Tag Archives: life lessons

Tossing It

Somewhere along the line it became most cost-effective to throw things away than it is to fix them.

broken ipad screen

(Photo credit: 3dom)

I know people who buy new printers rather than spend the money on the ink – it’s about a wash financially and they get a new printer.   I recently replaced a small appliance (ok, a little wine storage unit) because when I found out how much it would cost to fix the fan that had broken, a new unit, complete with warranty, made more sense.

Tech may be among the worst offending industries.  I mean, if the battery goes on your iPhone or MacBook Air, you can’t replace it.  We toss the unit and get a new one.  TV‘s are so cheap that the notion of repairing one is pretty alien these days, particularly when we consider that the new item will inevitably be better technology than what’s being fixed.

There is a problem with this mindset, however.  Too many people and businesses extend it to their thinking about customers, employees, and others.   When a relationship gets broken, we weigh the costs of fixing it against the expense of replacing it.  Rather than “fix” an employee who might have underperformed, we fire them.  That results in a few things – writing off the investment we’ve made in that person thus far as well as incurring the time and expense to replace them with no guarantee of better results.  Rather than investigating each and every customer complaint about service, we try to placate the disgruntled customer with some token gestures (the hotel room isn’t clean?  Oh, have a free bottle of water!) and don’t really mind when they don’t return again – they’re a pain.  We don’t look at them as fantastic suppliers of information about our failings – we consider them to be pesky children who rouse us from our daily business sleep.

Business relationships – with staff, with customers, with the public at large – are not disposable.  In many cases they are not replaceable and all efforts must be taken to repair them.  It’s almost never more cost effective to toss them.  You agree?

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Filed under Consulting, Helpful Hints

Cover Me

TunesDay! Today I want to write about the cover tune, one of the most overlooked forms of music. Way back when in the ancient days before the Beatles and Buddy Holly, musical artists rarely wrote their own music. Instead, they either discovered songs on their own or, more often, worked with A&R people and managers at their label to find music that was optimal for their voices. Arrangers would figure out the musical backing and that arrangement was often more important than the vocal. Think of the sound of Frank Sinatra singing a Quincy Jones  arrangement versus one by Nelson Riddle.  Same voice, very different sound.

Today most artists write and perform their own music rather than “standards” or songs produced by writing houses such as those found in The Brill Building.  Covering another artist‘s work is the exception, it seems.  When done right, however, it can make that interpretation something unique and your own.  For example, this:

Became this:

Which is the business point today.  I have clients who stress out from time to time about being original, and I agree that making something one’s own is really important in business.  After all, consumers expect us to be authentic and to speak in our own voices.  However, doing a brilliant cover version of someone else’s song in the business world can be a fantastic and successful strategy.  After all, Amazon wasn’t the first online commerce site nor was eBay the first online auction site.  Both interpreted the “song” they chose and did it better.  They became hits while the original artists faded away.

Rather than worrying about the “new” or the latest shiny object (or technology) out there, maybe we should focus our energies on rearranging what has proven to be appealing and covering it in a way that adds new meaning.  Maybe that’s another example of everything old (covering songs and rearranging them) being new again but if it is, I’m in.  You?

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Filed under Music, Thinking Aloud

Better

Ready for a two-fer TunesDay? Today I have two songs that deal with the same issue – our approach to the world and, therefore, how we’re likely to approach business as well. The first is from The Kinks, who are probably better known for Van Halen‘s interpretation of one of their songs (You Really Got Me) then they are for creating some of the most innovative music of the late 60’s and the 70’s and 80’s.  The second one is from The Boss, mostly because it hits on the same theme, I love his music, and its my screed!

First The Kinks:

If you’re ever feeling a little down, this might just be the uplift you need.  I don’t know of a more positive song.  The core of it is contained in these lines:

Be an optimist instead,
And somehow happiness will find you.
Forget what happened yesterday,
I know that better things are on the way.

And that’s really the business point as well.  Unsuccessful people tend to look externally, in my opinion.  The market is bad, a competitor cut prices, a key employee just left, what can we do?  There are always things out of one’s control that are the root of the problems the business is having. As the song points out, a positive attitude lets happiness – which in business is often measured by success – find you.

The Boss weighs in:

What’s so interesting about this song – one of Bruce‘s most positive – is that it was written when his life was kind of confused.  He had dissolved the E Street Band and left New Jersey to live in California.  He had gotten divorced and had changed the style of his music and none of this was well-received by his legion of fans (me among them!).  In the midst of that time, this:

These are better days baby
These are better days it’s true
These are better days
There’s better days shining through

Maybe it’s a lost soul trying to convince himself that everything is fine or maybe it’s a man who faces each day sounding a positive note on whatever may come.   It’s the same point Ray Davies is making in our first song – being an optimist at heart leads one further along in life and in business because, as Bruce puts it “it’s a sad man my friend who’s livin’ in his own skin/And can’t stand the company.”

Make sense?  Oh – extra credit:  In September 2010, Ray Davies released “See My Friends”, an album of reworked classic Kinks songs, which contains a duet of ‘Better Things’ with Bruce Springsteen.  The streams converge!

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Filed under Music, Reality checks