It's easy to understand that over 50% of the US population will never even consider watching it. "It's political." "I didn't vote for him."
But that is not what the film is about. It's about having hopes, dreams, and a path to get there. If that sounds too simple and corny, maybe it is. All good family movies usually are.
Yes, he was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. All doors were open to him, and he walked through them with ease and comfort. For many, there would not have been any reason to try and accomplish anything more. Being wealthy and powerful was enough.
He chose differently. He looked around, listened and believed that he could make things better. He put himself and his family out there to be judged and scrutinized. And they were. He gave it his full effort, and his family gave him its full support.
And it didn't work out. That's always the risk of thinking big. You can fall on your face. People don't take you seriously.
He felt bad afterward. He let people down. That's always the worst part. They gave him 110% and he felt that he gave them zero in return.
There's no swearing, monster green screen scenes or unethical behavior. Just a 1%-er who writes "Dad" on top of his debate notes to remind him of how lucky he really is. Simple and corny.
Give it a shot and let me know what you think.
Monday, January 27, 2014
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
So Twitter Walks Into A Bar...
...And there stands Apple, Facebook and Google. If the bar stays open for ten years, who will be left bellying up?
That's the question a lot of stock market investors are pondering right now. Twitter's IPO is set to launch tomorrow. Round and round it goes, what its valuation ultimately will be, nobody knows. A case can be made that it is valued much higher than Facebook was at the same time in its history. And it sure seems that Twitter is trying to do everything that it can to avoid the mistakes that Facebook made during its IPO, i.e. using different bankers and choosing an alternative listed exchange on which to trade.
Perhaps they're focused on the 50% drop in Facebook shares that occurred just three months after going public. And Facebook was growing at the time--by any measure, new Twitter users are stagnant at best. How many of your parents' friends have been newly tweeting?
Most likely the people most nervous about the listing tomorrow are huddled in meetings at the New York Stock Exchange. A PR nightmare will ensue if they don't pitch a perfect game. Their reputation and credibility are on the line.
Twitter is a good idea. It is informative, thought provoking, and fun. However, not all good ideas are good businesses. Iridium and Webvan come to mind. Will today's first graders know what Twitter is when they graduate from high school? Tough to say.
Just in case, when you place your buy order with your broker for Twitter tomorrow, ask to have the physical shares sent to you. That way, at least, you'll have the ability to offer them as collectibles on Ebay if and when the time comes.
That's the question a lot of stock market investors are pondering right now. Twitter's IPO is set to launch tomorrow. Round and round it goes, what its valuation ultimately will be, nobody knows. A case can be made that it is valued much higher than Facebook was at the same time in its history. And it sure seems that Twitter is trying to do everything that it can to avoid the mistakes that Facebook made during its IPO, i.e. using different bankers and choosing an alternative listed exchange on which to trade.
Perhaps they're focused on the 50% drop in Facebook shares that occurred just three months after going public. And Facebook was growing at the time--by any measure, new Twitter users are stagnant at best. How many of your parents' friends have been newly tweeting?
Most likely the people most nervous about the listing tomorrow are huddled in meetings at the New York Stock Exchange. A PR nightmare will ensue if they don't pitch a perfect game. Their reputation and credibility are on the line.
Twitter is a good idea. It is informative, thought provoking, and fun. However, not all good ideas are good businesses. Iridium and Webvan come to mind. Will today's first graders know what Twitter is when they graduate from high school? Tough to say.
Just in case, when you place your buy order with your broker for Twitter tomorrow, ask to have the physical shares sent to you. That way, at least, you'll have the ability to offer them as collectibles on Ebay if and when the time comes.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Mind Your P's and Q's
In our formative years, we were all taught to consistently use "please", "thank you", and "you're welcome". But have you noticed lately that the response given to any heartfelt "thank you" these days has automatically become "no problem"?
The connotations of the two responses are quite different. "You're welcome" denotes a complete willingness to provide advice, counsel or service not just at this instance, but at anytime in the future. If one is ever able to help someone out in this manner, receiving a "thank you" in return not only feels good, but makes one want to act similarly again sometime. "You're welcome" provides that direct message clearly and succinctly.
On the other hand, hearing the response "no problem" infers that, hey, you know what? That favor that you asked me for could have been a problem, so be careful in asking me for something similar again. Saying that a task was "no problem" only more closely associates that task with indeed being a potential problem.
Maybe it would be easier to respond to "thank you" with "happy to do it"-- a phrase whose meaning cannot be misinterpreted.
