Do Lectures: the people and the music

I’ve already published my Do Lectures 2011 notes over on the NixonMcInnes blog.

Something was missing from that, though. The missing part was about the people and the music of Do.

On the first afternoon, after driving for 5 odd hours, the idea of the afternoon was to get settled, find yer tent, meet some people and have a cup of tea, with a meal and booze later in the evening. Sounds good, non?

That evening, though, we were treated to an enjoyable and challenging set from comedian Josie Long. Challenging is a word that wankers probably use when they really mean ‘shit and horrifically awkward’. But I mean challenging GOOD. What I loved about Josie’s set – apart from lots of funny bits, especially the Bronte sisters piece – was how flipping angry she is about how the Tories are behaving, and how I just let that float right past me, comfortable in my little bubble. It’s not overstating it to say that Josie’s ranting has got me feeling pissed off and political again πŸ™‚

A bit of Josie’s stuff.

Then, hours later (I think) after beers and chats, we found ourselves round a lovely campfire, under a kinda-teepee roof, listening to Chailo Sim playing their first ever unplugged acoustic set. AMAZING. Totally magical. These guys have huuuuge talent, and being that close to the creation of such good sounds. Unforgettable.

We made them play this song at least 3 times during the course of the night. So so so good.

On the second night, we sang together as a Feral Choir with Phil Minton. I cannot describe how weird this was and capture the fullness of it, but imagine a large group of adults being coaxed into ‘singing’ very strange, indeed feral, noises in layers, in sub-groups and all together in a way that left you exhilerated, terrified and tired in muscles you didn’t know existed!

Like this….!

Then a local lad played another acoustic set which was – again – really good and the guy had incredible guitar and singing skills. In awe, really.

On the Friday night a mesmerising girl called Cate Le Bon played a mixture of English and Welsh-language songs in a barn up near the fforest kitchen gardens. Another wicked setting, and the music was melancholy, captivating, different.

But it was the Saturday night that blew my mind.

I’d heard from a colleague that Gruff Rhys was going to be good, and that her husband had thought Gruff – the ex-frontman of Super Furry Animals – was excellent at Green Man.

What we saw was a genius one-man-show from Gruff, bending musical boundaries and doing crazy shit with vocoders, kids electronic keyboards and little 45s of Finnish bird song.

It was, truly, a jaw-droppingly piss-takingly brilliant piece of musical mastery, and one I hope I will never forget.

This track was wicked:

Also check out Documentally’s storify of the Do Lectures. Audio-visual-niceness.

That’s the music bit.

Then I just feel like I need to say thank you to some of the people that made Do happen. I don’t know many of them, and so will inevitably miss people out, but especially:

– Andy Middleton

– David Hieatt

– Jon Heslop and Alex Heslop

– Anna

– Anya and her team of delicious food creating wizards

– James & Sian fforest and their boys

– All of the many other people that helped make it happen

The effort and thought and character that goes into the Do Lectures is astonishing. As author Les Mckeown put it: The Do Lectures was hands-down the best event I’ve attended in around…oh…30 years or so.

Reaching that standard is no accident. It is a triumph of careful though put into action and an amazing committed group of people working together.

So that’s it. I’m done now on Do eulogising. At least in writing. So soo so brilliant. Thank you.

List of Meaning Organisations

Pre-reading! More about Meaning Organisations here.

An evolving and very incomplete list of for-profit businesses whose meaning obviously transcends just making profit:

Canada
Mountain Equipment Co-op

Denmark
Groundfos
– Noma
Specialisterne

India
– The Tata Nano
Unilever Shakti

UK
Howies
Participle

USA
Interface
Google
Gore
Threadless
Kiva
Kickstarter
Patagonia
Pixar
Threadless
WorldBlu
Zappos

Please comment or email me with suggestions to add to the list.

The Better Business School

For a while I’ve had a hankering to establish some kind of centre of learning here in Brighton where we can gather, share and learn about new better ways to approach business. (And with a Wired Sussex hat on, we’ve had in parallel conversations with the University of Brighton discussions about how we could collaborate on something like this – but here I’m just thinking about what this could be like started from scratch).

This thing would be or lead to a school of thought as much as a physical school.

Where the learning blends the following influences:

  • Semco
  • Cluetrain
  • WorldBlu companies (inc. Zappos, NamastΓ© Solar, DaVita etc)
  • Rebuild21
  • Umair Haque
  • SeeStep / Conscious Business
  • Design thinking
  • Permaculture and systems thinking

I have been thinking it might be good to start with a summer school approach, a bit like d.school.

The buzz words and values would be along these lines:

  • Towards a sustainable world
  • Design – matters
  • Innovation – in all things
  • Peer learning – we learn from one another
  • Learning by doing – yup
  • Diversity – in the search for the best possible results
  • Open – in all things
  • Different – always and above all

It’s definitely not a CSR thing. It’s a business thing. A better business thing. The Better Business School?

Missions with meaning

Last week I was delighted to join in proceedings at Rebuild21 in Copenhagen.
And, due to speaker shenanigans, I ended up opening proceedings. My topic was Meaning Organisations.

This is about 19 minutes on the topic.

The Meaning Organization, Will McInnes, NixonMcinnes from Rebuild21 on Vimeo.

The Meaning Organisation, so coined – at least according to my research – by the inimitable Umair Haque in his post The Shape of the Meaning Organisation, is “built not just to learn (and then do “business”) but, more deeply, to redraw the boundaries of prosperity, by doing meaningful stuff that matters the most.”

It is an organisation, and in particular for me a business, with a clearly expressed higher purpose that goes beyond accomplishing commercial goals, and in particular where that purpose solves a real-world problem that makes the world a better.

And it is still a business: for profit, agile, independent, effective, focused on results.

Umair himself describes Meaning Organisations in this second blog post as having the following characteristics, and though they’re nice I see this as one of the great man’sΒ  quick splurges than some of his more carefully refined thoughts (so what I take from them is the feeling rather than the specifics):

– Significance
– Outcomes thinking
– Harmony
– Purpose
– Peace
– Love
– Ambition

It struck me that outside of the business world, it’s much easier to find Meaning Organisations. Most charities, not-for-profits and religious organisations are mission-led and have missions with meaning.

So why do we need Meaning Organisations?

I think it’s pretty obvious why we need Meaning Organisations, but for the sake of completeness here’s some context from my perspective.

Firstly, for many of us the meltdown in business and government over the past few years is the start of an unstoppable shift away from hollowed-out, profit-at-all-costs businesses which squeeze value out of people and the planet. As citizens, we’re sick of it. Business needs rebooting and rebuilding. (And some of the aspects that need rebooting are those I tried to convey at the Brighton TEDx talk on Radicalising Business).

Secondly, the workforce of today, embroiled in this changing, shifting world, needs to be thought of more as volunteers rather than military recruits. Gen Y want to know WIIFM. Everyone older than Gen Y has seen experienced redundancies in some shape or form, and knows that people have been expendable, there is no job for life, and are conscious of opportunities to become freelance (or Ronin), to manage portfolios of work, to take career breaks and all that other good stuff. In parallel, there has been a sustained trend towards more volunteering, towards coaching and mentoring – these and more I see as signals of our quest for greater meaning.
So today, if you want to the best talent, there needs to be Meaning as well as money.

Thirdly, because both of the above influence us as consumers, and it is my belief that consumers in Europe and the US (which is the extent of my cultural knowledge, and even then at a reasonably shallow level) are increasingly seeking out experiences, services and products with a narrative that is authentic, sustainable, stuff which has provenance. See the growth in sales of Freedom Food chickens, the rise of the micro-brewery, the niche bicycle design company, the resistance towards Tesco and other powerful supermarkets in small towns and villages, the Buy Local movement, the gastro pub.

So what are good examples of Meaning Organisations? Well I spent a reasonable time researching the topic of meaning organisations for the talk, but really I’ve only just started as everywhere I look I’m starting to find them. But what I’ve come across so far is that old nemesis from our days helping pioneer social media marketing in the UK: the whole ‘same old brands wheeled out as examples of excellence’ problem. Too few people doing it well?

Some of those regularly trotted out examples include:
Interface
– Google
Threadless
Kiva
Unilever Shakti
Zappos
– The Tata Nano

In Copenhagen at Rebuild21 several Danish examples were repeatedly mentioned:

Groundfos
Specialisterne

And then there was a stirring and hilarious speech from co-founder of Noma, the world’s best restaurant, Claus Meyer, on the New Nordic Manifesto which he co-authored and which has given confidence and purpose to thousands of Nordic food producers in the region. That manifesto and movement is abundant with Meaning Organisation-ness.

On great examples of Meaning Organisations, who are the British examples I wonder? Do let me know who comes to mind.

What is interesting is that many of these few examples are incomplete in their Meaning-ness. So Tata is the huge Indian conglomerate, but its Nano car is a business line that has provided the means to own their own transport to a huge new swathe of the Indian population by consciously designing a car that hits a $2,000 price point. There is rich meaning here. But this is not to say that the whole of Tata is therefore a Meaning Organisation.

Google has its underlying principles, one of which is ‘The need for information crosses all borders’. There is a sense, in this one principle alone, of a unifying goal, a purpose beyond making profits, a higher-order mission for people in the organisation to work towards.

Zappos would otherwise just be a shoe-selling business if it wasn’t for its brilliant, whacky, human colour and personality. A website, a warehouse and tons of shoes. Instead, it is an exemplar for us all in how progressive and radical culture can be scaled. If I had to reverse engineer Zappo’s meaning as an outsider I would have to stump for something around humanity – they celebrate weirdness, use the word ‘family’ frequently and have a strong emphasis on the individual being themselves and developing themselves.

It’s worth also mentioning Social Business and Conscious Business as other terms knocking around this area. I won’t go into them in detail here, but my feeling is that Social Business is confused between the Yunus school of Social Business and the Dachis/IBM school, so I can’t quite get behind that.

Conscious business, at least the definition developed by my friends and colleagues at SeeStep, I like for its wholeness. Whereas Meaning Organisation seems to sum up the purpose and meaning part of a contemporary business, there’s more to look at, and that’s where I feel Conscious Business is worthy of more attention and really comes into its own.

I guess the last thought I have is that Meaning is in the eye of the beholder.

What means something to you might not to the person next to you. So there is something about finding ways to attract people to our organisations who share the same Meaning, but also repel (or expel) those that don’t. Zappos famously have the bounty they offer to people to leave after their initial induction – not often taken up, but a clear and powerful signal that you should chose to be part of their organisation.

I have no idea how to end this post, other than to thank Sofus Midtgaard, the organiser of Rebuild21 for giving me the chance to investigate and learn more about this area further.

Onwards!

The Fat and the Defenders

We are just back from a lovely family holiday on the coast of North Devon. Croyde, Woolacombe, Combe Martin. Beautiful.

And there, rockpooling every day, were fat people, pretty much wherever you looked. Including in the reflection I saw mirrored back at me rock pools.

Seriously. Over the past two or three years I feel like the obesity epidemic has crawled out of the newspapers, radios and TVs as a media story entity and into the playgrounds, swimming pools, schools and streets as a fully formed physical fact.

Isn’t it shocking, seen up close? How fat so many of us have got in the developed world. 😦

I cannot help but think about my diet, and diets and eating in general. I am a poor role model right now. And I cannot help but think about my kids and their diets over the coming years, and kids and their diets and eating in general.

How right did Pixar get it with WALL-E? And how close are we already?!

More importantly, how will we overcome tomorrow’s challenges when we are in such morbidly poor shape?

This concerns me greatly.

Juxtaposed, I am reading some incredible output by two guys in particular on the topic of Resilience: John Robb and Vinay Gupta.

Both of their blogs are absolute must-reads for me. And both of their recent work is incredibly aposite and interesting. You need to read their work.

With these thoughts of fatness at the back of my brain somewhere, two other things collided in my head last week: the first from lusting at the magnificent brand that David Hieatt is creating over at HIUT, and in particular that gorgeous image of the light blue Land Rover Defender; the second from reading on John Robb’s resilience wiki Miiu about resilient cars.

The humble Defender is apparently one of the most resilient cars out there.

It appears on John Robb’s Miiu resilience wiki along with 25+ other ‘autos’ . The Toyota Prius, to my initial surprise, is not resilient by the Miiu community’s definition – it relies too much on the intelligence in its Engine Control Unit:

The basic engine integrated electronic component is called an engine control unit, or an ECU. Because resilient cars do not have advanced ECUs, they are easily fixed and tuned. A simple example of this is idle speed control, which in all new cars, is controlled by the ECU. The idle speed is controlled by the engine RPM. The RPM is monitored by the crankshaft position sensor, which is connected to the ECU. So, if the idle speed is too low, one would have to change it by tuning the ECU, which is an involved process. To tune an ECU, one would have to have an in-depth understanding of engine electronics and possess the knowledge and tools to tune an ECU. This is however, not the case in resilient cars. In resilient cars, the idle speed can be controlled mechanically by rotating a screw connected to the throttle that will increase or decrease idle speed.

