The best reason for a big event…


is being big. Nah, HUGE. Ordinary big isn’t good enough any more.

Big events, grand openings, national events that just can’t be missed. These work (if they’re big enough).

Big events, if they’re truly big, change the rhythm and demand a different sort of attention and preparation. We can push through the dip, expend emotional labor and do things we never thought we’d be able to do if there’s a charette and a deadline and an audience.

Human beings respond to emergencies and to hoopla. We like doing what others are doing, and we’ll suspend social disbelief if we’re being carried along by the pack (or the mob).

The challenge comes when we institutionalize the event and make it normal.

If you’re going to have an event, better make it big. Or even bigger than that. It needs to be awe-inspiring, frightening, on deadline and worth losing sleep over.

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Jumping the gun


4293966039_0c400a5213 There’s going to be a lot of hoopla this week, some of it on this very blog (three posts already today!).

I want to be the very first author to announce a new project for Apple’s tablet.

Apple is announcing the device tomorrow (I wish they had waited a week), but I thought I’d let you know early that I’ve licensed Vook the rights to Unleashing the Ideavirus so they can convert it into a multimedia app. It should be finished before the tablet ships, so we intend to be ready when they are.

Steve Jobs will probably never speak to me again for announcing before his launch. That’s okay, he never speaks to me anyway.

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Why write a book?


If you’ve never written a non-fiction book, there are a lot of reasons why you might want to. It organizes your thoughts. It’s a big project worthy of your attention.

Noted.

But once you’ve written a book, it’s not clear that it’s a useful thing to publish one. After all, it takes a year. It involves a lot of people. You need to print a lot of copies, ship them everywhere, create a lot of hoopla and hope that people actually a) hear about it, b) decide it’s worth the effort to track it down and c) read it and spread it. 

Wouldn’t it be easier to just blog it? Or to post a PDF online and watch it spread?

Some of my books have been short… one was under a hundred pages long. It could certainly have a been a series of blog posts. And the posts might even have reached more people than the book ultimately did. If my blog posts were counted on the same metrics as bestselling books, every single one would be a New York Times bestseller. Yours too, most likely. Books don’t sell that many copies.

The goal isn’t always to spread an idea. Sometimes the goal is to make change happen. A book is a physical souvenir, a concrete instantiation of your ideas in
a physical object, something that gives your ideas substance and allows
them to travel.

Out of context, a 140 character tweet cannot change someone’s life.
A blog post might (I can think of a few that changed the way I think
about business and even life). A movie can, but most big movies are
inane entertainments designed to make a lot of money, not change
people. But books?

The reason I wrote Linchpin: If you want to change people, you must create enough leverage to encourage the change to happen.

Books change lives every day. A book takes more than a few minutes to read. A book envelopes us, it is relentless in its voice and in its linearity. You start at the beginning and you either ride with the author to the end or you bail. And unlike just about any form of electronic media, you get to read the book at your own pace, absorbing it as you go.

I published a book today. My biggest and most important and most personal and most challenging book. A book that scared me.

It took me ten years to write this book. I’m hoping it changes a few people.

Thanks.

[Amazon, BN, independents, volunteer reviewers. Kindle too. I'll be posting details of a fascinating media tour in a few hours if you want to see what the book is actually about.] 

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