Monday 1 December 2008


Seven Lessons for Radical Innovators

In his Edge Economy column at Harvard Business Blogs, Umair Haque asks the question: how did the "unlikeliest of candidates" shatter Washington's toxic, bitter 20th century status quo to win the 2008 US election? Umair's analysis is as follows:

"The most critical part of the story is the organization Obama built: a new kind of political organization for the 21st century. It differs from yesterday's political organizations as much as Google and Threadless differ from yesterday's corporations: all are a tiny handful of truly new, 21st century institutions in the world today."

According to Umair, Director of the Havas Media Lab, Obama succeeded through the power of new DNA: new rules for new kinds of institutions. Among these new rules are:

  • Self-organized design: A tightly controlled core surrounded by self-organizing cells of volunteers, donors, contributors, and other participants at the fuzzy edges. In contrast, McCain's organization was trapped by a stifling 20th century, command-and-control paradigm.
  • Elasticity of resilience: Resilience is not about maximizing outputs or minimizing inputs, but the capacity to endure external turbulence and threats by growing, augmenting, or strengthening resources.
  • Minimal strategy: Because it was almost entirely with strategy in its most naïve sense - such as gamesmanship, positioning, triangulation - the campaign never lost its deeply-lived sense of purpose or diluted its credibility.
  • Maximal Purpose: The 21st century is about changing the world. What does "yes we can" really mean? Obama's goal wasn't simply to win an election, garner votes, or run a great campaign. It was larger and more urgent: to change the world.

    Bigness of purpose is what separates 20th century and 21st century organizations: yesterday, we built huge corporations to do tiny, incremental things - tomorrow, we must build small organizations that can do tremendously massive things.

    And to do that, you must strive to change the world radically for the better - and always believe that yes, you can. You must maximize, stretch, and utterly explode your sense of purpose.
  • True Power: The power many corporations wield is thin power: the power to instill fear and inculcate greed. True power is what Obama has learned wield: the power to inspire, lead, and engender belief. You can beat people into subjugation - but you can never command their loyalty, creativity, or passion. Thick power is true power: it's radically more durable, less costly, and more intense.
  • Nothing is more asymmetrical than an idea: orget about a short-lived, often meaningless "competitive advantage". It's a concept built for the 20th century. In the 21st century, there is nothing more asymmetrical - more disruptive, more revolutionary, or more innovative -- than the world-changing power of an ideal.
Bigness of purpose is what separates 20th century and 21st century organizations: yesterday, we built huge corporations to do tiny, incremental things - tomorrow, we must build small organizations that can do tremendously massive things.

This last lesson is the starting point for tomorrow's radical innovators, believes Umair, because it's the thread that knits the others together. And it's where you should start if you want to use these rules to start building 21st century institutions - whether businesses, non-profits, social enterprises, or political campaigns.

Read the article in full.

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Tuesday 28 October 2008


Google Project 10 to 100: Our Entry

"How soon will we get the $10 million from Google, Dad?", asked one of our WeDo Marriage heiresses a few days ago. No until after Christmas, sadly. Last week we submitted our entry to Google's Project 10 to 100, "a call for ideas to change the world by helping as many people as possible."

Check out the details of our entry and get ready to vote come 27 January 2008.

Here are the main questions asked by Google Project 10 to 100 and our responses to them.

Google: Describe your idea on one sentence.

A marriage to love, a love to last: a better and brighter future for today’s couples and for the children and communities of tomorrow worldwide.

Google: Describe your idea in more detail:

WeDo Marriage empowers couples to design, exchange and sustain personalised, mutual commitments and goals based on contract law rather than family law. Without imposing their vision of marriage on society as a whole, and working with professionally accredited service providers they can build Marriage Contracts that reflect their Love, Values and Aspirations. As happy, fulfilled and productive partners and parents they are equipped to make positive and measureable contributions to their community, locally and globally, now and in the future.

Google: What problem or issue does your idea address?

Experts agree that across the western world over the past thirty years marriage rates have halved and are now at a record low. By the 2030s new marriages will be extinct and most couples will have no legal relationship with each other, and most children will have a legal relationship with only one of their two biological parents. We see the terminal decline of marriage not as a demand problem but a supply problem. Most people want to get married; they just don’t want the only version of marriage currently available from the only people who currently supply it: the state family law system.

Google: If your idea were to become a reality, who would benefit the most and how?

WeDo Marriages make happy families; happy families make happy societies; happy societies make a happy world. WeDo families have the purpose, commitment and motivation to invest in a sustainable world, the world they pass on to what is most precious to them: their children. They have the conviction and drive to protect cultural heritage; protect the environment; to prioritise renewable energy solutions and to build fairer, safer and more caring and stable interdependent societies. They have the passion to enrich their children's future on this wonderful planet.

Google: Describe the optimal outcome should your idea be selected and successfully implemented. How would you measure it?

