For those who always ask, here are the podcasts of my radio show, Your Triple Bottom Line.
They are on iTunes
http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/your-triple-bottom-line/id399839403?ign-mpt=uo%3D4
For those who always ask, here are the podcasts of my radio show, Your Triple Bottom Line.
They are on iTunes
http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/your-triple-bottom-line/id399839403?ign-mpt=uo%3D4
A funny thing happened on the way to the radio station this week.
We had a great guest lined up, but were informed a day before that that time slot –7 PM Arizona time — was being preempted because the station, KFNX, had a prior commitment to carry the University of Arizona basketball game.
Rather than take a hiatus, I decided to pull out my trusty Zoom H4N and record a podcast with my co-host Derrick Mains. It happened to be a fitting week to talk of the launch of a baseline study by his company, GreenNurture and Miller Consultants. (More details here at the show web site.) This podcast also includes a report from Heather Clancy, our second on-the-ground correspondent.
The irony of this is, the radio show grew out of a weekly podcast! So, using social media-based format to broadcast a ‘show’ is more than a fall back. It’s an integral part of what I’m doing in radio in the digital era.
I had a great conversation with Brown Russell, former Chairman of Gum Tech (GUMM:NASDAQ), last evening on our radio show.
Brown was behind (and by this I mean he led) the launch of Zicam –the cold remedy, medicine. I didn’t know this but Zicam was one of the fastest growing new cold treatments in recent history.
The reason I thought he would be a great guest was because of a book I noticed on his desk one day. It was one of those thick books on communication that communicators who have just graduated may have not even heard about: The Diffusion of Innovations by Everett Rogers, first published in 1962. (By the way Rogers published 30 books in 15 languages.)
To put this in perspective this was before the Internet was ‘discovered.’ And some of the concepts Rogers analyzed presaged viral marketing by what, 40 years, maybe?
How do ideas spread and products take off, I asked? Is the diffusion of innovations across networks (the unwired kind) dependent on a marketing and PR push? Derrick brought us a good point –that demand, could possibly be influenced by planned scarcity (as in Apple’s play); by game mechanics (as in earning rewards), and filling the need that nobody has quite recognized (as in Facebook).
Here’s the podcast, if you’re interested. http://bit.ly/your3bl11
By the way, if you occasionally use terms such as ‘early adopters,’ ‘late majority’ or ‘laggards’ you’ve been borrowing from Roger’s theory!
Employees are either ticked off or raring to go. That’s the commonly held wisdom, right?
I wanted to find out and conducted a survey before my radio show, Your Triple Bottom Line. Some pleasant surprises: A large percentage of responders have positive things to say about the workplace. (The survey is still open for a week, so that number could change.)
However, when asked to describe what a terrible place to work was, one respondent cited “Filth, blind micro-management, too many chiefs.”
Hmmm! Too many chiefs is a common refrain whenever I speak to companies about what’s the biggest stumbling block to a more collaborative workplace.
I conducted this snap survey because we were planning on asking our guest, a much-acclaimed author of the book Fired Up Or Burned Out, about what kind of leadership makes workplaces so dreary or at other times, inspiring. The book (it’s received great reviews on Amazon!) takes you into the ‘power of connection’ at work from the American Revolution to… Starbucks!
Show # 8 – with Michael Stallard
Download a PDF of the book free here.
Cross-posting this from the Show blog, Your3bl.com
Here is the podcast of our first radio show, Your Triple Bottom Line
Our guests were: