January 16, 2010

YOU (yes you) ARE A GENIUS [THE LINCHPIN SESSION FROM SETH GODIN]

Talent hits a target no one else can hit.
Genius hits a target no one else can see.
--- Albert Schopenhauer


Stand up if you're a genius.

That's not (m)any of you. At The Linchpin Session, Seth Godin asked geniuses to rise and got the same result. He was the only one standing, but that's not because he was the speaker. This was not his way of putting us down and no dunce caps were handed out. His question had a point. His explanation was like a Shawshank Redemption but without decades in prison.

An Example
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
--- Albert Einstein


If you're not a genius, then who is?

How about Albert Einstein? You won't get many arguments by picking him. Remember the photo of him sticking his tongue sticking out? Only a genius, celebrity or boor would do that. You can stick your tongue out too. You can have messy hair (or wear a messy hair wig). That's as close as most of us can get to the E=mc2 level of genius. Luckily, there are other degrees.

What Genius Does
It's not that I'm so smart, it's just that I stay with problems longer.
--- Albert Einstein

Let's look beyond IQ and worldwide acclaim. What does a genius do? A genius solves a problem in a way no one else could. A genius gives the world something it didn't know was missing. A genius looks a problem with fresh eyes. A genius changes the rules.

Here are examples of genius in varying degrees
  • Velcro: based on burrs sticking to fur
  • Post-it notes: a use of a glue that was too weak
  • Super glue: an adhesive that was too strong
  • tooth brush and dental floss
  • preshredded cheese
  • the computer mouse and now the touchscreen
  • chocolate mixed with peanut butter (actually, chocolate mixed with anything)
  • the stapler
  • the spelling checker
  • heated car seats

Like Einstein, we can also work on problems longer. We can find help, which is much easier in today's interconnected world with a wealth of online information. We can then come up with our own solutions.

Second Chance
Are you a genius?

When Seth asked near the end of his session, the entire audience stood up. We were immodest about our brilliance, but we felt uplifted. How about you?

Links

January 9, 2010

Your Favourite Posts of 2009

Welcome to 2010. Let's start the year by looking back at what you read here on Riscario Insider in 2009.

Overall
The trends look great once again. Your visits more than doubled (increased by 2.4 times for the second year in a row) and 82.2% of you were new. You stayed 18.3% longer per visit and viewed an average of 1.5 pages each time.

The Top 10 Posts
Here's what you read
  1. PersonalBrain 5: data to information to wisdom (a surprise)
  2. Quotes related to Stephen Covey's Seven Habits Of Highly Effective People (a must-read book)
  3. Does Warren Buffett "Buy Term and Invest The Difference"? (#1 in 2008)
  4. Six Basic Fears From 70 Years Ago [Napoleon Hill]
  5. Secret 7: The Best Tax Sheltering in Canada
  6. Does billionaire Seymour Schulich help you "Get Smarter"?
  7. How advisors fool you (and what you can do)
  8. Surviving an audit: two lies and three tips
  9. Should you switch to an actuarial career?
  10. Three reasons why financial literacy eludes us
Worth A Peek
These 2009 posts didn't make the most read list but might suit you
If you prefer, you can listen to the podcasts. Here are the top five:
Other statistics follow.

The Top 5 Countries
You read from 139 countries (up from 99). Here are the top five.
  1. Canada: Toronto, Ottawa (was #3) Vancouver (was #2), Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Montreal
  2. United States: California, New York, Texas, Florida (was #5), Illinois (was #4)
    (by city: New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Houston, Atlanta)
  3. United Kingdom
  4. Australia (was #5)
  5. India (was #4)
Source of Traffic
  1. Search Engines: 46% (down from 61%) (94.0% from Google, 2.3% from Yahoo, 1.8% from Bing)
  2. Referring Sites: 40% (TheBrain, Canadian Capitalist, Canadian Personal Finance Blog, StumbleUpon, Thicken My Wallet, The Globe & Mail)
  3. Direct: 14%
Keywords
Here are the key words typed into search engines to get here.
  1. seymour schulich
  2. 7 habits of highly effective people quotes
  3. personalbrain 5 review
  4. dwayne daku
  5. six basic fears
Browser used
  • Internet Explorer: 48% (down from 59%)
  • Firefox: 34% (unchanged)
  • Safari: 8% (up from 4%)
  • Chrome: 7% (up from 2%)
Operating System
  • Windows: 85% (down from 91%)
  • Macintosh: 12% (up from 7%)
  • Linux: 2% (up from 1%)
Some visits came from portables such as iPhone, iPod, Blackberry and Palm devices.

Screen Resolution
  • 1024 x 768: 23% (down from 35%)
  • 1280 x 800: 20% (up from 18%)
  • 1280 x 1024: 15% (up from 12%)
  • 1440 x 900: 11% (up from 9%)
  • 1680 x 1050: 9% (unchanged)
How's that for detail? Thanks for reading.

For more frequent updates, Follow @riscario on Twitter.

Links
Podcast Episode 49 (7:10)

direct download | Internet Archive page