Alan See

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Alan See

Alan See

MindLeaders
Alan See is CMO and Vice President at MindLeaders. His background also includes time as an associate faculty member at the University of Phoenix where he facilitated courses in Marketing and Management Theory. He holds a bachelor of arts in business and an MBA from Abilene Christian University.
  • 0 comments 639 reads
    Posted on 2012-02-01

    Peter Gibbons (employee): The thing is, Bob, it's not that I'm lazy; it's that I just don't care.
    Bob Porter (consultant): Don't...don't care?
    Peter Gibbons: It's a problem of motivation, all right? Now if I work my ass off and Initech ships a few extra units, I don't see another dime, so where's the motivation? And here's something else, Bob. I have eight different bosses right now.
    Bob Slydell: I beg your pardon?
    Peter Gibbons: Eight bosses.
    Bob Slydell: Eight?
    Peter Gibbons: Eight, Bob. So that means that when I make a mistake, I have eight different people coming by to tell me about it. That's my only real motivation is not to be hassled, that and the fear of losing my job. But you know, Bob that will only make someone work just hard enough not to get fired.

    Remember the film Office Space (1999), the satire on corporate culture that had us laughing at the many ways a company's managers humiliated its employees and how its...

  • 0 comments 1,352 reads
    Posted on 2011-08-31

    Beloit College recently released their Mindset List for the class of 2015.  This year’s list contains 75 items that provide a look at the cultural touchstones that have shaped the lives of this fall’s entering class.  Most of this year’s freshmen were born in 1993, just for fun; take a look at the world through their eyes:

     

    • There has always been an Internet ramp onto the information highway.

    • States and Velcro parents have always been requiring that they wear their bike helmets.

    • The only significant labor disputes in their lifetimes have been...

  • 0 comments 1,157 reads
    Posted on 2011-08-17

    Think about what first attracted you to your home.  Your initial impression as you pulled up and viewed the unique landscape and exterior architecture.  Realtor’s call it “curb appeal.”  First impressions are important, as we all remember this warning: "You never get a second chance to make a good first impression."  In fact, psychologists, writers, and seminar leaders caution that we only have from seven to seventeen seconds of interacting with strangers before they form an opinion of us.  With so much at stake have you considered your Twitter curb appeal?  What I’m talking about are the elements...

  • 0 comments 2,003 reads
    Posted on 2011-07-29

    Somewhere in America, a business leader is standing in front of an audience prepared to use the phrase “Our most important asset is our people.” Do you think they really mean it? What about other key assets, for example:

    1. Real estate

    2. Rights to natural resources like oil and gas

    3. Cash reserves

    4. Patents

    5. The corporate brand

    OK, that’s not really a fair question because people are not something that’s owned by the company. Your “people” do walk out the doors of your business every night though. What would happen if they didn’t come back to work the next day? That could create a big mess, because for some organizations when you lose people you lose income. But still, nobody likes to be thought of as an object of production. So does the phrase “people are our competitive advantage” set a little better with you? That one is not so great if you are a not-for profit organization. After...

  • 0 comments 1,781 reads
    Posted on 2011-07-26

    Imagine two people entering a crowded room.  The first person bursts in and announces:

     

    “Here I am!”

    The second person walks in, looks you in the eye and says:

    ...

  • 0 comments 2,394 reads
    Posted on 2011-07-17

    Bell Telephone developed the first automatic switchboard in 1910 after projections indicated that by 1925 every adult woman in America would be needed to staff the manual switchboards that were in place.

    Do you think the new innovative automatic system was an immediate hit with telephone customers and the industry experts?  Well, probably not with everyone:

    “The experts are convinced that the young woman operator – that is, a human brain and set of fingers (and the young woman is found to possess the best combination for the purpose) – is a necessary feature to cope with the great range of selection required in the telephone service.  The automatic telephone exchange does not meet the conditions under which the telephone service has to be operated today.”

    ...
  • 0 comments 2,259 reads
    Posted on 2011-06-28

    I recently read “The Phone Book / The Curious History of the Book That Everyone Uses But No One Reads” by Ammon Shea.

    It was an interesting and fun read.  Did you know that early phone books included detailed directions on how to use the telephone?  For example, a New York City telephone directory from 1885 gave the following instructions:

     

    To Call

     ...

  • 0 comments 837 reads
    Posted on 2011-06-09

    “Give it to me in plain English.” My children are grown now; but when they were teenagers I can still remember a few conversations that started with that phrase.  As a parent, I just wanted a straight explanation.  Come to think of it, as a public citizen and consumer I welcome communications that are clear, simple and jargon-free.  That’s why I find it interesting that the federal government is rolling out the Plain Writing Act.  The term ‘plain writing’ means writing that the intended audience can readily understand and use because that writing is clear, concise and well-organized.  It takes full effect in October, when federal agencies must start writing plainly in all new or substantially revised documents produced for the public.

    “Federal writers are not supposed to be...

  • 1 comments 1,513 reads
    Posted on 2011-06-02

    Maybe it’s just me and my Midwestern roots.  But when you come at me full forces with “fanatical support” speak I feel a bit uncomfortable.  Should I tell you my true feelings when you end our conversation with this question?

     

    Have I answered all your questions and delighted you?”

     

    In truth you were not empowered to resolve my situation.  So at the end of the day, I still have questions, and I’m really not delighted.  Let me put it this way …

     ...

  • 0 comments 5,174 reads
    Posted on 2011-03-30

    It’s springtime and that means my weather alert radio will soon be broadcasting storm warnings:

    “The National Doppler Radar System has indicated that local conditions are right to produce severe weather.  High winds, damaging hail, and flash floods are likely products of this storm.  Seek immediate shelter moving away from doors and windows.”

     

    Why do I often reject the alert advice by running to the front door to see what’s happening instead of heading directly to the basement?  Do I have a bit of storm chaser blood coursing through my veins?  Curiosity, adventure and scientific exploration motivate storm chasers and that can be helpful because when the social media lightning bolts fly the...


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