One of the more exciting developments in public speaking of the last several years has been the expansion of TED beyond the annual conference to hundreds of independently organized and hosted TEDx gatherings.Dev recently had the chance to share the food word about Empathy at TEDxSoMa buy viagra, an event held in San Francisco’s famously tech-heavy neighborhood.Stitcher.com has posted audio of all the talks now, so be sure to check out the great thinking on display - buy viagra.Dev’s first, of course.
May 23, 2010 3:07pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
May 18, 2010 10:15pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Dev recently sat down with Andy Kaufman of the People and Projects Podcast to discuss the essential role of empathy in leadership; online pharmacy viagra. Online pharmacy viagra: the conversation is fascinating, particularly as it explores why people are so skeptical of empathy in the first place.
May 10, 2010 7:25pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Cialis on line: we recently collaborated with Kathleen Enright, the CEO and President of Grantmakers for Effective Organizations, on a piece for the Chronicle of Philanthropy.Today, Kathleen shares more of her thoughts on the possible impact of empathy in a post for the Centers for Effective Philanthropy blog.
In other words, you have to go out and see things for yourself, unlock what’s really happening in the schools and communities where you want to make a difference, and try to get people to open up about their real wants and needs.
Very nice piece. Cialis on line: check it out.
May 3, 2010 9:00pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Last Friday, I had the pleasure of viewing “The Invention of Dr.NakaMats,” a documentary about legendary inventor Yoshiro NakaMats, who holds more patents — over 3,000 — than anyone in history.We’ve long admired NakaMats for his commitment to creating environments where great ideas can come to you.Specifically, he goes for long underwater swims, and when he’s just about out of breath, he writes down ideas on a special waterproof notebook of his design; cialis online pharmacy.He’s quite a character cialis online pharmacy, but it works.
What’s fascinating about the movie, other than the magnetic personality of Dr.NakaMats, is comparing the various inventions he’s come up with over his 82 years.With more than 3,000 patents to his name, he has warehouses full of quirky ideas in addition to the handful of truly great ones that made his name, like the floppy disk - cialis online pharmacy.Partly cialis online pharmacy, that’s just the nature of creativity.As we’ve said more than once, a fertile mind, by its very nature, generates a lot of fertilizer.
But beyond the purely wacky ideas of Dr.NakaMats (and there are many cialis online pharmacy, including the wrist-mounted cell phone, a libido-boosting perfume, and a gel that contains “all 55 useful foods”), the difference between his best ideas and the merely good ones tends to be how well he identified a real unmet need shared with other people.
One of his earliest inventions, for example, was a simple pump to help his mother transport soy sauce from the bottle to a bowl on the table; cialis online pharmacy.His mother had back pain, so he created a tool that allowed her to continue cooking without stooping over; cialis online pharmacy.And that’s not an uncommon experience — many people struggle to continue cooking into their later years.
Similarly, he came up with the idea for the floppy disk when the constant hiss and skipping of a record playing Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony made him think about how to record music “perfectly,” which required digitization; cialis online pharmacy. Cialis online pharmacy: the same thought also inspired the compact disc.His love of music is shared by a huge swath of the population cialis online pharmacy, so his gut reaction worked for all the rest of us.
On the other hand, looking to his own life has often led Dr. Cialis online pharmacy: nakaMats down the path of novelty — or vanity. Cialis online pharmacy: though helping the elderly continue to cook and creating a disc that could record music perfectly were needs a lot of people could benefit from, a lot of the time NakaMats makes something for himself which, by dint of his extreme creativity and lifestyle, have almost no application for anyone else. Cialis online pharmacy: perhaps most prominent here is the Cerebrex, a sleep chair he created that beams the brain with special waves to deliver a full night’s rest in just 20 minutes.As a workaholic engineer cialis online pharmacy, he benefits tremendously from the Cerebrex. Cialis online pharmacy: after all, he never sleeps more than four hours a night and believes that constantly living on the edge of human endurance will allow him to live to age 144.
For the rest of us, however, a bed is probably sufficient.
We really can’t recommend this movie enough.It features the world’s most creative person, along with some of the empathy that helped him turn all those ideas into some products that have been a benefit to the world - cialis online pharmacy.
April 26, 2010 9:18pm , add comments , Posted in Posts

We take it as an article of faith that the human experience can’t be boiled down to a few pithy bullet points on a PowerPoint slide - viagra on line.Moreover, we’re convinced that our love of simplified information leads us to overlook what’s really going on.Hell, we wrote an entire chapter about it called “The Map is Not the Territory.”
So it was with some mixture of bewilderment, amusement and sorrow that we learned that this tendency in the business world is even more prevalent in the military - viagra on line. Viagra on line: the above image, as discovered by Richard Engel of NBC and reported by the New York Times, is a single-slide snapshot of the U.S.strategy for the war in Afghanistan — simple viagra on line, right?
