Landscape Photography – A Niche In Search of an Industry

May 19th, 2010

 Landscape Photography – A Niche in Search of an Industry

As I go about each day trying to get my fledging startup going, my IMG_0388_email REdays are filled with brainstorming the tried and true formulas as well as ‘thinking outside the box’. And as I spend so much time thinking, I keep realizing that I am not only trying to create a  business, but I am also trying to create an industry. 

 Sometimes, reinvention of the wheel is obviously not needed. It is not clear that someone needs to reinvent the gas station, the dry cleaners, or the grocery store.  But subtle as it may seem, invention and innovation are exactly what is needed in almost anything we do.   That  is the engine of small business and landscaping is no exception (http://photographyforrealestate.net/).

To the layman, landscaping is an artform with a practical purpose.  Landscaping enhances the beauty and value of a property.  Landscaping showcases so many  related stitch5_coloradjustgrn_LOGO3talents that it has become a necessity to maximize the most valuable asset an individual or company may have – property. 

In this millenial era, information is an incredible industry. With just a little effort, you can find information  on just about anything – usually free. Technology has been made available to a wider audience that ever thought possible.  The trap is believing there is nothing new to learn – no new innovation to make; that we know everything already and can use that knowledge in all the ways that it can be used.

The aforementioned engine of small business is supported by individuals that can do something common and do it uncommoningly well.  When that is no longer possible, our standard of living will go to a place we really wouldn’t like and our futures will become bleak.  But small business success is created with vision, invention and innovation.  Take the issue of providing aerial imaging to support the most important or mundane of taskings and efforts. 

 Aerial photography can be found on multiple websites that use national assets the public previously had no way of getting. But dependence on non-localized assets  has pitfalls.  It is still controlled by a collection strategy that is dicated on the needs of the country rather than the needs of an individual.  The imagery that suits your needs  is more likely to be coincidental rather than task driven.

 This is where industries like landscaping needs new tools, new access to problem solving services and utilities.  Tools like elevated imaging don’t  IMG_0423Mrt3anecessarily represent ‘new’ technology.  It represents an innovation in getting  a picture – the fact that the  picture is needed is not new; getting it this way, is.  Using this method, you are better able to customize the image to provide just the right look you need to the prospective client.    And as I work to develop my company’s service,  I can sense, feel that a landscaper is going to seize on  what I do. 

 Two things will happen at that time; one – the landcaper’s competitors will sit up and notice, they will integrate this asset into their own operation, and inadvertantly create an industry.  Next, my competitors will sit up and notice and the industry of elevated imaging will flourish as people scramble to come onboard until the next ‘new thing’ comes along.

…And If You Believe that… There’s a Bridge in Brooklyn for Sale…

April 28th, 2010
IMG_0437en1_JPEGLOGOI’m so ticked, my outrage has moved beyond the common sense feeling of embarrassment to wanting to ‘do’ something to put thought to keyboard. Once again, I fell for the tricks of a big company preying on a smaller one trying to get started. I don’t know if you’ve tried to start a company but the biggest pitfall is not being able to tell the difference between tenacity and stubbornness. From the very beginning, we’re taught that if you don’t at first, succeed – try harder or at least try again. Invest more time, money and effort into something that went nowhere.

In this case, I’m talking about letting myself face the fact that the ‘old way’ is actually gone. Marketing yourself to create a viable business model is essential – and in so doing, become profitable; you have to get out and hustle each and every day. Part of doing that involves ensuring your accessibility for your customer base to find you. This brings me to Yellowbook. Yellowbook is part of the old way of doing things. A printed listing that is out of date the moment they go with a ‘final’ copy. Despite my instincts and the fact that I informally asked people, friends and acquaintances if they used information from such things as the Yellowpages, Yellowbook or Superpages, I ignored the fact that they all said no. And in fact, were incredulous that I even had to ask…

