The hope of Audacity
In my blitz session to get my first podcast episode recorded I struggled to get to grips with Audacity. I’ve since watched this, and I… Read More »The hope of Audacity
In my blitz session to get my first podcast episode recorded I struggled to get to grips with Audacity. I’ve since watched this, and I… Read More »The hope of Audacity
This is a different type of post – more of a howto or a ‘what I tried’, in the spirit of moving fast and getting… Read More »121 minutes to your first podcast episode
How do we prepare our kids for the future? There have been places and times where the rate of change has been faster than it… Read More »Education for the future: what do our kids need?
This is one of the most useful tools I’ve come across for understanding how your business works (or might works). It designed for lean-startup style… Read More »Business Model Canvas
This is the fifth post in a series applying Seth Godin’s rules of bootstrapping (see also here) to building a non-profit organisation. Build and own an asset that’s difficult for… Read More »Bootstrapping the non-profit organisation Rule 5: Own your Assets
What if all of the value you created could be understood along one of three axes: time, energy (including matter, which includes information), and space.… Read More »Vectors of value
Unlike “the three Rs” of reading, writing and arithmetic which are woven within the K-12 curriculum, information literacy falls through the cracks. It doesn’t fit… Read More »(Information) literacy
John Wimber, founder of the Vineyard movement of churches, wasn’t renowned as a systematic religious teacher. Apparently people would ask him “John, when are you… Read More »The meat is on the street
If you’re leading an organisation or a team, a big part of your job is to help others to do their jobs. The reference escapes me, but… Read More »Your role (1)
Here’s a good way to build capacity: every time you do something new, open a googledoc (or your searchable, annotate-able editor of choice) and do… Read More »Easier tomorrow