Lessons Learned
« Previous EntriesHow To Consciously Get Unconscious Mastery — Mental Best Practices For Success
Monday, February 4th, 2008Special Guest Post today from Mark Cunningham, one of the top hypnotists in the world. I am a student of his training, a fan of his work and most importantly, I am privileged to call him friend.
Here, Mark reveals how to separate the information wheat from the chaff, how to set your goals (and reach [...]
The Art Of The Inconvenient Question
Friday, January 11th, 2008Whatever you think about what causesĀ global warming, are you making the same mistakeĀ art critics make?
In social situations over the holidays, when the subject of global warming came up (as it often does), I would ask one key, clarifying question that proved to be vital to knowing where the other person was coming from.
And the [...]
Best/Worst Practices Showdown: American Backbone Trumps Russian Deceit
Wednesday, January 9th, 2008“Thirty-five dollars.”
Me: “What?!”
My question was on two levels — first, his accent was so thick you could layer it on with a trowel. That, and the fact that the price was wrong.
His “Thirty-five dollars” sounded more like “dirty bibe dollarsusk.” Mentally I’m trying to nail down the accent’s geography. Russian? Chechen? Georgian?
Since I didn’t [...]
Best Practices - iCAP’s Release Meter FINALLY Does The Right Thing
Wednesday, November 7th, 2007**We interrupt the regularly-scheduled post for this time-sensitive news flash.** To be fair, I need to cover this because I want my coverage of the company to be fair and balanced.
Here’s what happened: looking through my site stats, I noticed an unusual trend over the last 2 weeks. A lot of people were landing on [...]
MoveOn.org Is Doing Their Job — Marketing To Their Base
Wednesday, September 26th, 2007Panem et circenses. . . that’s what MoveOn.org is all about. It’s not “The Cause” and it never has been. Nor has it ever been about a fair and balanced approach. Nor the facts.
But that’s not MoveOn’s fault.
No, the fault/blame/responsibility rests squarely on the shoulders of the