Imagination, Courage, Initiative
Projects RH is currently working
with two tech companies. This has drawn me into the world of incubators. It is
a world which mirrors life. It has imagination, courage, initiative,
self-sacrifice and determination. Our new business “squires” are not dressed in
the fineries of future knights but have the qualities to be a future leader.
I vividly remember a discussion
with my mother when I was in year 11. Her hope for me was a couple of degrees a
good job with the bank or oil company, meet a nice girl and get married. Oh,
has the world changed.
Our world demands flexibility,
authenticity, courage and belief in self.
I have learned that the tech world
is not just filled with idealistic 20 year old’s. Projects RH in both its tech
assignments is working agree qualified entrepreneurs who have at least 20 years
practical experience. They have shown real courage in putting all on the line
in the belief that they can commercialise their vision. Fortunately for me,
Projects RH has been engaged to assist them once their vision has been turned
into a prototype which can be commercialised.
We are energised by their
enthusiasm and their call to hold them in their cause. They have overcome the
naysayers and even their own self-doubt to get to the point where we can help.
They have accepted the challenge
to be agile and nimble, to live life on a shoestring and ask others to share
their vision. They have real skin in the game and have accepted life’s
challenges. After long careers each of the entrepreneurs had accepted that they
live in an imagination age. Mark Hodgson, in his work Time to Shine,
draws our attention to key fact that we live in the imagination age and
that the information and technical ages are behind us.
I remember studying “Learning the
Law” by Glanville Williams but enjoying “The Paper Chase” by John Osborn.
Osborn’s novel is set at Harvard Law School and his key character was a Professor
Charles W. Kingsfield Jr. Kingsfield unlike Williams focused on thinking, he
wanted his students to think like lawyers. In the imagination age education
remains important as it teaches students to think. Cutting-edge technology
needs to be applied and that takes knowledge and imagination, plus perhaps
inspiration that definitely application.
Both of projects RH’s clients
demonstrate that they have accepted they need for the application of cutting
edge technology but they’re selling point is they stir the imagination and an
understanding of what drives their respective consumers.
Mafematica (www.mafematica.com.au) addresses the
issue of how do I manage my assets to get the most retirement. There are some
650,000 SMSF’s (self managed superannuation funds) in Australia today their
owners are seeking the best retirement for themselves and others. This app
allows them to simulate changes in their investment portfolios and work out the
optimum portfolio for them. The key is they can do it when it suits them.
BuildAnApp (www.buildanapp.com.au) allows a
technician to build an application which enables their principal not only to
send messages to parties using their app but to have an individual dialogue.
This is a substantial step forward in dealing with your client. For me it means
when the gym instructor says I’m available at 11 on Saturday I can say no 11:30
and he says OK.
We read many stories which
suggest that there will be less jobs in the future. I would rather think that
the nature of work will change and that many of the repetitive jobs will
disappear. This will open the way for us, human race, to use our imagination to
take as even further.
Given this week we celebrate the
50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission it is timely to think that
is the human imagination that will take us into the future.
Paul Raftery
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