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Reframing your personal and professional outlook

6 March 2010 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

This is a great post by Umar Haque about reframing personal and professional/business outlook and strategies, from the Harvard Business Review (comments are also worth seeing). I found it in Paul Denlinger‘s Google Reader shared items. (As an aside, @pdenlinger is a great follow on Twitter for his keen insights into both the US and China political and economic landscapes.)

Three Do’s (and Don’ts) of 21st Century Strategy

Welcome, finally, to…today. The 20th century ended a decade ago, but the 21st century never began: the noughties were a lost decade, where jobs weren’t created, innovation became unnovation, and prosperity itself failed.

2010 is the real first year of the 21st century. And it’s going to be a year of conflict between the leaders of the old, fraying institutions of the 20th century, and the builders revolutionizing those institutions in the 21st. Here’s a framework for thinking strategically in the 21st century:

Six soft “wars” will define 2010 — and beyond. Three are conflicts no organization should fight, and three are struggles every organization who wants to survive, develop, innovate and prosper must.

Here are the three wars no organization should fight any longer.

The war on the American Dream. The American Dream has always been one, fundamentally, of prosperity for all. But in America, the middle class has been savaged over the last half century. You know the score by now: exploding income inequality, structural unemployment and underemployment, eviscerated public services, etc. But as the middle class goes, so goes every civilization. These are anodyne terms, but big business has been the prime mover in this battle. It is a familiar gamut of 20th century corporate “strategies” — outsourcing, mass production, mega-retailing, “branding” — that were the missiles and bombs of the war on the American Dream. Today, their day is over; it is businesses who can help create a thriving, vibrant middle class to whom advantage will inexorably flow.

The war on the natural world. Since the industrial revolution, the economy has been at war with the natural world. And it’s winning, hands down. You know the statistics by now. Go watch one of my favorite documentaries, End of the Line, right now for a flavor of the destruction industrialized fishing has wrought on the seas. In the 21st century, it is businesses who can heal the natural world — not wage incessant war on it — to whom the balance of power will flow.

The war on people. In my last post, I poked a bit of fun at the Supreme Court for their recent decision to roll back campaign finance restrictions. The big picture is this. For the last century, business has claimed a superior kind of personhood to, well, real people. Corporate “people” have far more power than human people today, because big business has fought tooth and nail for special privilege. But in the 21st century, not fighting a war on human people is the key to learning to serve them instead — and is a tremendously powerful path to advantage.

Here, in contrast, are the three wars every organization must learn to fight.

The war on poverty. Global poverty has dropped precipitously over the last three decades, thanks to Herculean efforts from international agencies and NGOs. But that trend is hitting a plateau. It’s time for a new player to enter the arena: business. Today’s innovators are discovering that putting poverty reduction at the heart of what is made, bought, sold, and used isn’t just good business — it’s the key to exploding the economic boundaries of “business” entirely.

The war on consumption. Anytime I’m in a boardroom, and a CEO says “consumers,” I eat his brain. The most fundamental law of demand-side econ today is: there is no consumer. People are lots of things: parents, friends, citizens. But they’re not merely consumers, because an economy driven by naked, aggressive hyperconsumption has had its day. In the 21st century, counterintuitively, it is businesses who can make tinier increments of consumption radically more meaningful that will reap the greatest rewards.

The war on yourself. The real enemy of prosperity is the industrial era DNA of the modern corporation. And the most intense struggle that every organization must fight isn’t external, but internal. It is about building a better kind of business, commerce, and finance. Because those are the building blocks of the better banking, healthcare, energy, transportation, media — the list is seemingly endless — industries that today’s economy so desperately needs. Where does that war begin – and end? Try my post on Twitter’s next-gen DNA for some pointers (and contrast it with Facebook’s to see two very different kinds of organizations).

In the final analysis, here’s the score.

