A Warrior’s search for Synchronicity

personal blog of Jan Joshi

Linchpin by Seth Godin

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A must read book for any one who enjoy change and do not want to end up being another replaceable cog


Written by janjoshi

March 6, 2010 at 1:54 pm

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Unfolding the Napkin by Dan Roam

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Solving problems with simple pictures. For those who don’t know Dan, he bagged the trophy for the best presentation run by slideshare.com. The art is not just about drawing, it is drawing to instigate thinking, bring clarity, tell a story and stimulate action. Pretty evident how that is possible from Thomson Reuters story, Health Care Napkin. Amazing are the roads Dan leads us through.

Written by janjoshi

February 19, 2010 at 2:08 pm

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Getting Real

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Getting real comes from asking real questions and listening to more than words that are said. Bringing back your observations of the unsaid into the conversation, gets both parties into a different realm of conversation helping to uncover previously untouched areas. Thus by entering into a multidimensional exchange of ideas and emotions you enrich a relationship, greying the boundaries between professional and personal divisions.

Reading Elizabeth Gilbert’s  ’Eat, Pray and Love’ lets you enter into such a conversation with some one that near and holds a warm soul.

Written by janjoshi

February 19, 2010 at 12:30 pm

Posted in Insights

The real competitor for Apple ipad

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Amazing way to blur the digital divide and probably this is the real competitor for Apple ipad

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February 6, 2010 at 1:06 pm

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The boy who harnessed the wind by William Kamkwamba

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If any of us has a notion that we are cruising against great adversities, William’s story will shift our thinking. Listen to the TED talk

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February 6, 2010 at 6:55 am

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A new way to think about creativity – Elizabeth Gilbert

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February 5, 2010 at 6:50 am

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Drive by Dan Pink

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“Compliance will get you through the day, but only engagement will get you through the night”.

The centre piece of Dan’s book is built around this idea – extrinsic motivators are not good enough when navigating through unchartered waters. Intrinsic motivators are indispensable in todays world, with ever changing boundaries where unless you are the one who is redefining the limitations  or closely following the leader, you have little chance of survival.

Dan has pointed at the gap between what science knows and what businesses do (businesses continue to concentrate on extrinsic motivators – carrot or the stick, the intangible is beyond the reach for most of them). Probably that is why Apple, Ideo have remained way apart and now Ford is also entering the same league.

Every manager have asked this question – How do I motivate my people, probably a better question to ask is what motivates people in this changed world, where the quest is not just for money, but for a meaninful existence too.

A great read

Written by janjoshi

February 4, 2010 at 9:52 am

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I am the Captain of my soul

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Great men live a life beyond normal human beings by choice not by nature. Carefully crafted strategies were part of the campaign led by any great people leader, whether it be Gandhi, who through Salt Satyagraha, challenged the moral ascendancy West held over East or Nelson Mandela, who inspired South African Rugby Team to win the world cup in 1995, there by creating an emotional platform to bring together people divided by apartheid for decades. Great Movie – Invictus – Thanks Clint East Wood

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January 27, 2010 at 5:58 pm

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Passion Personified to teach, touch and move

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Look at these women to feel what is passion personified

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January 25, 2010 at 3:11 pm

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Each master to his own technique

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This is a dialogue from an old Jackie Chan movie. Can’t remember the name of the movie.

As a child I was given the impression by the elders that they knew much more about the world and they could point me to the right direction. A warrior at heart, I seldom stopped questioning the limits of their patience, like most teenagers. And like many men who refuse to grow up, I still carry that teenager with me and now when half my life is over and parenting a five year old I don’t try to portray the image of an omniscient. What intrigues me is the notion or audacity that my parents or family had when they were bringing me up, to paint a wrong picture of their abilities or knowledge – much like those wall street bankers. I guess that this is a notion that most Indian families harbour, that the elders know better and approach their offsprings with the mindset that they need to be taught about the ways of  the world, not celebrating the immense capabilities with which they are born with and the potentials they will bloom into without any interference. At some stage in my life there was a cross over and my parents completely abandoned this notion – what would have been the subprime meltdown in our lives – I have to still fathom it out.

When answering my five year old’s questions like what is a heart attack, how did that first woman come on earth, what is protector, why is Vishnu (the hindu diety) called a protector and Shiva (another diety) called a destroyer, I don’t hold back, but try to explain even the cycle  of creation, protection and destruction to maintain the balance of the world. And every time we hold such conversation I try to embed the message that I know very little, there is a vast world out there where you could find more information both first hand and from people who have experienced it before, there are multiple modes of enrichment available, which you can choose to your liking , youtube, images, neopets, facebook and so on.

In whatsoever state you are, having a strategy of your own counts and understanding how that strategy fits into the bigger jigsaw. Many a time it may not work out as you planned, many a time you may come across a much bigger game which was played in your favour and in the designing of which you had zero input. All you can do is play your game with fierce will and involvement and embrace the unknown with hunger and passion, for there are not going to be many knowns in your life.

Written by janjoshi

January 23, 2010 at 2:50 pm