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Z’s 2009 Sundance Film Festival Report

Posted by Z on 19th January 2009

IMG_4820.JPG So… I finally found a moment to breath between movies. The parties, people watching, time to hang out with friends and family, and the films are fun.  There is more though – each year Sundance continues to change my views and understanding of film.  The festival helps me better understand films’ impact on society, their value, and their power as a medium to communicate.  With organizations like the Sundance Institute and Indiegogo.com independent film makers will continue to receive help to tell their story/ies and also help involve others interested in film.

This year started out strong with many movies the first weekend and the beginning week starting with an IMG_2218.JPGexcellent Indiegogo party (Robert Redford decided to stop by).  In addition  there were many current and past friends from work that made it out to the festival – fun fun IMG_2235.JPG(Eric/Slava – get Absolut as a sponsor again next year!).  This year I have been lucky in that all (save one) of the movies I have seen have had their director, producer, and/or major cast members present after the film.  This is one of the best parts of Sundance – a chance for everyone to ask questions about what they just saw, to better understand the motivations and journey of making the film.  It’s fun for those involved with the movie too – a chance to get feedback.  Sure, seeing some hit movies before they are out is unique, but not nearly as exciting as being able to interact with those who made the film.  A good example is World’s Greatest Dad.  After the film I was able to ask Bobcat Goldwaithe about the ending of his film – planned ahead or planned on the fly?  Turns out he planned it from the get go.  Why?  He writes his films backwards.  The other aspect of the Q&A is inspiration – we all have stories to tell and seeing beginners producing great movies shows that it can be done without a big budget and a ton of experience (although it does help :-) ).  Wanna make a movie? ;-)

Additional Info:

In total I saw 22 movies which brought forth many emotions and thoughts within me.  Our movie comments and grades for each of the movies can be found on my wiki.   The pictures and videos are posted in my picture gallery – the pics/videos include Robert Redford (who attended a Indiegogo.com party  we were at), Michael Cera (from Arrested Development and Super Bad), and Kevin Spacey.  For a list of movies we saw please click here.

Posted in Entertainment, Movie, People, Politics | 1 Comment »

Sundance Film Festival 2009 – proxy entries…

Posted by Z on 19th January 2009

Sundance this year is proving to be uber busy – luckily my friend Susan decided to blog about our experiences thus far.  I will be posting my own perspective once things calm down…  in the meantime, here are Susan’s first and second Sundance Film Festival 2009 blog entries.

Posted in Entertainment, Movie, People | No Comments »

People, Passion, Work (and Play?) – Zappos onboarding – the gold standard

Posted by Z on 20th May 2008

A gentleman I recently worked with today fwd’ed me this article which completely resonated with me:

Why Zappos Pays New Employees to Quit—And You Should Too – Harvard Business Online’s Bill Taylor

I think the onboarding process at Zappos is great – it gives those who have an interest a very healthy does of the company, and then weeds out those not passionate about the job.  Companies reputations are built on its leaders, but also by the troops on the ground.  Zappos recognizes this it seems and has instituted a process to ensure it has people that really want to work for it.  I’d guess that it’s a snowball effect as well – that is, the onboarding process is also a team building exercise to some extent, and I’d bet that many of the people not only like what they do, but who they work with while they do their job.  Many probably are not only colleagues, but friends.

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Good to Great – detailed book review (WIP)

Posted by Z on 14th May 2008

This is a start to my detailed book review of Good to Great by Jim Collins.

Good to Great – In Review

Introduction

Below you will find my raw (caveat: not completely polished) notes about the book. The notes consists of thoughts about the book contents itself, the thoughts book spurred from within me, and questions for which most of I do not have answers to, only associated philosophies. I organized my notes by chapter with a closing note related to my overall thoughts about the book.

Overall Thoughts

Discipline is a key theme throughout the book. I agree that to be great, one must be disciplined. It is a differentiator between those who lead and those who follow. The interesting thing to me is that discipline tends to imply a high amount of work. When I think discipline two things jump into my thoughts: the military and professional athletes. Both have discipline, but I’d argue the two are quite different. One requires a driver to instill discipline in the others, while (some) the professional athletes discipline themselves – almost involuntarily. Some athletes simply have their passion become their discipline, and therefore, to be disciplined doesn’t take “work”, it becomes play, it becomes fun. These points speak to the fact that by following one’s passion, their true passion, they will be successful. It’s almost a universal law by definition: If passionate, you are disciplined, and you will succeed. If you fail, you have falsely identified your passion.

