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Attention as a currencyYvette said Aug 8, 2007, 5:10 AM: |
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Ron mentioned on a previous board his interest in Attention as currency and since i happen to be thinking about the points of convergence between the old way (or existing capitalist model) and a better way i'd like to share this and invite feedback. Business:TrustCrossOverAll three Attention, Money and Trust are one and the same energy, seen from different perspectives (bilocality of Business:Consumer and Business:Creator). In the game of Business, Money and Trust are a Attention:Bilocality. If you pay me then i do not have to trust you. In the game of Grow_Yourself, Attention is the Money and Money is the trust. Also there is an inner world and and outer world in Business. - Within the inner world there are Collaborations going on, and the currency is Trust. - Outside this area there are Products and opportunities, and the currency is Money some more ideas to work out- Investment strategies for money - how do they apply in trust and attention? - Gambling strategies for money , applied to trust in relationships. |
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Re: Attention as a currencyYvette said Aug 8, 2007, 7:47 AM: |
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In the game of Business, Money and Trust are a Attention:Bilocality. If you pay me then i do not have to trust you.I've been thinking about this idea and i think it needs to be revised. My experience is that trust is required even when i pay someone….looking at the company i'm working with on the Hotel Infinity site for example. Although they are being paid in money, there is also a trust (attention) transaction that preceded the deal. Furthermore, without trust in the company the deal would not be satisfactory so perhaps it is that less trust is required because money acts as “insurance”? Payment can be withheld or a refund requested if what is delivered is not what was ordered. Your thoughts? |
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Re: Attention as a currencyWiseman said Aug 8, 2007, 8:36 PM: |
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Yvette, |
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Re: Attention as a currencywoepwoep said Aug 9, 2007, 2:09 AM: |
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I find both money and attention have their own space in economics ; these systems are complementary rather than competing. While money is a batch oriented system, attention has far more quantum like aspects. |
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Re: Attention as a currencyKeith said Aug 9, 2007, 2:46 PM: |
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Wiseman, you sound fairly sure of yourself when you state you can't see us adopting a new exchange method or economic model. I'm not so sure myself. Maybe “money” won't go away, but the way it's created and managed might need to be re-visited. |
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Re: Attention as a currencyWiseman said Aug 10, 2007, 12:44 PM: |
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Keith, |
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Re: Attention as a currencyYvette said Aug 11, 2007, 3:47 PM: |
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Spot on, Wiseman!!
Context Makes All the Difference in Value Submitted by ydubel on Wed, 2006-05-03 10:21. First, let me thank you for this post. I had written in my notes a last week that I wanted what you posted and then you just gave it to me. I love it when you do that! Thank you very much, Ron. I'll start with your Questions: - (1) if this theory holds, then my financial wealth is a function of my need for attention - (2) what are the factors that determine my need for attention? - (3) what are the factors that determine the value on the left side of the equation? I think the amount of attention required to produce the product/service effects how much has to be returned in the form of attention vs. money. There is an agreement about value between the provider and the customer, and this is where the shift in defining the customer will emerge. Taken from our dialogue about CRM at ecademy : Why in my mind does the consumer feel wrong? Typically marketing seems to operate on the a piori that the consumer is a thing that exist to be used. Marketing and related activities in those cases encourage mindless devouring of goods based on the assumption of lack or imperfection. On the other hand a customer is a human being who is trusting a business to help them solve a problem. It is a relationship that has a basis that feels closer to….until I have a new word for this relationship that is the one I'm working with because it does acknowledge the personhood of an individual. If a person thrives, not simply when loved, but when given the opportunity to Give love, then the implications point towards the value of Social_Capital. Again noting the problem of using pre-existing terms and butting heads with the preconceptions they conjure. Can I put that problem aside for a second? A human being is a complete organism and nothing can be added to make it more human or more whole so marketing activities need to shift towards engagement informed by that awareness. From my experiences it seems we humans are most aware of our wholeness when we GIVE the best of ourselves. For example, in the model most accept today if your products are plastic spinning tops that can be mass produced you require virtually no attention, and the value per item may be very little, but you can sell millions of them to build wealth or attract money. If there are no conditions put on how the money is made, such as will your manufacturing process harm the environment, are the people working in the factory happy with the work conditions and pay, are your tops as safe as they could be for the children that enjoy them? But if you have a service that comes from a personal talent AND you have conditions on how it is delivered then those conditions act as filters and I think it may alter exactly what money means or represents. Because if it represents wealth then it's out of sync with the business/economic models widely accepted today. So in order to attract money in today's world as is….you'd need to create a context for your product that helps bridge it with what is emerging. Perhaps a new word for currency is on the horizon, but for now it is needed that projects that can feature the value of your product will assist customers in understanding the value of it. Also, perhaps there are different types of customers. Some that will operate within an emerging system where Social_Capital is a desired result and is seen as part of the profitability equations and others who just want a solution to their problem. Like the the project I'm working on with Kerry and Irena. There are the customers who enter training to get free access to services, in exchange they help staff the center and can get trained in the areas that interest them. Because they get the services for free and then teach what they've learned for free to other center members/visitors and then provide the services for a fee to businesses/organizations….it factors into the profitability equations by addressing the staffing issue which is key to keep operating cost down and then there's the individuals need to earn money to support themselves. So that even the businesses who just want to buy X are supporting the project's concept. And because the project is based on equality, Kerry's expertise about the customer base is just as valuable as yours about attention because without either one the whole is fragmented….but what is becoming clear is that there are different kinds of customers who “pay” with different currencies so that is the need for the context that can bridge the old and the emerging. So the project creates the context for highlighting or even establishing the value of various expertise from a traditionally commercial perspective. It's the same with my expertise which is creating projects that bridge the old and the new, but only someone interested in building the new will fully appreciate that and see the value of my services…until they see an expample that idenfities an application that relates to a problem they'd like to solve. Can it be that you need a contextual placement of your product/service to attract money and create wealth? Only the best, Yvette “Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best.” – Henry Van Dyke |
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Re: Attention as a currencyjanos said Aug 26, 2007, 5:03 AM: |
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I would like to comment on the motto at the end of the quoted dialogue (Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best) and use it to hint at a fundamental element of true personal freedom: Unconditional guaranteed subsistence income. The details can be explored in a new thread.
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Re: Attention as a currencyjanos said Aug 28, 2007, 11:28 AM: |
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Katrina and Carmudgeon, Advocates of Citizens' Income (CI from here onward), on the other hand, claim that each child is born an “aristocrat”, so to speak, with her or his own share of the nature-given riches of the earth that are the basis of all economic success. I really hope that this does not sound patronizing or evasive. In my experience a dialogue that does not proceed from shared assumptions leads to miscommunications, misunderstandings, and failure to “unearth” insights which are seen as relevant by all participants. The modern version of CI (the idea goes back at least as far as Thomas Paine's Rights of Man) claims to definitely address the most fundamental flaw of the current version of capitalist economies. This is the well documented fact that the capitalist economic system is very good at creating wealth (goods and services) but it singularly fails in its equitable distribution (I am not implying here the socialist's thesis). In other words production is the proper function of economics, but the distribution of the surplus wealth (the surplus that reamains after the factors of production take their due rewards or rent, wages and profits) it creates is largely a socio-political issue. We are right at the heart of a non-Marxist critique of capitalist economies here. This is why I suggested at the end of my post that we transfer the dialogue to its own thread. Could you please look at that new thread with the suggested structure for discussing CI? I hope that this does not kill your interest in a subject that actually goes to the very heart of the most basic human right, the right to life and to the means of physical life. Again, please, please, I do not want to sound patronizing when offering a reminder to the objective in front of this group evolutionaries: … to subdue the (roughly) ten thousand year old conspiracy of a minority to dominate and exploit the surplus labour of the majority. |
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Re: Attention as a currencykatrinamae said Aug 27, 2007, 12:19 PM: |
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So basically, if someone wanted to not work or market their “talents” they could try to live off of a menial citizen's income? And where would this citizen's income come from? Taxes? i do say, i agree with Curmudgeon in that if someone in a small village had a talent, they'd only be able to exercise it if in some way or another it eventually had value to the village. otherwise, someone whose talent or work ethic is stronger is doling out goods or taxes to allow someone with an “unmarketable” talent to live. That's another thing - everything can be marketable - unless you have some belief that holds you back, like that you “shouldn't have to” market your product to live. I think people seem to have the idea that living is their “right” when it is not - it is a gift. And if someone has the audacity to look at their life as something that others have to protect, no matter how useless they are, then they do not deserve the gift of living, since their not really living with deep satisfaction anyway. |
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Re: Attention as a currencyandrew said Aug 28, 2007, 5:17 PM: |
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Okay, i have to take Katrina and Curmudgeon to task here. First off, i'd agree that if someone only made a resource that had value only to themselves then yes, it would be quite useless. But i have to ask if a 10,000 year old hunter-gatherer analogy is even useful here? The complexity of our modern nation states is staggering…..Personally, i pay 8-10 grand a year in taxes and i'm quite happy to have that money go in re-investment in infrastructure ( a great thing about capitalism) and also to pay for our universal type health-care etc. What i do find offensive is when my money goes to bulding the fifty-five thousand and first nuclear weapon! |
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Re: Attention as a currencyandrew said Aug 28, 2007, 6:06 PM: |
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Oh yeah, (can't seem to shut-up today)… |
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Re: Attention as a currencymita said Sep 19, 2007, 5:11 PM: |
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Isn't that the reason for all our media, marketing and ads are continuously clamoring for our precious little attention so we are programmed subconsciously to think and behave in certain ways and never venture out of the box named 'free market'. |
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