Thursday, December 31, 2009

Stupid habits can be cured http://ping.fm/W3XKV
"Only put off until tomorrow what you are willing
to die having left undone." -- Picasso

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

The common sense behond small changes. http://ping.fm/qCY9s
"We are all lying in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." -Oscar Wilde.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Hot chocolate isan alibi for whipped cream and marshmallows. Winter has redeeming features.
Successful people say "I must do something"; unsuccessful people say "Something must be done."

Monday, December 28, 2009

3 things every car needs: good tires, good brakes, and a driver who knows how and when to use them.

Friday, December 25, 2009

A gift for yourself, as suggested by Robert Grant: http://ping.fm/b9El2

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

We can be much less stupid if we can be a little more aware.
Beautiful video simulating a trip to the edge of the known universe. Share it with friends. http://ping.fm/K0fJy

Monday, December 21, 2009

Do a little to help feed the world and build vocabulary too at freerice.com http://ping.fm/5k8KJ

Sunday, December 20, 2009

At Inniswood 4 Solstice celebration

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Celebrate the Winter Solstice 4 - 7 PM Sunday @ Inniswood Metropark! http://ping.fm/4PfBL

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Can you put part of your life on automatic pilot? http://ping.fm/Cslor
Life, like a Rubik's Cube, is easier to get right with a good plan.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

I contacted my elected officials to help support HB 318 and you should, too. Find out more: http://bit.ly/B7IJ7

Friday, December 11, 2009

Heading for a night of astronomy @Perkins observatory:) ... No tickets available :(

Thursday, December 10, 2009

What habits contribute to your success?

Monday, December 7, 2009

Talent hits a target no one else can hit.
Genius hits a target no one else can see.
~ Arthur Schopenhaur

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Now a Facebook Fan of Perkins Observatory -- check it out at bit.ly/6rLZVp

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Going green makes economic sense. Even if it didn't, it would still be the right thing to do. It is our obligation to future generations.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Necessity is the mother of taking chances.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

As we express our gratitude, we must never forget that the highest appreciation is not to utter words, but to live by them. ~John F Kennedy

Saturday, November 21, 2009

once you have taken the step you'll grow into it.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Solutions should prevent problems, not fix them. The best solution in the world solves a problem that never happened.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

People who do multiple things at one time usually fail at all of them. Bill Bartmann
Avoid email traps http://ping.fm/OKOf1
Daylight Saving Time doesn't get you an extra hour of daylight. It wakes you up an hour earlier.

Great speeches

Great speeches aren't written, they're rewritten. Darren LaCroix

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Anthony Robbins 5 Keys to Thrive

1.       Feed the mind with books, audios and videos -- positive attitude and tools.

2.       Feed and strengthen the body.

3.       Find an inspiring role model,

4.       Get a plan and take massive action.

5.       Feet the spirit

http://tonyrobbinstraining.com/378/5-keys-to-thrive/



4 Investments

Mark Joyner (Simpoleology.com) says there are 4 things you need to invest in

 

1. Your self-esteem

2, Your business

3. Your relationships

4. Your energy (health)

Something special for Thanksgiving http://ping.fm/490B2
Progress equals happiness -- Anthony Robbins

Monday, November 16, 2009

How are you at multitasking? http://ping.fm/lnMQu

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Tools are not solutions. They cannot make decisions for you.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

If you see something happen twice, assume s pattern.
400 years ago today Galileo first pointed a telescope at the sky. Happy anniversary!

Friday, November 13, 2009

In Athens Saturday for a Toastmasters conference.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Do you ever need to return something? http://ping.fm/RhA2Z

Friday, November 6, 2009

There are 3 kinds of people in the world,,,those who can count and those who can't.

Assignment Guide: Table Topics Master

Follow the comments and suggestions in your Communications and Leadership Program" Manual.

It is your responsibility to call on people in attendance who are not formally included in the published agenda. Remember, only guests are allowed to vollunteer. Members are always expected to be ready to speak on any topic.

Unless previously structured by the VP of Education or by the theme of the day, this is a free format part of the club program. Be creative whenever possible. If you have trouble putting together your portion of the program, contact the VP of Education for ideas.

