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Monday, 17 August 2009
A couple of things have prompted me to write about karma. 

Last Saturday night my husband and I went to dinner at a restaurant in downtown Columbus.  The Good Parking Spot Goddess blessed us with a parking space right in front of the restaurant.  I dutifully fed the parking meter enough change to register an hour and half of parking.  It was 7:00 p.m.  The meter stopped at 8:00 p.m. 

When we returned to the car after dinner, I had a parking ticket for $45.00!  I was outraged.  I know the City of Columbus needs money but scamming me on a parking meter just pisses me off!

My husband, the ever kind and sensitive guy he is, made merciless fun of me on the way home.  When Dharma Dog greeted us at the door, my husband quipped, "Mama is a felon.  She's going to jail!"  I shot him a glare and went on into the house, ignoring the rest of his jokes at my expense.

This morning my husband took our youngest daughter to the airport.  I thought he was going straight to work.  Instead he stopped by the house for a moment.  With a sheepish look on his face, he confessed, "I got a parking ticket when I took Sarah's bag in for her."

All I could do was laugh.

The other thing that's prompted me to write about karma is listening to the sad tale of woe about a friend's son.  He's working hard to build his own business but isn't having a lot of success.  The main issue seems to be that his clients use his services and then don't pay him or they undercut him.  The world is against him.  It's full of people trying to cheat him out of money.  All I could say that usually when something happens to me like that it means that I am now or have in the past cheated someone else in some way.

No, that was not the case, I was assured.  He tries to be honest.  He's generous.  He takes care of his obligations. 

That is not the truth, the same young man has undercut his obligations to his young son, both in time and money.

What goes around, comes around.  Sometimes it takes longer than we like if someone has wronged us.  Sometimes it takes more honesty than we can muster to be truthful about times when we have done wrong.  I even believe that sometimes it takes lifetimes but we get what we give.
POSTED BY: Pixie AT 04:24 pm   |  Permalink   |  E-mail this
Monday, 17 August 2009
As I've said before, I am not the best social media marketing person around.  What I can do well is help you build positive energy around marketing your business; stimulate you to new ideas and actions; and, provide resources for social media marketing.

Chris Brogan is one of the best resources I know.  His new book, Trust Agents, was written with Julien Smith.

I just bought it from Amazon and I suggest that you do too.

How can I recommend a book that I haven't read yet?  I've connected with Chris on Twitter.  I've met him in person.  I trust him.
POSTED BY: Pixie AT 01:50 pm   |  Permalink   |  0 Comments  |  E-mail this
Monday, 10 August 2009











Network TV makes me crazy with the programming and the commercials so I prefer to watch some of my favorite shows on my computer.  Admittedly, I'm addicted to House, M.D.  After growing tired of watching the same House episodes twice, I've started watching Hell's Kitchen.

There is only one commercial advertisement for each episode on Fox.  At first the commercial was a relatively benign ad for Visa check card with catchy music and a cute storyline.  It's pretty smart advertising if you think about it.  The same commercial runs over and over again.  Repetition embeds it into your memory even if you hit mute and surf the net while it's running.

The worst commercial on Fox is for Microsoft Office PowerPoint.  The storyline is about buying PowerPoint for your child to do a school project that gets an outstanding grade.  The music is juvenile.  The most obnoxious part is that the commercial stops then offers you a number of buttons to click to REPLAY IT!  To return to your show, you have to find the very small print above the ad that says, "click here to continue in ____ second."

I cringe every time my show stops and the PowerPoint commercial begins.  I hit mute.  I hide my face.  I complain about this being the most obnoxious marketing I have ever seen.  I dislike it so much I sent an email to Fox.  I am so annoyed that I'm blogging about it!
POSTED BY: Pixie AT 03:13 pm   |  Permalink   |  0 Comments  |  E-mail this
An Ad Man Talks about Intangible Value
This is a brilliant and funny video from Ted.com that will have you taking a new look at intangible value.  Think about it for social media marketing, branding, advertising . . . life.
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Enigma Wellness
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