All posts by cjcheetham

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 24 Blue Moon by the Marcels

Blue Moon, you saw me standing alone
Without a dream in my heart
Without a love of my own

Admit it – you don’t own a single “doo wop” song.  Why?

the glory days of rock n roll – diners, cars, and great music.  There are a lot of possible best songs from the late 1950s and early 1960’s that formed the golden age of radio.  If you are going to have classic rock and roll song, it just has to be Blue Moon.

Guaranteed to make you smile.

http://youtu.be/7giOrKYIwpQ

-cj cheetham

P.S.

In case you were wondering, it’s something along these lines:

Bom ba ba bom ba bom ba bom bom ba ba bom ba ba bom ba ba dang a dang dang
Ba ba ding a dong ding Blue moon moon blue moon dip di dip di dip
Moo Moo Moo Blue moon dip di dip di dip Moo Moo Moo Blue moon dip di dip di dip
Bom ba ba bom ba bom ba bom bom ba ba bom ba ba bom ba ba dang a dang dang
Ba ba ding a dong ding

Bom ba ba bom ba bom ba bom bom ba ba bom

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

52 Songs for 52 Weeks – (Do you remember) Rock n Roll Radio by the Ramones

Rock and Roll Radio by the Ramones

The Ramones were one of the most influential bands of all time. Arriving on the scene as part of the blossoming punk rock movement in the 1970’s. Their look, their style, and their energy were a much needed shock to the system for a music scene that had grown sappy and boring in the mid to late 1970s. The Ramones were also able to keep the music fun – sort of a Punk Rock Beach Boys. They’ll never be another band like them.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJizV-d3sEQ

-cj cheetham

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 22 – Watch Your Step by Elvis Costello and the Attractions

Broken noses hung upon the wall; backslapping drinkers cheer the heavyweight brawl

Elvis Costello is one of the most prolific song writers in modern music history.  Choosing one of his songs for this list was a really difficult task.

I finally settled on Costello’s best album Trust.  Although it didn’t produce a major hit like many of his other albums did, Trust is his best work from start to finish.  And Watch Your Step is the best song on that best album.

It’s one of those songs that you wish was 5 minutes longer.

Don’t say a word…

http://youtu.be/c-175a-WZwY

-cj cheetham

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 21 – Metropolis by the Church

There’ll never be another quite like you
I’m so involved with everything you do

If the Church had been based in London rather than Australia, they would be a household name in America.  As it stands, they are one of the top Australian bands of all time. 

One of the most consistently excellent bands of the last 30 years, the Church was always able to combine great vocals, catchy guitar hooks, and great lyrics.

Metropolis, released in 1990 is a fantastic tune.  Add it to your library, just so you can get the guitar into your head and keep it there.

 

http://youtu.be/NKKaBk-ea8A

And when you fell they fell down on their knees
And when you broke they scrambled for a piece
And when you spoke I felt their anger freeze

-cj cheetham

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 20 – Overkill by Men at Work

It’s time to walk the streets; smell the desperation

In 1983, Australia’s Men at Work ruled the airwaves with Overkill.  Although they only released a couple of studio albums – Men at Work filled those recordings with outstanding music.  None better than this one.

One of the measures of a song is:  do you get tired of listening to it?  This is one song I literally never get tired of – it is pretty close to being a perfect song.

If you need more evidence of the timelessness of this tune – my 17 year old daughter loves it too.

http://youtu.be/RY7S6EgSlCI

Ghosts appear and fade away

-cj cheetham

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

Read This Book: Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury.

Ray Bradbury, who recently passed away, is one of my favorite authors.  His dystopian tale of a world where books are outlawed, Fahrenheit 451, should be required reading for Americans in a time when political correctness threatens free speech and thought.  Furthermore, Bradbury has written some of the best science fiction and horror tales that you will find.  From the Martian Chronicles to Something Wicked This Way Comes to the October Country; Bradbury has an impressive catalog.

