-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2008/09/29/anti-depression-thinking-what-do-we-do/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
1 day ago · 22 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
1 week ago · 181 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
1 day ago · 7 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
Can Blogging For Money Weather The Recession?
http://www.davidrisley.com/2008/09/17/can-blogg...
How A Geek Can Survive Economic Meltdown
http://www.pcmech.com/article/how-a-geek-can-su...
http://halleyscomment.blogspot.com/2008/09/new-...
Great to see you in Beantown last week. I was shocked to find you'd never been to a Red Sox game at Fenway ... glad you could fit it in.
Depression no more..
;)
Sitting and reading through depressing news and stock market figures will not do you any good. Everybody starts talks about the great depression in the media and quite frankly if we don't change that way of thinking - we just might believe in it and if enough people believe in a depression then that's where we are heading.
Yes times are tough - but it is time to be constructive and innovative and pull ourselves out of this situation - it was made by people - it can be fixed by people.
Just my $0.02
http://emersondirect.wordpress.com/2008/09/29/s...
this will take a lot of time, but if you're a parent - exposing your kids to science, engineering, electronics, computer programming is an investment that will actually pay off.
so my challenge to "Techcrunch, GigaOm, ReadWriteWeb, Center Networks, Mashable" would be for them to cover some of the cool and interesting people/companies that make things. we are what we celebrate...
Get 10 investors types (angels, rich folks, maybe VC's) in a room with 10 entrepreneurs in need of $$$; Make some "microcommittments" of $10K, right then and there ON THAT FIRST DAY to each entrepreneur who presents a good business plan of 3 pages and a list of action items for the next quarter; plan a meeting for late December/early January to assess.
Assign one mentor to each entrepreneur to meet with them every week between now and then -- the mentor should NOT be the one who gave that person the $$$. Make sure it's half men and half women entrepreneurs. They should have a goal to hire at least one other person.
Do it in SF, LA, NY, Boston, Chic, St.Louis, Atlanta, Phoenix and Denver.
Scoble -- make it into a show -- duh. Call it YOU'RE HIRED.
Having been at the same company for eight years now, I weathered the first Bush recession and look like I get the opportunity to go through another one. It's important to be smart about the money you hold, and to not sell low, and not put yourself in debt. If you and your business have cash and no debt, it makes the process much easier.
But on the other hand I'm on the lookout for cheap stocks. So a plunging share price is welcome. One more thing, some people should dissociate share price and actual company's performance. Microsoft makes more money than Google but its share price is cheaper than Google.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTIu_aWSf6M
When we lose to fear, we have lost. I will have more on the topic later...I come at the angle from someone who has very little money - maybe it gives me different perspective.
Here are some of the things I've done in response to the turmoil in the past few weeks:
1. Reviewed all my expenses and eliminated any that were not 100% essential to reaching my goals - both personal and business. I took a look at any expenses that were funded primarily by credit card (recurring subscriptions, etc).
2. Reviewed my business systems to see where improvements could be made. Smoother systems call for fewer challenges. Ensuring things are running at full efficiency will help stability and help get me through and blips in the forecast.
3. Started an investment account. The best way to spur economic change is to reinvest in the economy.
I wrote about this in a post on my blog last week.
http://myvirtualpartner.com/blog/2008/09/24/eco...
Thanks for starting the discussion.
~ Deborah :-)
What will it be?
Where are the winners in this situation? There must be somebody, somewhere who's taking advantage of it. For example, price of gold - "safe haven for investors" - has risen.
As for the "what can we do" question, I'd see that there's a storm going on and the best thing to do is to calmly wait till it's over. So, I opt for: Don't panic.
http://blog.buttonall.com/?p=112
OTOH, don't think all is lost. The Fed injected $630b into the financial markets today and it didn't do a thing. So maybe if we stop struggling and just let it flow, we will be better off.
http://blog.ebsqart.com/2008/09/29/open-thread-...
One recurrent theme I'm seeing in comments is that people are looking to expand their knowledge and looking for better practices rather than cutting back on quality to keep costs down. I do very much think we'll see a lot of ingenuity and success stories from people who push harder rather than scaling back right now.
This experience is one of the reasons why a bailout is wrong. Bankers and rich, location-independent people seldom have troubles getting back their money. A broker can make A LOT of money in falling markets.
The working poors, in contrast, have no choice. They are location-dependent, have a below-average education, don't know how to make money with money, have to move out of their houses or flats. And they depend on a good economy for their jobs.
However, what about using public transport instead of having an own car? I'm talking about urban and suburban areas here. What about using teleconferencing instead of flying half around the globe for a short business meeting? How about using environment-friendly renewable energy sources instead of oil and nuclear power? How about trying to pay off the debts step-by-step instead of making new debts for things that aren't necessary for survival. How about saying NO to consumerism?
So, better use the 700 billion dollars for REAL CHANGE instead of throwing them at people who have enough money anyway and can bail out themselves.
Let's improve PUBLIC TRANSPORT. Let's find means to lower energy consumption (use some of the money for tax-cuts to promote building well ISOLATED HOUSING). Promote new, environment-friendly technologies.
Instead, I keep working my ass off. This 'downturn' is all speculations. It's all 'fail, fail, fail' - the market needed a correction. Yeah, businesses tank, but businesses making better decisions take them over. That's how it goes.
oh, hey, guess what, there's some cheap(er) stocks out there right now... Can't get VC? try your hand at a solid company stock. It couldn't be any riskier than the mess Carter, Clinton and Frank got us into.
Mudassir
http://www.socialmediaplex.com
Stock market investment is not safe. Repeat after me ... not safe. its also a long haul investment, not a short term one.
Its important to remember the micro side of the problem. Reach out to your friends and offer help. Pick up the phone, ask your friends how their doing, and offer recommendations on how you can lend a hand.
I wrote twice about this on my blog.
1. "Don't Be A Dick"
http://tinyurl.com/3gm2ag
2. "Crisis And Friendship"
http://tinyurl.com/4rj9bv
I think depression is due to neglect by the surrounding, the person should go to the nature e.g the beach and feel the wonders of nature.