Thursday 16 May 2013

Don't slam Mike Jeffries of Abercrombie and Fitch

Unfortunately Mike isn't Robinson Crusoe here. Work for any media or publishing house. In fact have a look around most commercial enterprises and note how many people who don't fit a certain stereotype actually have jobs! When you are the boss you say who gets hired and the chances are people want attractive people to represent their brand. Not just that people want buyers all the time to be in a certain segment. I remember one editor told me she wasn't going to come along and watch the readers of her magazine talk about the issues any more as she liked to be in a bubble and think they all looked and acted like the gorgeous people, rather than the real people. Another time we actually published a 'real' look magazine. Guess what? No one bought it. So don't slam the CEO of Abercrombie - he has a lot of company (unfortunately) with him.

Friday 3 May 2013

27 Stunning Views of Architecture Photography


Photography is a very influential medium and a very challenging one to master too. Amazing photos not only show the beauty of photography,but they tell stories, awake feelings and manage to share with the audience the emotions a photographer experienced while shooting the picture.
Architectural photography can be broadly considered to include views of the exteriors and interiors of domestic, commercial, religious, institutional, and engineering structures, as well as records of the evolution of towns and cities. Today, we are showing you 27 Stunning Examples Of Architecture Photography.
Bay Bridge by Evgeny Vasenev
Bay Bridge by Evgeny Vasenev
Benny at work by abandon
Benny at work by abandon
Blade with Rays by KPK
Blade with Rays by KPK
Bridge by Alexander Martirosov
Bridge the light by Alisdair Miller
Bridge the light by Alisdair Miller
Cloud Gate and the City by Ali Erturk
Cloud Gate and the City by Ali Erturk
Colorful of Marina by Adhitiya Wibhawa
Colorful of Marina by Adhitiya Wibhawa
contemporary haunting by dorus
contemporary haunting by dorus
Defense color lines by Marc Pelissier
Defense color lines by Marc Pelissier
Desert Light by ali rasit
Desert Light by ali rasit
Ericsson Kista, Stockholm by Mattias Hamrén
Ericsson Kista, Stockholm by Mattias Hamrén
Fly over by Marc Pelissier
Fly over by Marc Pelissier
Keep it clean by Lars Johnson
Keep it clean by Lars Johnson
Leap of Faith by Jeff Lewis
Leap of Faith by Jeff Lewis
Modern Bastille day by Marc Pelissier
Modern Bastille day by Marc Pelissier
Myth by Ali Erturk
Myth by Ali Erturk
NYC Skyline by Fiorenzo Carozzi
NYC Skyline by Fiorenzo Carozzi
On the other side of the mirror by woda
On the other side of the mirror by woda
sailing at night by spreephoto
sailing at night by spreephoto.de
Singapore, the city of lights by Sebastian Kisworo
Singapore, the city of lights by Sebastian Kisworo
skyward by Zuhsalu
skyward by zuhsalu
The City of the Pharaohs (CAC) by Rafael Clares
The City of the Pharaohs (CAC) by Rafael Clares
The diamond by Marc Pelissier
The diamond by Marc Pelissier
The Embracement by Gabriel Buse
The Embracement by Gabriel Buse
The Forum by Darrell Godliman
The Forum by Darrell Godliman
The largest clock tower in the world by yazeed alshehri
The largest clock tower in the world by yazeed alshehri
The reflex by Fabio Ornago
The reflex by Fabio Ornago

Thursday 2 May 2013

A Positive Post....

Not sure about you but I am thinking I need to occasionally place a good news story among the other posts. As a huge follower of news - there is often only bad news to be had so I am going hunting for great and uplifting news stories.......Here is one. 

Confident: Neurosurgeon Charlie Teo. Photo: Quentin Jones
US beckons for man with a plan to cure brain cancer



World-renowned Australian neurosurgeon Charlie Teo has announced a 10-year global plan to find a cure for brain cancer.
He heads to Washington DC next week to address the US Congress and push for brain cancer research as part of President Barack Obama's initiative to map the human brain.
In 2010, Associate Professor Teo, the pioneer of minimally invasive keyhole surgery techniques, founded the Cure for Life Foundation, which is now the largest funder of brain cancer research in Australia.
On Thursday, he announced the intention of Cure for Life's Global Brain Exchange (GBX) to collaborate with US organisations to find a cure for brain cancer by 2023.
Professor Teo said GBX aims to sign agreements with US research bodies by the end of the year.
On May 10, he will address the US Congress as part of Brain Mapping Day.
''My job there is to impress upon them the need to fund brain cancer when they're funding brain mapping,'' he said.
''It kills more kids than any other cancer and has more financial impact on America and every other country than any other cancer.''
Professor Teo said Australian research institutions are working collaboratively on such work. He said the 10-year timeframe to cure brain cancer is realistic.
''When I was a medical student we were taught that 90 per cent of people with leukaemia would die and now we're taught exactly the opposite.''
About 1200 Australians die from brain cancer each year.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/us-beckons-for-man-with-a-plan-to-cure-brain-cancer-20130502-2ivr2.html#ixzz2SAx2ZZYo

Paradox

http://brianoldham.4ormat.com

Wednesday 1 May 2013

Ten Secrets that Made Steve Jobs' Presentations the World's Best And How You Can Use Them to Astound Your Audience - courtesy of SmartDraw.


