Further Thoughts on Service

On Service:   I tend to agree with the comments about red state/blue state divisions, though clearly it is  often a matter of rural/urban and mompop/corporate.   Engagement takes energy and minimal intelligence, but most of all it takes an attitude.   Tailoring service to customers is generally best done by widely distributed responsibility and encouragement of innovation.   Shannon’s observations are good.  Establishing a relationship requires some time a large turnover of either customers or workers means that the relationship can’t grow.   Knowing customers, we soon expect that customer to add the extra change that keeps his pockets cleared though such an exchange was surprising the first time it happened.    After a while, a customer knows what the business can do and a business knows what the customer is likely to like.   In the old days, clerks at stores would put aside certain dresses they knew their customers would like; clerks would step into the dressing room and discuss exactly how a bra should fit.    But the temporary nature of workers, the shifting clientele  – all these make such interactions impossible.  

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Thinking About Blogging

To blog is to desire a certain communion with others – an exchange of ideas.   On the other hand, it is a remarkable  tool of the free market, the open marketplace of ideas.   Communal and individual are  tensions explored by Isaac Mao in  a Guardian interview “China’s first blogger.”    Mao’s analysis is a thoughtful self-examination and an optimistic  interpretation of both blogging and China’s future, which he sees blogging as playing a part in advancing.    We are from  a culture that prizes individualism  highly; his  analysis  comes from a different perspective.   As  Mao  notes

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War & Organized Crime

My son-in-law,  just returned from Russia, sent an e-mail  linking to  Yulia Latynina  who “writs for the independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta (you may remembet Anna Politkovskaya, who also wrote for the  N.G. before she was murdered in 2006).”   Latynina  argues “South Ossetia Crisis Could Be Russia’s Chance To Defeat Siloviki.”     He acknowledges she may overstate the role of organized crime as motive, but visitors to Eastern Europe (and Russia)  often speak of  violence and pervasive corruption.    Indeed, “Saakashvili did say that fighting organized crime as among the reasons for attacking S. Ossetia.”    To buttress this point, he linked to another article, the older and lengthier one in Atlantic Monthly,  “A Smuggler’s  Story”.      The stories of a couple of their contemporaries who have spent summers in Tblisi are often of the lack of transparency in almost all day-to-day transactions.