Sigh… 36

Thanks to everyone out there who remembered by birthday today and sent me emails, IMs, called me, etc. It was quite overwhelming. Who the hell ARE all you people anyway? I got happy birthday emails from people I don’t even know. That’s weird. Especially when celebrating birthdays is something you try to avoid. Anyway, I appreciate it.

36…. when I moved from Bundaberg to Melbourne in January 1988, age 17, with a couple of hundred bucks I’d saved up from picking rockmelons over the summer on my girlfriend’s father’s farm, I promised myself I’d be a millionaire by age 25. The plan was – spend three years working out how the world works, then five years to execute "the plan". I had a high school education and was incredibly naive. I remember, after a week in Melbourne, wondering where you bought coat hangers from. I did my weekly shopping at the local 7 Eleven because I thought it was a supermarket. I lived on bread and tomato sauce for a week because I had no money.

Anyway, I didn’t hit the millionaire at 25 goal. At 25 I think I was making about $40,000 a year making corporate videos. So I reset the goal to 30. When I was 27 I landed a job at Microsoft when their share price was climbing. My hiring manager told me I’d be a millionaire in 4 years.

When I was 29 I started my first internet business – it was called Golflounge and we were going to create an online system for booking a round of golf on every golf course in Australia. We even raised $3 million on the back of a napkin. This was about… March 2000. Then Ballmer busted up Bubble 1.0 and we said "hmmm no thanks" to the money. I turned 30 six months later. I was working at Microsoft, making six figure income, traveling around the world, and miserable as hell. Oh and their share price was in a nosedive it STILL hasn’t recovered from. I went into a three-year depression. And I reset the millionaire goal to 35.

One year I turned 35. I was running The Podcast Network. I missed my goal again but at least this time I felt like I was doing something with my life. Finally. And you know? The "millionaire" goal suddenly seemed less important. So I didn’t reset it for 40. My focus had changed from being rich to being useful. I realized along the way that what I wanted wasn’t to be a "millionaire" anyway. What I wanted, what that represented, was freedom. The freedom to do what I wanted, with people I liked, when and where I wanted, and not to have to answer to a boss I didn’t respect.

And you know what? That’s my life today. Okay – I’ll admit, I’d like to have more liquidity. That would take some of the pressure off. But it’s a minor point. I feel like my life has meaning today. I am doing something I totally believe in, it’s a lot of fun, and I’m working with a terrific bunch of people who I respect and admire and am proud to be associated with. I’ve got a loving and supportive family.

I remember being at DEMO in the US last year and hearing several people on stage say "Find something you love to do and success will follow." I’m starting to understand that.

Forget about owning the next GooTube. Forget about being a millionaire for a second. Find something you love to do and you are passionate about and you believe in. Hopefully it will also be something that can impact positively on people’s lives. Then go do it.

That’s my wish for you on my birthday.

GDAY WORLD #158 – Featuring the Sacked Telstra Blogger, Tom Reynolds

Tom Reynolds, the guy who was a Telstra blogger until his contract was unceremoniously terminated last week, oh-so-coincidentally 24 hours after he wrote a post slightly critical of Telstra, joins Rich and I on the show today.

We talk about

  • Type 2 Diabetes, childhood obesity and fast food. I think it’s time we (eg me) did something about it.
  • Must see TV – Entourage, Deadwood, new eps of Battlestar Galactica, Studio 60 on Sunset Strip, and Heroes
  • Cam’s planning on moving to San Francisco to raise funds for TPN.
  • And Tom and Rich blame me for their life problems. Bloody typical. No-one takes responsibility these days.

If you enjoyed this podcast, make sure you don’t miss future episodes by subscribing to our feed.

The G’Day World Theme Song is “Save Me” by The Napoleon Blown Aparts. Thanks to our sponsors Wardy IT!

Finally cracked 1400!

After a scorching performance by me against my opponent Zimowski from the islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, I have finally cracked the 1400 ranking on RedHotPawn! I know, I know, you don’t care. But chess is the game of kings, my friends. I’m taking H&T to their first chess club tomorrow morning to celebrate their 6th birthday (which is actually Wednesday but the party is tomorrow afternoon). My Polish grandfather taught me chess when I was six. It’s one of the greatest gifts you can give a kid. There is plenty of academic evidence out there now that says it does wonders for cognitive development.

Telstra’s first blogging casualty

UPDATE: This story has made the front page of News.com.au.