I, most of us, grew up with the concept of those types of publications. The truth is, they’re dinosaurs too slow to even understand they’ve already died. They promise to ‘drive’ business to you so fast, you won’t be able to handle it. After more than 2 years of believing this business model, this paradigm, I’ve yet to receive 1 phone call, email, or visit to my website because of their efforts. It’s hokum, snakeoil, outright deception… For $40 per month, $480 per year, I bought a Yellowbook listing under their ‘Silver’ program. Newsflash, I find no evidence that the silver program even exists. Once the sales rep gets your name on a dotted line, they disappear, are never within reach of their phone and you can never get a hold of anyone on the ‘technical support team’. You can’t get a hold of their supervisors and they’re never local to you. Besides not being able to talk to someone, I also did not see my company actually listed anywhere in the ‘book’. So what did I get for $40 per month? A year long contract that lists me on a online 8th page, listing for wedding photographers – though I’ve never done a wedding in my life. So what have we learned Dorothy? You should keep your money away from the things that you know are dead or dying. Oh, and tenacity is the right answer……

This is Incredible… the facts…..

April 17th, 2010

A friend sent this link to me this evening from Youtube ™: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY

 The information contained herein, is the sort of thing I’ve been talking about…. See the video and enjoy – I found it fascinating….

Backyard Innovations

March 26th, 2010
A professional building in the East county San Diego area

A professional building in the East county San Diego area

While listening to the news, this morning, I heard about a gentleman fromYorkshire, England.  He had created a method to take pictures from a very high altitude at the edge of space, using materials off the shelf that anyone could buy and a little ingenuity.

For his project, he bought a small high altitude balloon, some helium, a point and shoot type digital camera, GPS and a controller for the whole apparatus.    All told, he spent about $700 US dollars. In return, he created a system that took, clear, stunning pictures that rival some of NASA’s most memorable images, at a cost there is no practical way to compare. An average space mission is about $350 million dollars with the soon-to-be defunct US Shuttle Transportation System.

True, there are problems and deficiencies with his method of imaging.  But what is important is that those images also capture the imagination of what further development will bring.  Currently he does not have the capability to precisely point and shoot at will  - a system to methodically manifest and collect on a list of prioritized targets.  However, there are uses for military or civilian applications such as construction progress management, real estate, conservation, etc.  The key here is innovation.  He thought outside of the norms – or big monopolized business and government programs the taxpaying public can barely afford anymore – and that is exciting. 

 Also, the images are challenged by resolution.  There is no doubt a picture of the earth below can be stunning, but this feat appears almost like an accident, rather than something practical done on purpose.  His camera system has limited room for image storage, and his system cannot alter the image collection during flight.  He cannot collect images with the fabled ‘license plate accuracy’.  All these things aside, this assessment points to a whole new possible industry. An industry that may possibly create jobs, solve problems and inspire new thinkers to do a great many other things. 

It should be noted that this man is not from the US and that’s okay – other countries are allowed to innovate and create. But we should note that while our politicians grandstand on the lesser issues – other peoples are carrying on with meeting the 21st century head-on.

We should never forget that many of the most important innovations of note in the future will come from the small entrepreneurs looking for ‘another way’ as they build and create in their own backyards.  (See elevated imaging using query: ‘elevated imaging, wiki’ on Google ™ or Youtube’s ™:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAEOTeht7-w

The Report Is In

March 13th, 2010

In the event you were still at work during the following broadcast by MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan on today’s 2:00 o’clock broadcast this afternoon, you might have missed one of the best summaries of how we ‘got here’.  This report, on the surface, may seem boring but when you listen to the entire case being laid out – you might feel a sense of outrage. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBUzzfCw5qs

If ever there was a time for partisan bickering to stop – now is the time.  We as, Americans, should be asking ‘how did the nation almost get brought down to its financial knees by the few and the very, very greedy?  Further, what will we do to prevent it from happening again?

This is not a partisan issue, it concerns all of us.  Jobs have been lost, homes foreclosed, businesses lost, and futures squandered.  Rules were broken and now America has to pay up.  What a burden we leave our kids. But we can learn from this….

Standing By While the World Learns the Lessons We Should

February 13th, 2010
the concept

PPT Brief 1st Gen ROOT_B1bPerhaps you remember, I wrote and posted a blog noting a super freighter container ship – the Emma Maersk In that blog, I wondered if we’re getting used to the prospect of becoming ‘second-best’.

http://www.boreme.com/boreme/funny-2008/emma-maersk-p1.php

Our internecine political battles have gotten so out of hand, there is virtually no way to get anything done that will put this country back on track (no pun intended) by getting the country moving on a vital and very needed part of our infrastructure modernization. Ironically, the very people who bemoan that this country is going to Hell in a handbasket because there are no jobs; are the first to kill or obstruct every, and any initiative proposed by this White House.

