Archive for July, 2009

Is it feminism that has made the Gen. Y:ers so ego?

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

After re-reading what I wrote on my notes from Sustainable Employer Branding, found here.

Can the reason for why Generation Y:ers being more egotistic, be that we do not NEED to care about others?

Some years ago, men and women where divided on the job market, or let us be honest, the women weren’t allowed out there if they were married. Back then, the man had to provide for his family. Who the hell had time to care about “numero uno” when he needed to get food on the table.

Today, when often the man and the women are working full-time, both bringing in some serious cash – one can be a little more open to go it’s own way.

Now, I have no idea if this is obvious, if everybody knows this and I am just very late in getting it. Maybe this was said in the book and I just completely forgot it. But if not, what can we do with this information?

We can test this by comparing families were both adults work, and were only one does. They could answer questions concerning their job status, how many jobs they have switched from etc.

We should at least get something we could work with, use what ever comes out of that study and use it to support single-working families.

Now, the title is a little bit harsh – I KNOW. But it is not to far fetched. Because of females speaking up, getting out on the job market and thus “creating” this situation, it might be some truth behind it. And in no way do I for a second believe that the feminist movement stands and fall on this argument.

No matter what, I believe we’re heading in the right direction.

Notes

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

I always wanted to keep a journal, problem is, I never believe to have anything important to write in it. I live a pretty dull life. I go to school, I eat, I think about Malin, and I might go on an occasional trip. What’s the fun in that.

So I never gotten around to do it.

When I started the Japanese Dreams project I decided to buy a notebook to use only for this project. Whenever I wrote something it it, I would cross over as soon as it was done. By doing his, I would see that being in a project wasn’t as hard as I had believed.

It turned out that I got ideas all the time, and since this book tended to be close to me whenever I had it, I wrote them down, but made sure to separate them from the project.

All the sudden I saw that some of the ideas I had could be integrated into the project – I could call the same person and ask two questions at the same time.

So, the book was upgraded to be my companion in my day-to-day life. If I hear a song, I’ll write the title in the book, next to the date. If I have things to do, I make a to-do list, and put the date next to it. By doing this, I can see what I have left to do, and tat one can actually do a lot of things faster then expected.

I was lousy to remember those smart quotes that I read in books. Now, I just scribble them down, and whenever I need them, they are right there.

Presto, I got my journal.

Randy Pausch – The Last Lecture

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

It might be paradoxical, but there is actually one thing that I dislike and like at the same time. It is when people tell me their life stories. I dislike it because every time someone does it, they do it because they want to teach me what they’ve learned over the years, as if their mistakes, faults and errors, and their solutions to these are good to know.

At the same time, I love it when somebody makes me want to learn from their mistakes, faults and errors.

Randy Pausch is dead. He died last year due to pancreatic cancer. Before he passed away he was offered to tell what he have learned, as a professor, son, Disney Imaginaire, father, husband etc. This lecture can be viewed and downloaded via iTunes U – I suggest you do it. Instead of watching a movie this weekend. Watch his lecture on Time Management as well.

Luckily, I managed to grab a copy of his book from the library and finished it in four hours. If I where to say that it was amazing, I would be exaggerate. But if I were to tell you what I learned from it – I would not be able to fit it all in one post.

Notes:

  • Whatever you do, know the basic of it.
    - I’m a business student who loves marketing. To understand and develop this, I need to know the basic features of it.

“If no one tells you you’re doing it wrong, that means they’ve giving up hope in you.”

  • If you do not understand what a person is telling you, there are two ways to go:
  1. Tell them that you do not understand, and then ask them to leave
  2. Tell them that you do not understand, and then ask them to tell you more

One quote that really stuck to me was said the day before Randy found out he had three-six months to live. This is what he told his wife, Jai, while visiting a water park.

Even if the results are bad tomorrow I want to you to know that it feels great to live and to be here with you today, alive. What ever they’ll tell us tomorrow does not mean that I will die as soon as I will hear it. I will not die the day after that, the day that follows, or the one after that. So, right now, today, is a wonderful day. And I want you to know how much I appreciate it.

