A leadership dream

on July 8, 2012 in Art, Blog, Education, Leadership

Since posting on lessons leaders can learn from method acting, I’ve been thinking about parallels between acting and leadership — in particular how acting changed when Constantine Stanislovski led changing the art to expressive and internal from impressive and external. “Impressive and external” means the actor tried to impress the audience with outward showiness. “Expressive and internal” means the actor tries to find emotions inside and express them. You know[…] Keep reading →

Frederick Douglass on the Fourth of July

on July 4, 2012 in Blog, Freedom, NorthKorea

As I consider the U.S. Declaration of Independence perhaps the founding concepts of the country I was born in and lived most of my life, I celebrate our Independence Day by reading at least one relevant historical work. Having visited Vietnam and North Korea since last July 4th, I’ve had pause to think about what freedom means to America and some things of what America is doing to freedom. Vietnam’s[…] Keep reading →

Leadership lessons from method acting

on June 11, 2012 in Art, Blog, Leadership

Leadership and acting have a lot in common. Both crafts require practitioners to be aware of and to manage their emotions and those of people around them. They evoke different emotions — leaders generally don’t try to get people to cry and actors generally don’t get people to work weekends — but their crafts overlap nonetheless. I’ve linked to Inside the Actors Studio before and I’ll keep linking to them.[…] Keep reading →

My comedy sketch script

on June 4, 2012 in Art, Blog, Creativity, Education, Humor

I’ve meant to post this script for a long time. In business school I wrote a script that ended up in Follies, Columbia Business School’s student-run sketch comedy and musical production at the end of each semester. In my time there, Follies produced some of the best sketch comedy and musicals, including Every Breath Bernanke Takes, which got us press and a letter from the White House. The sketch I[…] Keep reading →

Business people should understand our effect on the environment better than anyone, part 2

on May 13, 2012 in Blog, Education, Entrepreneurship, Nature, Tips

Following up yesterday’s post on balance sheets and charts for using and producing energy and reporting our numbers to see if we can make them balance, let’s look at carbon flows. People who don’t know about carbon emissions, flows, and balance confuse simple ideas with each other. For example, some talk about how volcanoes and cows digestive systems produce tons of carbon and wonder why we should bother changing our[…] Keep reading →

Business people should understand our effect on the environment better than anyone, part 1

on May 12, 2012 in Blog, Education, Entrepreneurship, Nature

People don’t realize it, but business people have some of the best the skills to understand our effect on the environment. We should learn those skills from them. I didn’t have much (any?) business experience when I co-founded my first company. I couldn’t read a balance sheet or know accounting. My science background taught me to understand general and broad patterns, which don’t suffice for running a company. Either the[…] Keep reading →

One of the best books I’ve read on the environment, our impact on it, and what we can do about it

on May 11, 2012 in Blog, Education, Nature, Tips

Imagine living your whole life nearsighted and one day you wear glasses for the first time — everything going from fuzzy blobs to clear. Or you know after you get out of the pool and your ears have water in them? Imagine you heard like that for your whole life and suddenly they cleared and you could hear properly. Or you’ve been wearing gloves and for the first time you[…] Keep reading →

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