Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Growing up

I have been writing Wisely Shared for about 6 months now,  sharing some of the great insights gained.  I have recently moved this blog to:  wiselyshared.com

You can also find the most recent updates by following my facebook page:  facebook.com/wiselyshared.

Looking forward to seeing  you.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Would you like to join me to hear Arianna Huffington speak?

Hello!  I have one spare ticket to listen to Arianna Huffington speak.  Her presentations are warm and full of insight.

She is the chair, president, and editor-in-chief of the Huffington Post Media Group, a nationally syndicated columnist, and author of fourteen books.

She has been named to Time Magazine's list of the world’s 100 most influential people and the Forbes Most Powerful Women list.

For your chance to join me to this sold out event:
1. Like my Facebook page (WiselyShared)
2. Include a comment about what makes you thrive.


Monday, July 21, 2014

3 Rich Insights from Guy Kawasaki



Guy Kawasaki is best known as the author of The Art of the Start.  On his visit to Sydney, he pre-warned that he would not bore us by sticking to talking about 10 key points.  Luckily for you I have further condensed this to the juiciest three! The night’s topic was evangelism and Guy was evangelizing about Canva, a graphic design product I use, love and gladly tell friends about. In fact, the pictures which feature in my blog are made using Canva. Looks like after just one night he has turned me into an evangelist too... Clever Mr Kawasaki!

Below is what he has Wisely Shared.


Relate to your customer
An interesting gem applicable to the workplace or in a business.  Don’t try to bedazzle the customer with how smart you are, instead get to know what it’s like to be in their shoes, understand the problem you are solving for them, speak in their language.  Being a remuneration expert, I can sometimes explain things using technical jargon, so clear to me, but I get blank looks as I alienate my audience.  I always try to make things simple, clear and relevant, often by using stories or analogies that help people see the point. The more you personalize a story stronger the connection you will build.

Look beyond a person’s title or pedigree
You know the feeling you get when talking to someone who really understands you (your idea, your product).  The conversation grows naturally, the excitement increases.  Those people can be found in the strangest of places, don't overlook the spark and the possibility in someone by trying to find someone who seems to have the right title . In today’s workplace title and pedigree is being replaced with diverse networks, relate-ability and know how.

Be kind and reciprocate
Guy told us that his early days at Microsoft were fast and not always kind, which meant that he learnt the hard way the price of not being nice to people on the way up, because they became the same people he had to pass on the way down.  Humble pie had to be eaten.  I think being kind is always simpler to start with!
Kawasaki gave us his top tip that he learnt from Richard Branson: kindness is a two way street, when you do a favour for someone, give the person a chance to reciprocate, be specific how the person can give back. This keeps the giving relationship fluid. Richard Branson once polished Guy’s shoes to get him to fly Virgin, many years later Guy polished Richard’s shoes.. What the....?  Must be a man thing!


Do any of these resonate with you?

For more great stories, visit my new blog at wiselyshared.com or like it on Facebook.com/wiselyshared.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

An evening with Cate Blanchett

There’s a distinct expectation that comes with going to see Cate Blanchett. Normally on the stage it’s about a performance that moves you.   Having seen Cate perform at the Sydney Theatre Company in the past, what she shared about herself in conversation with Anne Summers, made it clearer to me why it was so easy to relate and be absorbed by her characters on the stage and screen.
Cate said on the night that theater is a mix of practicality and fantasy, and I think that our own balance comes when we learn to combine both of those worlds.
Cate was delightful to listen to, the audience would ruffle into casual laughter as she spoke, paused to ponder her answers, then had us revelling in every word.
Highlight Notes
Choose your cast carefully
Whether on stage, in life or in your workplace, spend time with people you like being with.  Cate selected her plays not based on the character but because of the people she would work with, and was excited to spend time with, “it’s like having a great dinner party all the time”.  There is an amazing energy generated by being with people you enjoy being with.  Indeed being part of her audience that evening felt a little like being at a delightful dinner party.
Humble yourself to the work at hand
Cate shared a humility with which she approaches each of her roles, and takes a blank canvas approach to learn about each role.  She explores it like an anthropologist.  Cate said “the material reveals the way you should work” and I think that taking a beginner’s mind approach new endeavors gives us the same opportunity. This is poignant to each of us, when we meets a new person, client or start a new role. In the rush to prove that we know what we are talking about or introduce who we are, it is easy to forget to listen, to humble yourself to the person, the work, the team, allowing it to be something other than what you would originally have imagined.
Have a healthy lack of consequence
Sometimes, there are so many pressures to do the right thing that can leave us feeling afraid and ‘frozen’ not to do anything.  Cate’s approach has been to do many things (and not focus so much on the reasons ‘why not’ to do something).

Wisely Shared 
My question for the Wisely Shared audience was "Cate, how do you keep your poise and composure... is it something that comes naturally or can you share how you do it?" . She responded with "do I really seem that way, because I get quite nervous before coming out here. If anything, I focus on the one conversation at a time. It is less nerve wrecking that way". Just lovely. Thank you Cate I will be sure to remember that when I lose my cool.

For more great stories, visit the new blog location at wiselyshared.com and like it on Facebook.com/wiselyshared.

