It has been ten years. That is what the celebration is all about. Ten years ago Jim Gilmore and Joe Pine wrote the book, the Experience Economy. If you have not read it . . . you probably ought to consider it. More about that in a moment. I met Jim for the first time when he was a consultant to our company in Texas. I had no idea that he would, in the future, co-author a book that would change my life and the way that many Fortune 500 companies did business. I have to say that my first
Continue Reading
Monthly Archives March 2009
What Should YOUR Business Look Like In a Speedo?
Mike Vance is, in my opinion, one of the greatest business speakers in the last 100 years. His work on developing creativity is cornerstone. He introduced the three methods to create something. Those were: Invention Invention (i.e. the light bulb) Invention Extension (i.e. the flashlight) Invention Devention (see below) An old Nike T-shirt had a saying plastered across the front that read, “The older I get the better I was!” That is me. Believe it or not, there was a time when I was the captain of the swim team -many, many, many pounds ago with the svelt torso to
Continue Reading
I Almost Ran Over Mister Incredible – an incredible customer experience
I was just finishing a meeting at the Crowne Plaza hotel in Columbus when pulling out of the hotel breezeway, I was brought to a screaming stop by Mr. Incredible. Actually in the world of Customer Experiences, there is not many that measure up to The Arnold Classic. Each year 150,000 atheletes and visitors converge on the Columbus, Ohio Convention Center for this yearly event. What started as a body building expo for steroid and testerone overdosed Herculian types has now morphed into competition for fencing, archery, karate, and a dozen other sports. Now the interesting thing to note is
Continue Reading
What You Can Learn from the Worlds Greatest Youth Violinist
Bill Gates, The Beatles and Chad Hoopes. Chad Hoopes? Who is that? Hang on. As pointed out in Malcom Gladwell’s latest book, an Outlier is someone who lies outside the norms found in a bell curve. So Outliers becomes a descriptive term for super achievers. These super performers, who so outstrip the rest of the world with skills that dazzle, amaze, and inspire have several things in common. For example Gladwell introduces the concept of 10,000 hours. These shooting stars don’t just happen overnight. They have paid their dues. By doing some basic calculations Gladwell calculates that before they become
Continue Reading