“Given that you can’t change the past, you must employ it in the betterment of your life by reflecting upon situations after your emotions have cooled enough to see ‘what really happened’ clearly.”

This week’s quote comes from ActOne Group founder and CEO Janice Bryant Howroyd. It was featured in one of the Linkedin Daily Rundowns. I think it is a good mantra to live by. After all of my digital projects and life decisions I take a moment to reflect. Usually, shortly after when the details are

“Even the best arguments sometimes fall on deaf ears. But we should not generalise hastily to the conclusion that arguments always fail. We can learn through practice by reaching out, asking questions, being patient, and giving arguments in our everyday lives.”

This week’s quote comes from a recent Linkedin Daily Rundown. The quote actaully came from a December 19, 2018 article written by Duke University’s Walter Sinnott-Armstrong in Aeon titled, “Reach out, listen, be patient. Good arguments can stop extremism.” This article is a timely post that I recommend reading and thinking about. Maybe the post

Reading Digital

I’ve been thinking about writing a post that focuses on written content and how users consume it for a while. I wanted to wait until I’m working through some challenges with a client who is rewriting or creating new content to help make the post more useful. Alas, that day is here. I’m currently working

“Maybe they’re just too busy. Maybe they don’t forget about you, but they forget to remember you. People don’t mean to forget. My grandfather says if my head wasn’t screwed on, I’d leave it on the school bus.”

This week’s quote comes from Kevin McCallister in “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.” I thought it was only fitting to use a quote from a holiday movie with this post. I lived in NYC for a few years and love the city. I find it inspiring and exciting. Being there drove me to

Sliding into Home

I love football, but I do miss baseball. Don’t you? I suppose this post can be considered a follow up to another one of my posts, “They See Me Scrolling.” In that post, I explore the digital usage trend of scrolling and why that trend should force the old “above the fold” mentality to evolve.

“Do you listen to understand, or do you listen to respond?”

This week’s quote comes from my brother-in-law, Travis. Well, I don’t really know where the quote comes from, but it’s one he pulled out as a quick one liner in a conversation. The question is true for both personal and professional situations. Personally, if we don’t listen to each other, will we ever truely be able