Mr. Pausch was famous amongst his student to drop so called Pauschisms every now and then, he lists them as followed:

  1. Time, just like money, must be treated with care.
  2. You can always change your plans, as long as you have any.
  3. Always ask yourself: Do you consume your time the right way? – Randy used an example from a newspaper where a pregnant women complained about a construction site near her home. She was afraid that the noise form the jackhammers etc. would hurt her baby. In her hand, she held a cigarette.
  4. Delegate
  5. Take timeout!

On motivating:

If somebody blows your mind, tell them that you liked it, but that you believed the person to have more in them.

On complaining

Complaining is not a strategy that works, it won’t make you reach your goal, and it won’t make you happier. So, why do it?

On group dynamics. Randy was a university teacher, and to make the students work better in groups, he gave them the following guidelines:

  • Properly greet everyone
  • Find what you have in common
  • Strive to have the optimal meeting – eat together
  • Let everybody speak – and finish
  • Leave the ego outside – it was not “your idea”, “Lisa’s idea” etc. It was the “idea of going to Ibiza“!
  • Praise each other.
  • Formulate everything as a question. – Don’t say “We should go to Ibiza”, say “How about Ibiza?”. This leave room for other people to discuss, instead of being locked inside your statement.

On how he could get a full-time employment one year prior to anyone else in his situation

It’s easy! Just call me at my office on a Friday, at 10pm!

On apologizing

A good apologize has three parts:

  1. What I did was wrong…
  2. …it hurts me that I hurt you…
  3. …how can I make it better?

This shows the person that you understand what you’ve done, that you feel what the person is feeling, and that you are ready to do whatever you can for the person to forgive you.

On working

There’s no job under one’s dignity!

—-

I will try to live after some of these ideas that Randy Pausch lived his life after. Somehow, I think I already do.

—-

RandyPausch_Wiki_2Thank you Randy.

Attached Files:

More on employer branding

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

For more info on employer branding, wrote about it here, I recommend you read this blog post from The Brand-Man. In Swedish, but use Goggle Translate.

Newly read books

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Since I’m reading a lot of interesting books, and has the urge to share this with others, I’ve fixed so that the 10 most recently read books, with notes, can be found to the right.

Anders Parment & Anna Dyhre – Sustainable Employer Branding

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

In their book, “Sustainable Employer Branding – Guidelines, Worktools and Best Practices”, the two authors, Anders Parment & Anna Dyhre explains why companies need to change their way on how their recruiting, maintaining and how they market themselves as employers. What used to be “Let them come to us” has now changed to a “How can we get them to stay” business. And it is the generation Y (people born somewhere between late 60’s, whole 70’s and early 80’s) that leads the change.

Notes from the book:

  • Generation Y:ers are more keen to give credit to people they find competent, than people with a fancy title.
  • Y:ers rather wants a job that is self-fulfilling, than well paid.
  • Flexible working hours is more common, than the ordinary 9-5. A Y:er can skip work an entire day, but makes up for it during a Saturday night.
  • Problem with many industries is that it attracts a certain type of person. E.g. the make up industry is likely to attract a young female with a business degree in marketing. Problem is, all companies in this industry have enough of these. What they on the other hand is looking for are employees with engineering background – a typical male job. Thus, the women who apply for a job won’t get it, or the only jobs that are asked for by the company won’t interest them. Y:ers tend then to feel hurt by the company, thus the company might loose a customer.

Talented people tend to be more…

  • …flexible
  • …more interested in using the pull-factor – giving the customer what it wants
  • …interested in forming it’s own work-life, not what the company wants.
  • …likely to have a formal relationship to authority – boss = friend
  • …open-minded in finding information all over, not used via the company/CEO

A Y:er tend to change jobs more often than others, however, still this is considered not to be good if it happens too often. Every second year is considered okay.

The two authors gives three advises on how to implement Employer Branding.

Employer branding…

  1. …should be separated form the recruiting process
  2. …starts from within an employer
  3. …efforts should also help the employer to understand who is their ideal employee

By goal is to APPEAL TO THE IDEAL FUTURE EMPLOYEE.

A Y:er is more likely to…

  • …accept less in pay if they get the opportunity o work for their favorite company
  • …be motivated
  • …most satisfied and feel proud to be a part of their employer
  • …stay loyal to the firm
  • …be more productive

If flipped around, these are the five reasons for an Y:er leaving an organisation

  1. Low wage
  2. Lack of influence in decision-making
  3. Unattractive working hours
  4. Working environment
  5. work tasks

These five follow the same theme as those mentioned above, that the wage is not an issue, if the job the person is doing fulfills her-/himself. Thus, a boring job demands a higher wage. If this is not given the employee will leave the company.

