September 25, 2006

The Power of the Parable

Think for a moment about Paul's missionary strategy:

"I have become a servant of everyone so that I can bring them to Christ. When I am with the Jews, I become one of them so that I can bring them to Christ. When I am with those who follow the Jewish laws, I do the same, even though I am not subject to the law, so that I can bring them to Christ. When I am with the Gentiles who do not have the Jewish law, I fit in with them as much as I can. In this way, I gain their confidence and bring them to Christ. But I do not discard the law of God; I obey the law of Christ. When I am with those who are oppressed, I share their oppression so that I might bring them to Christ. Yes, I try to find common ground with everyone so that I might bring them to Christ. I do all this to spread the Good News, and in doing so I enjoy its blessings” (1 Corinthians 9:19-23).

How should Christians tell stories?
How do they make movies?
How do they compete for the attention of mainstream America?

"Those in frequent contact with the things of the world should make good use of them without becoming attached to them, for this world and all it contains will pass away" (1 Corinthians 7:31).

We should leverage as much of the creativity and flow of this culture as possible without becoming attached to it. We should be watching these highly rated shows and find out what draws people to view them. Is it the drama, the production value, the stars, the stories? What is the appeal?

Fictional parables can be a powerful tool for reaching the lost. Jesus "only taught with parables" when speaking to the public: “In his public teaching [Jesus] taught only with parables, but afterward when he was alone with his disciples, he explained the meaning to them” (Mark 4:34).

I believe it's detrimental how Christian producers and writers mix fiction with non-fiction. It completely disrupts the "suspension of disbelief", and the lost viewer is left questioning what's real and what's not.

For example, Johnny is lost and his life spirals out of control. When he hits rock bottom, he gives his heart to Christ and his life is changed.

That's not an effective way to tell a Christian story. What's real? What fiction? Is it all fiction (including the Christianity), or just some of it? I believe that's why Jesus' parables were about kings and landowners, sons and daughters, mustard seeds and vineyards. Even Jesus didn't mix truth and fiction in his storytelling. Why should we?

June 10, 2006

Losing Focus

A great article on why we need to turn off the computer and cell phones...




Losing Focus


E-mail and cellphones help us multitask, but they also drive us to distraction. How to take control and get more done
By CLAUDIA WALLIS, SONJA STEPTOE

Spend a few hours with Hollywood producer Jennifer Klein, and you might want to pop a Valium. Or slip her one. From the moment she rises at 7 a.m. in the Sunset Boulevard home she shares with her husband, she's a fidgety, demanding, chattering whirling dervish of a task juggler. Right now Klein, 41, whose credits include Pearl Harbor and Armageddon, has 15 film and TV projects in development--all of them requiring constant nudging and nurture. Her strategy for managing that and several overflowing In boxes: never do just two things at once if you can possibly do four or five.

"I'm an obsessive and addicted multitasker and gadget user," Klein cheerily concedes. A typical moment at her office finds Klein reviewing a screenplay by phone with its writers and jotting notes while glancing at an incoming e-mail on her BlackBerry, motioning signals to her assistant and firing off an instant message to a studio exec. "Here's how bad it is," she confesses. "When I'm flying, right before the plane lands, before the seat-belt sign goes on, I get the BlackBerry out and put it in front of me in the seat-back compartment. That way I can turn it on as soon as I land and see that little light flashing."

Actually, it gets worse than that for a woman known to do her daily sit-ups during a conference call. "While I'm driving, I've got the cell phone out. I'm drinking a cup of coffee, checking the Palm Pilot for the number and then calling," boasts Klein. Yup, got that all done while stuck in traffic.

Like many other modern workers, Klein takes pride in being a master multitasker, zipping through her daily to-do list: "I see the red lights go on or hear the beep, and I love it." But she has noticed some drawbacks and even some side effects: impatience, irritability and (gasp) some inefficiency. "Sometimes when e-mail goes down, I'm actually more productive, because I can concentrate on something," she says. She finds herself angry and snappish when callers make poor use of her endless availability. Although she feels anxious when her In box is empty, she feels no better when it's full: "When I wake up in the morning and have 15 e-mails, I get a nervous stomach."

Klein's action- and anxiety-packed work style may be extreme, but she's really only a couple of juggling pins ahead of most of us. By now every modern officeworker--from the mail-room clerk to the CEO--knows that the gadgets designed to lighten our loads also ensnare us. And the dinging digital devices that allow us to connect and communicate so readily also disrupt our work, our thoughts and what little is left of our private lives.

What sort of toll is all this disruption and mental channel switching taking on our ability to think clearly, work effectively and function as healthy human beings? Do the devices that make it possible to do so many things at once truly raise our productivity or merely help us spin our wheels faster? Over the past five years, psychologists, efficiency experts and information-technology researchers have begun to explore those questions in detail. They have begun to calculate the pluses, the minuses and the economic costs of the interrupted life--in dollars, productivity and dysfunction. More important, they're exploring what can be done about it--how we can work smarter, live smarter and put our beloved gadgets back in their proper place, with us running them, not the other way around.

AN EPIDEMIC OF ATTENTION DEFICIT

DR.EDWARD HALLOWELL, A PSYCHIATRIST in Sudbury, Mass., has seen the fallout of multitasking mania: it walks through his door five days a week. Over the past decade, he says, he has seen a tenfold rise in the number of patients showing up with symptoms that closely resemble those of attention-deficit disorder (ADD), but of a work-induced variety. "They complained that they were more irritable than they wanted to be," he says. "Their productivity was declining. They couldn't get organized. They were making decisions in black-and-white, shoot-from-the-hip ways rather than giving things adequate thought, all because they felt pressured to get things done quickly." But Hallowell, an ADD expert and co-author of several best-selling books on the subject, including 1994's Driven to Distraction, noticed something different about his new cases. Unlike patients with typical ADD, which persists no matter the setting, the new patients felt frantic only in certain situations--mainly in the workplace or, for at-home moms, while managing the home front.

In a Harvard Business Review article last January, Hallowell gave the condition a name: attention-deficit trait, or ADT. He explains that ADT takes hold when we get so overloaded with incoming messages and competing tasks that we are unable to prioritize. The result is not only distractibility, impulsiveness and haste but also feelings of guilt and inadequacy. "People think it's their fault that they're falling behind," he says. "They think they have to sleep less and work harder and stay later at the office, which only makes it worse because they're not taking care of their brain by getting enough sleep." How common is this phenomenon? "It's rampant," says Hallowell, who believes that corporate downsizing and job insecurity contribute to the problem. "When I give lectures around the country, there's always instant identification with what I'm saying. People in the audience immediately say, 'Oh, yes, that's me,' or, 'My whole office is like that.'"

THE HIGH COST OF INTERRUPTIONS

IT'S NO WONDER SO MANY OF US SUCCUMB to the panicky feeling that we can't keep pace with workplace demands. A series of new studies that examined the modern, multitasking worker show that the constant splintering and diversion of our attention wastes time and money. In a study of 1,000 officeworkers from top managers on down, Basex, an information-technology research firm in New York City, found that interruptions now consume an average of 2.1 hours a day, or 28% of the workday. The two hours of lost productivity included not only unimportant interruptions and distractions but also the recovery time associated with getting back on task, according to a Basex report titled "The Cost of Not Paying Attention," released in September. Estimating an average salary of $21 an hour for "knowledge workers"--those who perform tasks involving information--Basex calculated that workplace interruptions cost the U.S. economy $588 billion a year.

In a revealing set of studies, a team led by Gloria Mark and Victor Gonzalez of the University of California at Irvine tracked 36 officeworkers--in this case information-technology workers at an investment firm--and recorded how they spent their time, minute by minute. The researchers found that the employees devoted an average of just 11 minutes to a project before the ping of an e-mail, the ring of the phone or a knock on the cubicle pulled them in another direction. Once they were interrupted, it took, on average, a stunning 25 minutes to return to the original task--if they managed to do so at all that day. The workers in the study were juggling an average of 12 projects apiece--a situation one subject described as "constant, multitasking craziness." The five biggest causes of interruption in descending order, according to Mark: a colleague stopping by, the worker being called away from the desk (or leaving voluntarily), the arrival of new e-mail, the worker switching to another task on the computer and a phone call.

