Archive for the 'world after midnight' Category

Knowing or Understanding?

While re-reading one of my favorite articles, ‘In The Air’ by Malcolm Gladwell, I was thinking about teaching… Then I read Clarke Quinn’s Mathematics or mathematician, reconsidered and what he said put it into place.

When we teach people do we want them to just know the subject, or to understand it? Teach them Maths or turn them into mathematicians, teach people science or turn them into scientists? There is a big difference between the two.

Through teaching people how to think we open up new ways to solve problems. We don’t want them to just know something, we want them to be able to use the knowledge.

What is more is that if we teach it correctly they can use their knowledge outside of the specific field they are learning. Interdisciplinary learning can lead to creative thinking and problem solving and if we don’t really know what new problems will arise over the next few months (never mind the next few years), we might just need all the creativity we can get.

The Story of Stuff

Annie Leonard uses animation and the interactive, pass-along attributes of the web to ensure that her message about Sustainability and Consumption is well understood, and widely seen.

This is a teaser video, the full version can be viewed at www.storyofstuff.com . It’s a great video, and really enhanced my understanding, and hopefully habits, about behaviour.

Student Punished for Using an Online Study Network

As reported my Jeremiah Owyang:

The education system appears (at least in this case) appears to be completely withdrawn from the fact the real world is about collaboration, and it often happens online. This student, who lead group collaboration has charges brought against him, as he created a virtual study group. On the other hand, maybe this was an individual assignment, and he didn’t follow orders.

He was hit with 147 academic charges for his online study network… If he gets expelled, he could get a job with us anytime!

What does the Freemium Model have to do with REAL business?

When the marginal cost of producing something tends to zero, the smart
thing to do is to treat it as zero and get ahead of the competition:
give it away for free in order to sell something else. You can build
whole businesses around giving stuff away for free. Chris Anderson,
Editor in Chief of Wired magazine and author of “The Long Tail”, puts
his money where his mouth is
. He’s giving away the audio version
of his new book, “Free: the Economics of Giving Stuff Away”. In this
talk he shares some ground-breaking ideas about making his next book
almost free.

I highly recommend a listen to Chris Anderson’s session on IT Conversations (awesome resource if you haven’t discovered it yet). It’s 5star rated & well worth a listen if you’re at all interested in gaining strategic advantage in an economy gone wild. Do YOU think business and even macro economies are behaving in the orderly fashion that you were taught to expect in Economics 101?

If it all still makes sense to you, and you can confidently plot your trajectory for the next 5years for your business.. then consider yourself lucky, and don’t concern yourself with all these crazy new ideas. Head in the Sand? may work as a survival strategyBUT if you have been in line for turbulence, finding the actions of the heaving global market impacting locally, finding you’re not getting the ‘bang for your buck’ from advertising that you used to, and frankly a little disturbed by the impact of technology on almost every facet of society. You could choose to ignore it & ride out the storm. Or you do have the opportunity of big wave riding and grabbing the advantages that this time offers.
It’s happening TO you anyway, you may as well have it working FOR you.

I read Jeremy’s take on ‘free’, and thought it was a good opportunity to continue the conversation, because for us as consumers this is WONDERFUL, but what of the business application?

The VC’s love it, some businesses are thriving on it, Freemium what in the world is that?!

Ease and breadth of low.cost distribution online is worth harnessing; but whether you use it as a core business strategy or as a potent marketing application, will define your approach and risk exposure. Without a clear strategy to use ‘free’ to leverage the services and products you can sell (or you have a rolling flood of venture capital) this could be a dangerously exciting way to watch a company crash.

The fundamentals that are taught in Economics 101 do still apply (whew). “Create something of value that people will pay for, and you’re in business”.

Even so, this new.spawned hybrid, freemium, is worth taking seriously, because there are extraordinarily profitable avenues for its application within volatile market conditions. Attention Economics is in play now, and this one of the in.game strategies, but it isn’t for the faint.hearted or for haphazard practice.

If this idea has found some traction with you: research the companies who have applied the freemium model. Experiment with it in a trial, or smaller division of your business perhaps. It may just prove to be the unexpected breakthrough strategy your business has been waiting for!

______________________________________________________________________ Resources: Wikinomics’ take on ‘free’ for business; Why VC’s love Freemium (particularly for the 9 point checklist before diving in) ; the caveat to the limitations with free models; and of course Chris Anderson’s podcast on IT Conversations. It’s worth looking at the entry on attention economics as well, to contextualise much of what we’re seeing happening and may not have seen from a macro level.



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