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Thursday, June 15, 2006

I'm really starting to like President Chavez...
Everyday I become more convinced, there is no doubt in my mind, and as many intellectuals have said, that it is necessary to transcend capitalism. But capitalism can’t be transcended from with capitalism itself, but through socialism, true socialism, with equality and justice. But I’m also convinced that it is possible to do it under democracy, but not in the type of democracy being imposed from Washington.
Hugo Chávez during his closing speech at the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil. January 31, 2005.
We have to re-invent socialism. It can’t be the kind of socialism that we saw in the Soviet Union, but it will emerge as we develop new systems that are built on cooperation, not competition.
Hugo Chávez during his closing speech at the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil. January 31, 2005.

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Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Today was a Good Day

Or, at least, it will be.

Got the new Fiona album in its entirety last night. Finished listening this morning. 'tis very very good, and Sony sucks. At least let her out of her contract so she can release it independently... I guess. I don't know anything about "the business," but I imagine that I'd be pissed if I were her.

And I picked up the new Garbage album this morning on the way to work. And yes, I kind of sold out and went to Target. But it was only $9.98! And I paid my car insurance yesterday and currently have $0.69. So I'm sucking up to corporate America. And Target is a "Republican company" too. I suck.

"Target executives contributed solely to Republican candidates and Target's Chariman and CEO contributed fairly heavily. Target also has a Political Action Committee which contributed very heavily in the 2003-2004 election cycle weighing in at $173,240 (21% D 78% R)"

buyblue.org

uhh... but back to music...
I hadn't heard the single(s) yet, so no expectations.
Very very heavy album. At least starting off. And Shirley still sounds great. About halfway through now, and there's nothing I really feel like skipping at all. And the CD includes the video for the single... which I've yet to watch. They've got such a great sound... almost industrial guitars with a definite techo/electronica twist... and Shirley's voice just comes out of nowhere to make something pretty damned unique.

"
No Evolution
Sometimes it depresses me
The same old same
Oh we keep repeating history
The Institution curses curiosity
"

and

"Find out who you are before you regret it"

very sexual... somewhat angry... abused lyrics. I like it.

and am, once again, pissed to live in the God forsaken South East. Closest show is in Atlanta. On a freakin' Thursday...

But it's still gonna be a good day. In stark contrast to my last statement, Muse is playing about 15 minutes from my house. Can NOT wait. My sister said the front was a huge mosh pit at the Atlanta show. Definitely going to get there as early as possible. Am already comparing it to the Primus show from last year...

so there's another reason I'll be quoting Ice Cube tonight.

and there was another good trip to Manifest recently...
Wellwater Conspiracy - The Brotherhood of the Electric
Tommy James and the Chondels - Anthology
Mike Watt - Ball-Hog or Tugboat
Pearl Jam - Last Kiss single (I know, I know... but I'm somewhat of a completist... somewhat)
Helmet - Meantime
NIN - The Hand That Feeds prerelease single
The Strokes - Is This It?

and the Radiohead DVD "The Most Gigantic Lying Mouth of All Time"... weird stuff, but mostly very cool. Especially if it's dark, and the volume is cranked.

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Friday, June 18, 2004

I had, like, eight million ideas while I was driving yesterday... and, of course, pretty much forgot them all by the time I got home. The one thing I am able to remember, however, is that I think I'm actually really glad that the price of gasoline is going up. The higher the better. And here's why...

Americans love their cars, and our towns and cities are so damned spread out that we have to drive all the time to get anywhere. And most places don't have jack for public transportation. Because it's always been economical and easy to just drive yourself everywhere.

Americans also love their money. In fact, I'd venture to say that we love money more than we love our cars. If gas prices continue to rise, these two loves are going to find it more and more difficult to co-exist. Personally, I think that our love of money is going to win out on this one.

As much as I like to bash western culture and American society, I DO think that we're a fairly inventive bunch. But we seem to need something to kick us in the ass to give us the spark to really start inventing. And the best kick in the ass for Americans is to start taking away their money. I really seriously doubt that any of the presidential candidates would be talking about self-reliance (as far as energy goes) if it wasn't for rising gas prices and, therefore, public pressure to do something about it. I took down the John Kerry banner on the site b/c it mentioned higher gas prices. It turns out that I actually DO want higher gas prices. It'll suck for a while, but if the price of gas keeps rising, we'll figure out something else to do. The slow decay of our environment hasn't been enough to make us REALLY try to change our ways. If it takes a hit to the wallet to make us look at these problems, then so be it.

This entry sucks ass, but I wanted to write something down before I completely forgot what I was thinking about. Maybe I'll try to make it better later...

