Sci-Fi Cast episode 6

May 15th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

Here is Episode 6. Yes, I know things are misplaced for now. I’ll fix everything up on Saturday, don’t worry.

Vintage Mac games, ready to go

May 15th, 2008 § 5 comments § permalink

In preparation for tomorrow night’s Cape Tech Workers Meetup, I’ve packed a G3 All In One and a Mac Classic with

  1. Glider Pro (with all bonus houses)
  2. Doom
  3. Lemmings
  4. SimCity 2000
  5. Lunar Lander
  6. Zork I, II and III
  7. Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
  8. Tetris
  9. Marathon
  10. Rescue

It’s going to be great. Vintage Macs rule!

Apple Store Boylston Street

May 14th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

Beautiful.

Unfortunate Twitterrific coupling

May 13th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

bethandsarahhybrid0ccce1.png

Beth and Sarah combine to form some sort of weird hybrid in Twitterrific.

Swap complete

May 11th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

I’ve swapped my personal blog and my business blog.

If you’re looking for my professional services, please visit Kaylow Media. I will be doing business as Kaylow Media from now on.
Otherwise, you’re in the right place.

The Big Swap

May 11th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

OK, everyone. I’ve made a decision.

I’ll be doing business as Kaylow Media. So, I’ll transfer my pro site to this domain, and move my personal blog (the one you’re reading now) to DaveCaolo.com.

It’s a project I’m not exactly looking forward to, so I may drag my feet a little. Still, be aware that you’ll find this stuff there within the next couple of days, that that stuff here.

What about the podcast, Dave?

I’m still having trouble wih the data it sends to iTunes. I tried using a single category’s RSS feed, but now it lists as “Sci-Fi Cast > Podcast” in iTunes. So, screw it.

I’ve registered thescificast.com (Don’t look, I haven’t even begun fiddling with it yet). When I officially move everything over there, I’ll let you know.

Thoughts on branding

May 8th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

It’s a hot topic, and a real dilemma for me.

Brand as an individual or brand as a business?

When I sat down last winter to consider a career as a freelancer, I thought, “What services will I offer?” Well, I had been working as an IT director for a Mac-friendly school for six years, so that’s what I knew how to do. Not to sound immodest, but I know my way around a computer, and I enjoy working with them.

I had also been blogging professionally for three years (and personally for eight). Blogging is what I genuinely love. It’s in my heart. I could do this all day, every day. If there’s a passion in my life, this is it.

Blogging is so much fun, so dynamic, so immediate and accessible. Who benefits from blogging? Families, small businesses, chambers of commerce, schools, churches, coffee houses, college students, Marines, authors, nuns … everyone!

I don’t care if you’re in it for fun or profit, business or pleasure. Your experience will be enhanced with blogging. Hand me a soap box and I’ll go off on why this is a phenomenally fantastic thing to do. And that’s the truth.

Again, I’m not being obnoxious, but I know a lot about this medium, and sharing that knowledge with others makes me all giddy. I <3 blogging.

So, I found myself on brink of self-employment with two quasi-related skill sets: IT and blogging.

Back to my question.

What do I want to do? Well, the honest answer is “both.” The practical answer is “pick one.” Obviously, that “one” ought to be IT. Saying, “I’m an IT consultant” is respectable. Saying “I’m a blog consultant” sounds like “I have a professional lemonade stand.”

As I learned several weeks ago, that only leads to confusion and uncertainty for the customer. Saying, “I do IT consulting for home and business — including repairs, network design, software installation, software training, backup system creation — plus professional blog coaching” leaves customers thinking, “OK, here’s a guy who can’t make up his mind. Which does he do well?

Now, I’ve got evidence of people who pull this off successfully. I know a woman who is a very talented and successful career counselor. She also speaks to banking corporate types on best business practices. Those skills are related but different.

So, I went with that. I’ll do both. The next step was deciding on a name, a logo and a website.

It begins

As a person who has never had to name a business before, I found it agonizing. Everything I came up with sounded either trite, over-used, too “corporate” or too immature. Plus, what word or phrase conveys the services I described?