This infighting has virtually killed healthcare reform – when both major political parties acknowledge that reform is needed. The left supports runaway spending and the right supports fighting any idea that is not their own. Folks, we’re at dead standstill with all this gridlock. In the meantime, the out years will see people die needlessly and future prosperity of individuals squandered by the same old corporate two-step.

But through intimidation and lobbying by the insurance companies, people are too scared to embrace the change that is needed. Like being afraid to travel in a world that is believed to be flat. So now, the polls show that more people don’t want change to the healthcare system than the people who do. The message of fear has gotten through and people will suffer and die.

When you show supporting data that the US ranks 37th by the World Health Organization (WHO), people get angry – stop listening and declare the US has the best healthcare system in the world. The US has the highest infant premature infant mortality rate, the highest chronic illness rate (heart, stroke, cancer, diabetes) and the highest obesity issue per capita than any other industrialized nation.

(http://www.globalissues.org/article/774/health-care-around-the-world)
Forty million people face the medical nightmare on a nightly basis without health insurance. The financial ruin for the survivors has been catastrophic. Our own family faced this dilemma that ended when both parents died in a system that let them slip away because of being under insured. They had the best they could afford – but by their late 50’s, their races had been run.

This time, I’m referring to our embryonic effort at building a high rail system. We are so far behind, the Chinese will have built their 42nd high speed train by the time we’ve fielded our first little line from Tampa, Florida to Orlando. The Chinese already have all of their major cities connected by trains that exceed 200 mph. Imagine going from Dallas to Detroit in 6 hours. We have some short haul flights that take more time than that. The Europeans operate many successful high-speed trains.

(http://www.alleuroperail.com/eurorail-high-speed-train.htm)

But where is the United States on this issue? We can’t get passed being the only industrialized modern nation without universal healthcare, much less having a train system ready to meet the modern 21st century. If ever there was a time that favors infrastructure modernization, this is the time. It is a time that has the potential to rival the building of American doing FDR’S first years in office or even reach a level of modernization of the Truman – Eisenhower era. But we have political infighting like kids on the playground. We’ve ground to a halt in all that needs to be done.

So, what does this have to do with elevated photography? Nothing directly; but we’re talking about innovation and modernization – at least, that is the theme I had wished to emphasize with this blog. The year will go by in 2010 without much difference to the year before. In the meantime, people will wonder where the jobs are; and they will support the obstruction of a President with a vision that could positivelyaffect each and every citizen across this nation. Before you accuse this author of being in the tank for this President, listen to the video of Ted Kennedy giving the eulogy for his murdered brother on 8 June, 1968: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9JTYnMpRyg. Forget the politics; there is a calling that begs for a response – courage, innovation, imagination and creation…

San Diego Earthworks Earthfair

January 23rd, 2010

On 18 April 2010, the city of San Diego will make available – Balboa Park to celebrate the 20th anniversary of San Diego Earthworks Earthfair. Beltair Industries, Inc (BAII) intends on being there hosting a booth all day and hopes to receive many of you as visitors.

 Elevated imagery is a not yet well known method of collecting images. However, this method has many, many uses, environmentalism and conservation being just two of them.  The system BAII uses to capture images is a mast-mounted digital camera that is ‘slaved’ into a laptop receiver with image handling software.  The images can be gathered in both electro-optical view that most people are familiar with or collected in infrared to help in some areas of science, environmentalism and conservation.  The advantages of this system are its response time, repeatability and quality of the image and graphics.

I hope to see many of you there at the Earthfair as we, as a community, look into the preservation of the local environment and seek new ways and tools to it with.

BAII – Elevated Imaging… New Paradigms

January 2nd, 2010
 

a typical elevated image with potential to provide answers to mulitple questions

a typical elevated image with potential to provide answers to mulitple questions

BAII Elevated Imaging – The New Paradigm Continues

 

 

 

The new 2010 year is here as is the unavoidable annual ritual, of marching on to whatever fate the ‘newborn’ year  intends to bring. 

