Interesting Stuff About Halloween

The word “halloween” comes from a Old Irish term that meant “summer’s end.”  In the 1500s, people began talking about All Hallows Eve, which was the night before All Hallows Day. The Catholic Church eventually called All Hallows Day “All Saints Day,” a day when we celebrate all the saints who have gone to heaven.

In the Middle Ages, poor people would go door-to-door asking for food in exchange for prayers for the dead. Far cry from greedy kids snubbing trial size Snickers in favor of the 260-calorie full size option. Today, we honor the saints who have gone to heaven by asking our neighbors for candy.

Choose your candy carefully…don’t be caught giving out Necco Wafers that taste like chalk dust, chocolate coins that tastelike wax coins, anything in the fruit family (including raisins) or the worst ever Halloween treat…a toothbrush. And for God’s sake, please don’t give away that candy in the orange and black wrappers that doesn’t seem to have a name.

For a few years, everyone was concerned that evil people were putting razor blades in the candy, though that story is more urban legend than fact.  This story was probably invented by the same person who told us about waking up in the bathtub to find a stolen kidney.

Dressing in costumes didn’t become popular in the United States until the early 20th century, but today, we love to dress up for halloween.

When my wife was a little girl, she attended a very conservative church and was only allowed to dress as Biblical characters. The problem was there aren’t many female heroes in the Bible. You’ve got Mary, though I’m not sure dressing as an unwed, pregnant teenager would be the smartest move at the Independent Baptist Church. And it’s not likely that any of the girls are going to dress as Jezebel, though she’s technically a Bible character.

In 1993, Barney and Aladdin were popular with the kids. In 1985, some kids dressed like Ronald Reagan or Richard Nixon. Star Wars characters have been uber-popular twice, when the original movies (the good ones) were introduced, and again when the new ones (the bad ones) hit the big screen. It’s always safe for kids to dress like a pirate or a princess, but be sure to take their candy to the local emergency roomy o have it x-rayed for hidden razor blades.

Great Players Don’t Always Make Great Teams

LeBron James was the best player in the NBA in 2009, having secured the MVP trophy. His team lost in the Eastern Conference Semi-finals and he will not play for a championship.

He won the MVP trophy the year before, but the Lakers won the title. The year before that, Kobe was the MPV but the Celtics won the championship. The year before it was Dirk Nowitski as the MPV with the Spurs winning the title.

Not once between 2002 – 2009 has the MPV been on the championship team. In the last 20 years, it’s only happened 8 times, and 4 of those were Michael Jordan, who was arguably the best player ever on one of the best teams ever.

Here’s my point.

You can be a superstar, but if you don’t have a good team around you, the odds are against you when it comes to winning.

That’s why the best leaders get the best people around them.  Superstar CEO’s can’t do it all, and the business will never reach it’s potential if the entire team doesn’t step up.

Book Notes: Pour Your Heart Into It

Here are some notes from Pour Your Heart Into It, Howard Shultz’s first book about Starbucks.  I read it a few years ago, and recently reviewed these notes.

It may be a weakness, but I’ll always wonder what I’ll do next.  Starbucks resonates with people because of it’s ties to the past.  Founded for one reason – they loved coffee and tea and wanted Seattle to have access to the best.  They were filling their need for own quality coffee.  Quality was the whole point.

  1. Every company must stand for something.  Dark roasting made it different.
  2. You don’t just give customers what they ask for.  If you have a great product, you can educate your customers to like it. Assume intelligence .

“Whenever you see a successful business, someone once made a courageous decision.” – Peter Drucker

Bad luck may come out of the blue, but good luck comes to those who plan for it.

Early coffee shops became gathering places.  They visited over 500 espresso bars in Milan and Verona, observed local habits, menus, décor, techniques.

“We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done.” – Longfellow, 1849.

Passion is, and will always be, a necessary ingredient.  Even the world’s best business plan won’t produce any return if it is not backed with passion and integrity.  In the first year trying to raise money for the business, he spoke to 242 people, 217 said no.

They would take something old and tired and common – coffee – and weave a sense of romance and community around it.  Rediscover the mystique and charm.

The single most important thing you do at work each day is communicate your values to others.

Find that colleague you trust, who shares passion, values and goals.