As Table Topics Master. You have a unique opportunity and responsibility to spark the members interest and enthusiasm by providing a program which offers each individual called upon the chance to speak. The ideas listed below are examples. In principle, questions that call for specific expertise should be avoided unless you know the person has such expertise.
When you call on members, be sure to first call on members who do not have a role in the meeting. From there, go onto minor roles. Speakers, evaluators, and the Toastmaster should be last if called upon at all. Explain to guests that they will not be called upon to participate unless they volunteer but give them an opportunity to do sof if time permits.
Finally, members of the club are NEVER asked to volunteer. The purpose of Table Topics is to teach us to think on our feet. While the table Topics Master may select easier subhjects for newer members, there should be no volunteers. The element of surprise is important for all members in improving their skill. Members are expected to be able to talk about any and every subject at any time. If you don't know anythiong about a subject, the job is to smoothly transition ionto a subject you can handle.
"Round Robin" - The Table Topics Master gives a noun to the first participant who expounds on that subject for a minute. At the end of the minute, time is called and the Table Topics Master selects the next participant to continue the story.

"Mini Debate" Present a question and assign individuals to give a pro and a con view. A summary could be added or a conclusion of the members presented by another participant.

"Man in the Street Interview".

General discussion of club performance.

Current events.

Describe significant events in your life such as how I met my mate, my most frightening moment, the best time I ever had, or my most memorable occasion.

The participant has just been given an award and someone yells "Speech Speech!"

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Back to standard time...my sleep cycle is messed up but the dog's poop cycle is unchanged. The park doesn't require leashes after 5 PM :)

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Help the law of attraction. http://ping.fm/tiX4u

Friday, October 30, 2009

Did you know Perkins Observatory is in Wikipedia? See http://ping.fm/4QGPl

Thursday, October 22, 2009

A Toastmasters evening @ Moundbuilders open house in Granville.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Joel Comm 5 Ways to Profit via Internet

  1. Use Google Adsense to monetize blogs.
  2. Information products via the funnel
    1. Free front end
    2. Low price intro products
    3. Midrange course ($297)
    4. High end
  3. Affiliate programs at AMazon, Clickbank, Aweber etc.
  4. Membership programs
  5. Coaching programs
How can Facebook help your causes? http://ping.fm/yyngE

Sunday, October 18, 2009

There is no failure, only feedback.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

The best way to have a good idea is to have lots of ideas. -Linus Pauling
At Perkins Observatory for New Vistas in Astronomy. Tonite -- Gamma Ray bursts -- starts at 8 pm.
A good idea doesn't need a pedigree.
Looking for ideas Green Day at the Dublin Entrepreneural Center.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

A perfect autumn day for checking out fall foliage. Time for a walk in the park!
Weekly book review: Getting Things Done by David Allen http://ping.fm/MLa61

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Under clear skies for the astronomy club at Perkins Observatory
Life should not be about stress. Tonight's goal: an evening of astronomy a Perkins Observatory.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Watching NASA TV live for planned collision w Moon right now http://ping.fm/FsN9j

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Still time for those in Central Ohio to attend tonight's Central Ohio Advanced M meeting: Whetsone library at 7 PM. Home in time for CSI.
Set a goal to make work optional. Brian Tracy
Youtube Video of those attending Delaware planning meeting on construction near Perkins Observatory. http://ping.fm/tfeRK
More on development around Perkins Observatory http://ping.fm/x8keS

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

@Delaware council mtg to hear discussion of development around Perkins. Big supportive group here.
Will be @ Delaware Planning Comm, 1 S Sandusky St, Delaware @ 7 PM in support of Perkins Observatory.
Thinking about the use of sanity checks on my blog. http://ping.fm/wCEnw
Unsuccessful people do what shows up. Successful people have a plan.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Channel 4 coverage of development around Perkins Observatory. http://ping.fm/Ro7so
Notes on the development Perkins Observatory is concerned with can be found here: http://ping.fm/4Y5FG
Success doesn't come by UPS or Federal Expess. Bill Bartmann http://ping.fm/ylYml
Enjoying the Moon in morning twilight

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Don't make big changes for small reasons.
This week's book: On Writing by Stephen King http://ping.fm/tj67x

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Perkins Observatory is threatened by development. For detals see: http://ping.fm/UPxgy
http://ping.fm/d8ZDi?gid=161540979387
I just won area 26 Table Topics Contest and Anita Emerson won humorous speech http://ping.fm/2kleP
Count each day a blessing. My current count 22789. Count yours at http://ping.fm/FYPpe

Friday, October 2, 2009

Change small and change often. Make continuous improvement work for you.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Never leave the scne of a decision without tahing some action to implement it -- Anthony Robbins. My thoughts at http://ping.fm/k4T1F

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Blogging about building an intellecual toolkit. http://ping.fm/kl7uP

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Just peeked outside to see the Moon just a degree or North of Jupiter. Very pretty.
Efficiency and productivity are two different things.

