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Practical idealism

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  • B blueSprite

    Hi Christopher, I'll offer my humble suggestions for reaching audiences of varying taret ages (didn't have time to read all of the responses you received- only spot checked a few, so sorry if any of this is repetitive): I suggest a multi-prong approach. Write a book. No I'm not kidding. That exposure would lead you to the Barnes And Noble and Borders crowds. And if the title/topic is catchy enough, the morning talk show crowds might pull you in (Good Morning America, the Today Show, erc, always seem to have the "latest" author on) You'd catch the I-don't-want-to-leave-for-work-yet crowd (me ;) and the housewife/househusband crowd (pls don't judge me for watching those shows- my brain is just too sleepy at that time for hard core news) Become a part-time motivational speaker. High schools are always looking for inexpensive speakers. If you are charismatic, the teens may actually listen instead of text msging one another. This is easier if you have a published paper or book to show the school's guidance counsellor, in order to give your message validity (so (s)he can easily see what msg you will be providing to the students). Start a web site. Might catch on, if the keywords eventually bubble up into something google would display. Coffee Houses- discussions often take place there, or sometimes authors/poets may read their stuff. Offer some gimmick (not sure how this would be done)... a podcast that could be downloaded from your website, or first fifty to respond (in a positive manner) to some chat or bb on your website receives a pencil/mug/t-shirt with your catch phrase (that I'm sure you'll come up with soon) ;) on it. And as another poster said, your positive msg may not be well received by the goth crowd for instance... they want to be pessimistic as their schtick. The goth fad may fade but there will probably be another similar one to replace it. I think your idea is a lovely one, and I hope you pursue your idea of spreading optimism. Best of luck. blueSprite:rose:

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    Colin Angus Mackay
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    Now, I'm reading the rest of your post....

    blueSprite wrote:

    Become a part-time motivational speaker.

    He is. See here[^]

    blueSprite wrote:

    Start a web site.

    He's done that: http://www.practicalstrategyconsulting.com/[^]

    blueSprite wrote:

    a podcast that could be downloaded from your website

    There are many here[^] :-D Great minds think alike and all that.


    Scottish Developers events: * .NET debugging, tracing and instrumentation by Duncan Edwards Jones and Code Coverage in .NET by Craig Murphy * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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    • C Christopher Duncan

      Given that my perspective spans many decades at this point, I remember a time when American society was fascinated with the pursuit of higher ideals, and people on the streets sought out a more benevolent and fun atmosphere in their lives. It was cool and trendy to be happy, fun loving, silly, a bit irreverent. It was by no means a perfect period in our history, and a lot of the idealism was hopelessly naive and unrealistic. Nonetheless, people wanted to be positive and happy, not angry, edgy and fatalistic, and that was reflected in our culture as a whole. I'm not content to accept the current pop culture "dark and dismal" assessment of the future and present. I think to a large degree you pretty much find what you look for in life. Not surprisingly, I prefer to look for something better, and I usually find it. I think American culture has become morose, apathetic, cynical and pessimistic, which isn’t likely to bring about anything beneficial to those who think that way. I just don't think that's the way it has to be. So, in my writing and speaking, I've decided to do something about it. And here's where I could really use some insights, particularly from those of you who are under 40. It's my personal conviction that pretty much anyone would be interested in things that would lead to a happier and more enjoyable life, they just don’t know where to look or what to do. I also suspect that many in these last couple of generations aren't wild about the whole "dark and dismal" thing. I think we can be far greater than what we are, both as individuals and as a society, and I have specific ideas on how to do just that. Not 60s / 70s, hippie dippie, "all you need is love, yeah, yeah, yeah" platitudes that sound great but don't work in the real world. Practical stuff that anyone can put into practice. The problem is reaching the people. These days, all media, including the Internet, is massively segmented. My intention is to reach a broad range of people, because I think most folks really wish things could be better. However, there are no "everyone" radio stations to do interviews on, no "everyone" magazines to write for, or "everyone" web sites to hang out on. It’s all special interest groups who only want to talk about that one thing. In our current society, there aren’t much in the way of special interest groups for what I’m trying to do. That stuff faded out with the hippies. How then does one go about getting something useful in front of a diverse American audience? And especially those 20 and 30 somethin