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Wednesday, July 16, 2003

Capitalism breeds an extremely strange business environment. I used to not think it was true... or maybe hope that it wasn't true, but it is. Capitalism. Took a trip to one of my favorite pages to learn some stuff. Capitalism is pretty much what everyone would expect it to be... economic system blahblahblah. And capital is also pretty much what you'd expect it to be... basically wealth used to gain wealth. Only -ism was really all that interesting. I always sort of knew what "-ism" meant, but I don't think I've ever really looked it up. For those too lazy to click the handy-dandy link, it's basically theories, doctrines, beliefs, acts... So that turns Capialism into something like "my belief in the pursuit of wealth for the purpose of gaining wealth." That doesn't sound as good I I thought it would. But I'm getting ahead of myself...

Business is strange. Our sales guys inflate our numbers all the time to make us look better to other potential clients. We send emails and letters to our competitors pretending to be someone else so that they will maybe give us some secret or weakness about their product. The way it sounds, our product is perfect and can do everything. And why? Because we want money. Quite obviously.

So maybe we have 1500 stores running the software. Maybe if you include everyone who's going to start with us over the course of the next year. And it would be totally cool if it was presented that way, but it's not. "We have 1500 locations." Might be true. What's more true is "We have 1000 locations and expect another 500 by the end of the year." Both are fairly impressive, so why tell the pseudo-lie for the extra %.005 growth you might see in your customer base?

And yes, maybe we really are interested in purchasing our competitor's products. But I doubt it. So, we'll give them a fake mailing address and send our email from a different account. And instead of saying that we're interested in learning more about it, we're going to make sure they tell us by saying that we want to know more about their product BECAUSE WE WANT TO BUY IT. So now at least I know, if I ever start a business, to be wary of all customer requests for information. Great.

And then there's the actual sale. When we started, we had nothing. We sold an idea and a promise. Really it's quite amazing. Powerpoint presentations of stuff that didn't exist... "Vaperware" it was dubbed. It was awesome. Telling customers that we can do something when we really had no idea, then finishing at 10:00 at night to meet the deadline and earn the "see, I told you we could do it" brownie points from the customer. Now that we aren't sinking, that feeling has somehow disappeared. Now it's often "yes, our program does that" to the client, and "how fast can we make our program do this?" to our pretty amazing tech team. And then other times, we vouch for things that simply don't work. All to make the potential customer feel secure and as though not buying our product will cost them money.

It might be true. Most of the time I think it is... that we can, in fact, help save companies money. Our software is the best on the market. It's FAR from perfect, but it's the best thing I've seen. So why do we have to inflate numbers and tell half-truths and sometimes outright lie to get customers? We're trying to change our image to that of an established company. Being a start-up was easy. It was ok to tell people that %50 of what they want isn't on the horizon. But now our reputation is more at stake if we put our flaws and shortcomings on the table. We want to seem stronger, bigger, more centralized, tighter, and sturdier. For some reason it's ok to make most of that up. Just to make money.

And while I don't presume to speak for the personal motivations of anyone here, I think the general theme probably applies to most businesses. Just get the customer to buy. Once we've got them, they won't leave. And once they've bought, we'll have more money to hire more people to make more customers buy to get more money to... ad nauseum.

I found this quote while looking at some sales books on amazon.com

"Of course, if the customer doesn't need your product, then maybe you need to learn some of those "hard-ball sales" techniques (or find a better product!). No amount of customer empathy, listening, or product positioning will help you overcome a customer-product mismatch. Which brings me to a point:... I think playing hardball has a place in negotiations; remember, the party you are negotiating with doesn't always have to feel warm and cozy inside in the process. A true persuader will know when to be soft and fluffy and when to apply the pressure."

I guess you have to see customers mostly as sheep or imbeciles. It doesn't work to simply lay your product on the table and let the customer decide. They're too dumb, and they just won't understand how my product will help them. We've got Spin Selling, Eight Truths of Marketing to Women, Solution Selling... Even the one book I had hope for (No Lie - Truth Is the Ultimate Sales Tool) is billed as a book that "explains why the most effective salespeople know how to transform their product or service's negatives into positive selling points, or even bragging points." and I find out that the title is more sarcasm than anything...

Very very frustrating world... It would seem to make sense for companies to have more of a symbiotic relationship with one another than a parisitic one. But no one wants to pay on a percentage of profits for some reason. And, of course, one company can't work for another w/o getting paid something. And all that would do is turn both companies against the rest of us - the every day consumer. I know that socialism doesn't ever quite seem practical, but I really wish we could found society in general on an "-ism" whose benefits were more communal than personal. Really, it seems as like human nature destroys any similar idea before it even gets off the ground. ahhhhhh... it's evolution, Baby.

and holy crap this is long...

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