Site menu:

Home | Most popular smArticles | smArtist Reading | Archives | Blogroll | About Jon | Contact Jon

February 2006

Monthly Archive

Daxter ravings27 Feb 2006 12:18 pm

DAXTER GOES GOLD!!!!!

Daxter has gone gold! It’s been shipped off to manufacturing and will grace US store shelves in March 21, 2006.

GO BUY IT! PLAY MY GAME! :)

WOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Comments (3)
Daxter ravings13 Feb 2006 01:54 pm

I wrote a Developer Diary for Daxter!

I had the chance to write a Developer Diary for Daxter on Gamespy. I had a lot of fun writing it, go check it out!

http://ps2.gamespy.com/playstation-portable/ready-at-dawn-project/687319p1.html

Comments (1)
smArtist thoughts11 Feb 2006 04:59 pm

Starbucks: Company with a Soul!

Just a quick post here to recommend a book I thoroughly enjoyed:

Pour Your Heart into It:
How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time

It’s a really interesting way to tell a story. It’s a biography of Starbucks, told in the first person Howard Schultz, by the president and former CEO of Starbucks. The book is written with a specific timeline focused around the company, peppered with crises and shows the way Howard dealt with all the crises that nearly destroyed the company and what he learned from it.

It’s almost as if the book was written in the same way you’d write fiction, with real character development, except with the company itself as a character. And it manages to do this without seeming like it’s trying to be cute. It’s just… good. It’s a really engaging way to write a business biography.

Structure aside, I enjoyed the book itself a great deal. He set out to build a company with a soul and a passionate, committed team from the lowliest coffee-peddler all the way to the top of the food chain, and he shows how he did it and why it worked… or didn’t.

It shows how the company went from a small coffee beans-only store in Seattle to an international success that’s branched out into soft drinks, ice creams, and even music.

A few things about the book surprised me.

First, Starbucks has been around since the early 1970s, but only sprang into prominence in the last ten years. The foundation for greatness was always there but it only recently sprang into being such an incredible brand. This couldn’t have been accomplished without the company being committed heart-and-soul to being the best at what they do, and finding out how they cultivated and tapped into this soul makes for a great read.

Second, Starbucks doesn’t franchise! Every single Starbucks location (over 6,000) is corporately owned and run to manage quality. Generally franchising is faster, cheaper and easier since you’re putting most of the burden of establishing the business on the entrepreneur that’s going to manage it. But the fact that Starbucks doesn’t do this and STILL maintains the unbelievably high rate of growth that they do is amazing.

Third, ALL Starbucks employees, even part-timers, get stock options and health insurance. They were one of the first companies in America to offer this to part-timers. This ties into the whole “how to build a company with a soul” concept, and is pretty amazing considering how much money they could save by not giving a damn.

After reading it, I’m even more convinced than before that it is possible to accomplish more and better things with a small, nimble, passionately devoted company that respects its employees than you could with a large, lumbering, faceless behemoth of a corporation.

I don’t mean to sound like a hippie when I say that. I’m still 100% pro-corporations and pro-business. I just prefer the more human, more respectful way of playing the game. The one where respecting your employees and not being evil ultimately annihilates the slower, weaker and less respectful of their most valuable assets… people. :)

I mean, good lord, look at the size of Starbucks. It’s a gigantic company. Their product is good, it’s consistent, it’s EVERYWHERE, their people are always amazing at every level, and they grow larger and more profitable every day, even though they go to ridiculous and expensive lengths to take care of their people, donate to charities and try to make the world a better place by utilizing their leverage as a large corporation.

If a company THAT BIG can prove the formula works, what else could people accomplish with the same attitude, in a different industry?

We’ll see.

Comments (2)
smArtist thoughts06 Feb 2006 11:04 pm

You can do anything. Ask Robert Rodriguez.

Wow, been a while. Crazy month for me. I went through the hardest crunch of my life, I finished up everything I had to do for Daxter, my wife woke me up one day right before beta to tell me she’s leaving me and moving to the other side of the country to live with a guy friend of hers she met in World of Warcraft, then two weeks later my crunch ended and I have lots of free alone time now! Biiiiiiiiiig month for me, yes sirree. No, I’m not joking.

Anyway, Daxter’s just around the corner. We’re so close… everyone at the office has been playing it from back to front to back again. We have a REALLY fun game on our hands.

Also been reading quite a lot. I’ve read more in the last two weeks than in the previous six months!

I just finished this AMAZING book called Rebel Without A Crew by Robert Rodriguez, the director of movies like El Mariachi, Desperado, Spy Kids, Once Upon A Time in Mexico, and Sin City.

The book is a journal he kept of making his first feature length film, El Mariachi. He was poor and had no money, so he sold his body to science by offering himself up as a lab rat to a local hospital. They’d lock him up for 30 days and test drugs on him, and pay him money to do so. He took this time to write his movie and to earn the money he needed to make it.

Once he got out, he started filming and did EVERYTHING on the set himself. Filming, lighting, setting up the stage, directing, recording audio, everything. Then he cut and printed and scored the entire film himself, drove to Hollywood, and started trying to sell it.

Within about a week, through sheer effort, the PRESIDENTS of major movie studios like Disney, Paramount and Columbia were calling him personally to beg him to work with them, and were offering him hundreds of thousands of dollars to make movies. Simultaneously, his movie is winning major film festivals all over the country, while he is still dirt poor and trying to make it.

It’s an amazing day-to-day account of how everything came together for him through sheer force of will. If you’ve ever aspired to do anything yourself but need to be motivated to know that it CAN be done, read this book. Robert Rodriguez is absolutely amazing, and this book is super-concentrated inspiration juice. Buy it! You’ll feel like conquering worlds in no time.

I’ll be writing more soon. As I said before, I have basically nothing but free time now to read and do whatever I want, so why the hell not? :)

Comments (4)

Monthly Archives

  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • March 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • October 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005
  • June 2005
  • May 2005
  • April 2005
  • March 2005
  • January 2005
  • December 2004
  • October 2004
  • September 2004
  • June 2004
  • May 2004
  • April 2004
  • March 2004
  • November 2003
  • June 2003
  • May 2003
  • April 2003

Categories

  • Daxter ravings
  • General
  • Interesting links
  • smArt Management
  • smArtist thoughts

Search:



(c)2003 - 2007 Jon Jones.