The hardy, optimistic crowd brings a new sense of ‘starting over’; a hope for the future sort of cheeriness.  The more embittered of us, bring a clamor to be the first to predict a previously unimaginable disaster so they can have ‘I told you so’ rights later in the year.

In doing so, the lessons of the previous year get lost in the anticipation of  the incoming new year.  The attempt with this blog is merely to put some thoughts to readership – one of the lessons I learned this year is that I cannot possibly write a single article that addresses all things to all people for all time.  The world is too big, the events too many,  and I concede that I am just a bit player in it all.  But in my mind, a good place to start is to list some valuable lessons learned in 2009.

The Disclaimer:  I may not have learned all the things that are important to all people everywhere and therefore I may fail to mention something important to someone here. This is generally considered both understandable and reasonable; since knowing our system of law is based significantly on precedent – please wish me luck instead….. 

Personal Lessons:

  1. I should have spent more time in school.   Degrees have certain value – by all means, get one as soon as you can.  But the truth is, that school is redeeming; a means to forgive yourself for all the times you should have zigged when you zagged instead. There is always something new to learn that can be applied to almost any situation – so take your sheepskin and get back in school.  Who could argue that doing something good for yourself like getting an education is a bad thing?

     The common mistake that most people make is to look for the ‘payoff’ for going   that will make sense before they sign the dotted line.  In most cases there is noimmediate payoff – the accumulation of knowledge, experience and personalrelationships are the rewards that are immediately calculable.

  1. Dammit!  My mom and the doctors were right all along – after fighting common sense for 50 years, 2009 taught me the brutal lessons of failing to eat less, exercise more, read everything your can get your hands on, – oh and eat your veggies…..  funny, I was always the ‘kids will be alright’  kind of dad… I watch my ‘used to be’ little ones with their little ones and it’s all different now….

       3.  Trust my instincts more… As most of you know, I’m trying hard to get BeltairIndustries Inc.  off the ground in southern California as a viable business.  Even this blog is being generated to further that cause.  But to that point; it’s my instincts to survive as well as actual skills learned that will make this possible – so I must trust them more

General Lessons:   The ‘system’ under which we live in prepares our youth to become 1 of 4 people.  This current paradigm is based on education, hard work, luck and the building of coalitions.  It may sound like I am about to criticize our very reasonable and logical way of life – in fact, I am only saying that it has to continue its non-stop evolution.  Certainly – there are people who can explain much better than I – this theory of preparation for life in the United States.  First, I must digress into the current way we do things:

  1. The Employee:  Become a reasonably dependable person with some valued skillset to support the operations of some business – be it a store clerk or school teacher. You go to a school; academic, vocational or military to get some of these skill sets, a supervisor somewhere seeks out those skills; a matching of job and potential employee is evaluated and proposed and you now have a job.  That job gets complicated by the onset of families, product changes, employee expectations, economic shifts, longevity and continuation of benefits to compensate the time invested in the company or business.

     2.  The Specialist:  This is the higher educated,  skilled or niched Employee.  A doctor, lawyer, a luxury car technician (mechanic is not accurate enough here), etc.  These people are more difficult employees to get because of the skills andeducations required, therefore command generally higher salaries.  In the end, they find themselves working for a group, a business, an agency as an employee.

  1. The Entrepreneur:  This is the person who arrives to the thinking and/or place that they can start or run a business of their own.  When this happens, things begin to change.  The tax laws, personal and business relationships, the priority of issues, motivations.  A person’s focus may sharpen as does their tendency to become a better shopper, customer, business owner or other things I have not even thought of yet.  The goal here is to become a very attractive fish to get gobbled up by the next class of person.  This may happen at 10 or 82 years of age  based on motivation, education, acquisition of skills -  it’s different everyone.

       4.  The Super Entrepreneur:  This is the person who specializes in buying up all

     the little successful entrepreneurs.  These folks are interested in money – they may be interested in other things like giving disadvantaged people a fair chance in life, maybe their thing is the environment, or animals.  The point is, these peopl buy up other successful businesses because they specialize in business period.