Chapter 2 – Level 5 Leadership

Page 17: I loved the quote by Harry S. Truman at the beginning of the chapter – “You can accomplish anything in life, provided that you do not mind who gets the credit.” It made me think of the type of leadership by which I like to try to live by. I stress “try” in that sometimes ego gets the best of me. It is truly a great leader who can be self-confident and humble enough to not “need the (ego) feed”. Perhaps that type of leader has an ego fed from within. Besides, the people around you, those who you work with, know you, your capabilities, and passions – there isn’t a need to advertise who has done what, it is known, or in some cases, comes to be known.

Chapter 3 – First Who… Then What

Page 42: The quote at the end of the first paragraph states: “Great vision without great people is irrelevant.” This very much aligns with my philosophy that success starts with having the right people. This became part of my philosophy after a friend, who upon graduating from business school asked for my advice on whether she should be more focused on making sure the company she joined had the right idea (i.e. one she believed would work) or that it had the right people. We debated the question for a bit, but no matter the perspective taken, it still comes down to the having the right people. Fact is, the “right” people will not only generate the right ideas, but they’ll be able to ensure they don’t stay just ideas, but are instead realized.

Page 44: What caught my attention on this page was the concept of getting “… the wrong people off the bus.” Collins states that getting the right people on the bus is “… nothing new.”- neither is getting the wrong people off the bus. The thing is that good leaders know who their best people are and who their worst people are. For example, having worked at my fair share of large healthcare insurers and their senior leadership, I have seen leadership blatantly call out their worst people, yet leave them in critical roles on which the success of the company depends. A couple points related to the “off the bus” topic: 1) at a minimum one Level 5 leader must be present for this action to possibly take place 2) even if 1) is satisfied, if a company has a very large amount of people which need to get off the bus, this process can take many months, likely even years. I’d like to hear Collins general thoughts on how, for example, a large healthcare insurer with say 50% of it’s workforce clearly not producing, would get these people off the bus without minimal shareholder and customer impact. For example, one could argue that the company’s Level 5 leaders would only need to remove the weak leaders and new strong (Level 5) leaders could then turn the other employees around. Additionally, page 53 strengthens the point that those who aren’t achieving need to be removed from the bus, in that they not only aren’t achieving success, but they impede those who are achieving. Removing the wrong people from the bus also ties into the discipline and rigor pieces Collins writes about. Something that takes a long time, will take a significant amount of discipline. To quote page 52: “ To be rigorous, not ruthless, means that the best people need not worry about their positions and can concentrate fully on their work.”

Chapter X – not done yet…

Page X: xxxx

About the Author:

Zachary has been a technology fanatic since he first laid his hands on an Apple IIe when in high school. Upon graduation from the University of Michigan Zachary went to work for Intel where he found his passion of being a liaison between business and technology people, helping both better understand one another. As the waves of the Internet swelled Zach decided to take part, leaving Intel and joining Akamai Technologies. After helping businesses better leverage the Internet at Akamai, Zachary decided to join Diamond Consultants where he helps clients better use technology to improve operations and support growth strategies. It should be noted that Zachary’s first focus is on people, as he believes that to do great things it first requires great people, as they are the creators of business and technology. To put together a great meal, one must first ensure the ingredients are of the highest quality.

 

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Pages Referenced:
17, 42, 44, 52-56, 58, 61, 73, 121, 128, 129, 134, 138, 141, 142, 144, 147, 148, 152, 168, 172, 176, 184, 182-184, 192, 205

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How to stop complaining

Posted by Z on 10th December 2007

After complaining this afternoon I thought I’d lookup some thoughts on how to stop – check out Tim’s advice on it here:  Real Mind Control: The 21-Day No-Complaint Experiment | The Blog of Author Tim Ferris.  If the link is broken, just remember, no complaining! :-)

Posted in Health, People, Work | No Comments »