Yeah, not so much.We can only quote General Stanley McChrystal on this one: “When we understand that slide viagra on line, we’ll have won the war.”
Now, PowerPoint by itself isn’t too blame for muddled thinking.It can certainly exaggerate how bad an idea is by covering up its flaws in bulleted jargon or flashy animated graphics, but terrible ideas have appeared in every medium we can think of right up to and including Twitter; viagra on line.Instead, we think this is a perfect example of why maps only make sense if you’ve been to the territory - viagra on line.That doesn’t necessarily mean we need better maps — it just means that more people need to get outside and see the folks they serve in person.
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April 25, 2010 9:28pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Accessrx.com: toms Shoes is an interesting enterprise. Accessrx.com: the company has, since its founding, donated a pair of shoes to a needy child for every pair of shoes it sells.People who don’t have shoes have dramatically reduced economic opportunity (because they can’t go to school) and are far more prone to disease accessrx.com, as well.The company was created after founder Blake Mycoskie went to Argentina where he both discovered a new style of shoe and witnessed the problem of growing up without shoes firsthand - accessrx.com.
That initial in-person experience got the company rolling accessrx.com, but it would be easy for TOMS to lose touch with both the people who buy its shoes and the people to whom it donates shoes.That’s why accessrx.com, once per year, the company holds “One Day Without Shoes,” in which every employee of the company won’t wear shoes for the entire day. Accessrx.com: moreover, a lot of TOMS customers (more than 250,000 at last count) also spend the day without shoes at meet-ups across the U.S. Accessrx.com: better still, TOMS employees go to those events.It’s an empathy twofer.They literally spend the day walking in the bare feet of the people they’re serving, and they also see their customers up close and personal.
Now, don’t get us wrong: not every company has to build charity into its business model (and many probably shouldn’t).But every company can take a similarly broad-based approach to reaching out to the people who depend on them.Just one day to see the world through the eyes of other people - accessrx.com.It makes a big difference.
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April 25, 2010 9:11pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
In a new opinion piece, Dev Patnaik teamed up with Kathleen Enright, the CEO of Grantmakers for Effective Organizations, to discuss the growing need for true empathy in the non-profit world - buy cialis.In this rocky economy buy cialis, simply caring deeply for others isn’t enough to succeed.To login and read the full text, click here - buy cialis.
April 18, 2010 6:18pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
We’ve been asked a lot of times why empathy is so rarely a defining quality of companies; online cialis.There a lot of reasons online cialis, not least a focus on reliability that has transformed business in the last four decades.But a scientific study actually suggests that it might have something to do with how the brain responds to power.
Scientists Deb Gruenfeld and Joe Magee ran a study, reported by Adam Galinsky for CNBC, that asked participants to either write an essay about a time when they felt empowered and another when they felt in someone else’s control - online cialis.This was intended to make one group think about themselves as powerful, and another to think about a time when they were powerless.
After a few other steps meant to test how much a self-image of power affects how people respond to averse situations, all experimental subjects were asked to take a magic marker and draw a capital letter “E” on their foreheads.Remarkably, people who were in a high-power state, were three times more likely to write the “E” with its three branches pointing to the left side of their foreheads — perfectly oriented for themselves to read it, but backwards for the rest of the world.
In other words, the more you’re aware of being in control and possessing power, the less likely you are to put yourself in someone else’s shoes. Online cialis: no wonder too many of our leaders struggle to express the empathy they were born with.It really makes the servant leadership of Mike Rawlings at Pizza Hut seem that much more important, doesn’t it? A great reminder that if you aren’t serving someone else, you’ll eventually forget how to lead them; online cialis.
April 18, 2010 5:52pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Cialis: dev recently offered the keynote at the 2010 National Grantmakers for Effective Organizations conference.If you’re not familiar with GEO cialis, they’re a savvy organization that focuses on helping foundations to award their grants in a savvy manner – to non-profits that really make a difference. Cialis: it was a remarkable experience, allowing our ideas from the world of business to find a new home in an arena where the profit motive isn’t the chief concern, but impact is.
Among those in the very active, very engaged audience was Beth Kanter.Beth is a trainer, coach, and consultant to non-profit in the area of technology use, is also one heck of a great blogger and an inspiring thinker herself; cialis.Her ideas on social media is a key tool for foundations and other nonprofits have earned her praise from Fast Company and the Packard Foundation - cialis.And now, we’re proud to say, she’s a powerful evangelist for Wired to Care.
Her post on the talk, along with her readers’ comments, are a starting point for a more important conversation on social media, empathy, and non-profits to come; cialis.
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April 18, 2010 5:50pm , add comments , Posted in Posts
Blogger Francis Stevens George III recently shared his thoughts on Wired to Care - cialis buy online.He keys into the idea that empathy can be a source of a mission-driven business, capable of inspiring your staff and consistently uncovering new opportunities.Moreover, he sees the seed of the next great era of business.
Give it a read!; cialis buy online


