25 June 2007

We will Skype you

I've never been an IT-minded person. But it's amazing how IT communications can change one's lifestyle: over the last 7 months my work and leisure time has been heavily digitalised. I've become quite a web animal and use a variety of online tools to communicate and keep in touch for both personal and business purposes.

Moreover, I've become a kind of blogging ambassador. I made presentations on the business case of blogging already twice - in Lithuania and in Belgium. The speed of IT communications seems to speed up human activity and radically change modern life and society.

A few years ago, when I was with the global business advisory firm, more and more of my friends turned to using MSN Messenger, an instant messaging service. At first I was surprised that they could afford to chat over MSN and do some work, simultaneously (I most probably wasn't good at multi-tasking). But later on I felt left out - it seemed like everyone would connect via MSN during the office hours to discuss evening plans or exchange news of the day.

At some point I decided to catch up with my friends and... install the MSN Messenger on the office computer (although I wasn't sure it was the right thing to do). I followed rather simple installation instructions and - here I am! - I have the magic software on my work PC. I was pleased with myself - installed the thing correctly with no external help!:)

It all looked ok until I tried to sign in. I tried once, it didn't work. I tried twice, it didn't work. I restarted the computer, but it still didn't work. MSN was there, looked perfectly ok but didn't work. Then I decided to turn for help to the firm's IT department...

When the IT guy heard what my IT issue was, he smiled at me and said: "You may uninstall it. Because it won't work. Because the servers wouldn't allow." He was a nice guy and didn't tell me off that it was against the strict IT policy of the firm to install and use such software.

I now use a number of e-tools extensively but sensibly, ie try not to abuse them. They help save time and - no less importantly - money! The way they eliminate physical distances and enable us communicate in various forms (voice, chat, live video), continues to surprise me.

Do you Skype? Get in touch with me: giedriuscp.

Smart business casual. © Skype

14 June 2007

Thank you for smoking

Every profession has its own list of favourite films where the main character comes from that profession. PR people also have a must-see list of movies.

The "classic" films that every PR professional would name include Wagg the Dog or West Wing, the TV series. They show how powerful and important - and sometimes glamorous - the PR profession (spin-doctors!) may be. I'd like to name one film that showed a PR officer as a very smart guy. The movie is called Thank You for Smoking.

The main character, a family man, is a spokesman for a major tobacco corporation. As you may imagine he faces the dilemma of personal and professional duties. He seeks to raise his son into a good man but he must also be loyal to his (evil!) employer, the tobacco company. Facing a cancer-ridden teenager in a wheelchair or an aggressive mother activist on a live TV show is peanuts to him. The show ends in his favour and not in those who are supposedly victims of tobacco conglomerates. The biggest challenge is to face a room full of his son's classmates at school...

The school has this bring-your-father-to-school-to-tell-about-his-job tradition. The PR guy's son is too embarrassed to invite his father to school to tell about his "tobacco advocacy" job in front of the boy's peers. However, one day it's his turn to bring his father and the poor boy asks his father to do this parental duty...

The PR guy takes his both responsibilities - to his family and his employer - very seriously. So he does go to school to talk about his job to his son's classmates...

When it's time for a questions & answers session, one school-boy raises his hand and shoots a straightforward question: "My Mom says smoking kills people. How can you work for such a company?"

After a moment of uncomfortable silence, the PR man starts:
- Tell me, young man, is your Mom a doctor?
- No,- replies the boy.
- Is she a medical scientist?
- No.
- Well, boys and girls, here's a lesson for you all: always trust only a reliable source of information!

The PR guy is a responsible person. And he does his best to make his son proud of him. He made me proud of him too. Because he dealt with tough situations smartly and because we're in the same - PR - business.

Thank you for smoking. Roma, September 2006. Photo by Erlendas G.