Monday, May 19, 2008

Putting Up

“Simply the Best:” The theme for a Global Marketing Leaders Event organized last week by one of our clients.

Read on...>>

Posted by: David on 05/19 at 08:55 AM
Tagged: the best
(9) CommentsPermalink
  1. A perfect circle – Once achieved cannot be made more perfect. You can work within the parameters of that circle, changing colour, texture or outline, but once you start altering the structure its perfection is lost. Push an edge here or there and it becomes an oval. In eastern culture perfection is admired and the challenge lies in maintaining its purity, in western culture, we try to push it beyond its design, its purpose, its perfection. Exceed expectations, over deliver, give 110%. Greatness lies in consistency of perfection. Lester Wunderman created the circle, individuals add colour and texture and are charged with the responsibility of maintaining its perfection.

    Posted by Wayne Stevenson  on  2008-05-20 02:08:13

  2. Plato (paraphrased) would have said that in the physical world a Perfect Circle can’t exist and is unachievable, as it is only (at best) an approximation of the idealized Form. But is the best, the best you can do; the best that can be done; or simply better than all the rest? If you’re doing it better than all the rest, but it’s not your personal best, have you failed? And if you’re giving it your personal best, but it isn’t better than all the rest, same question. Ultimately, if you don’t give your friends and significant others a certain amount of slack and forgiveness for their flaws, failures and foibles, pretty soon, you won’t need to worry about them giving you back slack and forgiveness for yours.

    Posted by Stephen Leavitt  on  2008-05-20 06:37:38

  3. There is an old Chassidic tale that tells the story of a righteous man who on his death bed becomes frightened of his final judgement. His students try and comfort him -- you were as great, no greater than anyone in your generation; you were as kind and humble as the holy men of the past -- why are you worried? His answer -- While thta might be true my fear is that I am judged on whether or not I was as great as I could have/should have been. Did I meet my potential....

    Posted by david sable  on  2008-05-22 14:11:31

  4. Opening gambit (usually undisclosed): En avant, contre la médiocrité... Main theorem: Any attempt to dislodge or challenge mediocrity needs care and planning - and allies. And as well as knowing I'm on a campaign, I need to know I'm not wrong headed or distracted by emotion or trickery. Corollary: Everyone has objectives, including those who seem to be manouvering in futile or apparently irrational directions. Some of them have survived a long time. Some even can look good in the short term while ultimately doing damage. The solution may be simple, but finding it (and delivering it) usually isn't. The tailor's rule: measure twice, cut once. Tom (more egotistical than usual).

    Posted by Tom Osborn  on  2008-05-26 11:15:51

  5. “Some people are born mediocre, some people achieve mediocrity, and some people have mediocrity thrust upon them.” Joseph Heller more than usually cynical -- David

    Posted by david  on  2008-05-26 13:59:08

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