From: http://www.miiu.org/wiki/Autos

In the future, the Defender and its fixable friends win.

And what of us, the humans? What makes for a resilient human? What traits should we seek to develop in ourselves, what skills?

There is a link here between the fat and the Defenders. I cannot quite draw it out, but it is here, just beyond my fingertips.

And though I can’t quite reach it, I instinctively know I want to be a Defender. Adaptable, fixable, resilient. And not too fat to help myself or others πŸ™‚

New reading term: Selections/shares-per-page

Kindle and the meteoric rise of ebooks in general will change us. They will change what it is to read, like it or not – and I have a feeling that many of us will feel very protective about notions of traditional reading, given how precious the act of reading is to so many of us.

And of course they already are. One of things I am noticing is my innate collector/archivist/sharer coming alive in the Kindle features that allow highlighting and sharing.

I love how Kindle allows me to collect the best snippets from passages of books for future re-use as ‘highlights’, and how these are then saved to the web for my future browsing and re-use. It really is [pukey marketing word] transformational in how I am now reading.

You can say that this is nothing new.

That folded page corners, pencil scribbles in the margins or accumulated notes in the front and rear covers can do all of this in a no-fi way. But the ease, the share ability and aggregation of the web make it a significantly more exciting opportunity for me at least.

Reading Umair Haque’s book (which as a long-term Haquite and reader, I didn’t want to rush into) I have found myself highlighting insanely frequently – at times one or two excerpts on every page, page after page.

This is not anything to aspire to. I only highlighted a few passages – if I remember right – of Neal Stephenson’s gorgeously occupying ‘Anathem’. But there is something of interest when a book activates an unusual frequency of highlighting or sharing.

Sorry to be so prosaic but perhaps there is a future metric here, not something to aim for but something to one and learn from in the digital publishing world…

Average shares per 1,000 words (shares per mille / SPM)?
Highlights per book reader?

(Yes, Kindle already has a setting which can highlight popularly highlighted passages in the text of a book, but personally I found that annoying as a reader, and from an observer’s viewpoint that feature is more contextual and buried *in* the experience. What I am thinking of is the contrails that are written across the sky, left behind the actual consumption and seen publicly and widely.)

So is this something that Amazon will include in book listings too, given their incredible track record as a pioneer in the revealing of data as a powerful social commerce lever?

Reviews, ratings and, coming soon, highlights and shares.

Jim Gilliam: The Internet is My Religion

This is a wonderful talk. It doesn’t all absolutely fit with me, my beliefs. But the core of what Jim says, the essence of what it is to be part of a human network, that works for me. And I love how real and authentic his delivery is, how ‘him’ it is.
Great.

Time creation, the billion dollar opportunity

Business and entrepreneurial literature describe the big new business opportunities: cleantech, the bottom of the pyramid, health 2.0 and so on it goes.

I believe these are all big, valid market opportunities.

Another one is – or should be – time creation.

Study after study shows that people say they are too busy, that they don’t have enough time. (I was reminded of this today at the Arts Marketing Association’s annual conference in Glasgow where I was part of the opening keynote and where my fellow speaker Jerry Yoshitomi shared a study from New Zealand that showed that by far and away the biggest cited reason for people to not attend arts events was lack of time/too busy.)

These people I refer to are already afforded an abundant life full of necessities and luxuries. They are mostly in the developed world, mostly in the West.

What these people are generally (but not always) driving for are chunked experiences, shorter emails, on-demand stuff that can fit in.

As information overload grows to crisis levels, as our internet addiction spirals and our positive and counterbalancing moves towards greater work life balance and more integrated lives add to the pile of tasks to do, so our time fritters away.

There are products and services that create or reclaim time for us.
The concierge and virtual PA. Google’s Priority Inbox. The Getting Things Done religion. And much more I’m sure.

There are products and services that have sympathy for the time constraints we now willingly live with.
On-demand and catch up TV. Reminder text messages from dentists. Other things you can probably think of.

