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Breath In #Agile

If you’re not reading my other “Chasing Psychological Safety” newsletter then let me say: Happy New Decade! (applies if you are reading both...

What Potty Training Can Teach ComixLaunchers

After 3 days of (successfully!) potty training his toddler, ComixLaunch host Tyler James as popped back up with 10 lessons comic creators and...

How to Make Cold Water Hash Correctly and Easy

Learn how to make hash out of your cannabis, and do it correctly with our guide! If you’ve been a marijuana enthusiast, you’ve...

The restorative power of talking to strangers

Have you ever been told off by a stranger? For wearing the wrong T-shirt at an airport? I have. I’m sixteen and visiting...

The Road to TEDx

This article is written by Daryl Hatton, CEO of FundRazr. Daryl was invited to give a TEDx talk on the topic “Philanthropy as...

What do FOMO and Linkedin Have to Do with Supply Chain Management

Has anyone noticed recently that your linkedin feed is just full of a bunch of technology looking for a reason to exist and all sorts of conventions and other events people are attending?  When I first got into Linkedin (Yes, I am an earlier adopter) it was a community of practitioners who would exchange ideas and thoughts on real issues, mega-trends and other more practical items of supply chain.  Then the "Facebook" world invaded.  And FOMO began.

First, if you do not know what FOMO is it is the "Fear of Missing Out" and I think it has become the most dangerous marketing tool technology and others have used in a long time.  People are not even sure sometimes why they need or want something but what they do know (Thanks to "social media") is everyone else is doing it so I better jump on board before I miss out.  Harvard MBA Peter McGinnis coined this phrase and also warned us about the problems it will create for business.  In an INC article, it is defined as:
"He used FOMO to describe managers who execute on too many initiatives or follow too many potential paths, out of fear of missing some positive trend or opportunity"
The weapon the purveyors of FOMO use in business is LinkedIn.  It is here everyone posts about some fancy technology or some convention that you just "must be at" or "must have".  Mind you, most of these posts are not practitioners rather they are just advertising.  Rather than buying advertising they just create an environment where you feel like if you do not engage you will "miss out".  

There is a corollary to this phenomena and it is called FOBO - Fear of a Better Option.  This is the other side of the coin which is when managers are inundated with so much information they are behave like a deer in headlights.  They freeze.  They are waiting and assuming there must be something better out there and so they stop awaiting a "better option".

According the article cited above, FOBO can be a direct result of our "big data" world.  We have so much data and so many ways to display it, slide and dice it, and analyze it that we continue to do that figuring if I "slice it one more way maybe the answer will come out".  In other words, we keep looking at the data hoping a "better option" will come out.  

Both of these are problems.  If you are infected with FOMO you will go down every path known and you will end up with too many disjointed initiatives with no clear direction.  If you are infected with FOBO you will stop everything. You will not innovate.  You will be like your father at Christmas who says "Don't buy that T.V., next year there will be something better".  Of course, this is true every year and it leads to inaction and lack of innovation.

My advice is to be careful on your LinkedIn feed and be very careful who you accept invites from.  It is full of "advertisers".  Stay focused by reading about topics in depth and stick more to the academic world for studies and thoughts about the future.  Don't get sucked into these diseases. 

If you want to learn more about it, Peter has a Podcast called FOMO Sapiens and you can listen to it on your favorite podcast player. 

All-Ages Graphic Novel Kickstarter Launches with Action Tank’s Mike Barry

Writer/artist/MC? Mike Barry returns to the ComixLaunch Podcast sharing the success of his all-ages graphic novel Action Tank since funding on Kickstarter in...

No Quid Pro Quo for ComixLaunchers

Are you trying to get something for nothing in pursuit of your creative endeavors?Highlights of This Session Include: What quid pro quo really means...

5 Things You Should Know About Crypto Taxes in Ireland

Cryptocurrencies are becoming increasingly mainstream in Ireland, as more and more cash-rich investors look at cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum as a viable...

How to Survive a Launch Freefall

What do you do when it feels like the bottom has fallen out of your launch and failure is imminent? Whether you’re a...

IRS Issues New Guidance on Taxation of Cryptocurrencies

The Internal Revenue Service just issued more guidance on the taxation of cryptocurrencies. The guidance comes in the form of Revenue Ruling 2019-24...

Second Issue Kickstarter Launch Strategies with Travis Gibb and Joel Rodriguez

Launching a Kickstarter for the second issue of a comic book series presents unique challenges and opportunities for creators. To break them all...

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