Technology entrepreneur Joi Ito shares some brief but poignant thoughts about the unique opportunities for innovation during a recession.
[via Media Futurist]
April 24, 2009
Technology entrepreneur Joi Ito shares some brief but poignant thoughts about the unique opportunities for innovation during a recession.
[via Media Futurist]
Relevant to Joi’s discussion, this post @ http://www.simonmainwaring.com/blog
Re-cession. We’re in the middle of it and people are talking about their jobs, livelihood and future. According to the Huffington Post, jobless claims rose in 46 states this week, with California posting it’s highest jobless rate in three decades (11.2%). What’s more, while the economy tanks technology continues to change industries and the way we do business under our feet. As a result many people will not be absorbed back into those industries once the economy recovers because they will have moved on.
I had a conversation about this with a smart creative person. He wondered what would happen if he lost his job, had to start again, if his industry had fundamentally changed?
Instead of panicking, he did something very smart (not surprisingly). He put the situation to good use by asking himself three questions.
1. What do I like to do? When you are forced to change direction you ask yourself some pretty fundamental questions. How long has it been since ‘what you like to do’ has been important to anyone, including yourself? In short, he Re-considered.
2. What do I offer? Business BS, image management, false modesty and self-delusion aside, what do I consistently offer the people I work with? So he Re-viewed.
3. Who do I want to be? What do I want to contribute? What issues, business leaders or companies do I respect? What would I be proud to leave behind? (Ok, that’s four questions in one.) He Re-invented himself.
As painful as change is, he recognized that it also offers enormous opportunity to those willing to act on the answers to these questions. It’s simply a matter of transferring strengths you have in one area to an area where they don’t currently exist. In short, Re-branding yourself. In doing so you stay relevant and become part of the process of change rather than a casualty of it. Not to mention, inspire others.
It’s like being in your early twenties again (God forbid!), only you’re a little wiser (hopefully), and have some skills under your belt. All you need now is the same bravado that inhabited you then. That’s essential as business and industries are going to keep on changing faster than ever. In fact our future as creative people depends on our ability to Re-act by diversifying, adapting and staying consistently entrepreneurial.
These three questions have the power to transform a difficult period to one of Re-newal. Sure, it’s scary and hard work. But the next generation of industries, companies and wealth are being created right now. Whether it’s biotechnology, energy efficiency, environmental protection, sustainable design or something someone hasn’t even thought of yet, there are businesses being born every day that need the skills we already have. The new White House administration has ushered in an era of dramatic, industry-wide Re-invention (auto, financial, energy) and we can play a role. In doing so, you have all the fun of creating something new (including you).
April 26th, 2009 at 7:19 pm