Monday, September 28, 2009

More thinking about Toastmasters evaluations. Will be at Northstar Toastmaters this evening. http://ping.fm/1hVKF

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Spectacular performance is always preced by unspectacular preparation.
Toastmasters Blog Article: What all Members Should Do at Meetings http://ping.fm/ecPuu
This week's book suggestion : Life's Greatest Lessons: 20 Things That Matter by Hal Urban http://ping.fm/BCjDq

Saturday, September 26, 2009

@Home updating connections and connecting to more networks than I knew I had.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Key to Success

Successful speakers look for new audiences, not new material.

Successful merchants seek new customers for identical merchandise.

 

One key to success is to perfect your product, your service, or your message and find new people to provide it to. Even merchants that depend on repeat business depend more on product loyalty than innovation.

 

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Brendon Burchard on How Experts Beat the Economy

  1. Never lower your prices, just add value.
  2. To add more value, ask the following questions:
    1. What frustrates you most in your life / business right now?
    2. What are you trying to achieve specifically this year?
    3. What do you think it will take to double your business / happiness this year?
    4. What have you tried already?
  3. Get very personal in marketing. Put up a video or audio.
  4. Increase the value of your campaign.
  5. Deliver at home, right now, for a low starting cost.
  6. Offer unbeatable guarantees to build trust.
  7. Offer onues that drive people over the buying decision.

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Moon at Night

The past several nights have had mild weather, so I opened the bedroom window and set the blind so air could pass through. This gave me a view of the eastern sky over my neighbor's house as I lay in bed each night.  My erratic sleeping habits had me glancing through the blind. The first couple days, the nearly full Moon sent light pouring into the room, but each day the waning Moon grew thinner and reached the sweet spot later. How many astronomy professors have given how many students an observing assignment like this?

Sunday, September 13, 2009

46 Questions to Help Innovators Know What Customers Want

46 Questions to Help Innovators Know What Customers Want


Every innovator should read Anthony Ulwick's book, What Customers Want: Using Outcome-Driven Innovation to Create Breakthrough Products and Services, because he makes it very easy to questionate-to-innovate. SolutionPeople purchased 50 copies of the book and made it required reading before an innovation facilitation for a consumer products company. The facilitation agenda was simple; we used innovative techniques and tools to answer the 46 questions addressed in the book! The facilitation was a huge success as we produced an Idea Bank with thousands of ideas and over 100 useful solutions.

Question Bank

(created from the Table of Contents in Ulwick's Book)

