by Snoop Doug » Thu Nov 19, 2009 9:54 am
[quote="Marek"]And back in the real world, if you were in his position you would do exactly the same. I mean, milk it while it lasts, these guys don't earn mega bucks and their careers are going to be relatively short, so if people are willing to buy their books then they should go for it. Doubt I will go to the book signing though, although I know a few good pubs in that area so might see if he fancies going for a pint and a chat.
Cheers
Marek....
Hmm, I do like the pint and a chat idea. However I'm not sold on this milk it while it lasts philosophy. I and plenty others, choose to live life by other rules, guides, principles. In my professional capacity, I've long spoken about, advised on, practiced a sense of doing the right things for the right reasons. The goodies will come, don't force them. Money is not the sole answer. I worry that after all the financial turmoil caused by greed, a lack of trust, and ridiculous extrinsic motivators, we seem to still have so much to learn.
Here's an interesting talk by Dan Pink on the Science of Motivation. I encourage our wonderful readers to brew a cuppa, click the link, sit back and enjoy. Film is about 20 mins.
[url]http://stopdoingdumbthingstocustomers.wordpress.com/2009/09/17/the-science-of-motivation/[/url]
On a related subject, here's an interesting piece about how a sense of connectedness with the organisation seems to lead to a lower dependency on extrinsic motivation.
[url]http://www.aomonline.org/aom.asp?ID=251&page_ID=224&pr_id=420[/url]
I certainly don't blame Cavendish. I'm sure that he, like all people, is trying to do the best based on what he has learned. I just think that a book written in a few years time with the benefit of the massive success I believe he will enjoy, would be more authentic for the reader, and more importantly, real for the writer.
Cheers - Snoop