However, it is his loosely autobiographical book Dandelion Wine, a simple tale of two brothers growing up in a small Midwestern town during the summer of 1928, which has become my all time favorite Bradbury book.

The story is focused on the Spaulding brothers:  Doug aged 12 and Tom who is 10.  As they spend the early summer days helping Grandfather make dandelion wine.  Taking the simple – and what is often cast off as a pesky weed – and turning it into an item that brings joy; and that is really the theme of the entire book.    

Each chapter is a slice of life from small town America.  The boys’ imaginations run wild as they see magic in the world around them.  For example, after the boys listen as the local Civil War veteran regales them with tales of adventure and battle, Doug and Tom start calling Colonel Freeleigh “the Time Machine.”

Early in the summer Doug discovers that he is alive and he is excited to be so.  But as the end of summer draws near, Doug becomes despondent.  Just as the seasons are about the change – Doug realizes that his life is beginning to change as well.  He is growing up.  He is growing up and people will move away, family members will eventually die, and nothing will ever be as perfect as those first few days of summer 1928, ever again.

As I read this book, I had a lot of vivid memories of my own childhood – running around my own small town with my brothers and my friends.  Looking back, sometimes childhood seems like a dream – and certainly Bradbury infuses this novel with a dream-like quality.  As Douglas desperately tries to keep it always summer, I am right there with him, hoping he’ll somehow pull it off.  That he will find a way to make it stay forever now; eternal summer for Douglas and these carefree boys.

The book is full of incredible characters described in wonderfully funny and sad chapters.  I intentionally avoided this Bradbury book all my life because I was always drawn to his ghost stories.  But I am so glad I picked this book up and read it this year.  No, it’s not a ghost story – but it awakens the ghosts of times past, that are hidden within all of us.

I’ll not spoil the book by saying that the dandelion wine, like warm memories of family and friends, is safely stored in the Spaulding’s cellar by the end of the story.  It is
there to get them through the sadness of fall and the cold of winter. 

What a book Mr. Bradbury wrote!  I’d easily put it in my top 5 favorite works of fiction.

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: week 19 – We Let Her Down by Chris Isaak

Chris Isaak proves – that sometimes sad songs are the best songs. 

I told her I’d love her; Now that it’s too late I see – I let her down

http://youtu.be/3kZWqUYTi9A

-cj cheetham

 52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

 

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 18 – New Year’s Day by U2

On New Year’s Day 1981, the communists running Poland declared Martial Law in order to go after Lech Walesa and the Solidarity movement.  The Communists eventually lost.

You really can’t have a great song list without at least one U2 song.  This one has always been my favorite U2 song.  Outstanding piano on this one – mixed in with a killer guitar.

‘Under a blood red sky, a crowd has gathered, black and white, alls entwined, the chosen few, the newspapers say, its true its true, and we can break through

I was going to save this for January – but people are clamoring for more classic 80’s.  Great video to boot (featuring Soviet forces in WWII trying to destroy civilization).

http://youtu.be/8kx8wGRNZX4

Nothing changes on New Year’s Day…

-cj cheetham

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.

 

 

 

Micromanagement – The Incurable Disease

Try this experiment:  Get together with your coworkers and ask them what they think of micromanagement.  I’m guessing that you will get animated responses, indignant denunciations, and outright hatred of micromanagement and its practitioners:  micromanagers.  

In terms of public opinion, micromanagers are rated near the very bottom of society.  In fact, in a recent study (that I just made up off the top of my head) Americans rated micromanagers very low on the respect scale.  The results were stark, micromanagers finished just below “people who engage in human sacrifice” and just ahead of politicians.  It’s that bad. 

In other words, there is an almost universal agreement that micromanagement of subordinates is ineffective, annoying, and completely unnecessary.  Great!  We are all in agreement and we don’t have to worry about that subject anymore.

Now ask your coworkers just one more question:  have you ever worked for a micromanager? 

