Colbert vs. Google
Here’s Stephen Colbert’s interview with Google CEO, Eric Schmidt:
| The Colbert Report | Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| Eric Schmidt | ||||
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Here’s Stephen Colbert’s interview with Google CEO, Eric Schmidt:
| The Colbert Report | Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| Eric Schmidt | ||||
|
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Stumbled on a fantastic review of Jeff Jarvis’ book, What Would Google Do?, at Bill Dahl’s blog. His review is so good you may be tempted not to buy Jarvis’ book. Key take away point for me? The significance of relationships in Google’s model of business. Jarvis writes, “It’s about people and making new connections among them. It all comes back to relationships.” p .22. Reflecting on that idea, Dahl goes on to identify a crucial practice for church leaders—listening.
What if churches took more time listening than doing? Rather than coming with all the answers, coming with all the questions? Asking themselves, what is the Spirit of God doing in people’s lives right now—inside and outside their congregations? How can we respond? This reminds me Mark Lau Branson’s excellent book, Memories, Hopes, and Conversations: Appreciative Inquiry and Congregational Change, where he develops a practice of congregational listening. Branson makes the case that seeds of innovation are often in the lives of the people, rather than the minds of the leaders. That’s a difficult concept for many church leaders to get their minds around. The irony is that we tend to love business models when it comes to leading. Maybe Google’s counter-intuitive approach may be a way to encourage more church leaders to practice listening when it comes to leading. If you’d like to think about this further, check out Bill Dahl’s entire review of What Would Google Do? on his blog.
Everyone’s got their favorite Super Bowl ads. My favorite is “Parisian Love” from Google. The simplicity of it, the way it weaves a love story together in a matter of seconds, the music, it’s brilliant (plus I admit it made me emotional).
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