This is a huge business opportunity. If I were starting a business today I would be asking ‘how does this reclaim time for our customers?’ and ‘how does this play nice and fit into the madly busy lives of our customers?’.

If you believe we could be doing good, useful things with the reclaimed or unlocked time, then this is also an important contribution to society.

Time creation: it’s where the smart money should go.

Certainty fucks me off

I had a conversation last night, in a pub (drunk) that about where we each ‘come from’.

It was good-natured banter, but I’ve realised this morning what it was that got my goat. Certainty really fucks me off.

The gist of this banter was that I look a bit non-English, whatever that means, and this friendly guy was trying to guess where I was from (which is fine), and what pissed me off was the certainty that I was or wasn’t something. How can we know? How can we absolutely belong or come from somewhere? (This guy thought he was ‘English’, which when pressed he considered himself to be ‘Anglo-Saxon’, which is pretty funny).

Anyway, that’s not the real nub of it for me. This isn’t about nationality – it’s about certainty.

The last conversation I had that agitated this same sense for me was about humans as rational beings.

In this conversation a mate of mine was staunchly advocating the idea of humans as being frequently rational – making rational decisions, thinking sensibly, thoroughly, rigorously.

I think that’s bollocks πŸ™‚ Personally I believe that even when we’re making ‘rational decisions’ or ‘being rational’, that we’re not at all. Utter guff! But this friend was utterly convinced of the certainty that we are often rational.

I just don’t get certainty. I can’t seem to tolerate it. It doesn’t fit with what I see and have experienced in my limited quaint little life.

What also excites this intolerance in me is the religion of Science, and those espousing a kind of fundamentalist atheism, both of which seem to be all the rage in my world of otherwise likeminded left-leaning liberal folk.

I really appreciate and admire the work of science and its huge contributions to the world we live in. That’s all good. And I agree that lots of religious stuff is silly, oppresses millions of people, is the banner and excuse for war and unnecessary pain, and mostly doesn’t make any sense. But there’s a kind of certainty – sometimes – that I can’t bear.

Won’t there always be things that elude or surprise us? Can’t we only really know stuff and account for it once it’s happened (Black Swan kinda thing)? Doesn’t history tell us that we have a track record of convincing ourself of stuff and then later finding out that we were, in fact, completely wrong? Isn’t the world always going to be partly unknowable?

For me, certainty is the preserve of haughty pompous fools and can fuck right off πŸ™‚

The Interactive Blackmail Squad: NEW SERVICE!

LONDON/MOSCOW/MUMBAI 2011

“As of today I am delighted to announce that we are offering a new high value, long-term investment service.

We call it The Interactive Blackmail Squad.

You give us a list of upto 25 up-and-coming people you think will be movers and shakers in the next 10 years.

They might be competitors, peers, industry rising stars, family members or randoms plucked from a telephone directory.

Using our blackhat techniques, proprietary methods and over-the-counter digital tracking & monitoring technologies we immediately start collating as much of their digital footprint as possible – following them across different avatars and pseudonyms, across different social platforms and spaces, aggregating and storing their contrails and online contributions. (In fact, we may already be tracking them as we add to our database every single day!).

And when it comes to finding them online, there is no place we won’t go!

Annually, we provide you with a bespoke ‘Yearbook’ report into each of their digital lives, detailing uncovered sensitive facts, infographics highlighting interesting trends and patterns in their behaviour and an executive summary of their gaffes, flirtations, mentions of key brands/individuals and any other non-generic statements/actions.

The Yearbook will also include visual graphics depticting your trackees social graph, with a brief narrative on ‘connections of interest’.

We will also contact you at this time to arrange your annual consultation with our Global Privacy Engineers based for a 45 minute VOIP briefing and Q&A. This is your opportunity to really dig deeper.

However, the real value is in the accretion and synthesis of data collated over time. We expect our clients to reap the greatest Return-on-Investment in their 8th, 9th and 10th years of this ten year service – just as their trackees careers reach their apogee. WINNING!

Payment is accepted in Bitcoin (pref) or US Dollars. The service requires an investment of Β’5,000 per trackee, per annum.

Think long-term, pick some winners, and invest today!

——-

Related: http://willmcinnes.co.uk/2011/01/29/you-know-me-the-president/