Location: Sydney Theater Company
#ascblanchett


Saturday, May 24, 2014

Wisdom Unpeeled: Chief of SurveyMonkey shares in Sydney

Wisely Shared: Dave Goldberg CEO SurveyMonkey
With SurveyMonkey looking to set up base in Australia,  there is a trend whereby American tech companies are taking a fresh look at the Australian market.

Dave Goldberg (husband of Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg) talked about SurveyMonkey's expansion plans, entrepreneurialism and his 'why'.  This gave me a clear re-frame of my own 'why' for which I am grateful to have attended this talk.





Highlight Notes:

Have a great team
Choose who you work with carefully.   An average product with a great team will have a chance to turnaround. The best product,  with an average team will struggle to get off the ground.  This reminds me of quote by Jim Rohn which says that we are the average of the five people we spend the most time with.

Challenge people to think about things differently 
Don't waste time telling people what they already know. Think beyond common ways of thinking.

Know why you do what you do
Dave shared with us some of his 'why'
  1. Work with people you like (I am hearing this a lot lately where people are making the choice not to work with 'jerks'  and also seeing the converse; the emotional damage of working with people they don't like / respect)
  2. Learn something new each day
  3. Be part of something that makes a big impact
This made me think about my own 'why' and it was a similar three (why re-invent something which resonates)
  1. Work with people I like (it makes work more fun)
  2. Learn (avoid my chronic fear of being bored)
  3. Maximise possibility

 Wisely Shared: "To be a good leader, you need to have conviction in your mission, then people will follow you".

Location:  Hub Sydney



Sunday, May 11, 2014

Be willing to start over

Danielle LaPorte shares her laughter and wisdom

On a Wednesday morning,  the clues to go see Danielle LaPorte were everywhere on social media.  There were whispers of excitement about her visit,  gatherings being moved to accommodate, messages of shock from those who did not know she was coming and had not managed to get a ticket.  I had no idea who Danielle was, but I knew by the ripples that this was going to be good.

The auditorium of the Art Gallery of NSW was buzzing, mostly with women, as the evening started with music which resonating through us.  Then we were taken on a guided meditation, which had me tingling on the inside like a bottle of the finest French champagne.  Finally Danielle was introduced and spoke.  She wasn’t preaching,  she was sharing her soulful experience of the world wrapped in a warm hearted laugh.  Her words were easy to listen to and absorb.

Highlight Notes

  • Think of big personal change as what a caterpillar goes through to become a butterfly.  In the process, whilst in the cocoon,  the caterpillar completely loses itself and becomes soup,  it can’t even define its spine. Slowly it starts to re-form to become a butterfly.  Are you willing not to recognise who you are when you get through the change?  (ie: it is ok to feel lost along the way if you are going through a big change)
  • In starting again, there is the terror of joy,  you can’t go back to the original you.
  • Focus on how you want to feel,  and then align what you do with that. Ask yourself:  What will I do to feel this way?
  • Spend time in your personal and business life with people you like and resonate with, people you would want to have at a dinner party.


Wisely Shared:  “Follow your intuition.... although know that it doesn’t always work [lets out big laugh].”

@daniellelaporte

Location: Art Gallery of NSW

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Dipping into the global experience pool

Panel Event with ANZ Innovyz START International Mentors 
Innovyz START is an incubator based in Sydney and Adelaide.  
Panels like this make me thirsty to work on an international stage again.  In an intimate setting four business leaders shared their stories and experiences.  
The audacious Chris Gabriel (Chairman, Director, Advisor, Mentor and Angel Investor) talked about his experience building businesses in the Middle East and Africa and challenged us to always consider ‘what’s possible?’.
The gracious Jana Matthews (Director Innovyz START) kept the panel in check and shared insight on both the Innovyz and other experiences with start-ups both in Australia and the US.
The clever Jock Gordon designed MenuPad, which allows restaurant customers to order and pay for their food on an iPad.  Originally, no one in the Australian market wanted a bar of it.  So he looked out a little further and restaurants in US and the Middle East loved the idea.  He shared that people were somehow more comfortable ordering 5 slices of cheese with their burger if they can guiltlessly put the instruction directly into MenuPad.  For me it would be extra extra extra parmesan on my pasta,  I always seem to ask them to stop grating before I am ready for them to stop.
And the talented Chris Bernard works with entrepreneurs in the US, leveraging Microsoft’s network, hardware and services.  Chris candidly shared his views of the good, the bad and the ugly of start ups.
Highlight Notes
Know your customer 
Ask what your customer really wants and understand the problem they need solved actually is.  Don’t assume what they want or that you know better.  There is no better research than directly asking your customers what they want. They called this the ‘throw on your jeans and t-shirt’ and ask people what they think of a new product or service.  I think this is something we must always remember,  whether it is internal to a company or external.
Don’t compete on price
Offer an awesome product, with awesome service and amazing user experience  - people will pay for what they value.
Be true to your values, ethics and morals   
If you lose a deal because it is against your moral values, there will be other deals,  but it you compromise your values, ethics or morals, you will always be subject to compromise and people won’t trust you.



Wisely Shared:  “Continue to raise the bar,  and re-invent yourself”
@innovyzstart
Location:  ANZ Offices, Pitt Street