Steve Explains: The Un-Crush Objects and His Broken Heart

Last week I talked about what makes a Fan-To-Pro Crush Object and/or a Resume Worthy company, at least for myself.  In figured this week I'd take the time to explain what gives he the hiring heebie-jeebies when I see a company in the news.

So in no real order, here are the red lights that set off my warning bells . . . and push me into mixed metaphors.  Not all of these immediately make me say "hey, no one should work there," but as they build up . . .

  • Job cuts.  Look, not all job cuts are bad, but still when you need less people, then certainly I'm not sure that you're resume-worthy for the readership.  Also I find they're often made in desperation.
  • No direction.  Who are you and what are you doing, company?  If I can't make it out and all I see is meandering, then I'm going to be concerned you're not a target for the readership's career choices.  Size doesn't matter here.
  • Bad location.  Good companies can be anywhere, but some places show more promise than others.  As cool as you may be, do people want to live where you area?  For that matter, are you in the kind of place where investors rain down Venture Capital or not?
  • Clueless advertising and marketing.  Sure it's almost certainly done by some outsourced agency who creates your ads and adulations, but if you can't give those people good direction or clamp down on dumb ideas, then you've got an issue.  Bad management is bad management.
  • No stability.  Stability is a bit hard to classify – or expect – in tis day and age, but at least make a try.  If everything is changing all the time, you're moving, the product is changing, etc. it doesn't look dynamic and innovative, it looks desperate and insipid.
  • Disrespect.  Show some respect for your customers, employees, and competitors.  Otherwise you're not only a jerk, you're undermining your relations with the people that pay the bills, do the work, or can crush you.  It also shows that you've got too many people who are egomaniacs, and even if they succeed, the company may not.
  • The wrong kind of retro.  There's old-school that's hip, then there's just backwards and clueless.  If you're old-school, show enough savvy to show you know it – otherwise you may look backwards or even be backwards.
  • A lack of a sense of humor.  A lack of humor is a lack of awareness.  I am not too turned off by not being humorous, but an extreme lack of humor is a dangerous thing.
  • Follow the leader.  Innovate, OK?  Even a little bit?  If you imitate at least imitate your way?  Otherwise you seem unoriginal and unoriginality isn't a confidence builder.
  • Doesn't provide value.  If all you do is shift cash around and do nothing then I'm not interested

So there's the rather abstract guide to what makes me take a company out of my "the readers should work for it" lists.  I hope it helps.  it was at least therapeutic to write on my end.

Steven Savage

Quick Things To Help your Unemployed Fellow Fan

So you've got some fellow fans, geeks, and otaku who are having a tough-time job wise.  Maybe they just lost their job, maybe you've found your online or local community is plagued by unemployment.  What can you do, fast, to help people out?

  • Set up a message board topic or similar area on your gang/convention/group's website for job assistance and encourage people to help out.
  • Make unemployment – and employment – a subject at your next gaming session, group get-together, etc.  For that matter make a spinoff group until people's economic lives are less unpleasantly unemployment-focused.
  • Do a whip-round in your mailing list or preferred social media to gather people's lists of recruiters, temp agonies, etc. and pass them out to those seeking employment.
  • Make sure everyone in your fan group links to each other on LinkedIn and helps each other network.
  • Collect people's resumes and distribute them to the group in case they hear of any openings – that can take just an evening.
  • Hold an immediate online commiseration session.  It'll feel good.
  • Have everyone in your fan group go see if there are relevant openings at their companies.  Set a deadline to report it.

Any other suggestions?

Steven Savage

News Of The Day 10/22/2010

Verizon beats estimates and shows their future plans!  Kabam expands!  Microsoft has a Web Based App Store!  Plenty of things headed for the future as we close out the week in geeky news!

Economics/Geekonomics/Total Economic Disasternomics:
MUST READ: More Foreclosure Fraud for Dummies – now with Part Five

The Future is B.S. – A hilariously insightful article on the economic weirdness of the future.

Mobile:
Verizon beats estimates for Q3. It will not surprise you to learn this is due to smartphones. Also some rumors that it'll get the iPhone as well. I'd note that I think Verizon is trying to expand beyond phone services to be a kind of full-scale consumer electronics reseller with its own phone services and related as just part of the offering (a part of course that ties into the reselling a LOT). That actually seems to be a smart strategy – and they can offer a more "boutique" service ala the Apple Store.

News:
AOL seems to be loosing editors. Not sure I agree with the analysis here, but I find it curious in general. AOL's hyperlocal switch would mean a change in editorial function, but at the same time I also wonder if this is part of a larger turnover/change-of-guard.

Technology:
HP launches it's Slate. Doesn't seem half bad, and the price itself seems reasonable for what it does.

Video:
Netflix is consuming a lot of bandwidth. Just noting. World domination continues.

A compelling argument that the future of TV is html. Rough upshot? It's easier. However this article takes a good look at the Everythign Wars going on in video, from Google TV being blocked to more.

And yes, as noted Three broadcasters blocked the web-based versions of their shows from Google's Web TV – Google is in talks to resolve that. More growing pains as part of the inevitable move towards web video.

Video Games:
Microsoft launches browser-based Games store. Anyone surprised? Yeah, I thought so. The online store is the way to go.

Kabam continues to expand with the purchase of Wonderhill studio, which has some nice games going for it. Resume-worthy company perhaps?

Atlus bounces back to profitability this year – And it's mostly due to the beautiful, deliberately insanely-hard Demon's Souls. This is very good for the oddball/cult-hit publisher, and may give us a few insights into demographics and advertising of games. I know I got Demon's Souls based on the hype surrounding it, enjoyed it for its looks and challenge . . . and then stopped playing as it wasn't that relaxing. But it was a great game!

Video Games-MMO:
This may not be something everyone thinks of, but DC Universe Online is really fleshing out a good name voice cast. Considering the importance of the voice actors to Batman: Arkham Asylum, I wonder if this is not only good production, but good marketing?

QUESTION OF THE DAY:

Steven Savage