Posts Tagged ‘filters’

Everyone’s Got a Story

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

I was at a Dale Carnegie Course graduation this week.

One of the graduates was talking about what he gained from his twelve weeks in the program.  His realization – everyone’s got a story.

We often (usually?) make judgements about others based solely upon what we see.  It’s like looking through a keyhole in the front door of a mansion and claiming to know where everything – rooms, paintings, tapestries, furniture, silverware, closets, beds, linen, etc. – is inside.  We can’t even see the entire front hallway.

Dale Carnegie said, “You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested you.”  It’s amazing, when we strive to “Become genuinely interested in other people” (principle #4), they do become genuinely interesting to us.

The hard part is getting past our own initial judgement, so we can at least open the door and see the hallway.

Fool Me Once

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

China regulates internet access; Iran shuts down cellphone service.  Why?  Limiting (their) public(‘s) access to “unapproved” information helps maintain their regimes in power.

Lawyers respond to requests for information by inundating their opponents with mounds of paperwork.  Buried deep is the exculpatory evidence needed by the defense.

Access to information can be limited by its absence or by its burial in overwhelming amounts of data.

So, we look for “filters” to help us make sense out of our daily data oceans and convert them to information we can use to make good decisions.  These filters have tremendous power to influence our points of view.

Sales, marketing, news – they all help filter information for us – and influence our viewpoint.  The key?

Understand everyone has an agenda.  When we keep that in mind, we may be fooled once – not twice.