Of course, not all interruptions are created equal. Some are related to the job at hand and may be helpful--if not to the individual, then maybe to the team. Some are unrelated but nonetheless welcome: the Basex report found that 62% of workers at all levels said being interrupted by a friend with a nonbusiness-related question was "acceptable" (though the boss might take a different view). Several studies, including one by Mary Czerwinski, a senior researcher at Microsoft, show that interruptions at the beginning and the end of a task are the most detrimental to performance. An interruption when work has just got under way "blows away the goals you've established," says Czerwinski, while a ping or a knock at the end of the process "breaks the train of thought as people are reflecting and preparing for what they'll do next."

While the researchers did not look specifically at the quality of the work, a long history of psychological research has proved what one might expect: performance declines--and stress rises--with the number of tasks juggled. Similarly, there's a long-held principle in psychology that maintains that a little stimulation or arousal improves performance but too much causes it to decline. "If you apply that law to multitasking," says Mark, "you would expect that a certain amount of multitasking would increase arousal, perhaps leading to greater efficiency. But too much will produce declining performance."

Jonathan Spira, CEO and chief analyst at Basex, suspects that so-called NetGen'ers-- those who grew up IMing, Googling and texting--are less stressed by gadget-abetted multitasking than are older workers. "Younger people may actually be wired a little differently," he says. But, he adds, there's no getting away from the fact that to do your best work on difficult tasks, "sometimes you need to shut everything else out and focus."

Some of the world's most creative and productive individuals simply refuse to subject their brains to excess data streams. When a New York Times reporter interviewed several recent winners of MacArthur "genius" grants, a striking number said they kept cell phones and iPods off or away when in transit so that they could use the downtime for thinking. Personal-finance guru Suze Orman, despite an exhausting array of media and entrepreneurial commitments, utterly refuses to check messages, answer her phone or allow anything else to come between her and whatever she's working on. "I do one thing at a time," she says. "I do it well, and then I move on" (see box).

IS IT AN ADDICTION?

WHAT'S STRIKING TO RESEARCHERS IS HOW few people take even the most basic steps to reduce workplace interruption. In the Basex study, 55% of workers surveyed said they open e-mail immediately or shortly after it arrives, no matter how busy they are. "Most people don't even think about turning off the dinger," says Spira, who turned off the alert sound on his e-mail nine years ago with no regrets. "We can't control ourselves when it comes to limiting technological intrusions."

Indeed, there's a compulsive quality to our relationships with digital devices. Hallowell has noticed that when a plane lands nowadays, BlackBerrys light up the way cigarettes once did. "A patient asked me," he says, "whether I thought it was abnormal that her husband brings the BlackBerry to bed and lays it next to them while they make love." Hallowell and his frequent collaborator, Harvard psychiatrist John Ratey, believe that the neurochemistry of addiction may underlie our compulsive use of cell phones, computers and "CrackBerrys." They say that dopamine, a neurotransmitter involved in seeking rewards and stimulation, is doubtless at work. "If we could measure it as we're shifting [attention] from one thing to another," says Ratey, "we would probably find that the brain is pumping out little shots of dopamine to give us a buzz." Psychologists call the increasingly common addiction to Web-based activity "online compulsive disorder." Hallowell has a more descriptive term: screen sucking. "These screens have a magnetism we haven't quite figured out."

TAKING CONTROL

CAN THE TECHNOLOGY THAT'S overloading our circuits help address the problems it has created? Czerwinski and her bosses at Microsoft think so. She's helping design an intelligent office-communication system that calculates whether an interrupting e-mail or IM should be transmitted immediately or delayed on the basis of, among other factors, the worker's appointments and projects that day, his past preferences and habits and the organizational-chart relationship between sender and receiver. "Something like this has got to happen sooner or later," says Czerwinski, though she acknowledges that it raises privacy issues. The alternative is to turn off the IMs, phones and e-mail--if management allows it. "I've observed some people who did that, and they were highly productive," says Czerwinski, "but they also missed some very important e-mails. I don't think most people will be willing to do that."