Hey!  What are all those hands doing up in the air?

It turns out that in a real study, nearly 80 percent of respondents said they either currently work for or have in the past worked for a micromanager.  That represents a huge disconnect between what we universally hate and what is actually practiced by leaders.   What exactly is causing leaders to do what everyone hates?

Make no mistake about it, micromanagement is not leadership.  In fact it is the opposite of leadership.  It does not empower, motivate, or inspire subordinates to achieve.  Instead it creates an atmosphere of fear and loathing; of anger and discontent.  So why would otherwise talented people use a universally despised method to “lead” their organizations? 

The Roots of Micromanagement

Micromanagement is rooted in a multitude of unsavory leadership defects.  Perhaps those of you who have encountered a micromanager will recognize some or all of these traits existing in your tormentor.

1.  I’m the smartest person in the room (Arrogance)

This is a very common trait among micromanagers.  They fail to trust their people and they question the competence of their people.  This trait is a deformed version of confidence.  Most people will tell you they are happy with a confident, self-assured leader.  What people despise is the arrogant boss claiming to know better than the front line worker on every subject.  In the military this manifests itself when Headquarters second guesses the tactical leader despite the fact that the front line tactical leader has access to the most relevant information.

2.  Fear of failure (Cowardice)

Micromanagers live in fear.  They obsess over “what will my boss think?” and “if this doesn’t work perfectly, how will I explain it?”  This leads to endless requests by micromanaging bosses for more and more detailed information, before the boss is willing to make a decision.  What the micromanager is actually doing is hoping to never make a decision on a subject.  This will frustrate subordinates who are closer to the actual problem, understand the risk, and want to take the best course of action even though they know it isn’t perfect.  The micromanager? 

They would rather do nothing than get it wrong.  So they demand more and more information to consider for longer and longer periods of time.  Frustrated subordinates either figure out a work around and don’t let the Boss know; or worse the subordinate gives up on trying to solve the problem altogether.

3.  Let me weigh in on every subject (Obsessive)

 Micromanagers have opinions on everything their subordinates do.  In fact, if a micromanager reads any report or document from a subordinate, rest assured he will find something that needs to be revised or changed.  Why?  Because, by their nature micromanagers are obsessed with weighing in on every subject.  This is a misapplication of leadership.  The leader weighs in only when he has to enable subordinates to accomplish a task; the micromanager weighs in on every tiny detail thereby slowing down and frustrating progress. 

4. There is only ONE way to solve a problem (Compulsive)

When I was a student at the Army Command and General Staff College we would always caution each other to find “A” way to solve a problem rather than getting bogged down with “THE” way to solve a problem.  The efficient leader accepts that there are multiple right answers to challenging questions.  Unfortunately the micromanager doesn’t believe that and insists on finding “THE” answer to all problems no matter how small.  What results is a game called “bring me a rock.”   It goes like this:

Boss:  “Hey Joe, run outside and get me a rock that will prop my office door open.”

Joe:  “Sure thing Boss!”  (Joe returns with a big white rock and hands it to the Boss).

Boss:  (Disappointed) “Joe, I actually think a black rock would be better.”

Joe:  “Sure thing Boss!”  (Joe returns with a black Rock)

Boss:  (Disappointed) “Joe I actually think a square rock would be better.”

You get the idea.  Every time Joe returns, he is met with disappointment.  The rock isn’t big enough; not round enough; where are the quartz speckles, Joe?  Not heavy enough; not unique; etc.

Eventually Joe starts to think there is no solution to this problem.  He starts to hate the rock and fantasizes about what color and size rock would do the most damage to his Boss’s skull.

5.  Today’s technology allows me to know everything (Hubris)

A micromanager almost always loves technology.  They want excel spreadsheets linked to other excel spreadsheets, managed by a complex access database.  Micromanagers love pie charts, fishbone diagrams, scatter graphs, and flow charts.  The reason micromanagers love these tools is because they believe they can actually understand everything and know everything that is going on in their organization with the right visualization tool. 

