Home / Weblog Consulting Services
Publications Speaking and Media
About Dana Contact Dana


View Dana VanDen Heuvel's profile on LinkedIn
Search

www www.danavan.net
Google
Categories

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.


Weblog
October 31, 2008

FASOF, WTF is FASOF you might say.

FASOF is simple Funny Ass Shit on Friday...

So, I have something to add to your FASOF file for today... Check out the foreward to Guy Kawasaki's new book that I just started reading called Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition. It's a great book so far. Even if I've only read the foreward.

Anyway, it goes a bit like this (actual foreward text stolen from: http://blog.futurelab.net/2008/10/reality_check_checklist_the_be.html)

The Best Foreword In the History of Man

The last thing that Dan Lyons (Newsweek columnist and author of Options: The Secret Life of Steve Jobs) wrote as Fake Steve Jobs is Reality Check's foreword. It is, in my opinion, the best foreword in the history of man.

You know what I think about whenever I hear the name Guy Kawasaki? Motorcycles. It's true. It's the first thing I think about when I hear his name, even though I've been told again and again that Guy actually has nothing to do with motorcycles. So then I try not to think about motorcycles, but come on, the dude's name is Kawasaki. What else are you going to think about? And don't say Vietnam because that is not cool, people. Not cool at all. Guy was just a friggin kid when all that shit was going down. Anyway, since Guy is not a motorcycle designer, and also no longer a member of the Viet Cong, I try to think about something else, and usually what I think about is the fact that he worked for me at Apple back in the Eighties. To be honest he didn't make much of an impression on me back in those days, and I didn't really remember anything about him, but I asked HR to pull his records and apparently the only notes we have on him are that he had a habit of cutting the line in the cafeteria and that a lot of people did not like him.

Anyway, Guy worked here for about fifteen minutes but he's been dining out on that for the past twenty years, and whatever, more power to him. His big claim to fame was that he created this notion of technology evangelism and he created this huge community of weirdo Apple fanboys who would camp out overnight to get our products and who would attack anyone who dared to criticize Apple. To this day these freako Apple kooks still worship me like a god and never let me have a moment of peace or privacy. They steal license plates from my car. Some even show up outside my house hoping to catch a glimpse of me as I drive through the gate. Basically, they've made my life a living hell.

So, um, thanks, Guy Kawasaki. Thanks a friggin million for that. Great job. I mean it. You dick.

So what is Guy's new book about? To be honest, I have no idea. I didn't read it. I didn't even pretend to read it. I told Guy, Dude, look, I don't read books, okay? Books are a technology of the last century. If you want to make your book into a movie, or a podcast, and if you want to download that video or audio content onto a totally sweet iPod or iPhone, then maybe you will have created some modern content that I will consume, although, to be honest, probably not even then because I don't need to hear your frigtarded ideas about startups or marketing or raising money or whatever because I am already the greatest businessperson in the entire history of the planet and I've forgotten more about marketing than you'll ever know. Besides that I'm super, super busy and important, and I've got so much money that I could wipe my ass with hundred dollar bills every day for the rest of my life and I'd still have more money than almost everyone on the planet, including you, since the last time I checked you haven't exactly been setting the world on fire as a venture capitalist.

But I digress.

Anyway, Guy is craven enough that he doesn't really care whether I read his book or not. As he put it to me, all he wants is a famous name to put on the cover, and pretty much everyone else turned him down and so he had to resort to calling me, and so fine, I let him beg a little bit and then I made him do some humiliating things like stand on one leg for half an hour and jump up and down and make strange noises, and then I said, Okay, okay, enough already, you total freak, I'll write you something.

So this is it--my official endorsement. Reality Bites is by far the best book ever written about the Valley. It's an important and necessary work, one that should be required reading in every business school in the country. I wish this book had been around when I was starting Apple in my garage back in 1976. I'm sure I wouldn't have read it, but still it would have been nice if it had been around back then to help out all those other people who wanted to start companies but couldn't figure out some of the more subtle aspects of business, like the fact that you need to charge more money for your products than it costs you to make them. That's a really super important lesson, yet one that so many people overlook, especially here in the Valley. Anyway, if these incredibly super-obvious things aren't already super-obvious to you, then you probably need to read a book like this and have someone like Guy Kawasaki teach you how to start a business, in terms that a child could understand.

And now I'm thinking about motorcycles again. Dammit! Namaste, poorly informed wannabe business people. I honor the place where your imbecilic gaze and my incredibly wise words become one. Much love. Peace out.

Fake Steve Jobs

July, 2008


October 30, 2008

Digital_Centered_160x290.jpgBlogging on Danavan.net has been a bit light recently due to involvement in (sometimes way to many) other projects.

Along with Toby Bloomberg and Bill Flitter, I'm currently involved with a three-city series for the American Marketing Association called Digital Centered Marketing.

Check out the Digital Centered Marketing event blog over here: http://www.digitalcenteredmarketing.com/


October 11, 2008

webinar_lmw_alr_survey_logo.jpg





Hey folks - shameless plug for a client/friend here - a great survey covering a topic that's near and dear to me - work/life & flexible work. Take the survey, send it to your boss and spread the word!

Life Meets Work and Ask Liz Ryan are conducting our first annual survey: Flexing, Floundering, or 'Just Fine Thanks': Work/Life Issues in America.

We're capturing the opinions of Americans regarding work/life challenges, the role of government in flexible work programs (that ought to be interesting!) and other such fun stuff.

The survey takes less than 10 minutes to complete. Your responses are confidential and only will be shared in aggregate. Take the Survey now.

The results will be discussed during a webinar on October 28, 2008. To register for the Webinar, click here.