Czerwinski has also been helping Microsoft design alternatives to current software products to allow workers to stay on task for longer periods, even as onscreen interruptions arrive. In next-generation systems, which Microsoft's competitors are pursuing as well, interruptions are designed to be less intrusive--nothing flashes, pops up or makes a noise--and the alerts appear on the periphery of a screen that's larger than today's standards so that workers stay centered on their main task. The key, she says, is for an incoming message to provide just enough information for the worker to judge whether to grab it or ignore it until later. "We found that it's more calming to give them subtle alerts that aren't intrusive and which, should you glance at them, let you know whether you need to worry," she says.

U.C. Irvine's Mark also thinks improved technology will help, but she points to low-tech solutions as well. Some companies, she notes, give employees DO NOT INTERRUPT screens to put over their cubicles or establish quiet times when it's not permissible to bother a colleague. In some offices, she says, "workers wear colored hats to signify when they do and do not want to be interrupted." Another simple trick, suggests Spira, is to leave more explicit instructions on e-mail "away messages" and answering machines about how and when you prefer to be interrupted.

But to truly take control of our productivity, we also have to stop fooling ourselves about our capacities to juggle. We have to resist the "it will only take a second" impulse to read an e-mail, check a stock price or chat with a colleague in the middle of a demanding assignment. At the same time, we have to stop pretending that we are machines that can endlessly process tasks without a break. There's a reason that research shows the No. 1 work interruption is not an electronic signal but rather a human being stopping by. It's the same reason a personal call feels welcome even when you are superbusy. We are social creatures, and to do our best work, we need to set aside time in the workday to connect with others--and also to break free from our checklist and just think.

Psychiatrist Hallowell offers some basic solutions to multitasking mania in a book to be published in April, titled CrazyBusy: Overstretched, Overbooked and About to Snap--Strategies for Coping in a World Gone ADD. Among his suggestions: prioritize ruthlessly ("Cultivate the lilies, or the things that fulfill you," he says, "and cut the leeches, those that deplete you"), allot 30 minutes a day for thinking, relaxing or meditating, and get significant doses of what he calls vitamin C--the live connection to other people. "As much as we are connected electronically, we have disconnected interpersonally," he says. Compulsive screen sucking, he suggests, may actually be a symptom of vitamin-C deficiency. To perform your best, maintain your individual creativity and avoid the pitfalls of ADT, he insists, "you want to have some face-to-face moments of closeness." And when you do, turn off that blinking BlackBerry.

February 19, 2006

Start Rowing

In the corporate world, I went through this exercise, one that I'm sure most everyone has heard about--brainstorming.

It works like this: everyone sits in a room and they have a task to complete, a hurdle to overcome, a job to do. They start brainstorming. Storms of the brain. Every idea is captured. Every idea is given attention. No matter how stupid, no matter how brillant, every idea is documented. It's a flow, a creative flow.

This is a great idea, to brainstorm, and it's a good exercise for any group. And, every idea gets the same attention. There is no bad idea.

My goal everyday is to create. To create what? Doesn't matter. I need to start flowing, start capturing, start brainstorming. I want it to flow naturally, creatively, strangely, challengely. It needs to have an outlet, a place where I can express.

This weekend, I attended a conference called Reach. It was a creative media conference. I saw productions that challenged me creatively. I heard speakers challenge me intellectually, emotionally, creatively. The general theme was this--there are lots of ideas out there. Lots of people have good ideas, even great ideas. Ideas are a dime a dozen, but only a few ideas get started. Only a few ideas come to fruition. You've gotta push out from the shore and start rowing if you're going to see an idea come to life. You can stay tied up to the dock all your life with a good idea, but unless you push out, you'll never go anywhere.

I'm ready to push out on some ideas.

Start rowing.

February 09, 2006

Unfortunately, Russell...

Just came across this.

Imagine with me for a moment--you're a screenwriter, and you have a creative block. You need some drama. Here's what you do: Google "Unfortunately, $InsertName" and there you go.