Formulating Innovation Strategy

1. Who Is the Target of Value Creation and How Should It Be Achieved?

2. What Types of Innovation Are Possible?

3. What Growth Options Should Be Considered?

4. Where in the Value Chain Should We Focus to Maximize Value Creation?

5. How Do We Handle Multiple Constituents with Potentially Conflicting Outcomes?


Capture Customer Inputs

6. Why Should Companies Gather Customer Requirements?

7. What Three Issues Plague the Requirements-Gathering Process?

8. What Types of Data Do Companies Commonly Collect from Customers?

9. What Customer Inputs Are Needed to Master the Innovation Process?

10. What Methods Should Companies Use to Obtain the Necessary Information?

11. How Do You Know Which of the Three Types of Inputs You Should Capture?



Identifying Opportunities

12. What Is an Opportunity?

13. What Three Common Mistakes Are Made in Prioritizing Opportunities?

14. How Should Companies Prioritize Opportunities?

15. How Do You Identify Underserved and Overserved Markets?

16. How Dos Value Migrate Over Time?

17. What Implications Does the Outcome-Driven Paradigm Have for Competitive Analysis?



Segmenting the Market

18. What Is the Purpose of Segmentation?

19. How Has the Practice of Segmentation Evolved?

20. Why Are Traditional Segmentation Methods Ineffective for Purposes of Innovation?

21. What Is Different About Outcome-Based Segmentation?

22. How Is Outcome-Based Segmentation Performed?

23. How Does Outcome-Based Segmentation Address Development and Marketing Challenges?

24. How Is Job-Based Segmentation Different, and When Should it Be Used?



Targeting Opportunities for Growth

25. What Is Different About Targeting for Innovation?

26. What Types of Broad-Market Opportunities Are Likely to Be Attractive?

27. What Segment-Specific Targeting Strategies Are Effective?

28. How Does a Targeting Strategy Result in a Unique and Valued Competitive Position?

29. Why Do Companies Fail to Target Key Opportunities?



Positioning Current Products

30. Why Does Messaging Often Fail to Tout a Product's True Value?

31. What Are the Prerequisites for an Effective Messaging Strategy?

32. What Messaging Will Be Most Effective?

33. Should a Company Message Along an Emotional or Functional Dimension?

34. How Does the Sales Force Have Immediate Impact on Revenue Generation?

35. What Is the Advantage of an Outcome-Based brand?



Prioritizing Projects in the Development Pipeline

36. What Issues Do Companies Face When Prioritizing Projects?

37. What Method Is Used to Identify the Winners and the Losers?

38. Which Efforts Should Get Top Priority?

39. What Other Factors Affect Project Prioritization?



Devising Breakthrough Concepts

40. Why Does Traditional Brainstorming Often Fail to Produce Breakthrough Ideas?

41. How Are Breakthrough Concepts Successfully Generated?

42. What Are the Mechanics Behind Focused Brainstorming?

43. Why Do Traditional Concept-Evaluation Methods Fail?

44. How Is the Customer Scorecard Used to Evaluate Product and Service Concepts?

45. How Are These Methods Applied in Practice?

46. What Is the Role of R&D in the Innovation Process?

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Tips to staying safe online

http://media.4at5.net/email_domains/wet/49218/images/headersSafeTips.jpg

http://media.4at5.net/email_domains/wet/49218/images/transparentSpacer.gif

  1. Be skeptical. Treat every social networking link with caution - especially the ones promising a link to a video.
  2. Guard your personal information. Use privacy settings to restrict who can see your sensitive information, or consider omitting all personal information from your profile.
  3. Choose passwords wisely. Use different passwords for each of your sites; select a randomized combination of numbers and letters.
  4. Have antivirus and antispyware protection. Even if you think you're not infected, scan your machine for dormant viruses with a free scan; and protect your PC with an Internet security suite that includes antivirus, antispyware, and firewall technologies.
  5. Always install updates. If you're already using antimalware software, be sure to install updates which include the latest malware definitions; do the same with updates to your operating system.
  6. Remain vigilant. Malware authors are continually writing new programs to avoid detection, so pay close attention to suspicious behavior.

In order to assure that you receive our emails, please add us to your address book: webroot@webroot-email.com

Saturday, September 5, 2009

How We Know Things

Perkins Observatory does public programs most Friday nights. At the program September 4, 2009, one guest heard us sat that the Sun was about five billion years old and had about five billion more years to go. Then she asked "How do you know that?" This is one of those "onion" questions -- the answer has  many layers and most of them can make you cry. Let's explore a few.

 

At the most fundamental layer, we don't know that. We don't know anything and our definition of science says we will never know anything. In the same sense, logic can tell you an argument is valid but will never prove it is true. Let's put that aside and ask the question less rigorously. What leads us t believe what we accept as true?

 

In a mystery novel, detectives compare the story of each witness to the others and to evidence on hand. If the collected information isn't consistent, then something is wrong somewhere. In a similar way, scientists compare ideas and observations looking for inconsistencies. If none are found over time, the ideas slowly gain acceptance. Contradictions force ideas to be reconsidered. Let's look at various ways we estimate the life cycle of the Sun as an example.

 

If we view the Sun as an engine which fuels itself by converting hydrogen to helium, we can estimate both age and life expectancy by comparing available and consumed fuel. If a car has 7 gallons left in a 12 gallon tank and the last gallon allowed the car to travel 30 miles, we can estimate that the car was fueled about 150 miles ago and has about 210 miles before it will need refueling. When we compare hydrogen o helium in the Sun, we get the numbers usually offered.

 

We get the model of how fast stars turn hydrogen into helium by collecting data about many different stars. We don' have the patience to spend hundreds of years watching a tree go from seed to scrap, but if we look at many trees in a forest we can find representative samples of various ages. From that, we can test our model and see how individual trees ft into it. You do the same sort of thing when you estimate a person's age by comparing observations about them to people whose age you think you know. Since the Sun can't be older than the universe itself, we can use the same method to define an upper age limit.

 

Finally, we can check what we believe about the Sun to other things we believe to see if the stories compare to one another. Since life on Earth depends on many things including sunlight, we look to see if the history of life on Earth is younger than the age we give to the Sun. This is equivalent to detectives comparing one story to another. No one story has all the facts, but the stories will either support or contradict each other. Cosmology, physics, chemistry, biology and other branches of science each tell a story about the universe around us. Science compares or interpretations of each story to related stories before we accept something as true.

 

(c) 2009  by Jay Elkes

Email: jayelkes@gmail.com 

Twitter: @JayElkes

http://www.linkedin.com/in/jayelkes