The connotations of the two responses are quite different. "You're welcome" denotes a complete willingness to provide advice, counsel or service not just at this instance, but at anytime in the future. If one is ever able to help someone out in this manner, receiving a "thank you" in return not only feels good, but makes one want to act similarly again sometime. "You're welcome" provides that direct message clearly and succinctly.
On the other hand, hearing the response "no problem" infers that, hey, you know what? That favor that you asked me for could have been a problem, so be careful in asking me for something similar again. Saying that a task was "no problem" only more closely associates that task with indeed being a potential problem.
Maybe it would be easier to respond to "thank you" with "happy to do it"-- a phrase whose meaning cannot be misinterpreted.
Thursday, September 12, 2013
They're At Every Farmer's Market
The Pro
-asks multiple questions of each vendor
-carries his/her own shoulder bag to hold purchases
-slowly eyeballs each individual piece of produce before deciding whether or not to buy
-often empties containers to cherry pick their contents
The Sampler
-goes from vendor to vendor asking for a taste of their offerings
-successfully completes a full meal in the process for zero cost
-never makes a purchase
The Flower Lady
-wears a large straw hat
-only interest is in taking home as many types of fresh-cut flowers that she can physically carry
-not at all aware that fresh produce of all kinds is readily available
The Browser
-visits each and every stand, hands clasped tightly behind back
-slowly peers over all of the offerings , often squinting
-asks the price even though there is a 4 foot high sign immediately in front of them
The Dog Lady
-accompanied by a small white canine weighing less than 15 pounds
-completely unaware that the dog is devouring anything and everything off of the ground
-has no control whatsoever over the dog's penchant for barking
Any others that immediately come to mind?
-asks multiple questions of each vendor
-carries his/her own shoulder bag to hold purchases
-slowly eyeballs each individual piece of produce before deciding whether or not to buy
-often empties containers to cherry pick their contents
The Sampler
-goes from vendor to vendor asking for a taste of their offerings
-successfully completes a full meal in the process for zero cost
-never makes a purchase
The Flower Lady
-wears a large straw hat
-only interest is in taking home as many types of fresh-cut flowers that she can physically carry
-not at all aware that fresh produce of all kinds is readily available
The Browser
-visits each and every stand, hands clasped tightly behind back
-slowly peers over all of the offerings , often squinting
-asks the price even though there is a 4 foot high sign immediately in front of them
The Dog Lady
-accompanied by a small white canine weighing less than 15 pounds
-completely unaware that the dog is devouring anything and everything off of the ground
-has no control whatsoever over the dog's penchant for barking
Any others that immediately come to mind?
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Nice To Meet You
My wife and I have been lucky to have 3 different dogs since we were married. And living in a metro area makes it a sometimes challenging endeavor regarding when and where to walk them. We're not into the dog park, so we usually take our guys for a lap or two or three around the neighboring blocks.
Our dogs have gotten the chance to meet a bunch of friends this way, and off the top of my head I can immediately think of about a dozen different dogs by name that our current pet knows quite well.
But I can't say the same about the dogs' owners. Sure, I know Beau, Crockett, Joshua, Henry, and the rest, but I have absolutely no clue regarding their owners' names. And I would venture the same is true the other way around as well. Maybe it's different in the suburbs. I'd love to find out.
Our dogs have gotten the chance to meet a bunch of friends this way, and off the top of my head I can immediately think of about a dozen different dogs by name that our current pet knows quite well.
But I can't say the same about the dogs' owners. Sure, I know Beau, Crockett, Joshua, Henry, and the rest, but I have absolutely no clue regarding their owners' names. And I would venture the same is true the other way around as well. Maybe it's different in the suburbs. I'd love to find out.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Don't Be That Guy
Watching the recent price reaction in Microsoft immediately following the announcement that CEO Steve Ballmer is planning to leave the company within 12 months gives one pause to think. A quick rise of almost 10% and an addition of close to $19 billion in market capitalization came quickly and unexpectedly, some may say. But should the move have been so unexpected?
By any measure, and as any longtime shareholder of Microsoft would certainly attest to, Microsoft's stock price has languished under Ballmer's tenure. Complete underperformance to Apple and Google immediately comes to mind. And what traders and investors are simply conveying is this: Microsoft will perform better in the future and will be worth more as a company with anyone but Ballmer steering the ship. Wall Street opinion is offered both rapidly and candidly.
Whether or not this assessment is fair to Ballmer deserves to be a case study worthy of examination by future students of a master's in business administration class. What he did right and wrong during his helm as CEO will be debated for semesters to come. Perhaps more interesting to think about are the potential reactions in other companies or organizations if the person at the top were to leave. It seems as though that the leaders of early lean startups (true visionaries), were they to exit, could cause immediate investor disdain, whereas well-entrenched CEO's of large capitalized concerns might create a cause for celebration, a la Ballmer and Microsoft.
People are judged and evaluated within their professional lives each and every day. We all want to feel as though we have made a definable positive contribution to our respective employers and organizations. A wonderful benchmark to shoot for would be to have the public devalue the collective net worth of our employers and organizations as soon as we are no longer active participants within them. Steve Ballmer will never be able to claim that benchmark.
By any measure, and as any longtime shareholder of Microsoft would certainly attest to, Microsoft's stock price has languished under Ballmer's tenure. Complete underperformance to Apple and Google immediately comes to mind. And what traders and investors are simply conveying is this: Microsoft will perform better in the future and will be worth more as a company with anyone but Ballmer steering the ship. Wall Street opinion is offered both rapidly and candidly.
Whether or not this assessment is fair to Ballmer deserves to be a case study worthy of examination by future students of a master's in business administration class. What he did right and wrong during his helm as CEO will be debated for semesters to come. Perhaps more interesting to think about are the potential reactions in other companies or organizations if the person at the top were to leave. It seems as though that the leaders of early lean startups (true visionaries), were they to exit, could cause immediate investor disdain, whereas well-entrenched CEO's of large capitalized concerns might create a cause for celebration, a la Ballmer and Microsoft.
People are judged and evaluated within their professional lives each and every day. We all want to feel as though we have made a definable positive contribution to our respective employers and organizations. A wonderful benchmark to shoot for would be to have the public devalue the collective net worth of our employers and organizations as soon as we are no longer active participants within them. Steve Ballmer will never be able to claim that benchmark.
Monday, August 19, 2013
How Has Your Line Moved?
I had the recent misfortune of purchasing a complete counterfeit version of a pretty well known product. And it wasn't a pair of Gucci sunglasses or a Rolex offered by an individual on a busy street corner. It occurred via an independent storefront within the Amazon.com ecosystem, and it surprised the daylights out of me.
Upon further reflection, I determined that my expectations of Amazon have changed significantly over the last 15 or so years in that by clicking "buy" on their site, I subconsciously have very close to 100% confidence that what I ordered will be fulfilled honestly, correctly and expeditiously. However, due to the fact that Amazon elects to lease their massive amount of internet real estate to just about any entity that puts up a shingle, the risk of a storefront conducting unscrupulous business practices is an ever-present risk.
To extrapolate on that line of thinking, I would imagine that other online destinations like Ebay or Overstock encounter a similar percentage of fraudulent occurrences during their normal courses of business. And on the other side of the coin, no one would ever expect anything but an authentic Iphone when they walk into an Apple store to purchase one.
So what has happened? Like anything else that we encounter, our expectations are continually shaped over time and experiences. It must have been pretty scary for the first customer of Amazon to click buy as there was no frame of reference attached to the process. We all have a vault within us that we constantly update and tweak to determine our individual predictions of any forthcoming economic transaction. Sometimes the information within that vault is changed drastically and surprisingly, but it is all just a part of our ongoing self-learning growth.
Upon further reflection, I determined that my expectations of Amazon have changed significantly over the last 15 or so years in that by clicking "buy" on their site, I subconsciously have very close to 100% confidence that what I ordered will be fulfilled honestly, correctly and expeditiously. However, due to the fact that Amazon elects to lease their massive amount of internet real estate to just about any entity that puts up a shingle, the risk of a storefront conducting unscrupulous business practices is an ever-present risk.
To extrapolate on that line of thinking, I would imagine that other online destinations like Ebay or Overstock encounter a similar percentage of fraudulent occurrences during their normal courses of business. And on the other side of the coin, no one would ever expect anything but an authentic Iphone when they walk into an Apple store to purchase one.
So what has happened? Like anything else that we encounter, our expectations are continually shaped over time and experiences. It must have been pretty scary for the first customer of Amazon to click buy as there was no frame of reference attached to the process. We all have a vault within us that we constantly update and tweak to determine our individual predictions of any forthcoming economic transaction. Sometimes the information within that vault is changed drastically and surprisingly, but it is all just a part of our ongoing self-learning growth.
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