Photographer Richard Renaldi spends a year asking total strangers to touch, and then takes their picture. Some appear like they've known each other for years, some look like they're about to die with discomfort. All rather, well, touching.
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Photographer Richard Renaldi spends a year asking total strangers to touch, and then takes their picture. Some appear like they've known each other for years, some look like they're about to die with discomfort. All rather, well, touching.
Posted by Neil Perkin on November 30, 2008 at 05:59 PM in culture | Permalink | 0 Comments
Image courtesy
Enjoying this little campaign from The School of Life (which in itself is a peach of an idea) which I signed up for recently after seeing it over at Mark's place. A one month prescription of a "daily dose of thought", delivered to your inbox. Thirty aphorisms to "discuss, dispute or distribute", or perhaps you have your own...
Posted by Neil Perkin on November 29, 2008 at 08:29 AM in advertising | Permalink | 0 Comments | TrackBack (0)
It's certainly interesting times for newspapers. Seth Godin has just bemoaned the opportunities missed by the NY Times. Meanwhile Blogs, Twitter and Flickr are stealing the immediacy crown and doing it with added humanity as amply illustrated by the Mumbai coverage.
But there's still some good ideas coming out of them. Here's an example I love (picked up via Jemima's twitter stream) from The Guardian - a collaborative project of photo messages taken by visitors to the Guardian site and a Flickr group. Inspired by Obama's groundbreaking use of the internet, they asked people in the days following his victory to share their personal messages to the new President via the same medium.
And almost 900 from around the world did. So using the on demand publishing service Blurb they've taken the most interesting, funny, thought-provoking ones and commissioned, compiled, edited and printed a book within three weeks. You can see a digital preview and buy it here. It's charming. But more to the point this is exactly the kind of quick thinking, fast-moving, community-driven, collaborative thing they should be doing.
I would have stuck some more images up here (these two are taken from the Flickr pool) but the copyright message on the digital preview is pretty scary so I'm hoping they aren't going to ask me to take this down seeing as how I'm giving props to their book and all that...
Posted by Neil Perkin on November 27, 2008 at 10:03 PM in media | Permalink | 0 Comments
Giles makes the point that in these tough times companies have two choices - to innovate their way out of recession, or to retrench their way through it. He's right of-course, and I know which way I'd rather go. It almost goes without saying that innovation can not only get you through a recession, it can see you come out the other side in a stronger competitive position, like the Satir change model that Jonathan blogged about suggests:
Unlike most of the people I work with, I've worked in a recession. In fact I came out of education right into the middle of one and I remember the bleakness of the graduate recruitment market and the apparent lack of opportunity at the time. But you make your own opportunity, and that's what we call innovation, and there's never been a better time to remember that.
But it's not quite so simple. The real question for businesses of-course is what type of innovation - product innovation is one thing, but the real game-changers come from stuff that changes the rules of a market. Stuff that changes the business model. Most business model innovations come from newcomers to an industry. Most established competitors find this type of innovation difficult because it often doesn't make economic sense for them. They're too focused on reaching next quarter's number.
This is a huge challenge. For one thing the numbers are stacked - for every established business trying to develop a new model there might be hundreds of entrepreneurs trying to do the same thing. And even if you can harvest the good ideas from your organisation, it's tricky to grow them in an environment where you are trying to accomodate two divergent and potentially conflicting games that operate to very different rules. So ideas are one thing, action quite another.
In Game Changing Strategies, Constantinos Markides talks about this in terms of the need to create what he calls a "positive crisis". It's not enough to actively and continuously question what you do, he says, because even when people intellectually accept the logic of doing so, they very rarely act on it - so you have to generate action that breaks the inertia.
As Seth Godin talks about in Tribes, the real difference in today's environment is leverage. One person has the leverage to change everything. And whilst this might be the worst enemy you ever had, it could also be your best friend. The ability to connect people to form a Tribe has never been greater, and leaders can come from anywhere. But maybe the leaders of the future are sat within your organisation. And maybe you are too focused on management to enable leadership, because you know what? There's a big difference:
"Management is about manipulating resources to get a known job done...leadership is about creating change you can believe in...Leaders have followers. Managers have employees" Seth Godin
Everyone sat inside those organisations has the leverage to transform the model of the business they are in. When they try, the temptation is for the business to wrap such ideas in short-term ROI, judge it by existing rules, implement it through an existing structure, make it fit an existing process. You don't manage innovation. You need to get the organisation, with all that process, all that hierarchy, all those assumptions, out of the way. In other words, in order to create a purple cow, you have to get rid of a few sacred ones first.
Posted by Neil Perkin on November 26, 2008 at 05:18 PM in change, innovation | Permalink | 0 Comments
Liking the new Improv Everywhere piece, featuring a crowd welcoming back random strangers at the airport. Like the other Improv missions, it's the randomness that makes it such fun. Interesting too, that it was commissioned by Absolut as part of their "In An Absolut World" project ("In An Absolut World someone is always there to welcome you home"). A sign of things to come methinks.
Welcome Back from ImprovEverywhere on Vimeo.
Hat tip to Giles for the tip off
Posted by Neil Perkin on November 25, 2008 at 04:06 PM in advertising | Permalink | 0 Comments | TrackBack (0)
Only Dead Fish is a blog and digital consultancy run by Neil Perkin. Neil is the author of two best-selling books on the intersection of business transformation and organisational agility: Building the Agile Business and Agile Transformation (both through Kogan Page), and the curator of Google Firestarters