions of Hap­pi­ness”.
36.50 Pinny talks about “The A-Ha! Moment” in all very suc­cess­ful [and very unsuc­cess­ful] mar­ke­ting cam­paigns.
37.15 John­nie: “The Tyranny of Big Ideas”. Tal­king about Improv Thea­tre: “When you try to take too much con­trol, you take away the huma­nity from the pro­cess.”
38.50 Pinny: “There are no Big Ideas. There are only Little Ideas.”
40.43 [FINIS]
[LISTEN TO PODCAST HERE.]

February 17, 2008

hugh & the rabbi, episode 2

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[Lis­ten to the pod­cast here.]

Rabbi Pinny Gni­wisch of Ice.com, Mar­ke­ting con­tra­rians John­nie Moore and Mark Earls, plus myself gathe­red together over Skype for our second “Hugh & The Rabbi” pod­cast. We star­ted tal­king about “Influen­cers”, in the mar­ke­ting sense of the word. We ended on something far more inte­res­ting. A good time was had by all.

The Minu­tes:
00.32. Today’s show is about “Influence”. How clients ima­gine that there are these sec­ret “Levers” out there, and all a client has to do is sign a check to make the mar­ke­ter magi­cally pull it.
01.30 Mark: Tal­king about how things go from being mino­rity popu­la­rity, to majo­rity popu­lar. One school of thought pla­ces high degrees of empha­sis on reaching “Influen­cers”. Another school of thought pla­ces grea­ter empha­sis on a high degree of “Ran­dom Acts of Trac­tion”.
3.25 Hugh: All a mar­ke­ter can do is create lots of oppor­tu­ni­ties where “Ran­dom Acts of Trac­tion” can hap­pen.
03.35 Pinny: How can you tell me that you’re going to create an uber-widget for me, when you’ve already admit­ted that your one big suc­cess story came down to luck?
04.10 Mark: Who wants to go into a mee­ting with a big client and say, “Most of this, by the way, is just chance”…? Most of us want to say, “I’ve got the sec­ret sauce that’ll give you the edge…”
04.40 John­nie: Para­dox: Being pri­ma­tes, we’re all hard­wi­red for fair play. Yet we all want to be the one with the unfair advan­tage.
05.35 Hugh: “All is vanity.”
05.40 Pinny: Suc­cess is 5% wis­dom, and 95% luck. If it were the other way around, we’d all be a lot hap­pier.
07.00 Mark: On crea­ting one’s own luck: The one thing the great minds of the Twen­tieth Cen­tury all seem to have in com­mon was: a very petit-bourgeoise work ethic. “You have to be there, wor­king at your desk, when a ran­dom act of Luck comes your way”.
08.20 Pinny: The ones that influence the world are the ones who show up; the ones who are there. Anyone can create a “Ves­sel for Bles­sing”, but you have to “be there” in order to do it.
09.00 The “Influen­tial” model is most often tou­ted by peo­ple who would like to be seen as “Influen­tials”, or at least, “Friends of Influen­tials”.
09.30 Mark rants about “Cool Hun­ters”.
10.00 John­nie: Group beha­vior in asses­sing music varies WILDLY, depen­ding on whether peo­ple in the group are being obser­ved by other peo­ple in the group.
11.00 John­nie: In mar­ke­ting, the order of events we post-rationalize is much, much more ran­dom than we rea­lize, let alone admit.
11.30 Mark rants on about the record busi­ness.
13.15 John­nie: The futi­lity of trying to out-think the mar­ket.
14.00 John­nie: One has to be “in the moment” [to use the Buddhist phrase] in order to truly unders­tand the mar­ket.
14.25 Pinny: Being “pre­sent” is what truly crea­tes sus­tai­na­bi­lity. That, and sta­ying “hum­ble”.
15.05 Just because Mal­colm Glad­well is wrong, doesn’t mean Mass Mar­ke­ting is right.
15.40 Hugh talks about Rus­sell Davies: Suc­cess­ful brands don’t do “One Big Thing”, they do lots of little things.
17.00 Hugh talks about the “Bles­sing and the Curse” of when things go viral.
18.30 Mark: It’s far more sen­si­ble to try lots of dif­fe­rent LITTLE expe­ri­ments, than try to put all of one’s weight behind the ONE BIG IDEA.
20.05 Pinny: Com­pa­nies have to be not top-down, or bottom-up in order to be crea­tive– they must be “side­ways”.
21.10 John­nie: Com­pa­nies have to be Peer-to-Peer [i.e. “Side­ways”], not top-down or bottom-up. Peo­ple find it hard to work together without hie­rarchies.
22.00 Hugh talks about mee­ting Tim Bur­ton in 1989, and how he desc­ri­bed direc­ting movies.
24.00 Pinny: Com­pa­nies that allow Peer-to-Peer will flou­rish. The dia­log rab­bis have with their con­gre­gants is much dif­fe­rent than it was thou­sands of years ago. Far more peer-to-peer etc. “Over time, the big ans­wers never change, but the big ques­tions do.“
25.00 Pinny: Kids are much stron­ger “con­su­mers” than they were 100 years ago. Their ques­tions get big­ger.
26.12 Hugh: The rea­son Web 2.0 is so “char­ming” is that what dri­ves it at its core, is a lot of young peo­ple, “Just trying to build and share cool stuff with their friends.” Apps are built around pre-existing rela­tionships, not trying to create rela­tionships. For their own sake.
29.30 Hugh and Pinny talk about the dia­mond busi­ness. “It’s not the rock that’s inte­res­ting. It’s that Tom and Jill love each other and are get­ting married, that is inte­res­ting”. Get­ting the pro­duct to “Trans­cend its own uti­lity” is where the action is.
31.00 Mark talks about how Web 2.0 shows us so much about our real, “Social Ape” sel­ves, not our “Scien­ti­fic Mar­ke­ting” sel­ves.
32.50 Hugh talks about Euan Semple’s the­sis about “Love” being the main dri­ver of Web 2.0.
34.40 Pinny: The Five Levels of Mys­ti­cism. How as time goes on, we get dee­per into the soul. Society is get­ting dee­per in the spi­ri­tual level.
36.40 Mark talks about get­ting away from busi­ness being seen as a mecha­ni­cal thing, towards something more based on “Belief”. The com­pa­nies that excite us the most are not “just about the metrics”. Peo­ple need “Belief”, both as indi­vi­duals and as mem­bers of groups.
39.30 Hugh: “Sing like you mean the words.”
39.45 John­nie tells a great story about the actor, Char­les Law­ton. “I know the psalm, but she knows the Shepherd.”

