Sacrifice

I just found this transcript via Lex Alexander’s blog.  To be honest I don’t have time to read the whole thing right now, but given this quote I feel compelled to make sure that I do later today.

Dad also held steadfastly to a posture that would
seem quite foreign in our day, and which was a bit enigmatic even then. He argued that paying taxes was a great privilege of our national democracy, for it helped us to undergird the common good. Dozens of times during my childhood I heard him say: “It
is no burden for us to sacrifice for the sake of others
less fortunate than ourselves. It is our responsibility.”  It was, he argued, the obligation of people and governments
to take care of those who were in need. “It is no burden to sacrifice for the sake of others,” he said. “No burden to sacrifice.”

Chris Paul Going Pro

Chris Paul, who grew up just down the road from my house, is going pro.  No surprise, although I think he could have used another year to mature.

Physically he’s ready, but I worry about the mental/psychological part.  He didn’t do well under pressure at the end of the season (Hodgeball anyone?), and my gut tells me he may have some tough times at the next level.

On the other hand at the pro level the equivalent of the Hodgeball incident would have been a number 8 on the Sportscenter top 10 for one night and then forgotten.  So maybe getting out of the hypocritical "pure game" that is big-time NCAA basketball will be just what he needs.

Speaking of Julius Hodge, does anyone else think that his Senior Swoon has pushed quite a few underclassmen that might have stayed one more year into the draft?  I mean he literally cost himself millions by staying the extra year and having an off season.  If I’m in one of those guys’ shoes I’m off to the pros faster than you can spell…whatever big-time NCAA basketball players can spell.

M-O-N-E-Y

They Just Couldn’t Pronounce Pfafftown

Wal-Mart has decided not to build a supercenter on the corner of Reynolda Road and Shattalon Road here in the western part of Winston-Salem. 

I think it’s a good call for many reasons, not the least of which is that it would have made getting to my daughter’s soccer field an absolute nightmare on Saturdays.  I know that’s a very selfish reason, but that’s me.

Could it have also been that the suercenter would have been right down the street from Pfafftown, if not in Pfafftown itself, and the execs in Arkansas just couldn’t figure out how to pronounce it? Prize goes to the reader that can spell Pfafftown phonetically.

Small Town Living?

When Celeste and I decided to move to Winston-Salem we felt that we were moving to "small town America." We liked the idea of escaping from the craziness of the DC area, yet still having the amenities we’re used to available to us, namely malls, movies and good schools.

But did we really move to small town America?  Actually no.  I just took a look at the ranking of US Metropolitan Areas from the 2000 Survey, and found that the Triad (W-S, Greensboro, High Point) is ranked 37th in the country by population (1,251,509).  Compared to the DC-Baltimore corridor, ranked 4th with 7,608,070 residents, we definitely downsized but you still can’t say we’re in a small town.  Perception really is everything!

Here’s another surprise: the NC Triangle (Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill) actually ranked behind the Triad at 41st place (1,187,941) and Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill only ranked three in front of the Triad at 34th place (1,499,293).  By 2010 the Triangle should pass the Triad since the growth rate for the Triangle from 1990-2000 was 39% compared to the Triad’s 19% growth.  Add to that all the lost jobs in the Triad from the furniture, textiles, and financial services industries and the Triad will probably fall a bit.

And here’s a fun one to end on: Salt Lake City-Ogden, UT was in 36th place (1,333,914) and they got to host the winter olympics a few years ago.  I say we go for the ’16 Summer Olympics, and put the velodrome in Lewisville.  I’ll even rent my guest room to the highest bidder!

People I Met in Chicago

Okay, if you aren’t interested in business information, competitive intelligence, market research, etc. then I suggest you skip this post.  But if you are interested, read on.

My main responsibility at the SCIP conference in Chicago was working with the exhibitors and sponsors.  Since there were about 60 of them I didn’t get to talk to them all in-depth, but I did get to spend some time with many of them.  Here’s some of the more interesting (to me) services and products I came across:

Traction Software — These guys provide an "enterprise blog", which is essentially a blog on steroids. Jordan Frank is one of the "funner" guys to talk to in the business. 

auroraWDC – Partners (and brothers) Arik & Derek Johnson have a consultancy in Wisconsin and even better (for my purposes) a blog.  Arik’s also a SCIP Board Member, and did me a huge favor by moderating our CI Buyers Panel this year.

ZoomInfo – This firm provides a business person search engine. Just type in a person’s name and all of the relevant web-based info tied to that person comes up.  Great tool if you want to get some basic background on someone you are going to meet, or someone you’re doing a deal with.  Rest assured, however, that there isn’t anything personal about it.  Since it only pulls information from the public web it’s mostly bios, press releases, etc. They had the benefit of having two speakers mention their product, causing a flood of traffic to their booth, but Leah Kirlis, a product manager for the company seemed to handle all the attention without breaking too much of a sweat!

Alot of the big-boys in the industry were present too.  Here’s a quick list:

Thomson Scientific – Had the pleasure of speaking with Todd Cohen for a while and I was happy to learn some of the new developments for them.  Surprise: acquisitions!

Thomson Dialog – We just inked an annual marketing agreement with them, and they had a good presence at the conference.  Definitely a tool that any researcher would love to have.

Standard & Poors – Had a very interesting conversation with James Postell about the need for basic financial education in the business realm, especially with researchers, corporate librarians, etc.  Hopefully something fruitful will come out of it.

Finally, I can’t forget the guys at Proactive Worldwide.  They had the biggest presence at the conference.  Big booth, oxygen bar, water giveaway, two $500 raffles at the general session and an army of staffers on site.  Top it off with David Kalinowski receiving a Catalyst award and I think you could say they hit a home run.

I could go on and on, but I think you get the idea.  Very impressive people from very impressive companies were at the SCIP conference.  I couldn’t list them all, but it was definitely a privilege getting to work with them.  Hopefully I’ll see them all, and many more next April in Orlando.

Sales Intelligence Summit with SCIP Members

MemberpicMe and SCIP members Rob Sidrow (Microsoft, in the middle) and Rob Jeppsen (Primary Intelligence, right) at the Sales Intelligence Summit

Microsoft won the Sales Intelligence award, and Rob Sidrow gave a great presentation based on their case submission. 

I don’t know if copies of the various summit presentations are available, but if you’re interested in any of it let me know and I’ll check it out.  I think that any one of my four readers who are running their own business, or are in any way involved in sales should take a look at this stuff.

Rob Jeppsen was largely responsible for putting the summit together, so if you have any interest in incorporating competitive intelligence into your sales program then I suggest you contact him for more information.  I think he knows EVERYBODY in the business.

Progressive Libertarianism

I’ve often struggled with my political identity.  I agree with some of the Democrats’ agenda and some of the Republicans’ agenda.  And there’s the fact that I harbor a severe distrust of all politicians, no matter what their stripe.  So if pressed I’d say I’m a cynical DemoPublican.

However, after reading this piece by Chris Nolan, I think I come closer to being a Progressive Libertarian than anything else.  Unfortunately that’s the kind of name that gets parties marginalized, or at least confused with a party in Mexico or Italy.