Valuing the free

Hilarious performance by Ira Glass on a pledge drive for public radio, which is good listening for anyone wondering how to get people to value what is given away free....
Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

The other John Moore points to a magnificent performance by US Public Radio presenter Ira Glass

about how a WBEZ-FM listener will enthusiastically fork over $1.81 every day at Starbucks and listen to WBEZ five hours a day but … he hasn’t made a pledge to WBEZ… Good stuff. No, wait

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February 2025 update

People have been facilitated before: boredom, stillness, recovering attention and the undercurrents of life

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The value of not always saying something helpful

Beyond writing

Writing stuff down can easily remove us from practical reality and suppress our intuition

Inauthentic marketing: case study

An example of inauthentic direct mail, from Lincoln Financial Group. The elements that eat away at the credibility of the sender and the effect on this reader.

Authenticity: you can’t fake it

Thanks (again) to John Porcaro for linking me to the Customer Evangelists’ blog where I found this: OLD SCHOOL: Ad agency pays teen bloggers to

In praise of um… er….. deeper meaning

Once again, it turns out that what we do naturally has more value than we realise; whereas clever contrivances intended to “improve” our effectiveness often just destroy significance… and make us less well understood! A good lesson for all those presentation trainers and “image consultants” out there!

Follies of ranking

John Porcaro blogsmore evidence of the dangers of running businesses by crude interpretations of numbers… how superficial metrics can cover a rich tapestry of human

Values – ideal or real

I am blogging from my friend Thomas’s office in Essex. All around are those inspirational posters… eg “PERSISTENCE Now that we’ve exhausted all possibilities… let’s

The volatile chemistry of trust

Interesting research from Stanford suggests that exciting brands get more trusted after making mistakes and putting them right whilst more “sincere” brands start with more trust but lose it more easily. Perhaps the sensible interpretation is that second-guessing customers can be a waste of time!

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Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

Network Campaigning

Paul Miller at Demos has just published a paper on The Rise of Network Campaigning. If network campaigns continue to grow in terms of their numerical power and the sophistication

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Another take on the recession

Andrew Sullivan’s compilation of different readers’ views of the recession continues. I’m an American in my early 20s the ink on my Ivy League diploma not yet dry plunging into

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Improv and service recovery

Rich from Hello World in South Africa adds a nice riff to yesterday’s post on Miles Davis. He relates the idea of improvising to service recovery, recalling his days as

Johnnie Moore

De-coded

Tim O’Reilly’s proposal for a bloggers code of conduct is looking increasingly forlorn. Over at gapingvoid Kathy Sierra rejects it. And Tristan Louis gives it a well-deserved fisking (hat tip: