Archive for the ‘Big Ideas’ Category

Cueless Means Clueless: Texting’s Legacy

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Having trouble with employees who just don’t seem to get the point during a conversation? It could be that they’re literally cueless, rendering them clueless. Thanks to instant communication completely reliant on electronic devices, a whole generation has grown up virtually blind to the non-verbal cues that deliver 93% of message content and impact [Mehrabian].

With the written word their dominant form of communication via text, blog, IM, email or other media, Millennials lack what is called silent fluency, the ability to detect and interpret facial expressions and tone of voice. As a result, they often miss the cue and miss the point of what is being said, or left unsaid.

One major contributing factor: Gen Yers are too busy checking iPhones to pay attention to a live speaker, schooled by years of interconnectivity to continuously surf for updates to the detriment of  live activity.

What’s needed is a corporate etiquette and communications tutorial to get everyone on the same page, literally, and to fight the “continuous partial attention” syndrome that has disrupted the workplace.

What’s your idea for alternative senior housing?

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

logo-bigideasWhat’s your big idea for addressing the aging crisis? We’ll be posing a series of questions about different aspects of aging and getting your Big Ideas about them. Share your solutions with us and we’ll make sure your voice and ideas get heard.  It’s called “crowdsourcing” and uses the Web to harness the potential problem-solving power of millions.

Aging issues are many, severe and diverse. They range from the financial to the social to the physical and beyond. Aging issues are too many and too big for one person or one entity to address alone. But together, we can make a difference.

Watch this space! We’ll be posting one question a month on the Age Lessons web site in the hopes that the collective brainpower of the Internet will generate some innovative ideas and solutions.  Get recognized for your great idea. See it posted. Listen for peer reaction. Watch others build on your concept for an even better solution.