 So, back to the general lessons of 2009:

Corporatism in the US as we now know it is going to eat itself alive to an uncertain and ugly death in front of our very eyes.  I don’t mean little corporations designed to use the law to survive.  I’m talking about the banks, mortgage companies, the credit card agencies, insurance agencies, etc. They are continuously going to a well that has finite resources and they don’t learn from it.

We finally proved to ourselves that corporate welfare does not work. The US taxpayer – broke from watching his 401K evaporate into empty promises , facing homelessness, losing his healthcare, the rising cost of education, and losing his job that he invested a whole life in,  is getting ticked off to a point of no return as bonus after bonus is paid out to 5000/hr corporate officers who have angled to have the very hand that feeds them lose out their ability to do so…

If it was not the availability of the sheer numbers of the supportive and responsible taxpayers being extorted – this problem would have self –corrected many years ago.  This year was the most aggressive application of the business model since the phrase Reaganomics was even coined.  And the trickle down has produced more unemployment and corporate wealth than ever.

Product vs. Service:  Our country has moved from one that produces a ‘hard’, touchable, seeable, product to one that depends more on performing services.  Services that are considered boring, tedious, hard, dirty, or expensive to do yourself.  We now see the folly of low expectations in our auto industry, not building our own housing products, outsourcing things like maintenance of business records or have some faraway 10 year old sew our cheap t-shirts, letting infrastructure fade away as we push the responsibility down the road for some other messiah to look after.  If people have to choose between making the mortgage next month or having to wash their own car… I’m betting the car wash will lose the bet……

We had better take better care of each other:  The current situation US Postal service find’s itself is a classic example. Most people (me included at one time) assume this system is a federal agency supported and run by their tax dollars.  This is far from the truth.  This is a  business that is just now learning the tough and brutal lessons that the newspaper industry has learned and is currently still learning.  In this case – there is still time.  There are precedences; the pain was not so noticeable when the milk man was replaced by the mega-supermarkets. When the horse drawn carts gave way to service trucks, hardly anyone shed a tear. In an effort to help the postal service relate to the new way of doing business – I hope, somewhere – someone important reads the parable down below:

The newspapers made themselves obsolete by not adjusting to a new paradigm that has more agility, lower cost and greater distribution.  In fairness, the explosion of the internet, services like Google ™ or Youtube ™ were not necessarily predictable.  But I also mention that,  as with any business, I have to invest in marketing.  With the advent of the internet – I was able to create a website ( www.beltair.org ) with almost anything I chose to put on it at a cost of about $10 per month with an almost unlimited readership.  In contrast, my three trips ( they required me to come see them – only one newspaper agency chose to meet me at a Starbucks ™ ) to the newspaper industry produced the following:

  1. The counsel that their price of advertising about $2,500 for a week regionally is already known to be almost so worthless that my commitment would be better served  by spending $17K instead over the next 3-4 months with no prediction or guarantee of  customer conversion to business with a known rate of about 2%. But they were giving me a ‘deal’…… and I should have felt lucky.  I guess the assumption is that the same 80,000 readers that may or may not read their paper, that may or may not convert their interest from reading the paper to becoming one of my customers,  have no access to the internet
  2. I went to another agency but they were ‘not interested’ … that was it… simply no    interest in taking my advertising dollar – but I got an impressive cup of coffee at  my own expense in their office.  I placed a dollar into their cup near the coffeemaker with the Styrofoam ™  cups.   That was over 6 months ago… withno call backs….    It ends up that I couldn’t even call them out of the blue and give them money  for a process that has a 98% failure rate.

3        ‘We have to find the appropriate package for you’ was the approach I was given  where for weeks a wide range of confusing ideas where passed around with the idea I was going to pay a weekly fee of thousands of dollars  – the total which was never firmly established.

In the meantime – I’m blogging for free and have my own free business video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAEOTeht7-w .  If the postal service really wanted to survive they would provide a very similar service to Yahoo ™  with some additional perks that would be unique to their service.  Get some of those email dollars – every industry has room for another competitor.  Figure it out….

So, Where do we go from here…?

December 21st, 2009

I posted my last blog about a month ago where I said in essence; pessimism will drag us down to unacceptable paralysis.  For some of us, every where you look, read hear and sadly experience is how bad things are going.  For me, the question is no longer whether times have been better or not – but how much of the current situation is of my own making due to my discouragement; and what part is due to the less than good and/or unfair circumstances?

