?????

???? (dekimasu) is a Japanese chameleontic? verb whose literal meaning is “to be able”, that shapes itself into different things according to the conversation topic. So, you can use ???? as a synonym of ????(hana shimasu) when asking if somebody does speak some language, or as a substitute for ??????(shitte imasu) to ask if someone knows (how to do) something,

Above all, anyway, dekimasu is a rather interesting management concept because a single word contains the essence of a job or an assignment. ????? (are you able to…?) should be the first question to (self)ask when entering into a new venture or task. It implies defining the target, the path to follow to get there and the means to use. As much as these concepts look simple, they’re often under looked with dire consequences.

Answering the ????? question can save time, money and – sometimes – life.

Monetizing Your Internet Self. The Uros Baric Case

At the beginning of the Internet-Era marketing “experts” led people into thinking that the simple fact of having a website would have made them “rich”. To some extent this legalized scam (turned out into the infamous Internet-bubble) has worked efficiently luring the greed-part of our “self” and still preserves its momentum. ? Time passed but the song remains the same ( ?Led Zeppelin :)) “Make Internet-monies fast!” the “marketers” shout, “go blogging-tweeting-socialnetworking and get rich!” (yes, websites and e-mails aren’t mainstream anymore.) The (booby)trap of this new scam is – again – the focus on empty technologies rather than on ideas, contents and experiences. It worth nothing to have a fancy Facebook page, a zillion of (purchased) “like” or “+1” ? if you ain’t nothing to share. That’s the triumph of Aristophane’s Inferior Argument over the Superior.

Introducing Uros Baric, a young, talented classical guitarist from Slovenja. Baric runs a blog plenty of useful, firts-hand information about playing, (video)recording, digital audio and video workstations, blogging, classical music self promotion, and runs his own recording label too.

What makes Baric’s Internet presence unique is that instead of re-posting someone else’s re-post of something, he shares his own experience. He explores ideas, tries ?it into the wild and ? shares the results: in one sentence, he builds knowledge.

Thanks to his experience, just to provide a couple of examples, I spared a lot of time and money not purchasing a Black Magic Pocket Cinema Camera and, on the contrary, I discovered the brilliant MuseScore notation software. That’s definitely turned me into a “customer”.

So, unless you’re a big company whose drive is, for instance, the price (and maybe even if you are), monetizing the Internet-Self implies time and effort to “give” people your experience and establish “confidence” to create a business relationship. This is nothing new, as Giancarlo Livraghi wrote back in 1997 is his “Price, Service, Trust” quoting Jonatha Moules:

Many of the virtual shop windows highlight massive discounts in colored flashes, apparently in the belief that cut-price offers are a key factor in successful selling …..

Massive discounting is certainly viable online ….. And since only a small proportion of Internet surfers currently use the medium to shop, low prices appear to be a good strategy for drumming up business.

But the assumption that electronic commerce requires less marketing spending, or is only viable through pile-it-high-sell-it-cheap strategies, is to misunderstand the new medium. One of the most important characteristics of electronic commerce is that it re-writes the rules of selling, but not necessarily in the way you expect.

Werner Knetsch, managing director of the German arm of the consultancy Arthur D. Little, argues that many assumptions about selling online have proved wrong.  ?The real challenge is creating a clear value proposition for customers. In marketing, being first and attracting customer “hits” on the web site have not proved as important as being well prepared for your new market. Remember, only 6% of visitors will buy something. ?

Think of it, when you will assess the ? “digital marketing strategy proposal” from the next “Internet Marketing Guru” knocking at your door.

Luddite or Illiterate in the Digital Age?

During a reportage about the lawyers’ daily life (in my parallel life I am a photojournalist) I met a lot of colleagues whose age spawned between mid thirties and mid-fifties. During the sessions, many celebrated the fact that I was using a film camera instead of that “modern” digital crap.

Initially this reaction made me think of these people as a Luddites, scared by technology and modernity. And then I realized I was wrong: they’re not Luddites, they just are ignorant (in the Latin meaning of the word: to not know.) Although these people carry on important assignments requiring training, dedication and high-level personal qualities, they’re just powerless toward the digital age because they refuse to understand it.

Of course they’re able to use a computer, surf the Internet and send emails, but that’s all: to them a computer is like a fridge: a tool do perform some task with no particular need of further analysis.

This is why we – as a society – are the loser in the technology evolution race.

Search Engines And Short Term Memory (or: the digital Alzheimer)

I was looking for the source of a satirical quote I’ve read years ago and, of course, I tried Google as first tool, but with no results. The only option would have been to go back in my garage, open the boxes where I stored the old newspapers, and try to find the line I need.

This lead me to an obvious but never considered conclusion: if something is “just” on paper, is going to be forgotten because “average joe” (including me) doesn’t make the effort to go over the “search” button push, looking for sources not available online.

True, Google did launch the digital library initiative, the Gutenberg Project is releasing the ebook version of the public domain literature classics and there are similar activities elsewhere, but there will always be an off-line knowledge that people don’t care to look for because it is offline.

The final word(s): our memory goes back in the past as deep as a search engine can.

The Rain, Matteo Renzi and His Honour Guard

The picture of the Italian Prime Minister running to avoid being soaked by the rain while the honour guard stood still under the storm is a lapsus showing his lack of self-control: instead of sharing the “fate” of his men, he just cares for himself.

Waiting for the next downpour, it might worth to read Hagakure’s “Lesson of the Storm”, 1 useful not just for handling a rainy day.

 

  1. Fear Not the Rain
    You must understand the “lesson of the storm”.
    If all of a sudden a man is caught by a storm he will run as fast as he can ? to find a place to rest not to get soaked.
    But if he does accept that when it rains one gets wet, he can stay in a calm state of mind even if soaked to the skin.
    This advice works for everything.