This is hubris and this is destructive.  It is not possible for one person to understand that much information.  This is why we hire employees to begin with.  At some point in the past a Boss said “we need to hire a guy to run project X, because I do not have the time or energy to manage that anymore.  I need to focus on other leadership level stuff.”   

Then years later along come Mr. Micromanager and he wants all the detail weekly on Project X.  Not only that but he’d like pie charts on the projects associated with the other 25 letters in the alphabet too!

Soon things devolve into a death spiral, as frustrated subordinates come up with new, bright colored slides, with shapes, arrows, symbols and shadows – all designed to give massive amounts of information to the micromanager.  Unfortunately the micromanager begins to re-imagine bigger and better slides, data bases, and spreadsheets that will eventually unlock life’s mysteries.  Before you know it a significant portion of the workforce is dedicated to creating graphs, charts, and slides – all in the name of technology making information “more accessible” to decision-makers.

 Curing Micromanagement

Okay, we are in agreement.  Micromanagement is a disaster and we need to find the cure for this leadership disease.

Except there is just one problem:  There is no cure (didn’t you read the title of this article?).

Like Michael Jordan, you can’t stop micromanagement; you can only hope to contain it.  The best way to contain micromanagers is to stop putting them in charge of other people.  If you have a micromanager in your organization, find a detail oriented job that requires no human interaction for them.  That is your best option.  For Heaven’s sake, don’t put him in charge of people.

Another way to limit the effects of micromanagers is to let them know they are arrogant, cowardly, obsessive, compulsive, and hubristic leaders who are more hated than people who conduct human sacrifice.  In other words, the micromanager must be confronted and then the micromanager, like the alcoholic, must go to battle with his demons daily.  Will he occasionally fall off the wagon and demand a Pareto Chart when he doesn’t really need one?  Yes.  But as long as he gets back on that wagon, your organization stands a chance.

A third strategy for limiting the deleterious effects of micromanagers is to mock them.  The movie Office Space is a great example of just the type of mocking that is necessary.  Give the micromanager a good drubbing with mockery – remember this is for his own good; he has a disease.  Obviously this option only works with peers and subordinates.  Open mockery of a boss will probably land you out of a job.  So be careful how you use it.  Think of mockery as a tourniquet – a last resort that could result in the loss of a limb.

Lastly, realize that these controlling techniques will only work on about 50% of micromanagers.  The other 50% will not be affected at all by these weak efforts to control them.  In fact, the other 50% are probably oblivious to the fact that they are micromanagers at all. 

So, there’s a good chance you will work for a micromanager at some point – just don’t become one. 

If you really have to do something people detest, go with human sacrifice – you’ll be more popular.

-cj cheetham

52 Songs for 52 Weeks: Week 17 – Restless Natives by Big Country

Big Country exploded onto the music scene with their incredible song, In a Big Country and instantly earned superstar status and immediate comparisons to U2. 

Despite their electric start Big Country never achieved the fame that was predicted for them.  Who knows why?  It could have been that Scottish bands were over looked; it could have been poor promotion.  One thing is clear – they didn’t miss out on superstardom because of their music.

Big Country’s 1st 3 albums are as good as any in my record library and I’d say their song catalog is as good as any band – ever.

During the height of their popularity, Stuart Adamson and the band were asked to record the music for a Scottish film called “Restless Natives” – it wasn’t  a great film, but it does have an incredible sound track.  This is the title track.

http://youtu.be/tN6eZOS5wQ0

The eagle he was lord above and Rob was lord below

-cj cheetham

Check out the classic Restless natives film clip:

http://youtu.be/oaDBET0oij8

52 songs for 52 weeks will get your music collection up to par. If you want to have a better music collection – check in each week . Add a song a week and in one year’s time your music collection will be the envy of all your friends.