Tom Reynolds rang me this morning to tell me he was available to work on some TPN projects over the next couple of weeks as he’d been sacked from Telstra this morning. Co-incidentally, Tom wrote this blog post only two days ago quoting Robert Scoble’s Corporate Weblog Manifesto and saying from now on he was going to be more open and honest in his blogging. Tom wrote:

… sometimes departments here have allowed a culture of “duck and cover” to rule them. Personally I think the new idea of “One Click, One Touch, One Telstra” is fine- in theory, but there will need to be more than just a fancy jingo and a series of cool new ads. We need to look at what we rate as important and make it happen.

I consider this a huge mistake on behalf of Telstra. I just gave a quote to News.com.au telling them the same thing. About two weeks ago I sat next to Paul Crisp,  Corporate Affairs Manager at Telstra, at the Australian Institute of Marketing breakfast and told the audience that companies which allow blogging have to have two policies – one for the bloggers, so they know what they can write about without getting into trouble, and the second for the managers in the company so they know how to treat bloggers if they have concerns about how or what they blog.

It seems to me that Tom is a victim of a manager inside of Telstra who isn’t on the program and has concerns about a member of the team writing openly and honestly about working inside the company. A similar thing happened to me at Microsoft. I jumped ship and started TPN. Just think… Microsoft could have kept this creativity and energy inside the company. Telstra could have kept Tom inside the company but instead they will make him a celebrity. I told Tom this morning to get ready to leverage being "the guy that Telstra sacked for blogging".

Here’s a link to Tom’s personal blog. I know he’s taking it easy today so don’t expect to hear much from him until he clears his head.

“But there’s no evidence to support the Big Bang Theory!”

How many times have I heard THAT statement from easily-lead Christian friends who believe everything their Sunday evangelist tells them? Sure. Don’t bother opening a book or anything. That’s be WAY too hard.

Anyhoo… for the benefit of those of you who have friends or family like that, here’s the latest in my series of packaged up responses.

When someone says "But there’s no evidence to support the Big Bang Theory!", you can say:

"Oh yeah, well you better tell that to the Nobel Prize committee, cuz they just awarded the Noble Prize in physics to the guy who proved it", Astrophysicist George Smoot of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. I love the story about Smoot getting notified:

When a member of the Nobel Prize committee called Smoot a little before 3 a.m. Tuesday morning on his unlisted cell phone number, he assumed it was a hoax.

"How did you get my phone number?" was the first thing he asked.

He later discovered the Nobel Prize committee had awakened a neighbor with a listed number who gave them Smoot’s number.

After he hung up with the very serious man with a genuine-sounding Swedish accent, Smoot went online to make sure it was true.

After refreshing the page on the Nobel Prize Web site a couple times, there it was: Smoot and his colleague John Mather of NASA had won the Nobel Prize in physics "for their discovery of the blackbody form and anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation."

The TPN Oct 2006 Survey is GO!

Oh yeah, you know you LERVE a good survey. And this is the finest surveying that money can buy. We went into the future to bring this baby back for you. This survey is built by autonomous nano-bots, lubricated with genetically-modified omega-3 oils, and powered by Steorn’s free energy modulator (which finally came out in 2009 and completely destroyed the oil cartels… you had to be there).

FILL IN THE TPN SURVEY NOW.

Look Around You

Jon and Beti were raving about "Look Around You" at the last TPN dinner and I finally watched some of it tonight on YouTube. What a gem. Thank god for YouTube. This alone justified their $3 quadrillion valuation. If I had the funds, I’d buy three of ’em. Hey – the sun is up. It’s 5.40am. I’ve just pulled an all-nighter. Now I’m off to produce a video podcast for Tourism Victoria. By the way, listen to my interview with Melbourne businessman Geoff Lord if you haven’t already. Lots of good stuff in there. I especially liked his analogy of water-skiing and taking risks. Your goal for today is to take a risk you wouldn’t normally take with a view to pushing your horizons. This is the only life you’re going to get. Are you going to spend the rest of it doing what you’re doing right now?

Dear Mr Jobs

Dave Gray aka Rooster aka the host of TPN’s Global Geek podcast, has taken the initiative and written a nice letter to Steve Jobs offering him a cheque for $1 for the use of the word "podcast". Legally I think he’s probably setting what they call a "precedent", but as long as the precedent is only for $1, I can live with that. Read Dave’s letter to Steve Jobs.