41.15 Mark tells a great story about a thea­ter group. “Even when nobody is watching…”
44.15 Mark talks about the great 1973 Bar­ba­rians vs All Blacks rugby game, as a metaphor for achie­ving great­ness.
46.50 Pinny tells a story about grab­bing a drop­ped scroll while cros­sing the street in heavy traf­fic. A metaphor for “Always being on”. Being trans­pa­rent means “Always being on”. Hugh: “When you’re in that state, you are in a State of Bliss, a State of Grace.”
49.43 Finis.

January 22, 2008

hugh and the rabbi [podcast]

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[DOWNLOAD THE PODCAST HERE.]
When I was last in the USA, I had the great plea­sure of mee­ting Pinny Gni­wisch, Co-Founder and CMO of Ice.com, who was intro­du­ced to me by a good mutual friend, Leah Jones.
Pinny’s a lovely and inte­res­ting guy. He’s a Hasi­dic rabbi, with a long back­ground teaching in ele­men­tary schools. Nine years ago he and his brother star­ted Ice.com, an online jewelry store. His com­pany is to selling dia­monds what Amazon.com is to selling books. They recently secu­red $47 million from Bos­ton invest­ment ban­king firm Pola­ris Ven­ture Part­ners, which as the sch­piel puts it, “will ena­ble Ice.com to con­si­der acqui­si­tions, build up its e-commerce infras­truc­ture and tar­get new niches in affor­da­ble luxury goods.” Not bad going at all.
Though his com­pany has been this ama­zingly suc­cess­ful, he still carries on regu­larly teaching kids in ele­men­tary school.
There’s not many peo­ple who can claim such hands-on expe­rience in both spi­ri­tual and inter­net mat­ters. I thought he’d be a great guy to share a pod­cast with. I hope you find it as inte­res­ting as I did. Enjoy.
The Minu­tes:
0.00 Intro to Pinny.
2.00 Pinny talks about why he deci­ded against ending up wor­king in a syna­go­gue.
3.00 Pinny explains how, since he became a “suc­cess­ful entre­pre­neur”, he can talk about spi­ri­tual mat­ters in pla­ces that, if he were a nor­mal rabbi, he’d never be invi­ted to.
3.59. Hugh: Few peo­ple are both Rab­bis and suc­cess­ful dot­com entre­pre­neurs. There’s an obvious ten­sion there, bet­ween the spi­ri­tual and the entre­pre­neu­rial, but that might ulti­ma­tely make for something very crea­tive and inte­res­ting.
4.35 Pinny: “We are finite beings, Mas­ters of the Infi­nite.“
5.05 Hugh talks about the mea­ning behind the Chi­nese Dra­gon: “Ser­pent meets the Celes­tial”: a metaphor for the Human Con­di­tion etc.
7.15 Pinny: “No tech­no­logy will make up for the fact that we are ruled by both the Ego and the Spi­rit.“
8.20 Pinny talks about the time his teacher told him about his battle bet­ween the “ani­mal soul” and the “spi­ri­tual soul”. The rabbi said, “Pinny, this is your battle, for the rest of your life. Get used to it.“
9.45 Pinny tells his five kids: “Suc­cess breeds Humi­lity.“
10.00 Hugh tells about the time he met Mark Zuc­ker­gerg, the foun­der of Face­book.
12.00 Pinny explains how he spent ten tears bet­ween lea­ving his job as a syna­go­gue rabbi, to star­ting a dot­com, teaching in ele­men­tary schools. Teaching about 11,000 kids a year.
13.58 Pinny: “Tal­king to kids is where you see the light bulb go on.“
16.30 Pinny asks a group of kids, “Who expe­rien­ced a miracle today?” One of the kids ans­wers, “I woke up!“
19.20 Hugh talks about how it’s much more easy to find ins­pi­ra­tion in “small things”.
