This is an interesting read.
Imagine a company that:
• Lets you vote on the CEO's performance – and lets you, not your boss, determine your work projects.
• Uses e-mail discussion lists to make critical decisions, practicing full transparency so everyone is kept in the loop.
• Rotates all leadership roles on a regular basis.
Read the article....
Found via The Chief Happiness Officer.
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Monday, July 14, 2008
A Schlepping Party
So the wife asks if I want to go to Buffalo for the weekend to attend a party.
What kind of party? I asked.
A Schlepping Party, she says.
What's Schlepping? I asked.
Well, it's part of the big Graduation Party they're having for my brother Matt, who's graduating high school.
Well, says I, I'll miss Gaming Sunday™, but since it's a one-time thing, I'll go.
Well, we all know what schlepping is, now don't we?
"Schlepping" means moving stuff.
Lot's of stuff, in this case.
Two other guys and I helped her dad move 100 wooden folding chairs and 14 giant tables from a church to some trucks to the park to some trucks and back to the church. All in one day.
Oh, and I moved four giant wooden picnic tables across the park, and hefted about four more from the shelter to under a tent and back again.
Needless to say, I was tired.
But that's okay, the party was a lot of fun -- it only rained twice, for only about 1-2 hours each time -- and the next day I got to rest while driving six hours home.
Ugh. My body is bent and broken.
Of course the best part, the part that rounded off the whole trip, that made leaving on Friday and coming home on Sunday the best thing ever, was coming home to find one of my cats locked in the coat closet.
Where he was for two days.
Where he scratched to get out.
Where he peed all over some gloves and stuff on the floor.
Where he seems to have lost a bit of weight.
*SIGH*
Why is it that cats run into closets when you open them, without letting you know?
Oh, well.
It was a pretty good, if tiring weekend.
Congraduations, Matt!
What kind of party? I asked.
A Schlepping Party, she says.
What's Schlepping? I asked.
Well, it's part of the big Graduation Party they're having for my brother Matt, who's graduating high school.
Well, says I, I'll miss Gaming Sunday™, but since it's a one-time thing, I'll go.
Well, we all know what schlepping is, now don't we?
"Schlepping" means moving stuff.
Lot's of stuff, in this case.
Two other guys and I helped her dad move 100 wooden folding chairs and 14 giant tables from a church to some trucks to the park to some trucks and back to the church. All in one day.
Oh, and I moved four giant wooden picnic tables across the park, and hefted about four more from the shelter to under a tent and back again.
Needless to say, I was tired.
But that's okay, the party was a lot of fun -- it only rained twice, for only about 1-2 hours each time -- and the next day I got to rest while driving six hours home.
Ugh. My body is bent and broken.
Of course the best part, the part that rounded off the whole trip, that made leaving on Friday and coming home on Sunday the best thing ever, was coming home to find one of my cats locked in the coat closet.
Where he was for two days.
Where he scratched to get out.
Where he peed all over some gloves and stuff on the floor.
Where he seems to have lost a bit of weight.
*SIGH*
Why is it that cats run into closets when you open them, without letting you know?
Oh, well.
It was a pretty good, if tiring weekend.
Congraduations, Matt!
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Trying on a New Hat
At my new job, there are a variety of tasks that fall to me.
As I mentioned before, one of the first things I had to do was to locate a facility for our office. Well, we finally got the keys to the place today. It was a stressful task, and now all the stress over finding a place will be traded in for all the stress over furnishing the place. Yeegads.
Which brings me to the first item: My wife and I drove to Holland, MI to get some office furniture. We ended up bringing home six, $700 chairs ... for which we paid only $99 each. Rock!
Side Note: On the way back, we stopped at My Buddy Ronn's new apartment in Grand Rapids. He's got some pretty nice digs -- roomy place, view of a huge pond, and handy bike paths -- all for less than I paid 15 years ago in Ypsilanti for a smaller pad. Rock!
One other hat I have to wear is Marketing Guru. I've already posted the business card I put together based on the graphic firm's design, but this time I had to do something I've thought about, but never really done before. I had to create an ad for our company, to appear in the October issue of Linux+DVD magazine.
I fretted over this night after night, coming up with slogans, reading about how to create a print ad, and just generally stressing out. But on the way back from Grand Rapids, My wife and I chatted about it and generated an ad that could blossom into a full-on campaign (or at least a series of connected ads). It's by no means professional, but compared to some of the ads I've seen, it's not half bad.
In any case, here's the final product, after multiple tweaks (including dropping the clip art and hand-drawing the silhouettes). Check it out:
As I mentioned before, one of the first things I had to do was to locate a facility for our office. Well, we finally got the keys to the place today. It was a stressful task, and now all the stress over finding a place will be traded in for all the stress over furnishing the place. Yeegads.
Which brings me to the first item: My wife and I drove to Holland, MI to get some office furniture. We ended up bringing home six, $700 chairs ... for which we paid only $99 each. Rock!
Side Note: On the way back, we stopped at My Buddy Ronn's new apartment in Grand Rapids. He's got some pretty nice digs -- roomy place, view of a huge pond, and handy bike paths -- all for less than I paid 15 years ago in Ypsilanti for a smaller pad. Rock!
One other hat I have to wear is Marketing Guru. I've already posted the business card I put together based on the graphic firm's design, but this time I had to do something I've thought about, but never really done before. I had to create an ad for our company, to appear in the October issue of Linux+DVD magazine.
I fretted over this night after night, coming up with slogans, reading about how to create a print ad, and just generally stressing out. But on the way back from Grand Rapids, My wife and I chatted about it and generated an ad that could blossom into a full-on campaign (or at least a series of connected ads). It's by no means professional, but compared to some of the ads I've seen, it's not half bad.
In any case, here's the final product, after multiple tweaks (including dropping the clip art and hand-drawing the silhouettes). Check it out:
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Let's Talk Stress
I'm working my new job, and I'm loving it. But the things I have to juggle are causing me a bit of tension.
We're moving into an office/light industrial park from a home-based business and this means we have to get everything: desks, chairs, dividers, phones, networking, backup power, toilet brush, alarm systems, insurance, pencils, garbage cans, barcode scanner, portable AC units, and -- of course -- a coffee machine. Can't live without that.
To top it off, we'll need to build an enclosure for the network gear and even run some plumbing if we want anything resembling a kitchen sink. But before we do all that, we have to have a lawyer read the lease, the building has to be cleaned, and we have to turn over the security deposit and first month's rent. Did I mention I had to find the building in the first place?
Yeegads. This is a lot of things to keep running at the same time, to try to schedule convergence of them all at move-in time. And on top of this, I need to be as frugal as I possibly can. This is a startup, after all.
This is a pretty big project for me, which I have to complete while simultaneously doing marketing & advertising.
I have to say, I'm feeling the burn.
We're moving into an office/light industrial park from a home-based business and this means we have to get everything: desks, chairs, dividers, phones, networking, backup power, toilet brush, alarm systems, insurance, pencils, garbage cans, barcode scanner, portable AC units, and -- of course -- a coffee machine. Can't live without that.
To top it off, we'll need to build an enclosure for the network gear and even run some plumbing if we want anything resembling a kitchen sink. But before we do all that, we have to have a lawyer read the lease, the building has to be cleaned, and we have to turn over the security deposit and first month's rent. Did I mention I had to find the building in the first place?
Yeegads. This is a lot of things to keep running at the same time, to try to schedule convergence of them all at move-in time. And on top of this, I need to be as frugal as I possibly can. This is a startup, after all.
This is a pretty big project for me, which I have to complete while simultaneously doing marketing & advertising.
I have to say, I'm feeling the burn.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)