Moving ON
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About this ebook
Find new angles and new paths for your life and career in subjects like:
- Entrepreneurship
- New technologies
- Personal Marketing
- Networking
- Creativity
- Behavior
- Communication
- Quality of Life
- Exposure
- Resilience
- And much more…
- In Moving On the master storyteller delivers a truckload of insights into marketing, life, career and business culture. The wit and elegance that Mario Persona brings to his texts make this book a unique entertainment and learning experience.
MARIO PERSONA
Mario Persona é palestrante, professor e consultor de estratégias de comunicação e marketing e autor dos livros “Laura Loft - Diário de uma Recepcionista”, “Meu carro sumiu!”, “Eu quero um refil!”, “Crônicas para ler depois do fim do mundo”, “Dia de Mudança” (também em inglês: “Moving ON”), “Marketing de Gente”, “Marketing Tutti-Frutti”, “Gestão de Mudanças em Tempos de Oportunidades”, “Receitas de Grandes Negócios”, “Crônicas de uma Internet de verão”, Coleção “O Evangelho em 3 Minutos” (4 volumes) e Coleção “O que respondi...”. Mario Persona participou também como autor convidado das coletâneas “Os 30+ em Atendimento e Vendas no Brasil”, “Gigantes do Marketing”, “Gigantes das Vendas”, “Educação 2007”, “Professor S.A.” e “Coleção Aprendiz Legal”, além de ter sido citado como “Case Mario Persona” no livro “Os 8 Pês do Marketing Digital”. Traduziu obras como “Marketing Internacional”, de Cateora e Graham, “Administração”, de Schermerhorn, “Liberte a Intuição”, de Roy Williams, além de diversos livros de comentários sobre a Bíblia. O autor é convidado com frequência para palestras, workshops e treinamentos de temas ligados a negócios, marketing, comunicação, vendas e desenvolvimento pessoal e profissional. Alguns temas são: Gestão de Mudanças, Criatividade e Inovação, Clima Organizacional, Gestão do Conhecimento, Comunicação, Marketing e Vendas, Satisfação do Cliente, Oratória, Marketing Pessoal, Qualidade Vida-Trabalho, Administração do Tempo, Segurança no Trabalho, Controle do Stress e Meio-Ambiente
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Book preview
Moving ON - MARIO PERSONA
Letter to an executive
Hi, Joe. No need to say Mr. Smith; I’ll just call you Joe, because that’s all you once used to be. I want to talk to you. Can I have five minutes of your time? Two? I know that you don’t have time, that you’re in a mad hurry, but what I want to say is important just so you don’t continue to be this way — mad — when the rush is over.
It’s true, the rush will be over; nothing lasts forever. How many times recently have you heard the phrase He doesn’t work here anymore
when you called someone? It didn’t use to be like that, did it? These are new times. Be humble. Much of what you think you have isn’t yours. It belongs to the company or to the position you have.
Remember Junior, the guy full of MBAs, who could even speak Mandarin? Look, Joe, you’d better lose some weight, because he’s going to take over your jacket. You used to be the cream of the crop, but not anymore. Things have changed. A hundred days without results and somebody else is going to be picking up the phone at your office and saying: He doesn’t work here anymore.
You’ll get the red carpet exit, all right. After all, the company has an image to preserve. They’ll say you left in order to develop your own projects (which means look for a job
), to seek new challenges (look through the job ads
) and to have more time for the family (be supported by the wife
).
So start getting off your high horse, because, for one thing, it’s not your horse, it’s a rental. Maybe it’s not your job on the line; maybe it’s your employer’s. Businessmen also get fired. By the market.
When I was young and was working for a bank, I negotiated the renewal of the bank's lease with the property owner. There was a lot of money involved.
Smoking a cigar and bored with the deal over the huge table in a huge office of the huge building of his huge company, he puffed in my face the very high-and-mighty conclusion:
Suit yourself, let’s keep it at that. This rent is what I spend on fuel for my yacht on a weekend.
His yacht must have been really big and burned up quite a bit of fuel, because a few years later he had no yacht, no company and no cigar. Only smoke. Times have changed, so be humble, Joe. What do you mean, be humble?
Well, steer clear of the image of an executive I once saw playing golf at a resort. Lofty and arrogant, blaming others for his golfing mishaps, he was quite a show. He drew attention to himself with his temper tantrums, cursing the grass and blaming it for his failure to get the ball in the hole. That was a few years ago. I don’t know how he’s been doing since.
You probably won’t retire as an executive. Few people will make it to that point. Get used to the idea of not being at the next convention to see Peter Drucker and other gurus. For one thing, even the great Drucker is gone, like everyone else will be one day, and so will you. So be humble.