20.13 Pinny: “When I visit New York, I get the most ins­pi­ra­tion from tal­king to home­less guys.” Pinny talks about how the guy who gives to cha­rity gets more in the end, than the per­son recei­ving it.
22.40 Hugh: “It’s in the small things, where you really see the ‘juice’ of crea­tion.“
23.10 Pinny tells the story of how we went from teaching kids, to star­ting “Ice.com”, an online jewelry store, with his brother. Ins­pi­red by lis­te­ning to an NPR inter­view of Jeff “Ama­zon” Bezos in the car.
24.40 Pinny: “Razor­fish offe­red to build us a site for 3 million dollars.” Even­tually he got it for much less from somewhere else.
26.00 Pinny: “We were really doing it for the exci­te­ment.“
27.15 Pinny: “Nobody knew what they were tal­king about back then. It was new industry. Nobody had an inter­net back­ground back then. It was a bit like star­ting out like Chris­topher Colum­bus, except there were thou­sands of boats along with you.“
29.00 Pinny talks about the impor­tance of already having family in the jewelry busi­ness: “You can’t just wake up one mor­ning and decide you want to be in the dia­mond busi­ness. It’s a busi­ness with hun­dreds of years of tra­di­tion and close-knit family ties.“
31.40 Hugh and Pinny talks about the perils of inter­net com­pany growth. Pinny talks about having to hire “A real CFO and CMO”. The cha­llenge of “Ego vs. The Big­ger Pic­ture”.
33.55 Pinny: “Our com­pany just rai­sed $47 million from an invest­ment bank. So know we have to grow the com­pany in a cor­po­rate direc­tion.“
35.00 Hugh: “So why did you want to grow the com­pany?” Pinny: “It was ine­vi­ta­ble.” Talk about com­pany growth being a mani­fes­ta­tion of per­so­nal growth within the orga­ni­sa­tion.
38.00 “More stuff crea­tes more worries.” And then you die with “more stuff”. And nobody cares.
39.00 Hugh talks about his friend, Jonathan’s father, who flew Spit­fi­res in WW2. Loo­king back, nobody cares about how much “stuff” he had after the war. All that mat­ters was that he “was bea­ting the shit out of Nazis”, and that is enough.
40.40 Pinny talks about how being a rabbi kicks into the human side of his busi­ness. Something you don’t see in a lot of cor­po­ra­tions. Crea­ting a work envi­ron­ment “Where work feels like ‘Family’, that is the gift.“
42.10 A lot of what keeps large com­pa­nies in busi­ness is coer­cion and fear.
44.30 Pinny talks about crea­ting a work envi­ron­ment without Fear, like “You were on vaca­tion”.
45.30 Hugh talks about Char­les Hope over at Blip.tv. “I only work about 3 hours a week. The rest of the time I just play.“
46.30 The pod­cast reaches the last fur­long. Hugh ends the show with one last ques­tion: “You’ve been a mar­ke­ting guy, you’ve been a rabbi guy. On paper, they are quite dif­fe­rent. But what do they have in com­mon? Pinny: Rab­bis have to mar­ket God, and mar­ke­ters have to mar­ket their pro­ducts. Some­ti­mes you’re doing the exact same thing.
The rea­son the tem­ples are empty today, is that rab­bis are no lon­ger trans­pa­rent. Mar­ke­ters, like rab­bis, have to learn to become trans­pa­rent again.
48.25 Hugh: A les­son in mar­ke­ting trans­pa­rency: Moses mee­ting the Bur­ning Bush. Moses asks God, “Who are you?!!” God is taken aback.
49.00 Pinny makes the point: What’s true in reli­gion is also true in mar­ke­ting: As the gene­ra­tions go on, peo­ple want more trans­pa­rency.
50.50 Clo­sing thoughts and win­ding down.…
54.04 Finis.