Asking whether we’re “in the recovery” is the wrong question. Reviving yesterday’s zombieconomy would mean resurrecting yesterday’s socially useless corporations. But yesterday’s prosperity is sputtering out. A new century needs a radically better economy, made of radically more useful business. And that need to be better says: yesterday’s best isn’t nearly good enough.

Welcome to the struggle for tomorrow.

Fire away in the comments with questions, comments, or thoughts.

Filed Under: Work Tagged With: career, harvard business review, professional, strategy

Ain’ts no more!!

4 March 2010 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

This is a post so long overdue, a non-fan put up his own thoughts about watching the Saints in Phnom Penh. Thanks John!

My interest in the Saints was piqued because after 43 years of solid mismanagement and dysfunction, this team is a study in how to lead a disparate group of “rejects” to success.

Drew Brees was cast off from San Diego. Reggie Bush was passed over by Houston. Jonathan Vilma was expendable as a Jet. Pierre Thomas wasn’t considered a draftable NFL prospect. Marques Colston was drafted… in the seventh round. Only so many bad breaks can happen to a group of young men. Right?

I also found that unlike many sports where the sheer simplicity of a game is pure agony to watch for its lack of mental stimulation, American football is like business strategy speeded up. There’s a lot to learn from the sheer amount of coordination and strategy in these games.

Plus I’d never been to a game before, nor was much of a fan, until this year’s trip back home. But friends scored us some great seats at the Superdome, and man was that over the top and a LOT OF FUN!

And then finally I was sold after reading about the civic and charitable work the players and coaches do in the New Orleans area, becoming an integral part of the region’s recovery after Katrina. I even follow Drew Brees’ twitter feed now! (I don’t normally go gaga for athletes but he’s so articulate, smart and civic-minded I can’t help but drool over this guy!)

“I never had followed football but became an instant Saints fanatic because there was no single organization that was holding together the spirit of the people in this community like the Saints,” said Natalie Jayroe, president and CEO of Second Harvest Food Bank of Greater New Orleans.

(For anyone who ever lived in or loves New Orleans, this piece by Wright Thompson in ESPN, Saints the Soul of America’s City, is beautiful and really quite touching.)

And what a moving season it was, for those of you who watch football and saw the Superbowl. No objective stats supported this team’s ability to make it this far, much less take the title. Hardly any pundit or gambler put their money on the Saints. The only things behind their momentum was a lot of desire, an intensely loyal fan base (win or lose New Orleans was going to throw this team a party!), and a singular belief by both the team and its city that this was the year.

It didn’t make any sense, and that is the brilliance of it. So in keeping with a great American tradition, I need to own that game! I wish I could’ve been in New Orleans for all of it, but glad to have a great crowd in Phnom Penh to watch it with!

HELL!! IS!! FREEEEEZZZZZZIIIIIIIINNNNNGGGGG!!
Did it really happen?!
Would you believe Jon Hall from Hubig's Pies was passing through and stopped in to watch the game? Small world!
There's our limo for the day :-)
3pm and they iz crunk!!
Our entire crew was even decked out in the black and gold!! ;-)

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: drew brees, football, new orleans, Saints, superbowl

Sham-A-Ling-Dong-Ding by Jesse Winchester

18 February 2010 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

What an absolutely beautiful ballad.. This man has a gift, to be able to take you by the hand and lead you to a tender, touching moment. It’s a song that cherishes and treasures those earliest years of your love. Listen and watch this moving piece by a singer-songwriter born in Louisiana, Jesse Winchester, on The Spectacle. He brought tears to Neco Case and Elvis Costello.

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: Elvis Costello, Jesse Winchester, Neco Case, Sham-A-Ling-Dong-Ding, Spectacle

Saints the Soul of America’s City by Wright Thompson

4 February 2010 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

Because I need to preserve this beautiful piece by Wright Thompson, Saints the Soul of America’s City, for later reading, in its entirety:

NEW ORLEANS — The soul of New Orleans is in a trumpet and a low-ceilinged bar. It’s in the free red beans in the back. It’s in the art hanging near the food that has two dogs howling at a New Orleans Saints moon. It’s in the voice of Kermit Ruffins, two hours into his standing Thursday night gig at a packed club hidden in the neighborhood behind the French Quarter, the place weathered and peeling like the side of a workingman’s boat.