Learn to live like a simple mortal — stay in line at the bank, take the bus. It may not have the glamour that you’re used to, but it’s less stressful than the life you’re leading now. By the way, remember to leave the glamour at the reception desk along with the badge. It belongs to the company.
Don’t get carried away by your network of friends. Many of them go with the flow. When you’re no longer a hot investment, they just won’t be around. Then it might be the right time to call all those business cards you kept for a rainy day. But don’t be surprised if what you hear mostly is: He doesn’t work here anymore.
Start developing a Plan B,
a Plan C,
or maybe even a Plan Z.
The more options the better. You might end up a consultant or even a professional speaker like me. You can’t imagine what kind of CVs some people who look for me have. They’re after tips on how to give lectures, figuring this is the standard retirement of every executive. It’s hard to believe that I may have something to teach people with that kind of background.
Identify your capabilities. Is there anything you know how to do? I don’t know, cooking, sewing, or book-keeping? These skills can be pretty useful when you start your own business as a restaurant owner or swimsuit manufacturer, or stay home doing the accounting for your new clients. OK, you can present yourself as a chef,
fashion designer,
or personal finance coach,
when you do the tax return for friends in your home office.
You can use these terms if you want to add some glamour to your new activities. But if you don’t know how to do anything, be humble and go back to studying.
I have no more tips. Oh, yes! One more: be humble. I’ve said that? All right, it’s my age. And, by the way, what is yours? You know it matters, don’t you? Speaking of humbleness, I know businessmen and executives who’ve worked that way, providing an example of humility and making the act of serving into a trademark of their professional image.
During lunch at an event, the owner of an industrial group that had hired me interrupted what he was doing to greet me. What he was doing? Serving tables. Another one, a CEO of a multinational company, took my suitcase and carried it to my car in the hotel parking, before the flabbergasted eyes of those who follow his daily orders in the company. Aloof managers will disappear. Those who don’t mind rolling up their sleeves and doing a little manual labor will survive. So be humble.
I know, I’ve said it already.
* * * * *
Introduction
I visited her in Philadelphia, even though I knew she was in a terminal condition. The experience wasn't very pleasant; it brought only memories of better days. I reckoned I wouldn't have another chance if I didn't see her on that one cold North American early-winter morning.
I felt a mix of reverence and sadness as I passed through those heavy doors. It was like invading a pharaoh’s tomb, centuries beyond its glory days. Like ancient hieroglyphics, the lettering on the walls screamed the agonizing message: GOING OUT OF BUSINESS!
. I was actually in one of the Towers Records chain shops, another casualty of new times and changes.
Have you realized how quickly things are changing? As a youngster, going to a record store was a major event. It was also a pain because some shop owners had the sadistic habit of pretending they didn't understand the name of the song and asked us to sing a part of it. I really hated that, but I liked to drop by, just to hear another jerk sing. It was hilarious.
That’s in the past. If there's still a music store in your town, rush over and take the kids. Someday they'll be able to say they've been to such a place, in much the same way I can tell today I've ridden in a cable car.
CD Stores are biting the dust, but not all by themselves. Photo shops are going down with them. Everything’s digital now. You take pictures with your cell phone and have them printed via the Internet. Music? Just download it. And what about the video from the rental store? It's kicked the bucket and is awaiting the band to play at the funeral. The Broad Band.
Oddly enough, the one that seemed to be at death's door holds on strong and firm. Older — much older — brother of other media of artistic expression, the book is still outsmarting death and scoring goals.
When the first personal computer came up, everyone thought that it would be the final nail in the book's coffin. No one thought about sound or image, since the first machines could only sing beep
and print photos made of letters. But traditional image and sound media passed away first. Meanwhile, all attempts to separate letters from paper media failed to get the seal of approval from the ultimate judge, the market.
The book is a fetish. People want to feel its cover, leaving marks as they slide their fingers through its pages, show it off on the way to work or on a bookshelf. Some bookstores even sell books by the foot, just for ornamental appeal. I saw a guy in a bookstore, looking at himself in the mirror as he catwalked, modeling a book. He chose the one with the best-looking cover, probably just to take it for a walk.
So far, so good. The trouble is dealing with the amount of people who write to me wanting to know how to publish a book. They think you're only a writer if you get your book in print. Not true. A writer is someone who writes, just like a sculptor carves, a painter paints and a singer sings. One shouldn't be concerned about whether the world will get to see one's work. To a writer, putting words in paper is a physiological need, a visceral one. Writing is the emesis of the satiated bee; it's the honey.
The mistake lies in thinking that getting your book printed is synonymous with becoming rich and famous. People in this mind frame don't really want to become writers; they want to become rich and famous. Most published writers don't even come close. For one thing, you have to