Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

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When to Quit

March 13, 2008

Like many people out there who read blogs, I utilize Google Reader to help organize and simplify my reading.  At any given time I have anywhere from 6 to 20 blogs of which I subscribe for daily scoops and insights.  With topics that range from theology to business to interesting maps and a list that is constantly changing I have developed an unofficial system for determining if a blog stays or goes.  If I can go more than 4 posts without reading past the first paragraph, it’s got to go.  Of course, I don’t recommend this strategy with my blog.

One blog that I consistently read and rarely skim belongs to one Seth Godin.  It is a business blog that is very practical and can be applied to many fields that might fall under a description other than business.  Which leads to this comment he made recently…

For a long time, we’ve created a myth in our culture that it’s worth any price to reach your goal, especially if your ego tells you that you’re the best solution. We’ve created legends of people and organizations that pursued transformative long shots to achieve great results.

I need to be really clear: pushing through the Dip and becoming the best in the world at what you do is in fact the key to success. But (and it’s a big but), if you’re required to become someone you’re not, or required to mutate your brand into one that’s ultimately a failure in order to do so, you’re way better off quitting instead.

As I read this, I couldn’t help but think how the our churches often ignore this concept.  In a place where our reasoning often includes the words “tradition” and “it’s how we’ve always done it”, perhaps there is no organization in America that needs to hear it’s time to quit.

With perseverance being one of the great teachings of Christianity, we often struggle with the idea of change and hold on tightly to the success stories of others who persevered, while neglecting some of the obvious indicators around us.  I’ve been in this uncomfortable place with youth ministry.  A few years ago, I was really excited about starting a youth worship service.  After a year of pushing it, it was all too obvious that the leaders were not in place on the student end and although a good program this was not the time.  As I planned the following year during the summer, I decided to kill the program.  I learned another humbling lesson that my own desire and perseverance will not drive a program on its own.

I think Seth’s second paragraph has even greater significance for the church.  The “professional church” world is so overflowing with paradigms and models.  Right now, there are literally hundreds of books titled “The _______ Church”.  Many of these books are good.  In fact, many of them are great books. (Even though most aren’t)  The problem with so many models is that we focus more on becoming the church in the book, down the street, or the one that doesn’t exist instead of Jesus Christ.

So many mainline Protestant church bodies are compromising their doctrine and identity in the Jesus Christ of the Bible.  If there is any truth to the statements Seth is writing here, we the church will be best served to confirm our identity in Jesus as He is the one who saved us and one we proclaim.  If our programming, attitudes, and visions are not built upon such a solid foundation, perhaps we should just quit.

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10’s

February 5, 2008

We here at daedal jocosity (and when I say we, I mean I) are installing a new segment to this blog that will simply be know as “10’s”.  These will be an ongoing piece that will surface every so often to reflect on the best, worst, ugliest, funniest, loveliest, holiest, craziest…or anything else with an “est” suffix.

So without further ado, I present the innagural “10’s” which will focus on the 10 best Super Bowl commercials of my current memory at the time of “publish”.

1.  Tabasco Mosquito – My favorite Super Bowl commercial of all-time meets all the criteria necessary in an excellent commercial.  It’s suble, yet funny with an element of conceivable truth and above all simple.  The unexpected expolosion of the mosquito is forever ingrained in my memory.


2.   McDonald’s Jordan vs. Bird – The cameras were rolling for the greatest game of H-O-R-S-E ever played as Michael Jordan and Larry Bird square off for a Big Mac.  As absurd as it is, I remember thinking “I bet they could make those shots if they tried”.  Just awesome.


3.  Budwieser Frogs – “Bud” “Weissss” “Errrrr”.  My friends and I used these words in our conversation for at least 2 years after it aired.  The commerical bohemoth was at it best with 3 beer-obsessed frogs.


4.  Snicker Kiss - Albeit contreversial at the time, my favorite part wasn’t the kiss, but the reaction afterwards of “Quick!  Do something manly!”


5.  Office Linebacker – The visualization of how you would love to deal with employees who repeatedly mess up.


6.  Fed Ex Caveman – Very creative, very funny.  I love the final scene where he kicks the small dino and gets crushed by the foot of another.


7.  Pepsi Cindy Crawford – As a young adolescent boy, this was the best you could ask for in 1992.


8.  Monster.com When I Grow Up – Features kids saying things such as “…I want to be a yes-man”, “…claw my way up middle managment”, and “…be forced into early retirement”.  Monster could not have made a better first commercial.


9.  EDS Herding Cats – This was a great metaphor for the product EDS was selling and it was hilarious hearing about the family of cat herders.


10.  Outpost.com Wolves – There was a series of odd comercials they put out, but this was the best.  My favorite part was the man sitting in the chair at the end saying, “That’s good stuff!” 

I’m going to insert a #11 with my favorite commercial from this year’s Super Bowl…I present Bud Light featuring Jackie Moon.