Who wants a dream that’s near-fetched.

The Great Good Place (1989) by Ray Oldenburg – people need that third place outside of their work and homes.  People come in for the atmosphere and camaraderie.

“I wanted to be the employer of choice, the company everybody wanted to work for.  By paying more than the going wage in restaurants and retail stores, and by offering benefits that weren’t available elsewhere, I hoped that Starbucks would attract people who were well-educated and eager to communicate our passion for coffee.”

Treat people like family and they will be loyal and give their all.  Stand by people and they will stand by you.  They gave avenue for every employee to question any decision that did not line up with the mission statement.  Mission Review Team.  Gave stock options to all employees, and health benefits to those who worked part time.

Things are going to take a lot longer and cost more money than you expect.  It’s a lot wiser to bring in experts before you need them than to stumble ahead with green, untested people who are prone to making avoidable mistakes.

Once you’ve figured out what you want to do, find someone who has done it before.  You can’t possibly have the resources and skills to make every idea actually happen.  Strong, creative people are a lot more stimulating to be around than yes-men.  What can you learn from those who learn less than you?

Take heroic measures, if necessary, to meet customer demand.

They refuse to mess with the real stuff in a way that values integrity – remain respectful to their core product. “If we were not obsessed with control, our business would be a lot easier.  But the coffee wouldn’t be as good.”

“The difference between great and average or lousy in any job, is, mostly, having the imagination and zeal to re-create yourself daily.”  Insisted on company owned stores to maintain quality.

1996, Frappuccino introduced because of a southern California store idea…$52 million that they would have not made if they hadn’t listened to a partner.  The best mistake he never made.

Starbucks spends more money per pound on coffee than almost any company in the world, even though probably fewer than 10 percent of their customers can tell the difference.  Why?  Because wecan tell the difference.

Secret to the power of the brand:  personal attachment our partners feel and the connection they make with the customers.

They set out to educate their customers about the romance of coffee drinking.  Average sale is $3.50, average customer comes back 18 times each month!

“Starbucks success proves that a multimillion-dollar advertising program isn’t a prerequisite for building a national brand – nor are the deep pockets of a big corporation.  You can do it one customer at a time, one store at a time, one market at a time.”

Our product is not just great coffee but also “The starbucks experience” – an inviting, enriching environment in our stores that is comfortable and accessible yet also stylish and elegant.

“Everything matters.”  Everything here is best of class.  “Will it strengthen or dilute our brand?”

“If you examine a butterfly according to the laws of aerodynamics, it shouldn’t be able to fly.  But the butterfly doesn’t know that, so it flies.” – Vincent Eades

Nothing truly great can ever be achieved without taking risks.

Interesting Stuff About Apples

I’m not talking about that apple.  I’m talking about the edible ones.

The history of the apple is as old as the Garden of Eden. But the BIble never says the fruit Adam and Eve ate was an apple. For all we know, Adam and Eve had a bite of a banana, or a kumquat. Maybe the fruit hanging from the tree of knowledge of good and evil was a pear. Given the the fact that the Middle East is located in the Middle East, it’s far more likely that the forbidden fruit was a pomegranate or an olive. Still, all the painters paint an apple, so an apple it must be.

Right off the bat, things aren’t looking good for the apple. On top of the negative impression created from serpent association, wild apples were terribly sour. Today, you can enjoy domesticated Honey Crisp, Gala or Red Delicious apples. The Pink Lady apple is a cross between the Lady Williams and the Golden Delicious apple, and is the best selling apple in Europe. There are 7,500 types of apples, some are best for cooking and others are best for eating.  I wonder which apples work best for bobbing?  China produces most of the worlds apples, as well as most of the world’s everything else.

The reputation of apples remained sour until Isaac Newton came along in 1642. As the story goes, he was sitting under an apple tree when one of the little red devils fell on his head. A short while later, he taught the world about gravity. I’ve always been intrigued about Newton’s Second Law of Thermodynamics, which says that things naturally go from a state of order to disorder, which is continually proven by the introduction of my three children into a clean room. Isaac Newton has nothing to do with fig newtons, despite all the fruit related stories. Fig Newtons were named for the town of Newton, Massachusetts.

There are a lot of stories and legends about the apple. According to Vegparadise.com, people in England used to hang apples from strings over the hearth. When the apples were fully roasted, they fell into a bowl of spiced wine.  This is perhaps the precursor to the Apple Pie, which is apparently very American.

New York is sometimes called The Big Apple, a nickname given by a sportswriter in the 1920s. Ironically, the first time the phrase “The big apple” was used in reference to a city, that city was Los Angeles. New York has been one-upping Los Angeles ever since. Of course, the reason you know New York is the Big apple is mostly do to advertising and the 1970s I Heart NY campaign. Advertising is also the reason you buy knives that can cut through tin cans by calling a 1-800 number at 2am.

There was a guy named Johnny Appleseed who lived in the 1700s. He traveled around for about 50 years, planning apple seeds and dreaming of a land where nobody would go hungry.  Who knew that Utopia was a world with endless apples?

If something or someone is important to you, they might be the apple of your eye. Nobody really knows why these people considered apples more important than everything else. Shakespeare used the phrase and so does the Bible.

Sometime during the 19th century, someone said, “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.” Maybe that’s because apples are high in potassium, folic acid or Vitamin C. Clearly, apples are better for you than fig newtons.

So there you have it…interesting stuff about apples.

Why You Shouldn’t Seek Free Advice

For 20 years, I did my own taxes. A few years ago, I hired a professional, and it’s made a big difference. The amount of money I pay in accounting fees is far less than the amount of money I would leave on the table doing the job myself, not to mention that that I don’t worry as much. Just because you can do something, or even possess the core knowledge, doesn’t mean you should do it.

In leadership, I’ve paid for the outside opinion of professional consultants. Even though I like to think that I know what I am doing, I’m prone to miss what’s right before my eyes. The advice of friends and peers is valuable, but the professional opinion of a consultant provided a different level of insight.

No matter what you lead, I believe that coaching, consulting and outside analysis will help you. Yes, it costs money. But as they say, you get what you pay for.

Here are four reasons why free advice from friends often falls short.

1. Free advice is generally what it’s worth. There’s a reason that person isn’t getting paid for his or her opinion.

2. People don’t implement free advice. You are far less likely to change something based on the free opinion of a friend. But when someone with training and skill tells you what you should do, you take notice. It’s why you listen to your doctor in matters of health.

3. If you’re not willing to pay for it, I don’t think you really want it. Working with professionals communicates a commitment. It’s certainly not automatic, but when you put your money where your mouth is, you’re closer to being serious.

4. Free indicates a one-way relationship, and one-way relationships generally aren’t healthy.

Fully Funded Churches

Over the last few years, I’ve had the opportunity to work with my friend Casey Graham, the founder of Giving Rocket, on several HIGHLY PRACTICAL resrouces around the idea of fully funding the mission of the church.  Money can be a tricky subject in a lot of churches, but since finances effect nearly EVERY ministry in the church, it’s something that needs your attention.  As useful as Docs and Forms can be for organization, these resources from Giving Rocket can revolutionize the financial situation of your church.

And for the next ten days, Casey is running a 50% off sale in the store.  Every one of these financial resources is half off.  Here are a few of my recommendations:

  • The Guide to Year End Giving will show you how to do a Christmas offering this December.
  • Automate the Important is full-blown campaign to help you EMPHASIZE automated.  This is the closest thing to a silver bullet as you can get.
  • The Giving Talk will show you how to preach a “mini-sermon” just before you receive the offering.
  • Know the Numbers will show you how to budget, talk about the numbers and reports you should track, and help you work with finance teams.
  • There’s a Guide to Offering Envelopes and a Kiosk-Launch Kit…both of these are great.

All of these resources are 50% off if you use the code TENDAYS at checkout.  I also recommend the Giving Rocket Core Membership – a monthly program that will bring you a weekly Giving Talk script, copy and paste emails that you can send your congregation, members only webinars, a resource every month and access to the resource vault.  Membership is normally $99 a month, but you can get this for half-off for the next ten days.  I woudl highly recommend this system to your church.

Ideas and vision are great, but without a clear funding strategy, your vision can actually demotivate you.  Take ownership for the financial situation in your church and take intentional steps to build a healthy financial culture.

