Revenge of the Right Brain

I just read a great article in Wired called The Revenge of the Right Brain, which was an excerpt from A Whole New Mind: Moving From the Information Age to the Conceptual Age a book I am definitely going to buy when it comes out in a few days.

Until recently, the abilities that led to success in school, work, and business were characteristic of the left hemisphere. They were the sorts of linear, logical, analytical talents measured by SATs and deployed by CPAs. Today, those capabilities are still necessary. But they’re no longer sufficient. In a world upended by outsourcing, deluged with data, and choked with choices, the abilities that matter most are now closer in spirit to the specialties of the right hemisphere – artistry, empathy, seeing the big picture, and pursuing the transcendent.

Beneath the nervous clatter of our half-completed decade stirs a slow but seismic shift. The Information Age we all prepared for is ending. Rising in its place is what I call the Conceptual Age, an era in which mastery of abilities that we’ve often overlooked and undervalued marks the fault line between who gets ahead and who falls behind.

The Information Age has unleashed a prosperity that in turn places a premium on less rational sensibilities – beauty, spirituality, emotion. For companies and entrepreneurs, it’s no longer enough to create a product, a service, or an experience that’s reasonably priced and adequately functional. In an age of abundance, consumers demand something more. Check out your bathroom. If you’re like a few million Americans, you’ve got a Michael Graves toilet brush or a Karim Rashid trash can that you bought at Target. Try explaining a designer garbage pail to the left side of your brain! Or consider illumination. Electric lighting was rare a century ago, but now it’s commonplace. Yet in the US, candles are a $2 billion a year business – for reasons that stretch beyond the logical need for luminosity to a prosperous country’s more inchoate desire for pleasure and transcendence.

Liberated by this prosperity but not fulfilled by it, more people are searching for meaning. From the mainstream embrace of such once-exotic practices as yoga and meditation to the rise of spirituality in the workplace to the influence of evangelism in pop culture and politics, the quest for meaning and purpose has become an integral part of everyday life. And that will only intensify as the first children of abundance, the baby boomers, realize that they have more of their lives behind them than ahead. In both business and personal life, now that our left-brain needs have largely been sated, our right-brain yearnings will demand to be fed.

Hat tip: 800 CEO Read.

Facilitations on Racial Issues Next Week

I was recently asked to moderate a debate hosted by a school club Moving On Racial Equality on Affirmative Action. Additionally, I was asked to facilitate a separate discussion on the HBO Documentary O.J.: A Study in Black and White after the junior class watches it. The book The Secrets of Facilitation has been on my shelf for a bit so I’m going to pore through that beforehand. Race relations has always interested me but I’m the first to admit that I don’t know much in the way of history, policies, etc. At the moment, affirmative action w/ respect to school admissions is something that interests me. If anyone knows of any good articles or resources on these topics please let me know.

FeedBurner Issue Resolved

For those subscribing to my FeedBurner feed an issue involving garbled words and shortened posts has been resolved. It had to do with my links to Amazon product pages. All is well. Thanks to Dick Costolo, CEO of FeedBurner, for the assistance. If you publish a FeedBurner feed, you may want to deactivate the Amazon services you have on your account.

Recent Journalism Reading

I recently perused my first issue of the Columbia Journalism Review, devoured the new book Hard News: The Scandals at the New York Times and their Meaning for American Media, and consumed the lengthly Atlantic cover piece on the “mercenary world of political talk radio.” Needless to say, my journalistic juices are flowing.

The Columbia Journalism Review was interesting to me because of the little tidbits and niche-focused pieces but won’t appeal to the general reader. Before adding another periodical to my reading list, I thoroughly check out back issues and agonize over whether it makes sense to subscribe. So – I knew CJR was going to be good.

Hard News is a riveting, engrossing “pre-during-post” account of the Jayson Blair scandals which rocked the NYTimes and journalism as a whole. The “Meaning for American Media” part of the title isn’t really represented; instead, it’s a blow by blow of the conversations and events leading up to the implosion and the ensuing fall out. It’s fun to get the inside look at folks you read in the NYTimes every day and also to get a glimpse at the pressure-cooked environment that is the Paper of Record. I recommend this book if you want a great, important story, but don’t want a deep analysis.

The current Atlantic cover story is a little long-winded, unfortunately, but makes some interesting points. Last summer during my trips to rural California I for the first time got to hear the infamous right-wing radio stations I read about. This piece dissects one LA based political, conservative radio station. It’s a good read for anyone who doesn’t get treated to a daily dose of Sean Hannity to understand what the fuss is all about.