Unfortunately, Russell...

  • Unfortunately, Russell being a little digging machine (and an overachieving one at that) made some more modifications to his bedding chamber and dug through to the surface.

  • Unfortunately, Russell's sled bogged down in soft snow going up a steep hill. By the time he reached the top, the others were a quarter mile ahead and seemingly about to end his last chance to collect the oxen.

  • Unfortunately Russell fixed that nasty palette bug in drivers/video/fbcon.

  • Unfortunately, Russell's SE Linux policies take effect on everything he touches, the gun was denied, and the headset was turned off.

  • Unfortunately, Russell had gotten quite old. (Ouch, that one hurt.)

  • Unfortunately, Russell was not feeling at his best that day, and so he was not as flamboyant as he was.

  • Unfortunately, Russell wastes much of the book on exposition and flashbacks, and the emotional turmoils and scandalous revelations too often lapse into melodrama.

  • Unfortunately, Russell's e-mail address no longer works so I have been unable to notify him of this version.


I could go on. There were 700 of them. But, unfortunately...

February 07, 2006

10 mistakes conservatives make in art and entertainment

Here's a great article. Take time to read it!

A New Season of Storytelling

Only when evangelicals agree to look at Hollywood not just as an evangelistic tool, or a harmless entertainment provider, but also as an important participant in cultural discourse will they understand that as a major share of the movie market, they are in a position to shape that vital discussion.

This is from William Romanowski in a USA Today article.

There is a shift happening in Hollywood. It's a gradual shift, but production companies are starting to take notice. Here's how I see it:
  • Music: In the 80's, Christian music began to flourish. It was odd, strange that Christians would sing contemporary sounding songs. It wasn't just the hymns or the praise. It was rock. It was Petra. I remember in my early years thinking how strange this was, but how cool it was. Finally, I could listen to some cool music that had a great message, encouraging message of hope and peace and faith. Today, you have everything from ska, punk, rock, rap, pop, swing to blues. And, there's Christian blues. It's almost an oxymoron.

  • Books: In the 90's, the new Christian "entertainment" was written fiction. Frank Peretti had released "This Present Darkness" and the sequel "Piercing the Darkness". These books captivated me. I rarely read, but started reading because of this excellent fiction. My wife is an ardent reader of Christian romance Novels. Why? Because she doesn't care for the trashy romance novels that fill most bookshelves.

  • Movies: For this decade, I can only think that movies are next. The Passion of Christ has proven that there is a market. I doubt seriously that the multi-billion dollar business of Christian entertainment would leave the movie industry untapped. It's the next logical step.

Redeeming entertainment.

February 06, 2006

First Quarter

February 1 brings a unique milestone for me--my first "Quarter". I've officially been "on my own" for three months now, or as they say in the business world--Q1. It's not quite a calendar quarter--that comes at the end of March.

But, it's my personal Q1.

Here are some of the things I have learned so far about being on your own:

  • It's hard to pace yourself when corporate America has set your pace for the last 16 years.

  • Man, Starbucks rocks, especially after a couple of Chai Lattes.

  • I've already been on two vacations. Gotta love it. Headed to Mexico in 2 weeks.

  • Still have "zaps of reality" that I have to make my own money now.

  • Dreaming has become more exciting to me, because dreams are now within my reach.

  • I'm enjoying spending more time with my family.

  • Did I mention Starbucks rocks?


I'm not sure what the next quarter has to offer, but I'm excited about the opportunity.

January 24, 2006

Create, Express, Recognize

The creative process consists of three steps:

1. Create
2. Express
3. Recognize

Create: It starts with an idea, a creative flow, an inspiration, a thought, a concern, a "what if".

Express: Then, that idea is expressed through whatever means, be it, art, music, film, painting, acting, mime, writing, sculpting...whatever. The creative idea is expressed. It takes form. It's shaped, molded, captured, let out. It's put into a form to be shared with the outside world.

Recognize: Finally, it's viewed. Others get to see the creation. Does it communicate the emotion, the feeling, the passion you created to communicate? Are others moved to tears, to laughter, to decision through your creation. The challenge of any artist is this--does to convey exactly what you intended it to convey?

