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Being in Play
By Michael Alan Hamlin
September 24, 2001

If you are a geek or a shrink, you're well positioned for success. Or so says Robert B. Reich. In his first major work since leaving the Clinton administration where he served as secretary of labor, Reich reflects on how work and lifestyle are rapidly evolving - more frenetic than ever - and the often harsh personal choices those changes demand.

The future belongs to the smart and innovative, Reich counsels in, well, The Future of Success. Ok, nothing new there. But by smart this university professor and writer is not talking about the magna cum laude elites. Instead, it's the just better-than-average types. Those who get to the future not by playing by rules that leave them disadvantaged, but by breaking the rules and replacing them with their own.

And who are these people? First there are the professionals. Those geeks whose passion is to create not for the sake of creating, but for the sake of profit. They're mostly not highly computer literate or engrossed, as the term geek has come to suggest. Many, perhaps most, aren't computer wizards at all, don't solve complex problems, and don't enjoy a monopoly on some vast resource of valuable "knowledge." Instead, "the real value these people add to the economy derives instead from their creativity - their insights into what can be done in a particular medium, what can be done for a particular market, and how best to organize the work in order to bring these two perspectives together," Reich says.

Rather than exhibiting a talent for writing elegant code, creative workers have a talent for asking the right questions and carefully listening to the folks who do write the code - or some other task. They are synthesizers, organizers of chaos, and den mothers expertly leveraging yin against yang to produce products and services of extreme appeal. And since appeal has a short shelf life in this consumer-controlled global economy, geeks never tire of creating new things over and over and over.

But where would the geeks be without their shrinks? Reich says not very far. Like geeks, shrinks also defy the conventional wisdom in Reich's dictionary. They don't have couches for patients but they may charge by the hour. These are the people who take what the geeks create and make it famous, and they're called marketers, talent agents, rainmakers, trend spotters, producers, consultants, and hustlers. They are the people, "in short, who can identify possibilities in the marketplace for what other people might want to have, see, or experience, and who understand how to deliver on those opportunities."

Together, they provide the two faces of an economic coin. One doesn't exist without the other, but they are never seen together. Collectively they have value. But a value that simply wouldn't exist if the two personalities weren't a single whole. And so Reich implies by intent or otherwise that aside from exhibiting the qualities required of geeks and shrinks, the single most important thing these modern workers must do to succeed is to somehow find each other.

Once they do, they can count on working as hard as people have ever worked, at least if they're based in America, that land of opportunity (and sad tragedy). Reich returns continually to the relentless pace of life - a pace he sought to escape in part by leaving government - and its contribution to American productivity. Americans work harder than anyone on earth, he says, up to 350 hours a year longer than the French, for example, and even more than the notoriously efficient Japanese, who work about as hard today as they did in 1980.

What's driven the Americans to do this to themselves? They are richer, but for what purpose? Reich believes the urge to stay in the office has to do with the near universality of variable income in corporate America. Because so few people on the move in their organizations work for a fixed salary, income is insecure. There's no more of that steady work and steady pay increase routine. Excel, and your paycheck excels with you. Fail, and plummet to a bottomless pit. The gap between success and failure and the haves and have nots has never been greater, and it's growing, and is itself a catalyst for extreme endeavor.

Reich's conclusions provide a much more plausible explanation for the huge jumps in productivity in America than that espoused so regularly by Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan. Greenspan credits technology-induced productivity for the sustained expansion of better than a decade up until the great dot-bomb. But Greenspan has recently been embarrassed because productivity figures have been revised downward, making them far less spectacular than they once seemed. And the gains that remain were probably more directly the result of Americans working harder than technology sans the human dimension.

Working hard, however, doesn't complete the success equation. Lots of people are smart and lots of people are creative. Being smart and creative just isn't enough to distinguish the crusading future-rich professional from the competition. That takes marketing.

Well, maybe not just marketing. Some things never change, like networking. Reich believes that in a cluttered field of creative workaholics "who you know" has never been more important. And while success isn't sustainable without substance to back it up - something Reich doesn't say much about - getting the chance to be successful frequently boils done to using someone else's foot to get in the door.

Which is just the first step, of course. Next comes brand building ? you're own. "In the new economy, you get ahead not by being well liked but by being well marketed," Reich argues. "The goal is no longer to fit in or to gain the approval of one's peers. It's to stand out among one's peers, to dazzle and inspire potential customers, or people who will connect you to them."

The more dazzling you become, the more valuable you become, too. Just how valuable? There's a way to find out: put yourself in play. Fast movers suggest through Internet chat rooms, associations, and party talk that they are being pursued. If the talk is credible, offers start piling up, which can then been dangled before their current employer. If the employer is willing to pay more, that's the player's value. If not, it's the value of the offer. For now.

And it's probably not surprising that like variable income, being in play is the nature of the beast across professions, from lawyer to university president.

So forget that silly shyness. Success depends not on being the smartest, or the most creative, or the best networked. It depends on being different, knowing the value of that difference, and marketing it well.

(Mr. Hamlin is managing director of the consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and managing in Asia. His latest book is Marketing Places Asia, which is coauthored. His e-mail address is mahamlin@teamasia.com.ph. If you use a Smart/Talk N Text GSM user, you can text a message to Mr. Hamlin's mailbox by typing the keyword mikehamlin and sending it to 200.)



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