January 11, 2008

podcast update

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Just in case you mis­sed it, here it is one more time:
John­nie Moore and Mark Earls, my two favo­rite Bri­tish mar­ke­ting blog­gers, joi­ned me last wee­kend on a pod­cast, where we riff about the “Death of Adver­ti­sing” and, more impor­tantly, what comes after it.
The pod­cast is here on Johnnie’s blog. We had a most enjo­ya­ble 45 minu­tes or so. Hope­fully you’ll con­cur.
P.S. In case you don’t have 45 minu­tes to spend lis­te­ning to a pod­cast, John­nie also kept pretty com­prehen­sive notes on the minutes:

40.35 Mark’s loo­king at how beha­viours cas­cade through popu­la­tions and we do we work with them or sub­vert them. Hugh: com­pa­nies don’t like to work with ran­dom.
41.35 Hugh: what’s wor­ked for me is to get away from the idea of mes­sage and think ins­tead of social ges­ture. How this works for Stormhoek.
43.05 John­nie: Social objects are inci­den­tal to the fun­da­men­tal pro­cess of rela­ting. The brand is secon­dary to the pro­cess and bran­ding goes wrong when it tries to make the pro­duct the star. Hugh: paying more atten­tion to the con­ver­sa­tions that are hap­pe­ning rather than crea­ting a message.

Rock on, Johnnie.