May 272010

There are some things to do in life just because you can.

This posting is one such pointless activity. It has no content of any merit whatsoever. Indeed, you are already wondering why on earth you are spending any time on this at all.

It’s not as if there isn’t enough out there to read on the web.

So why am I writing this?

Well actually I’m not. I’m speaking it. This posting is being produced purely through speech recognition software. Including all the punctuation…

And a paragraph breaks. I can’t believe how good it is, straight out of the box.

Isn’t technology extraordinary?

All I have to do now is find something interesting to say.

(And the person who comes up with THAT application will make a fortune.)

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May 022010

I was supposed to go for a training ride this morning (prep for the London-Brighton Bike Ride in 7 weeks), but the rain and the wind got the better of me. So while making the morning tea, I thought I’d just check my email.

That was 10 hours ago, and I’m still here – completely lost in a parallel universe of news, views, ideas, opinion, music, work and technical problems.

lost-weekendSome of it has been a voyage of discovery; I have now mastered RSS feeds (see the orange button in the masthead to get notification of future posts direct to your desk top!) and have created a personalised news feed which means I’ll never have to watch the TV or buy a paper again.

Similarly, a revisit to Twitter has opened my eyes to the richness of the medium – not the ‘I’m-in-Burger-King-and-the-girl-is-well-fit’ tweets, but the links to stories from around the world and to blogs about the impending election.

I have recorded things on Evernote, added to my web library on Diigo, and built follow-lists on Seesmic.

As I type, I’m following a post-mortem of The Andrew Marr Show this morning, and listening to Danny Baker from yesterday (“A photo of a thousand naked people is art, but a picture of just one is Readers’ Wives”).

It’s all wonderful and extraordinary and becoming increasingly integrated. Soon this blog will automatically notify Facebook that I’ve posted a piece, comments from readers will arrive on my smartphone, and this site will carry stories from other writers I admire, so becoming a publishing portal.

I am of a generation that finds this all quite amazing. It is a voyage of discovery that stretches me, keeps me learning, and gives me tiny glimpses of what tomorrow may look like.

Yet there is one question that straddles it all, as colossal as Christof’s dome in The Truman Show:

Why?

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Dec 022009

An astonishing piece of video collage created by Marco Brambilla. It’s teeming with much imagery you’ll recognise and even more that you won’t:

 

May not have ‘a message’, but as a calling card for the artist’s capability, it’s both powerful and memorable.

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Nov 022009

"It’s not what you are – it’s what they think you are that counts" – advice from Joseph P Kennedy to his son, JFK

A couple of days ago I posted a story about changing my name; more accurately, how I’ve added a second name after 40-something years of feeling a little empty in the middle.  The response was a mix of interest, confusion and good natured ribbing – as one should expect from good friends. But I also detected a subtext:

"Why have you announced it? I mean, it might come up in conversation at some later date. But why make such a big deal of it. More to the point, why change your Facebook address?"

In truth, changing my name is only half the story. While I did it for genuinely personal reasons, quite coincidentally it gave me a solution to a long-standing problem.

How do you draw parameters around your web presence?

TOO OPEN?

I’ve been writing Rutherblog for just over a year, and in that time I’ve written about whatever has taken my fancy: films, politics, the rail system, behaviour in shops, family life and – very recently – the death of our dog. I’ve written lists of word play, bad jokes, poems and dialogues. Sometimes serious, often thought-provoking, mostly funny (at least that’s the intention. You tell me.)

flasher Occasionally I’ve touched on marketing, technology or recruitment – my areas of professional experience. At the very beginning of the exercise I stated that I didn’t know where this would go, and that I would fly in the face of classical marketing rules and NOT focus it or have a theme.

It has been a self-indulgence with which some of my friends have been willing to go along. It’s been very rewarding and the source of considerable merriment, for which I am very grateful. But…

There have been a couple of occasions when my openness has led to mild discomfort at work. At least one of my colleagues wonders how it impacts the way I am perceived by Clients?

Similarly, there have been a couple of occasions when I have met with candidates, and it’s clear that they’ve done their homework. So when they refer to my family life or my early days living in digs, it’s rather uncomfortable. They know too much about me.

WE ARE ALL BRANDS

This issue is put under the lens in this quarter’s issue of Intelligent Life, in an article by cultural commentator and critic Peter York. His thesis is that for the past 30 years, we have been awash not only with marketing messages, but also messages about marketing itself. We have become marketing-savvy, and many of the ideas in its kit-bag have become part of everyday conversation "positioning", "branding" and “segmentation”.

York points out that in an increasingly fragmented, fluid economy – with an ever-larger slice of the workforce taking freelance / self-employed status (I’ve done that twice) – reputation is everything. Of course, it needs to be based on something, such as a professional qualification or a track record of project success – but your ability to attract work is dependent upon the associations you make in minds of others.

janusSo, while writing about the latest Pixar movie or my run-in with the Inland Revenue continues to give me great pleasure, it doesn’t add anything to my reputation in my field of expertise. To whit, no-one who has asked me to represent their company really wants to know that I can write spoof London Cabbie monologues.

Equally, my friends aren’t especially interested in sourcing strategies in Eastern Europe, or the challenge of distributing low-margin products in a time-sensitive markets.

Hence, I’ve created two parallel existences on the web. Paul Rutherford for business, Paul Arthur for musings on Life.