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      T Offline
      Todd Smith
      wrote on last edited by
      #45

      Late night info-mercials? Todd Smith

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      • C Christopher Duncan

        Well I'm certainly no saint, but I guess every little bit helps. :) Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

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        M Offline
        Mircea Grelus
        wrote on last edited by
        #46

        Christopher Duncan wrote:

        I'm certainly no saint

        Your profile doesn't do much for you in this direction neither.:laugh: regards, Mircea Many people spend their life going to sleep when they’re not sleepy and waking up while they still are.

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        • T Todd Smith

          Late night info-mercials? Todd Smith

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          C Offline
          Christopher Duncan
          wrote on last edited by
          #47

          It slices, it dices, it makes Julianne fries in minutes! Only $19.95! :-D Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

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          • C Christopher Duncan

            It slices, it dices, it makes Julianne fries in minutes! Only $19.95! :-D Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

            T Offline
            T Offline
            Todd Smith
            wrote on last edited by
            #48

            Set it and forget it! Todd Smith

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            • C Colin Angus Mackay

              blueSprite wrote:

              Write a book. No I'm not kidding

              He did - Look at his signature. I'm half way through "Unite the Tribes" and it is excellent. Some of it I think is so obvious I'm wondering why I didn't think of it already. Other parts I'm not so sure of, but I'm keeping an open mind (because so many people have told me that TV shows like The Office reflect reality to perfection, yet I'm lucky enough not to have experienced any office like that, so what do I know - So, I'm guessing he has a point but I just don't have a clear frame of reference to pin it against.)


              Scottish Developers events: * .NET debugging, tracing and instrumentation by Duncan Edwards Jones and Code Coverage in .NET by Craig Murphy * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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              Christopher Duncan
              wrote on last edited by
              #49

              Thanks for the kind words, man. As for the parts you're not sure of, remember, I live in America, so you may not have to wade through the degree of corporate BS in Scotland that we do here. :-D In fact, Unite the Tribes is where I learned some things the hard way that prompted this thread. The concepts in Tribes apply to an extremely wide range of careers, and I intentionally wrote it so that the reader could put them to work in any industry, including software. So, I wrote a book that applies to virtually every industry and career type. I thought that would be a really good thing from a marketing point of view since it would mean a really wide market. In fact, surprisingly, it was a huge mistake and created a marketing nightmare. Why? For the same reasons that I mentioned in this thread. There's no "everyone" sites or magazines. CPAs have to deal with this stuff, but their trade magazines want you to write articles about numbers. Programmers have to deal with this stuff, but techies want to hear about code. Basically, limiting my audience would have improved the market, while expanding the audience limited it. I still haven't been able to get my pocket calculator to believe me. :rolleyes: Consequently, before I repeat the mistake and begin writing and speaking about practical strategies that improve people's lives and careers while making the world a better place, I need fo figure out which niches actually want to hear this stuff. Live & learn. :-D Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

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              • M Mircea Grelus

                Christopher Duncan wrote:

                I'm certainly no saint

                Your profile doesn't do much for you in this direction neither.:laugh: regards, Mircea Many people spend their life going to sleep when they’re not sleepy and waking up while they still are.

                C Offline
                C Offline
                Christopher Duncan
                wrote on last edited by
                #50

                :laugh: Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

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                • T Todd Smith

                  Set it and forget it! Todd Smith

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                  C Offline
                  Christopher Duncan
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #51

                  Clearly, there are business opportunities for the two of us... :) Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

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                  • R Roger Wright

                    Christopher Duncan wrote:

                    Where on the Internet would a person go to read about or discuss this kind of thing?

                    www.happy.com ;) "...a photo album is like Life, but flat and stuck to pages." - Shog9

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                    M Offline
                    Michael A Barnhart
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #52

                    Roger Wright wrote:

                    www.happy.com

                    If it only was not already in use for other gains. :sigh: "Yes I know the voices are not real. But they have some pretty good ideas."