Finally, I decided that it’s my skills and knowledge that I’m selling. So, I registered DaveCaolo.com and bam! That was it. I was Dave Caolo at DaveCaolo.com. The company is me. The brand is me. We’re one in the same.

On the front page, I created an introductory paragraph as well as three “sections”: One for blog coaching and two for IT, one home and one business. For a logo, I put up my face. Me, me, me.

“Great,” I thought. “Potential clients will land on the home page, see the section they’re interested in and click through.”

Now I’m second guessing that decision.

It changes

Today I read an article at Copyblogger which put the fear of God into me. Entitled “Are you in personal branding prison,” it states in no uncertain terms that what I’ve done by focusing on myself as the brand is exactly the wrong thing to do. “What if you want to grow or take a break? You can’t,” says James Chartrand. When I leave the business, either to sell it or do something else, it dies. No me = no business.

Plus, I can’t ever hire employees*, because the clients don’t want John to show up, they want Dave. Dave is what they’re paying for.

Now I’m re-thinking the whole thing, and it’s exhausting. Perhaps I should brand my freelance efforts as “Kaylow” or even “Kaylow Media.” Perhaps I should leave it as it is. Perhaps I should say “F this” and get a real job like a regular person and reduce a tremendous amount of stress for my lovely wife.

What do you think, dear readers? I hope you’ll leave a comment.

*That thought is laughable, as I’m not exactly on track to become a millionaire with this venture.

Sci-Fi Cast episode 005

May 7th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

This time, Ged Maheux, Krystyn Heide and I discuss season 4 episode 5 of Battlestar Galactica, our favorite vintage video games and the Star Wars Christmas Special. This episode has the best ending so far.

As usual, we suggest you don’t listen if you aren’t caught up to the most recent episode of Battlestar. Spoilers abound! With that in mind, enjoy.

Download | RSS | iTunes

New Nine Inch Nails album available for free

May 5th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

“This one’s on me,” says Trent at nin.com.

There aren’t many bands I’ve been listening to steadily since 1989. NIN is one of them (if not the only one).

Get your copy of The Slip here.

Professional goals update: Asses kicked

May 5th, 2008 § 0 comments § permalink

Last Monday, I posted my professional goals for the week. With a little focus provided by David Seah’s Concrete Goals Tracker (CGT) forms, I did well. Here’s an update

  • Order new business cards (2 points) Score! +2
  • Complete website (2 points) Score! +2
  • Publish WordPress video (2 points) Score! +2
  • Write new blog articles (2 points per) Score! +8 (4 articles x2 pts. each).
  • Draft new video series (2 points) Score! +2 (this is going to be awesome, by the way. You’ll just have to wait a couple weeks more).
  • Pitch my presentation “Blogging for Artists” to local galleries (2 points) Score! +2
  • Connect with local members of the tech community (1 point)
  • Mail proposal to Client A (10 points) Score! +10
  • Land Client B (10 points) Score! +10

That’s 38 Productivity Points for the week. Awesome. Here’s what I learned.

If you need a list of concrete actions, create one.

I’m a dutiful little worker, as long as I know exactly what needs to be done. My wife gives me Honey Do lists on the weekends, and I secretly love them (don’t tell her). Why? Because they describe in no uncertain terms what I’m to do.

My old day job followed a similar model. I knew exactly what needed to be done each day.

  1. Backup the server
  2. Confirm the Filemaker Pro backups
  3. Check voicemail
  4. Print Report X and Report Y …

Unexpected tasks popped up, sure, but I can deal with those. Now that I’m working on my own, it’s easy to sit down at my desk at 8:00 AM and think, “OK, what do I do first?” I need a Honey Do list, and creating one for myself has helped tremendously.

Reward successive approximations

I tend to prevent myself from feeling good about a project until it’s complete. Last week, I rewarded each small step towards the goal. Filling in the little circles on Dave’s form was a part of that. You probably know how satisfying it is to strike through an item on a to-do list. Imagine if you could then “win” points for doing the same thing!

It sounds kind of silly but it was effective. So, instead of thinking, “I haven’t released the podcast yet … drat,” I can think, “So far, I’ve scheduled the podcast, gotten everyone together, registered WireTap Studio, created my outline and recorded the podcast.”

I’ll post my goals for this week soon … it’s on my list.