Ducks all in a row? I doubt it.

‘Ducks in a row’ often means that things are planned and ready to go. Is that the best way to make things happen?

When I started out on the path to being a small business owner, it took a long time before I saw the light. I hummed and hawed for what seemed like forever about what wonderful, creative name it should have, and how it would fit with the domain. The business couldn’t start until I’d made that decision.

Finally, I said to h*ll with it and registered a business with a variation of my own name. That was 2.5 years ago, and I haven’t looked back. As a sole proprietor, people relate to me, rather than my company anyway.

But the web site was still waiting. When I get the time to design it; when I have a ton of content for it; when I …er, just wasn’t happening. There were too many excuses.

Anyway, last month I attended the TechVibes Massive technology conference in Vancouver, BC. I collected lots of information from service providers and took it all home to a file. A few days later, I thought…what am I doing. Let’s get on with the domain and web site thing.

In the file at home, I came across a special related to Massive. Heck, it offered 3000 email addresses as part of the all inclusive price. How could a sole proprietor go wrong 😉

So I bit the bullet, registered the domain and generated some content for a basic template home page.

Done: http://www.dws-co.ca or http://www.dws-co.com They point to the same site. (update, the links are now based on donsca, as in ca, com and me)

There is still lots to do. It’s not all that pretty, but at least I’ve made a start. That start will probably keep me motivated now, and the design and content will evolve with time.

So, the moral of this story is: if you wait for everything to be ready and perfect before you start, good luck. It will be a long time coming. Your ducks will never be in a perfect row. There will always be some excuse holding you back. What’s the old maxim: ready, fire, aim. (Who said that anyway?)

Today, in an alumni session with a business group I belong to, three out of four of us made reference to the ‘ready, fire, aim’ concept in our reports to the group. We’ve all had the same discovery in the last month or so. One put it this way: like a bicycle, if you’re not underway, it’s hard to aim it toward the target.  Makes sense to me.

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Epi Awards – just great

My sister got us tickets to the Epi Awards ceremony, held at the Pacific Cinémathèque in Vancouver today. We went there to celebrate her son and his friend who were selected as finalists. They also got nominated in the Best Message category for their work on the short film, “That night at pizza shaq”.

It was all part of a contest put on by the BC Epilepsy Society for young video makers over the last year or so. The idea was to come up with a short video to capture the spirit of a new look at epilepsy in society. I understand some of the winning videos will be posted on the society’s website soon.

All the entries showed incredible creativity and technical know-how, and, as film maker Velcro Ripper (one of the speakers) said, they’ve become agents of change. Lending their art and craft to making a difference in the world.

Who says that ‘youth’ are a problem. Seems to me that many are more of a solution?

It was a somewhat serious topic, but the emcee, David C. Jones, had everyone in stitches for most of the show. What an excellent job he did. I tried to find a link to him, but both I tried were dead right now. Come back David!

The improve troupe “Improvisors” presented a 3 act improv over the space of the agenda. What a laugh. That was really the first improv I’ve seen. Now I want more.

There was also a short film called ‘The story of a man, a dream, and a whole lotta kites’, by Matthew Nie. Wow, what a film. Hard to put into words, so find it and see it. Really inspiring.

There was also a young lady from waaaay up north, that gave an inspriational talk on living with epilepsy – she still makes films, hikes, camps, paddles rafts, fishes, skidoos, and has a real connection to her community. Wow.

Overall, a great way to fill a Sunday afternoon. Thanks folks.

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Green Timbers Heritage in Surrey

I was lucky enough to be invited to the unveiling of a plaque commemorating some of the heritage values at Green Timbers Park in Surrey. Our new Mayor Diane Watts (fourth in from left) was there, as was Councillor Judy Higginbotham (opposite plaque from the Mayor), some of the Surrey Heritage Commission, and a few directors of the Green Timbers Heritage Society.

It was a small event, with cookies, coffee, and a few words about the site. Two of the buildings there were part of the original forest seedling nursery, started back in 1930. One of them is now designated part of Surrey’s hertitage.

Afterwards, we went on a tour of the first plantation in BC. The plantation is located in Green Timbers Park, and part of it was planted by local dignataries. The original seedlings were supplied by a provincial nursery on-site.

The heritage society has put up a map so people can see which trees were planted by who, and where each tree is. Time and storms have taken their toll, but there are quite a few of those original trees left.

In about 1989 or 1990, there was another tree planting and the decendents of those dignitaries came out and put in a small plantation beside the original. The new plantation is in an area that was originally left cleared so they could grow ‘bare root’ seedlings for reforestation. Again, the seedlings were grown at the nursery there. Nice.

You can learn more about Green Timbers Park via this link. It’s getting more and more popular as the area develops.

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Truncated posts

Not to prolong the discussion about long vs short posts, but I bit the bullet last night and moved any short-post blogs to a separate folder. I may or may not keep up with them.

It won’t make a lot of difference, I guess. It’s just one reader leaving that got tired of having to bounce around to read someone’s thoughts every time the feed came up.

During a speed read through my feeds today, I did notice an interesting technique though, . It might be a compromise of sorts. The author (sorry, I forget who) provided a perspective with a link on something longer that they’d written. Somehow, once I’d read the ‘abstract’ and a sumary of his thoughts about the subject, I didn’t feel too bad about opening up a browser to read more. By that time I knew it could be worth more time and thought on my part.

