Information about me

Chicago, Illinois, United States
I have worked to improve professionals and international interaction centers since the mid-90s. I have worked with organizations to grow newly formed organizations to 300% their initial inflow of customers and support personnel and helped others reduce the life of open issues by 1/3. I have aided multiple start-up ventures through planning and initial phases of opening their doors. Occasionally, I work with individuals on improving their resumes, interviewing skills and professional presentation. I believe in a core principle that you should always be looking for the next rung above you and guiding somebody to make a change in their lives as they approach where you have been. Kaizen is the Japanese principle of continual improvement, I call mine ‘the next one up’.

Monday, November 20, 2006

ORFALEA CENTER FOR GLOBAL & INTERNATIONAL STUDIES SPECIAL EVENT: Former President William J. Clinton and Entrepreneur Paul Orfalea

For those that are interested, this was a rather interesting conversation on globalization and you can watch the web-cast as a replay. This is a good conversation on many things about global business and U.S. relationships. While I try not to be political here, had this conversation occurred prior to his campaigns, I would have voted for him... Ofcourse, President Clinton would not have had the knowledge or foresight to discuss these topics without this experience.

The best I can do here is paraphrase him until I am in a place where I can rewatch the broadcast but the statement was something to the effect: Do not overlook philosophic thought and possible facts due to your blind grasp on your ideology. Thank you, thank you, thank you for somebody in the political world finally saying it is OK to change your position if the facts in front of you have changed. This should hold for most things in your life as well.

All professionals should be encouraged to change their minds and be able to relay the reasoning for such a decision. An unchanged position submerges an individual to far into their ideology to think clearly about advancement. While changing your mind is a good think, you must be able to provide the reasoning for it as well. If you can not provide a process logic to reach the new destination the philosophical logic is not sound and a lack of supporting evidence makes your perspective easily dismissable as ideological fodder instead of deductively reasoned logic.

No comments: