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thought leader marketing

Do you remember your high school chemistry teacher?

If you were lucky, you had a teacher like Sandee Kastrul — someone talented enough to make chemistry relevant, accessible and fun. Back in the 1990s, deep in some of Chicago’s poorest and most crime-ridden West Side neighborhoods, Sandee had a gift for engaging her students and bringing concepts like the three states of matter – gases, liquids and solids – to life. Girls found it easy to imagine themselves as flowing liquids, musicians and other artists self-identified as amorphous gases, and even jocks recognized their affinity to stolid solids.

The great thing about Sandee is that she didn’t confine her magic to the classroom. Over the years, she stayed in touch with her students and took an interest in their lives. And when she saw one sharp student after another graduate from high school, excel in college but then settle into low-paying, pink-collar jobs, she refused to accept the status quo; she acted.

In 1999, Sandee co-founded i.c. stars. This is an organization that puts Chicago young adults on a path to soar — as entrepreneurs, as business and IT professionals, and as community leaders. Through project-based learning, full-immersion teaching and strong partnerships with leading corporations, technology services providers, grant makers and individual volunteers, Sandee and her team connect talent with opportunity. During and after the program, i.c. stars interns and alumni benefit from mentorship, critical contacts and relationship building, and merit-based employment.

I find it pretty impressive that i.c. stars has transformed 200 high-potential urban young adults into some of the best technology professionals and community leaders around. But Sandee will tell you they’re just getting started.

In fact, the i.c. stars vision is to create 1,000 such “inner city computer stars” by 2020 – and not just in Chicago.  This is a model that could work just as well in Rockford, Aurora or Atlanta, but it will require people like you and me to contribute time, talent and/or treasure to the cause.

Case in point: If you’re in the Chicago area, consider purchasing a ticket or sponsorship to attend i.c. stars’ Techbash 2011. You’ll have an opportunity to personally meet many of the program’s alumni and network with 40 company CIOs, who will be serving drinks as celebrity bartenders at the event.

Next up: i.c. stars community and alumni success stories

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London bicycle courier, Oxford Street

Image via Wikipedia

I just finished our first “Worlds Biggest Book Club” with our first book, and still free on Kindle for 18 more days, called “Do the Work” by Steven Pressfield whose credits include a number of movies including “The Legend of Baggar Vance.” In that movie we are inspired by the following dialogue:

Bagger Vance: See, the trick is… to find your swing…
Rannulph Junuh: What’d you say?…
Bagger Vance: Well you lost your swing… We got to go find it… Now it’s somewhere… in the harmony… of all that is… All that was… All that will be…

In Steven Pressfield’s new book, “Do the Work” you will just as powerfully get inspired by statements like, “The ‘Real You’ Must Due the ‘Resistance You’” and

“The Opposite of Resistance is Assistance.” There are so many amazing ideas and suggestions in this book that you MUST go read it, NOW, TODAY.

This is where a reference to my son comes in. Please read on and see if you see the connection:

If you had a second chance at life, would you recognize it? Would you do everything in your power to live as if there were no tomorrow?

Last year the threat of “no tomorrow” was very real for me, but the universe offered up a gift, an opportunity to learn the true nature of acceptance and gratitude. Although disguised as a malicious malady, it was no less rewarding to receive, and I am a better person because of it. I learned so much about myself, the world and my relationship to it. Cancer is increasingly becoming a household name and will continue to touch our lives as all things get harder, better, faster, stronger.

It’s been one year and I’m well. In fact, I haven’t felt this strong since college, so I thought this is as good a time as any to ride my bicycle from Chicago to the Panama Canal. That’s 3,000 miles, 6 weeks, 9 countries. I’ve been training for the last 4 months, and even got a job as a bike courier during the day for efficiency’s sake. I will take off Sunday May 8th at 9am from The Bean at Millenium Park. If your in the neighborhood, stop by and see me off.

I’m going to maintain a travel log throughout the trip, documenting the unique and curious experiences I encounter along the way. If you have experience in places on the route, or know of anyone/anything I simply must see, don’t hesitate to let me know! I can use all the support I can get. I’m getting incredibly excited as my departure draws near and I’d like to invite you to follow me on the Interweb. You can visit www.onegraham.tumblr.com for more info. Click the links at the top of the website for details.

I look forward to seeing you when I return on June 24th. Until then, don’t stop ’til you get enough.


All my best,
Graham Lee Giovagnoli
www.onegraham.tumblr.com

———As a mother, as a coach, mentor, speaker and advocate of young people trying to get a good start in life, I hope you can take some inspiration away from Graham. . . . I know I did.

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Chocolate, Peanut Butter and Social Media Innovation

April 30, 2011

During talks I often share my insights on creativity and innovation using the line, “A billion-dollar business was born when chocolate collided with peanut butter. For those of you who love Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups and Reese’s Pieces (remember ET?) you will resonate with the amazing growth in this brand and all of its brand [...]

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Seth Godin Goes the Distance with His Next Book and The Domino Project

February 10, 2011

Are you ready to stand up and make a difference? Are you ready to change the world? I meet a lot of people are ready? To inspire you, check out the huge movement Seth Godin is starting with his new Domino Project Team (I’m a part of the 65-person team!) and the make-a-difference, book publishing [...]

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Three Tips for Generating New Ideas for Your Business

October 22, 2010

Do you find yourself wondering why you aren’t getting new and better ideas regularly? It all depends on HOW you are going about your search. Following are three different ways you can create new ideas for your business tomorrow. Look on Amazon. Look at the current best sellers in non-fiction. What does the trend in [...]

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5 Tips for Better Social Networking

October 17, 2010

I’ve been in London over the last week. It’s been great fun. I have walked almost five miles a day, tried fish and chips, visited Churchill’s War Room, seen two amazing plays and moved very carefully around our very small hotel room (rooms are much smaller here) with my much taller husband maneuvering himself so [...]

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6 Degrees of Networlding – Networlding Europe is Launched

July 22, 2010

Everyone, or almost everyone, now knows what 6 Degrees of Separation means. If you don’t, it’s the realization that came after an experiment in 1967, by social psychologist Stanley Milgram. Milgram decided to investigate how small the world really is. He had randomly selected residents of Boston and Omaha  sending letters to a separate random [...]

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Best Of

September 26, 2009

My vision for the Networlding blog is for it to be a source of information, insights, and advice for those who are now engaged in personal or organizational transformation. I welcome contributions in the form of comments, questions, or suggestions. For example, Bob Morris will be sharing his thoughts about the business books he reviews [...]

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