Genius. Legend. Visionary.
These are but a few of the superlatives that have been used to describe the late, great Steve Jobs.
But beyond his business acumen, the man behind Apple®computers and Pixar Animation Studios was perhaps the greatest keynote speaker of our time. There are more than 57,000 links to his presentations on YouTube.
What made his presentations so amazing that people all over the world want to see them? More importantly, how can the rest of us learn from Steve to inspire our audiences the way he did?
In his excellent book, The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to Be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience, Carmine Gallo takes us behind the scenes and offers Steve's ten secrets that you can use for presentations that will inform, engage and, yes, astound your audience.

Holy Smokes, Bullets Kill! (And Other Presentation Tips)

Before planning your presentation, according to Carmine Gallo, it is critical to know the question that matters most to your audience: "Why should I care?"1 You need to think about how to inspire your audience. Simply trying to sell them something doesn't cut it. As Carmine writes, "Your widget doesn't inspire me. Show me how your widget improves my life, and you've won me over."2
Here are Steve Jobs' ten secrets for insanely great presentations.3
  1. Plan in analog. Brainstorm in advance of creating your presentation. You can use pen and paper, a whiteboard or, better yet, a mind map.

    Plan in analog

    DO NOT use PowerPoint®to create your presentation—it will be used only in the final step! (More on this later.)
  2. Create Twitter-friendly headlines. Describe your product or service in 140 characters or less. Preferably, a lot less. Steve introduced the MacBook Air®as simply, "The world's thinnest notebook." About the first-generation iPod®, he tweeted: "It's one thousand songs in your pocket."
  3. Introduce the villain. Steve saw a presentation as a three-act play that must tell a story, but what is a story without a hero and a villain? Before he introduced the famous 1984 ad to a group of Apple salespeople, he set the stage, casting "Big Blue" as Goliath. "IBM wants it all," he warned, and defiantly asserted that only Apple stoodin its way. His dramatic moment sent the crowd into frenzy.

    While the villain doesn't have to be a competitor, it must be a common foe that your audience will want to join with you in rallying against. Your product is then revealed as the conquering hero.
  4. Create visual slides. As Carmine writes, "Neuroscientists are finding that the best way to communicate information is through text and pictures, not text alone." As for bullet points, Steve never, ever, used them and neither should you. Carmine has a section in her book titled, "Bullets Kill" that describes why you should avoid using PowerPoint to create your presentation.

    "Think about what happens when you open PowerPoint. A blank-format slide appears that contains space for words—a title and subtitle. This presents a problem. There are very few words in a Steve Jobs presentation. Now think about the first thing you see in the drop-down menu under Format: Bullets & Numbering. This leads to the second problem. There are no bullet points in a Steve Jobs presentation. The software itself forces you to create a template that represents the exact opposite of what you need to speak like Steve!"4

    Take a look at the following comparison of bullet-point slides compared to the same information, presented visually. 
  5. Practice, a lot. Most people read their presentations off of their PowerPoint slides. This is why most presentations are boring. Steve treated every slide as piece of poetry and every presentation as a theatrical event. He wasn't a natural presenter; he worked very hard at it. Rehearse your presentation, toss the script and look at your audience. Practice at making it look effortless.
  6. Obey the ten-minute rule. It's a scientific fact that the brain gets tired after ten minutes. Steve's presentations typically lasted an hour and a half. He would break them up into short intervals of ten minutes or less by interspersing videos, demonstrations, or guest speakers. Don't let your audience get tired or you'll lose them.

    A great way to keep your audience's attention when presenting information is though sequencing, which builds the story within a visual one step at a time, making the information much easier to digest.
  7. Dress up your numbers. We often deal with large numbers or data that an audience can't comprehend without context. Breaking them down and presenting numbers visually can overcome this. Notice how much more effectively the chart below illustrates sales figures as opposed to a matrix of data. 
  8. Reveal a 'holy smokes!' moment. Maya Angelou said, "People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them fe el." Steve Jobs always produced a memorable moment in a pre sentation. When he introduced the MacBook Air, he told his a udience that while everyone had seen manila envelopes floating around the office, what they had never seen was someone pulling a notebook computer out of one—which is precisely what he did. The audience went wild and images of that moment remain emblazoned in people's minds four years later.
  9. Sell dreams, not products. When it looked at the iPod, the world saw a music player. What Steve Jobs saw was a tool to enrich people's lives. Howard Schultz of Starbucks didn't have a passion to sell coffee; his vision was to create an experience: a 'third place' between home and work where people would want to gather. The dream met the customer's need and the product sales took care of itself.
  10. Have fun! When was the last time you saw someone enjoying giving a presentation? Steve Jobs had fun in every keynote. He made jokes at his own expense. While most people give presentations to deliver information, Steve always created an experience that his audience would enjoy and remember. Most importantly, he sold them on becoming a part of his dream, not his product.

Australian magazine article on getting hooked on Salt, Fat and Sugar.... So you think it is only Cigarette companies, think again!


Corporate Fails by Chart.....


based on data from BankruptcyData.com

Full-on video example.....