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                    • J Jeremy Falcon

                      Christopher Duncan wrote:

                      where does one go to share ideas and make a difference?

                      I think more and more, the Internet is becoming a part of people's daily lives. Personally, I'm 27 and I don't read many magazines anymore; I use Google. I would think the Internet has the most diverse crowd of any people actually. But then again, a lot of people don't know about too much of it. If it's not AOL or MySpace that is. I dunno, but I fully believe we moving into the digital age even more so than we are now. Jeremy Falcon

                      G Offline
                      G Offline
                      gpsmobiler
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #53

                      Jeremy Falcon wrote:

                      Personally, I'm 27 and I don't read many magazines anymore; I use Google.

                      Maybe this is where information breaks down, and truth gets muddled up with 'popularity' in the omnipotent PageRank scheme of things. Personally, I'm quite suspect of Google, and other information-delivery schemes that just keep pooping out a very 'unnatural' bend on the selection of information. I read an interesting article titled 'How Google is Making us Dumb'. It had some interesting points. The crux of it being 'how' people are going to learn to find information in the present and future. The problem is we're rapidly junking very 'trusted' sources and opting for the ease and speed of Fast sources, who's agendas aren't known, and are fairly impossible to find out.

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                      • C Christopher Duncan

                        Given that my perspective spans many decades at this point, I remember a time when American society was fascinated with the pursuit of higher ideals, and people on the streets sought out a more benevolent and fun atmosphere in their lives. It was cool and trendy to be happy, fun loving, silly, a bit irreverent. It was by no means a perfect period in our history, and a lot of the idealism was hopelessly naive and unrealistic. Nonetheless, people wanted to be positive and happy, not angry, edgy and fatalistic, and that was reflected in our culture as a whole. I'm not content to accept the current pop culture "dark and dismal" assessment of the future and present. I think to a large degree you pretty much find what you look for in life. Not surprisingly, I prefer to look for something better, and I usually find it. I think American culture has become morose, apathetic, cynical and pessimistic, which isn’t likely to bring about anything beneficial to those who think that way. I just don't think that's the way it has to be. So, in my writing and speaking, I've decided to do something about it. And here's where I could really use some insights, particularly from those of you who are under 40. It's my personal conviction that pretty much anyone would be interested in things that would lead to a happier and more enjoyable life, they just don’t know where to look or what to do. I also suspect that many in these last couple of generations aren't wild about the whole "dark and dismal" thing. I think we can be far greater than what we are, both as individuals and as a society, and I have specific ideas on how to do just that. Not 60s / 70s, hippie dippie, "all you need is love, yeah, yeah, yeah" platitudes that sound great but don't work in the real world. Practical stuff that anyone can put into practice. The problem is reaching the people. These days, all media, including the Internet, is massively segmented. My intention is to reach a broad range of people, because I think most folks really wish things could be better. However, there are no "everyone" radio stations to do interviews on, no "everyone" magazines to write for, or "everyone" web sites to hang out on. It’s all special interest groups who only want to talk about that one thing. In our current society, there aren’t much in the way of special interest groups for what I’m trying to do. That stuff faded out with the hippies. How then does one go about getting something useful in front of a diverse American audience? And especially those 20 and 30 somethin

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #54

                        Christopher Duncan wrote:

                        How then does one go about getting something useful in front of a diverse American audience?

                        Mention the war on terrorism :sigh: The tigress is here :-D

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                        • C Christopher Duncan

                          It slices, it dices, it makes Julianne fries in minutes! Only $19.95! :-D Author of The Career Programmer and Unite the Tribes

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          Jim Crafton
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #55

                          Hell, there's even someone (I won't mention him by name...) on CP who could help you out with that! :) ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF!

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