I must find that blog again…..

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Limelight for bloggers

Steve Rubel writes about a new service  offered by some daily papers in the US.

“In what could be a landmark moment for citizen journalism, four newspapers plan to syndicate bloggers’ content on their own sites through a new program called Blogburst.”

Very interesting.

From the website at Blogburst, we get the following advantages:

“What do you get out of this?

Visibility and exposure on major news and portal sites

    • Traffic through attribution and links back to your blog
    • Authority and credibility within your topic area
    • New readers who wouldn’t normally find out about your blog
    • The opportunity to take your blog to the next level”

What you don’t get is to add advertising in your feed (yet). That’s kinda one-sided, but I guess if a blogger wants the exposure it’s a good thing. You can always advertise on the blog itself, and given that it’s an opt-in arrangement, you could always opt-out if you felt it wasn’t paying in other ways.

I guess the question remains about who should get paid for content. Too bad they don’t offer some sort of payback through a click through setup from their online editions.

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Northern Voice to unfortunate silence

The Northern Voice conference in Vancouver last weekend was the first blogging conference I’ve been to. What an interesting collection of topics and speakers – everything from extreme geek, to storytelling and community building. I left excited, and with full intensions of creating a blog post fury. I may still, but…

When I got home, I got a phone call from a friend in Search and Rescue – Surrey Search and Rescue, that is. He asked if I had some time to come and participate in a search.

I hummed and hawed a bit, but had a bite to eat and went down to the search base at the Tsawassen ferry terminal. Searchers scouered through the mud and darkness until about 02:00 or so for a fellow that had gone missing a few days earlier. They had found some of his belongings along the causeway, but there’s been no sign of him.  If you can help, please give the Delta Police a call.

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Only in New York, you say…

Yaro Starak at Entrepreneur’s Journey talks about a program in New York where local entrepreneurs are interviewed by a city television program. Unfortunately they only deal with locals.

Too bad. This a great idea. I attend lots of local events and the number of interesting, talented people I meet out there amazes me. They aren’t all necessarily great, newsmaking successes, but they are living their dream, making a difference, and loving it.

Perhaps if we focused more on things like that in the news we’d be better for it. I’ve seen one program, Studio 4, with Fanny Kiefer that does this, but as far as I know she’s just on during the day. Does anyone else know of other local shows like it?

Can we have more ads in RSS please

 

Yes, you read that right. But within reason, please.
 
I’m getting to the point of unsubscribing to a number of very good blogs. And it goes back to the age “old full post vs lead-in” argument that goes on from time to time.
 
It’s all personal preference, of course, but…
 
One of the reasons I prefer RSS is that I don’t have to hop around constantly from blog to blog. But lately, more and more people seem to be providing only the first 100-200 words through RSS. They invite you to the blog site to read the rest. Often ‘the rest’ is just a paragraph or two that wraps things up. How irritating.
 
Now there are a number of reasons to do that, I guess. Two could be:
  • to get people to come to their site and see/click on their ads
  • to get people to come and comment on their post
 
Well for the former, why not just put a few ads in your RSS feed and be done with it. For the latter, I’m not sure that’s how to do it. If I like a post and want to comment, I’ll click through to the site and comment. If I have to click through to your website to see a whole post, I might not even finish reading it, let alone head over to comment.
 
That said, I understand that some folks like to read through some introduction to a post and then click through to read only those that interest them. But really, with the RSS reading tools available today it’s not that hard to scroll through to the next entry.
 
Guess there’s really no answer for everyone. Perhaps I’ll just move those blogs to my someday/maybe list of blogs to read. I’ll go through them when I’ve got more time (hah, hah).
 
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Sure has been dark in here

Yes, very, very dark. 

Might be blogger’s block to some extent, but I seem to remember thinking a while ago that I’d just take a break and see if I could think of a ‘niche’ to write in.

Well, that hasn’t worked very well.  I think all that did was lead to a bad case of procrastination.

Anyway, for a change of pace I "claimed my blog" with Technorati today. Scary. I’m ranked 1,107,878 and I’m linked by zero  other blogs. Not surprising in itself, considering the posting rate, but Hey! that makes me one in a million 😉

I’ll try to do better.

Back in the saddle

Ok, at the risk of stating the obvious, I have to mention that I haven’t been posting much.
 
Well, it’s been busy. What else can I say.
 
Here’s a glimpse of the calendar for October (in no particular order):
  • Joined the board of a group that acts as steward of a local park (Green Timbers Park – sorry, the link web page is down)
  • Finished off three courses in the SFU Writing and Publishing Program  (just have to write two exams)
  • Volunteered to act as the lead for Contractor’s group for the STC and attended my predecessor’s last meeting
  • Spent a weekend at the Surrey International Writer’s Conference
  • Purged of a lot of stuff at home
  • Attended 3 Toastmasters meetings, and helped steal the flag from another Toastmasters club (then they stole it back 😉
  • Went over to Victoria for Thanksgiving to visit my sister and her family
  • Attended a Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting on goal setting
  • Chipped my tooth and got it fixed
  • Reviewed a draft website for a colleague
  • Attended the SOHO small business expo

I know, everyone’s busy. But, this month has been busier than usual for me. Guess I’d better get use to it.

 
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