Journalism

Despite the easy headlines about consumer apps, tech startups, and special departments or incubators set up to do innovative things, the real innovations occur when established companies draw on what makes them unique (history, skills, customers) and dare to change processes, challenge expectations, and take risks in their operations.

Innovation isn’t a thing that stands on its own or has inherent value, but rather evidences the willingness to throw out even the most cherished practices, and risk transforming them into new, better, faster, more meaningful routines. It may involve tech, nor not...but it certainly involves people, processes, and the messy reality of inventing the future.

I've written 250 or so such stories at Forbes over the past half decade. Prior to that, I wrote about brands and marketing for Advertising Age, and brands & technology for Information Week.

Shifting Responsibility

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What’s the Best Way to Find an Ad Agency?

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Royal Engagement

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DARPA Wants New Technology To Predict “Societal Unrest”

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Crash Foreshadowed

Today, an airplane crashed into a high-rise. It was just before 10 o’clock in the morning on this day in 1945, but the sky above Manhattan was dark due to a thick fog. Lieuten...

Net Neutrality

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More Roads

Today, a data network was founded. The United States Post Office was important enough to be specifically mentioned in the Constitution with its own clause, decreeing that Congre...

According To Big Data, We Won The Vietnam War

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Improbable Events

Today, the unlikely happened. The strip of metal that fell off the Continental Airlines DC-10 as it took off on its way from Paris to Newark was a foot and a half long and an in...

Top Heavy

Today, a safety measure proved deadly. Lifeboats were considered a necessary component of any passenger or cargo ship in the 19th century, but there was no established or regula...

Objective Disorder

Today, an edict was repeated. Like any legal argument, the Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church on the Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons issued on October 1, 2025 was ...

The Privacy Debate Isn’t About Secrets, It’s About Control

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Sorta Pi

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The Link Between Social Media Activity And Corporate Reputation

A brief essay at Forbes recently cited an academic study that correlated social media activity with positive perceptions of a brand, and provided three conclusions: "The first c...

Rude Shock

Today, the cost of debate became clear. The American Civil War started with lots of speeches and rituals. Secessionist legislators gave principled speeches about states’ right...

Final Edit

Today, the witnesses were dispersed. First century Jerusalem was a turbulent, violent place. The Romans were military occupiers who’d co-opted the somewhat Greek-ified Jewish ...

Should Marketing Own Customer Service?

In a word, no. Customer service may be accomplished through communicating, which is a the tool that marketers use to interact with the world, but its substance reaches far beyond (...

Wrong Criteria

Today, NASA made the wrong pick for its crew. Picking a teacher to travel on the Space Shuttle was intended to rekindle public excitement about space exploration. The selection ...

Inevitable Darkness

Today, the names were changed. It started when an Arab Berber commander named Tariq ibn-Ziyad landed a small force at Gibraltar in 711, to intervene in a civil war among the Vis...

Finding Monetization

Today, a company started making a profit. Henry Ford’s first forays into the car-making business weren’t terribly successful. He founded the Detroit Automobile Company in 18...

Are Bloggers or Journalists More Believable?

Publicity has always been a tool for brands to deliver content that is authentic and credible, since editorial judgment could affirm that what was shared was true (or at least had ...

No Canals

Today, we didn’t discover waterways. Mid-19th century Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli first discovered the canali on Mars while he was finding and naming the continen...

Hell No

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Hyping The Death Of Hype

The headlines declaring that Procter & Gamble has ended its marketing function are inspiring: Job titles have been changed, from “marketing” to “brand,” along with the ...

No, No, No, It’s All About Mars

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GM Faces This Century’s Greatest Branding Opportunity

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Privacy Fears Cost 100,000 Lives?

It’s not like there’s an epidemic of obesity in America because folks need a high tech device to show them their blubber. Read the entire essay at Forbes

The Weird Logic of Loyalty Programs

Many brands conflate the legitimate needs to sell effectively with the drivers of true customer loyalty, often using the nomenclature of the latter to label programs to accomplish ...

Good Drinking

Time and place define innovation. Read the entire essay at Histories of Social

Pretty Vacant

Had the social web existed at the time, maybe the Sex Pistols would have existed only for a day. Read the entire story at Histories of Social Media