More Love in the world. More individuals entering into relationships in search of enduring love, and more couples advancing into commitment-based, longer-term relationships. More parents having children, reducing demographic imbalance; more children nurtured by two parents, enhancing child outcomes in terms of personal development and educational performance. And a society with more net contributors to the common good.

Over 100,000 ideas were submitted. So our odds at WeDo Marriage of making the top 100 ideas from which the ten winners will be picked are 1,000-to-1. Better odds than we've ever had before ;-)

Go here to learn more about the project, watch a video, and sign up for a notification to select your favourite idea when voting beings in January next. The prize fund will come in handy in the New Year ... when cash is a bit short after Christmas.


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Saturday 4 October 2008


Seth Godin on selling new ideas

How to Sell a Book (or Any New Idea) (step 1 is the hard part) is the title of an excellent eight-slide presentation from Seth Godin on ChangeThis.

Here's a sample quote ...


My friend Fred has a new book coming out and he was trolling around for new marketing ideas. I think he’d be surprised at this:

Sell one.

Find one person who trusts you and sell him a copy. Does he love it? Is he excited about it? Excited enough to tell ten friends because it helps them, not because it helps you?

More from Seth:

Tribes grow when people recruit other people. That’s how ideas spread as well. They don’t do it for you, of course. They do it for each other. Leadership is the art of giving people a platform for spreading ideas that work. If Fred’s book spreads, then he’s off to a great start. If it doesn’t, he needs a new book.

This bit is important:

You don’t get to take step 2 if you can’t do step 1.

And finally - you'll need to view the slides to get this:

What’s hard now is breaking the rules. Successful people are the ones who are good at this.

Go download How to Sell a Book (or Any New Idea) (step 1 is the hard part).

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Lessons for life and business

From Rajesh Setty, serial entrepreneur, investor, author and blogger: Mini Sagas - Bite Sized Lessons for Life and Business. It features 15 mini photo-essays (photographs with stories each of exactly 50 words). Here is the link.

If I had to pick a favourite ...


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What advertising can't fix

A Reuters report Church of England law relaxes wedding rules reveals that a new British law came into force in October making it easier for couples to get married in Anglican churches.

Previously, couples could only get married in a church if they worshipped there regularly, lived in the parish or applied for a special license. Under the new rules, couples can choose to get married in a place with a special connection for themselves or their families.

According to Stephen Cottrell, the Bishop of Reading: "Getting married in church just got easier. People who are serious about getting married naturally want a marriage ceremony and a setting which is equally serious." This report story reminded me of a recent blog post from marketing guru Seth Godin called What advertising can't fix and the following cartoon from Tom Fisburne.

With due respect to the good Bishop, marriage rates in Britain are at the lowest level since records began. According to the Office for National Statistics, the number of people choosing to sign up for a state marriage fell in 2005 by 10 per cent, producing the lowest marriage rates since they were first calculated in 1862. In the words of British think-tank Civitas:

It is not too extreme to talk about the death of marriage.

The Church of Enlgand deserves credit for relaxing rules that some of its flock may have found cumersome, but it does not change the fact that state marriage is a contaminated brand managed by a self-serving, state-backed monopoly known as the 'family law system'. Marriage rates have halved since the family system took over state marriage in the mid 1970s; according to the UK Independent, the last state marriage will be performed sometime in 2033

The terminal decline of state marriage is not a demand problem but a supply problem; it's not that people don't want to get married (every opinion poll and survey says most do); it's that there is currently only one type of marriage currently available (and it's a rubbish product). The wonder is not that fewer people are signing their names to the state marriage contract; it's that so many are still doing so. But, as the statistics show, it won't be for a whole lot longer.

Few would disagree with Bishop Stephen Cottrell when he says that people who are serious about getting married "want a marriage ceremony and a setting which is equally serious". But should they also not want a marriage contract that is serious: a contract they have choosen for themselves, not a non-negotiable deal imposed by the state? A contract for two, commited people - and without a state-backed monopoly as a dominant and abusive third partner.

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Branding with Schley and Nichols

Why Johnny Can’t Brand: Rediscovering the Lost Art of the Big Idea is a book from Bill Schley and Carl Nichols Jr that offers insights into how to create what they call a Dominant Selling Idea (DSI) and build a #1 brand.


According to the two authors a product or service needs to satisfy the 'Five Selling Ingredients' to become a DSI.

  • Superlative - is best in class - better than the competition. Promise me something nobody else does.
  • Important - offers something that really matters. Something I really want or would be in the market for if I knew about it.
  • Believable - offers a logical reason, has credibility.
  • Memorable - has an emotional hook that sticks until purchase time. Do you have something not only that I need - but what I want.
  • Tangible - offers something real. Customers trust it because they’ve experienced it and it performed as promised. Must perform in a way that’s totally aligned and consistent with all of your claims.


You can download a PDF copy of the Introduction and Chapter One from the DavidID website.


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