I’d be happy to tell you more about any of these resources, or answer any questions you have about how the membership works.  I believe in Casey, and I love the service that Giving Rocket is providing to churches.

Cynical and Bitter

This post is probably more for me than it is for you.

Over the last few months, I’ve truly had to guard my heart from becoming cynical and bitter, frequently reminding myself that I am not a victim. I’m not going to become one of those guys who thumbs his nose up at the system, because the system is not to blame for my sins.

I’m not going to sarcastically debate those who don’t believe that God can’t use me. I’m not going on a hunt to prove my point, or find nuanced Greek words to backup my belief that God’s not finished.

I don’t have a problem with the church. I don’t question organized religion. I don’t think we need to throw it all out of the window and start from scratch.

 

 

Book Notes: Start Something That Matters

Start Something That Matters by Blake Mycoskie, founder of TOMS Shoes.  Here are some of my notes, quotes and thoughts.

  • “We are a for-profit company. Our goal is to help people and to make money doing it.”
  • In starting to sell his prototype: “No matter how convenient it is for us to reach out to people remotely, sometimes the most important task it to show up in person.”
  • TOMS has succeeded precisely BECAUSE we have created a new model.
  • Annette Simmons explains: “Facts are not neutral…People make their decisions based on what the facts mean to them, not on the facts themselves….facts are not terribly useful to influencing others.” A 2009 Carnegie Mellon University study shoes that students gave $1.14 after reading a letter filled with stats, compared to $2.38 after reading the story of a seven-year-old girl named Rokia. Jared was a far more successful campaign for Subway than their “Seven Under Six” campaign.
  • Conscious capitalism. Good business.
  • “We started TOMS with 250 pairs of shoes in three duffel bags. I didn’t quit my job immediately. I didn’t invest tens of thousands of dollars. I just made 250 pairs of shoes and tried to sell them.” Kenneth Cole’s first shoe display with in the trunk of his car.
  • There is a Japanese concept known as kaizen, which says that small improvements made everyday will lead to massive overall improvements.
  • Tim Ferris says that for important things, the timing is almost never right. Conditions are almost never perfect.
  • A lack of resources i not reason to avoid starting a company. If anything, it often inspires creativity and a competitive edge.
  • Silicon Valley venture capitalist Mike Maples says companies that start off overfunded are actually in more danger of faltering than those who are underfunded. Too much money is toxic.
  • Build your business slowly and intelligently.
  • Keep it simple. Google doesn’t allow more than 28 words on their home page.
  • The easier it is for someone to understand who you are and what you stand for, the easier it will be for that person to spread the word to others.
  • 75% of Zappos orders come from repeat customers. A brand succeeds of fails based on whether or not people trust the company.
  • The better your employees feel about their jobs, the better your business will perform. Extend more trust than you might normally be comfortable with. There is a correlation between job satisfaction and how empowered people are to fully execute their job without someone shadowing them every step of the way.
  • We outsource technology because we are not a technology company.
  • Don’t make giving an afterthought. Figure out how to make it a responsible part of what you are creating.

A Few Free Things

I was cleaning up my dropbox folders and found some stuff in the public folder that I thought I would share with you.

Hope something in here helps you today.

My 9 Year Old’s Increased Allowance Presentation

All three of my kids share a home computer. Yesterday, I logged on to do a software update and make sure things were working properly. On my 9-year-old’s home screen, I saw a PowerPoint presentation called “Allowance.” It looked interesting to me, so I clicked on it.

Apparently, she and her sister have been working on a presentation to ask mom and me for an increase in allowance. Here’s the four slides in her presentation.

Pretty good job presenting the problem.  She continued with the second slide.

I actually wasn’t aware that my kids did many chores.  That’s something I need to look into.  Next slide.

Now she’s making the problem bigger by bringing up other kids.  This isn’t just a problem with my kids…it’s a nationwide phenomenon.  And all of those kids DO look so happy.  Now I feel like a bad parent.  Last slide, please.

Wow…a clear call to action.  This is actually pretty good.  She’s telling me exactly what to do and giving me a deadline.

So that’s the PowerPoint presentation from my 9-year-old.  I think she would make a good agent.

How would you respond?