Punditry takes time: a lesson from 2009

Punditry is a full-time job if you really want to do it right. That’s just one of the life lessons 2009 dealt me.

After I got fired from my job as a construction I.T. manager some years ago, I got a publishing contract with O’Reilly, who published two of my books.  This catapulted me into a position I’d never been before: that of a pundit.  Suddenly, my opinion mattered.  It was something I ran with, and for some time, did so profitably.  But it is indeed very difficult to stay ahead of the curve and remain a relavent pundit, especially when you have other concerns–like growing a quote-unquote real business.

That’s not to say I don’t keep up on the musings of thought leader like Andy Abramson, Alec Saunders, Rich Tehrani, Jeff Pulver, Ken Camp, Luca Filigheddu, Dameon Welch-Abernathy, and a slew of other thought leaders who are apparently much better at time management than am I.

Just get me away from my laptop screen, you know?   I mean I love sharing my opinion–that is, I really do like being a pundit–but can I please have a little me time at the end of the workday?  During the first half of the year, writing on subjects about which I care increasingly less (VoIP, for example) subsided because I just had to get something off my plate.

Jacob and Madelyn are in junior high school now, too. I do so much more with them than I used to.  They’re both great musicians and as they grow older, our mutual interests have widened.  We spend a lot more time together.  And Katie’s such an integral part of the family, too.  For better or worse, all of these things take time.

The same is true of Best Technology, which grew in 2009 to three full-time employees and now has clients from Sandusky to Hudson, a swath of northeast Ohio a hundred miles long and encompassing a fleet of over two thousand PCs.  This didn’t just happen.  It also took away from my enjoyable-but-time-consuming pastime of writing. I also joined the Rotary Club of Elyria in 2009, a service organization that has a very rigorous schedule and demands quite a bit.

At the end of the day, there’s very little time left for blogging, thought leadership, or punditry–whatever you’d like to call it. And I’m a little let down when I visit my own blog and don’t see anything fresh.

So–better time management–that’s my New Year’s Resolution. See you after the first.

eComm: A rock solid meeting of the minds in a fragmenting industry

(Save 20% by using the code “SignaltoNoise” when registering for eComm online. Save another 20% by registering before July 21.)

As our daily experiences fuel the dreams and ideas that give birth to next-generation tech businesses, those of us in the industry are constantly looking for ways to stay ahead of the idea curve.  Often, that means delving into technologies that are new, plentiful, and untested.  Add to that the tidal changes occuring in the telecom industry and—well, it’s nearly overwhelming. There are so many things to keep up with, so many new search tools, social network add-ons, and the like, that it’s impossible to truly stay on top.

Unless you attend eComm

The European Emerging Communications conference will take place in Amsterdam this October 28-30.  The reason this conference will help you cut through the noise of all the new launches and idea overload is simple: the ideamakers are always at eComm. Meet them. Talk to them directly. Exchange your own ideas about the future of the social tech stratosphere.  Engage in person.

Consider the changes driving today’s telecommunications industry:

  • Telecom is becoming software
  • Today’s model of the telephony and SMS cash-cows will significantly dry up long-term
  • “Phones” are becoming general purpose always-on computers
  • A march is underway to change how spectrum is allocated and utilised
  • Applications innovation is being democratised
  • The media industry is converging with personal communications
  • Internet-style ecosystems are starting to pressurise the traditional value chain
  • Search engines and computer manufactures are encroaching into the space
  • App downloads; media content and even communication streams are increasingly routing-around operator’s billing systems
  • The telecom kingdom is fragmenting daily

This is eComm’s list, of course.  But take a look at that last entry.  It’s kind of the bottom line, isn’t it?  Where do you fit in?  Do you have questions, answers, contributions, or just curiosity? Me, too…

See you there.