 

THIS YEAR’S MODEL

Unfortunately, it doesn’t stop with blog sites; Web 2.0 isn’t limited to a single website address. Here’s a partial list of the sites and tools I use under the ‘Paul Rutherford’ brand: Twitter, StumbleUpon, Delicious, Digg, Diig, Evernote, YouTube, 12secondTV, Flickr, Tumblr… it goes on. All with a trail of digital footprints left in the sand. Once you’ve entered the blogosphere, it is a Pandora’s box.

The slightest trip can echo loudly.

Case in point: a Facebook friend who constantly impresses me with links to the most intellectually stimulating, innovative material recently became a "Fan" of one of this year’s hot new fashion models. There may well be a hidden reason to this, but clicking on her page link just took me to a set of bikini pictures. It’s not porn, but it has diminished his brand a little in my eyes. Partly because I don’t think becoming a fan of a model isn’t, well, becoming for a senior business figure; mostly because he’s told me that he’s done it.

joseph_kennedy As my wife has oft-observed about other people’s marriages, "who knows what goes on behind closed doors?" And frankly, I don’t want to know. As Kennedy Snr said, it’s not what you are, but what others think you are.

And so I’ve just become a little more conscious about managing two ‘brands’ on the web. Like a product manager, the name of the game is consistency – from the packaging to the literature to the ‘customer experience’. Hence, the need to create a web presence that reinforces the brand values at every exposure.

ALL OR NOTHING?

This sounds horribly manufactured and somewhat facile. But the truth is our ‘audiences’ (customers, clients, partners, suppliers, investors, employees, staff) are drawing conclusions about us all of the time, from face-to-face encounters, written communications, telephone calls, the way we dress, our presence in the office, our absence from the office. They have a different view of you than your partner does, or your parents, or your neighbours, or your school friends. We ‘manage’ this stuff intuitively all the time, adapting behaviours and presentation styles to suit the circumstances.

It’s the biggest challenge for anyone entering the websphere; being aware of the ‘messages’ that we’re projecting, and knowing where and how to draw the lines. Some restrict their Facebook friends to just that – a handful of genuine friends, which they ring-fence to ensure no connection to the outside world. Others open up to everyone, and what-you-see-is-what-you-get – take it or leave it.

A year into this experiment, and I’m trying to find a balance. And to do that, I’m using ‘Arthur’ to bridge the gap in my name, while widening the gap between aspects of my web presence.

So apologies to my Facebook contacts for the confusion caused. It’s because you do know who I am  that in realigning this morass of sites, addresses, URLs and identities you ended up as the one group that saw the change happen before its very eyes, with no explanation.

Not elegant – but if you can’t fall over in front of your friends, they’re not really friends.

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Sep 182009

Advice to bloggers everywhere…

Who is Mark Twain? from Flash Rosenberg on Vimeo.

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Jun 052009

So, this is one of 200,000,000 blogs ‘out there’.

Hmm. Feels rather crowed…

Hype or hope: the world will be a different place by the time you get to the end of this video.

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Apr 262009

Thomas Mann: “A writer is someone for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people.”

I wouldn’t dream of putting myself in the same company as Mann, but his comment chimes with me because of the curse of perfectionism. Every word examined, edited, re-written, re-edited – usually in real time, which usually means the first paragraph of a post takes 30 minutes to hone.

(Indeed, I have already re-written that paragraph twice. Old habits, eh?)

Some say that it’s how it should be. When Jack Kerouac published his stream-of-consciousness novel ‘On The Road’ – written in an intensive 3-week period, on a 120ft scroll of paper – Truman Capote waspishly commented “That’s not writing; that’s typing.”

For the first four months of this year, I tried ‘writing’ my blogs: and it has always taken twice as much time as I plan. Set aside an hour at 21h30 and I’m still at my desk at 23h30, searching for a bon mot as an ending.

And that perfectionism becomes a barrier to beginning. Hence, my posting have dried up since the middle of April.

But I return to the blogosphere, inspired. Thanks to Bre Pettis and Brio Stark, and their ‘Cult of Done’ Manifesto.

cult of done text

No more perfectionism for me; I am shutting away the internal editor who’s forever criticising every sentence, setting my on-screen timer for 20 minutes, and posting whatever comes in that time.

At least until I get back on track.

All of which is an apology. Sorry I’ve missed my deadlines, and apologies if the next few weeks (while I catch up) isn’t the same standard as before.

But hey: it might be better.

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Jan 272009

There is a new scourge amongst us. A new threat to our health, our emotional state, our well-being.

It has already inflected millions, but as recent sufferer I hope I am not too late to prevent this becoming a pandemic.

tired man For the sake our our families, our friends and our communities.

More potent than any drug, it completely distorts one’s sense of time, place and meaning.

More engulfing than any cult, it demands the sacrifice of all free will.

It creates the most vivid illusion of productivity, while rendering the sufferer incapable of any useful activity.

Indeed, this blog posting was to have been an incisive exploration of UK macro-economic policy and the conflicts caused by over-reliance of the financial sector in a neo-Keynsian world.

But the virus put a stop to that.

It is an invidious infection that, for which there is currently no known cure.

All I can do is plead with you: Just Say No to StumbleUpon.

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Jan 172009

I’m a little frustrated at the lack of readers coming to my blog. But help is at hand.

According to Iain Dale – publisher of Total Politics magazine – there are four topics that generate more response on his sites than any other; Israel, abortion, climate change and homosexuality. If I can include them all in three paragraphs of a single post, he says I’ll hit the jackpot.

(As if I’d stoop to such a low trick).

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Jan 102009

Been a busy day, and Mission Control is threatening me with physical harm if I don’t sit with her and watch the movie we’ve rented. So this will be very, very quick indeed.

So quick, in fact, that it’s over.

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