He plays a song he wrote, “All I Want for Christmas Is the Saints in the Super Bowl,” and the crowd dances and sings all the words. When he takes a break, he calls me in closer. There’s something he wants to show me. He undoes his thin black tie, and the top two buttons, then pulls both his collared shirt and T-shirt down just enough so I can see. I notice the top point first, and slowly, the entire tattoo comes into view, a month old, enormous, covering his entire chest. I start laughing, and so does he. A symbol of the city adorned with a symbol of the city. Kermit Ruffins has gotten an enormous fleur-de-lis, the Saints’ helmet logo, tattooed on his chest.

“Only in New Orleans,” he says, winking. “I’m killing ’em when I take off my shirt at the beach. Especially at the Super Bowl.”

Hello, madness

These are strange and beautiful days in New Orleans, and they must be seen to be believed. I’ve visited the city dozens of times since I was a boy, lived and worked there for a spell and last week, when I went down to experience the mania over the Saints’ undefeated season firsthand, I found myself not sure whether every street was a dream. Some moments made me laugh, and others were so full of a desperate love that I had tears in my eyes. [Read more…] about Saints the Soul of America’s City by Wright Thompson

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: football, new orleans, Saints

The gestational journey ends

18 January 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Thank you, everyone, for sharing advice, for the visits, calls and gifts, and all the well wishes! We’re still catching up with baby and sleep so for now, just a quick update :-)

Christmas Eve 2010
2 days old

 Above is his first passport photo, taken by the hospital’s photographer at about a day old.

We flew to Bangkok at 35 weeks, since the airlines don’t let you travel any later into the pregnancy than that as a precaution against having to deal with a woman in labor on board. Other mothers in Phnom Penh have driven either down to the border at Koh Kong (via a road that goes off the grid for a solid hour, as of 2010), or else up north through Poipet into Aranyaprathet, Thailand, and then bus/train it to Bangkok. But I just didn’t think I could handle that! The road to Poipet border crossing has much improved since I’ve been through it last, but decreasing the number of uncertainties while I’m heavily pregnant is a good thing!

My first groggy thought after waking up out of anesthesia and meeting our son was a dismal, “they mixed ours up with this cross-eyed Chinese baby”, but Hubby reassured me that from the time they took him out the Chinese-looking baby hasn’t left his sight. The baby’s filling out his features now, so my mixup worries are going away :-)

We had an unplanned c-section. First contractions were at 8am and by 1030am when we arrived at the hospital I was already 6cm. Between the pelvic girdle problem I’ve been having in the last trimester and the contractions, there was no respite from the pain so I asked for an epidural. Three hours later I was fully dilated but he wasn’t coming down fast enough and his vital signs were rapidly dropping, so I was wheeled into the OR. Apparently the cord had wrapped around his neck and arm, and he was losing oxygen rapidly. WHEW!

He came with big lungs and a small stomach – they say this is normal :-\ Thankfully he doesn’t use his lung power much :-) except when he’s getting his BCG shot :-(

Here he is in his bassinet :-)

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: baby, Bangkok, birth, delivery, pregnancy, Thailand

the decade in magazine covers

16 January 2010 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

… by Magazine Publishers of America and the American Society of Magazine Editors

Filed Under: Life Tagged With: magazine, media, video

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Those little feet pitter-pattering about rule our lives lately. But on the occasional free moment I get to tap out scatterbrained bursts of consciousness about raising toddlers in Cambodia, traveling with them and working abroad. These posts are my personal updates to friends and family. But since you’re here, have a look around. Thanks for stopping by…

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