Side notes:

  • A bank that needs people, but has a reputation of being a bad employer – what kind of recruits will they get?
  • At law and auditing firms they are, out of 100 employed students in year 0, only have 30 left in Y5 and 5-10 in Y10. Who will still be there after all these years if people knows about this?

To summaries what the authors want to say with their book, my guess is that, …

“Those who leave are the good employees. They are attractive because of their talent, … their driving force, and … their energy. They are likely to make a difference on their next employment.”

It is important, if a good employee wish to leave the firm, to keep it in the loop of the company. The book uses the term “boomerang recruitment”, meaning that the employee might comeback in a few years, if the company plays it’s cards right.

Intel, after an employee leaves, services it’s old co-worker with new computers, or printers. It also offers the employee to come back as a consultant, or invites it to company picnic, meetings, and sends it newsletters etc.

——–

For me, this book was a great eye-opener, and I know exactly who I’ll recommend to read it. The principal at my business school – the book ends with stating clear examples for how a university can do this.

I will also tell friends who works with events, especially one who is about to get started with a career fair. This is a great opportunity for companies to start their way into getting a good, solid, and sustainable employer brand.

Official site for the book, and authors.

Insomnia and making plans

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Since I’m having trouble sleeping, mostly due to being so excited over the book I’m reading, recipes for the leg of lamb that I’ll cook tomorrow, and ideas for Japan, I’ve been thinking whether or not I should stop reading/writing/planning stuff up to two hours before bed.

Lucky for me, I got Mega Man II & Wikipedia!

Did you now that Bob Dylan isn’t his real name? I knew that, but I needed an example of what kind of information you could find!

Metal Man is the coolest boss in Mega Man II!

Thomas Fink – The 85 ways to tie a tie

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Thomas Fink seems to know three things, physics, mathematics, and male fashion. And he knows them well.

He written two books, “The Man’s Book” and “The 85 ways to tie a tie – The science and aesthetics of tie knots“, the last co-written with Yong Mao. What combines these two books is that Mr. Fink not only explain what one thing is, he also have a mathematical formula for it.

In Fink’s and Mao’s book ties, they prove that there is only 85 ways to tie a tie, that has an ordinary length. This is best explained in Fink’s “The Man’s Book” – 2006, p. 67

The number of different tie knots K that can be tied with h moves or half-turns is

K(h)=\frac{1}{3}(2^{h-2}-(-1)^{h-2})

…Assuming the standard tie is long enough to allow at most 9 moves, the total number of knots is

\sum^9_{h=1}K(h)=85

Out of these 85 the two authors find that…

  • …13 to be aesthetic enough to be worn by a man.
  • …15 have names:
  1. Oriental
  2. Four-in-hand
  3. Kelvin
  4. Nicky
  5. Pratt
  6. Victoria
  7. Half-Windsor
  8. St. Andrew
  9. Plattsburgh
  10. Cavendish
  11. Christensen
  12. Windsor
  13. Grantchester
  14. Hannover
  15. Balthus
  • …a tie knot will be fully untied if the combination to tie it ends with “…Right-Left-Middle-Tuck”.

The book is a great gift for a man geek who likes to look good. I’ll definitely buy it if I ever find it in a book store.

Petrell of Sweden

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Almost a year ago I came across a little firm in Halmstad called Petrell of Sweden. Their thing was to create one of a kind bowties and sell these over the internet. For over a year I have visited their page every now and then hoping to be first with grabbing one of their masterpieces, always to go empty handed.

But not this time.

Say “Hello!” to my new and lovely bowtie.

DSCN3880DSCN3881For a measly 225SEK + postage 20SEK – I recieved a over night delivery, handmade, one-of-a-kind bowtie.

I am VERY sure that I’ll use this couple again.

Feel free to pay them a visit – www.petrellbowties.se

Tokyo must-see 1

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Jaunted.com has made a list of the five Apples stores you must visit if you ever get the chance. One of them is in Tokyo. Of course I’m gonna have to visit it, when it has these features:

  • Five stories high
  • Buttonless Elevator

It’s going to be awesome.