January 16, 2006

Big Meeting Today

On October 1st, 2005, I decided to resign my corporate job. It was a hard decision, but I had to. Sixteen years of corporate life was starting to take it's toll on my physically and emotionally. I had to step out into this new adventure, this new journey of life. If I had stayed, I would have done well, corporately, but I would have died inside.

I worked another month for Nokia, and then stepped out on my own. We prepared ourselves financially, by getting completely out of debt. (If you'd like to read our financial story, check it out here.)

So, with no debt to hold us back, and a world of opportunity ahead, we stepped, not cautiously, but boldly. We didn't even really have any projects that we were depending on for income. In fact, we had two projects waiting for us, but one cancelled and the other put on hold. It was like God was given me a two-month vacation, or what I call a two-month, corporate wind-down. It was nice. Weird, but nice.

Now, here we are today about to pitch a marketing proposal to a large company here in the metroplex. We're going in to pitch them on why MorrisonPond should be their marketing agency for 2006. It's very exciting, but we really feel that we have a very appealing and affordable offering. And, we truly believe in what we are doing!

• It's not about provision.
• It's not about building a portfolio.
• It's about helping them grow and build their business, and we really believe we can.

When I started at Nokia in 1999, I did buy into the notion that I would make a difference there. After six years, it just seemed so futile. After the first four years, I calculated how much money they had spent on me and my business development projects (what I was hired to do). I estimated about a million dollars--salary, benefits, trials, travels, projects, events, etc. For four years, Nokia spent a million dollars on just me, and the projects they assigned me to do. Yet, I never sold a single product, never launched a new business, never made them any money. A million dollar risk investment.

Don't get me wrong--these were good ideas. But, take a good idea, and try to run it through the corporate machine, with all of its red tape and corporate processes, and good ideas get pushed aside or restricted too much to grow. I do commend Nokia on investing so much money for a risk. That's very commendable for any business. But, when you invest that kind of money, don't limit the creativity with corporate red tape. Let it grow.

I think about another idea I had while working there. There was a corporate process for sharing new ideas called the Venture program. I thought, "Cool, I'll share this new idea with them through this corporate process." So, I filled out the paperwork and submitted the idea. After a review, I promptly received my Venture coffee mug and a nice rejection letter that my idea would not be funded.

A year later, a smaller, different group saw the idea and thought, "Wow, we need to patent this now." So, they started the patent process. As the idea grew, they decided it needed international patents as well. The idea continued to grow. Later, entire programs were setup to fund this idea within the company, and now it's being implemented as part of their entire product portfolio. I just have to laugh, because corporate processes kept this idea from launching a year earlier, and even then, it was limited at best.

Why do I share this? Because I lost the coffee mug.

That's corporate America for you.

So, I decided that I was tired of working ten times as hard to make one thing happen. I was ready to plant new seeds, my own seeds...

- seeds that were not limited to one industry
- seeds that were more creative in nature
- seeds that I get to manage and launch
- seeds that I feel called to plant.

So today, there’s a new seed, a new idea, a new potential customer, not limited by a corporate process, but by my own abilities, my own desires, my own boundaries.

January 08, 2006

Blog This. Blog That.

I just realized that I probably have way too many blogs:

This blog.
My business blog.
My minisry blog.
My son's blog (overseer).

Trying to update them all is a bit too much. Maybe I should pull the Top Pup blog. It's difficult keeping a business blog, when you already have a "Latest News" section. I intended it to be more personal, kind of an outlet for my passion for media. But, I shouldn't have to explain myself and my passion for media. Simply, it should be reflected in my work.

The ministry blog is more of a news section. That was the original intention. And, I've used it for that. I also use to document some of my favorite quotes. It's an easy capture system to do that.

And finally, there's my son's blog. To get him to take time to blog is like pulling teeth. "Why daddy?" he said this morning. "Why do I need to do this?" I explained that you don't have to, but it would be fun to share and express yourself. A strange smirk. (Give me the pliers.)