I also said: There comes a time when a difficult situation becomes a normal existence and either you accept it or move on. I am not immune to the current situation; I do admit to having problems associated with this economic downturn – more than I would like to talk about, or even think is fair. I have been affected just like the folks on the political left and the right.   But that doesn’t matter, we’re still here. But then I had a fortuitous thing happen, during my lunch hour a couple days ago; I saw a PBS special: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/europe/jan-june09/eu_background_01-01.html .  There were several things that became very clear to me: 

 1).  Hegemony and preservation of the wide variety of races and cultures have been and are being observed and preserved by the union since its inception around 1993. 

2). The process, makeup and lessons learned from the EU can be used by us in the US as object lessons to leave our current life robbing recession behind.

3). The formation of the Union has virtually guaranteed that another WWII type war in Europe is about impossible.  In other words – war is obsolete; whether it is amongst themselves, Russia or Islam.

The partisan bickering had become a much smaller priority than the desire to move towards peace, prosperity and evolution of economic life. Just to quote a few numbers; the EU posted a GDP of around 12 trillion dollars compared to the just over the 11.8 trillion in the United States.  The EU is comprised of 8 countries with a population of about 500 million people compared to our population of around 310 million. 

I wrote a blog just before my anti-pessimism blog, in which I wondered if we’re becoming ‘2nd best’.  In retrospect, the question was an apple versus orange situation.  I was comparing the solitary nation of the US to all eight nations of the European Union.  In truth, there is no one country that yields more economic might than the US, no one country that provides as much opportunity for small business, nor access to an advanced education that can be immediately applied to the building of a nation than the US. 

Though, I might have failed to adequately verbalize this in my lasting writing, my optimism lies in the sheer opportunity and obvious need for the rebuilding of our infrastructure and the potential spin-off of new and existing small business to meet the coming demands.  If we can stop our propensity to engage in wars of philosophy around the globe, we can put that money to use employing the 10’s of millions of workers out there trying to find the jobs. We have the opportunity to create and maintain the jobs that will feed families and provide the sort of post WWII stability that we’ve become accustom to and now miss in the wake of this downturn. 

The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will consume about 600 billion dollars this year alone, and we are still on a record pace for home foreclosures.  We officially have about 10-12 percent unemployment depending where in this country your reality has bit you in the butt.  Worse, if we include all the various categories of people who have fallen on their versions of tough luck.

Rather than get into partisan battles over healthcare (because it’s coming anyway), get anxious over our involvements of other countries, you would better serve yourself and your nation over issues of rebuilding it – in every sense.  How?  Learn the lessons of ‘too big to fail’, unhealthy corporatism and special interest lobbying.  Don’t vote for those politicians with a solid record of backing from the corporate machine. 

Decide where you are politically and understand that there is no Utopia.  Go to a ‘mom and pop’ store sometime rather than a conglomerate like Wal-Mart or Target.  Pay attention to your community and shop in it.  The people there understand you and your needs better than some faceless and huge corporation headquartered nowhere near you. 

The EU has a bullet train – we haven’t even initiated the research to find out the details of how we will develop our own.  Our banks hurt us with our own money and it needs to stop.  In Europe this has been dealt with new regulatory legislation without the usual charges of socialism  that we hear so much about hear from the right.  In short, for the right – there are going to be some changes.  For the left – there has to be a perception of fiscal responsibility, or you’ll find that you are no longer the majority.  You may not get the ‘bicycle and the pony in the same year – get over it already…..                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

We have people in need for all kinds of reasons… a fifty year old, ex-breadwinner is not likely to become a freshman at an Ivy League school.  But he/she can be ‘retooled’ into a worker we will need.  Our lifestyle and expectation to ‘go it alone’ is a paradigm we can no longer hold up as an ideal.  Wishing for better times will not solve the problems we currently face.  But if the middle class wants to dig itself out there are some things that are just plain evident.

1).  We, in the middle-class are not going to get any meaningful help from the mega-corporations nor the politicians.

2).  We are going to have to tap into the same bravery that sent our service people overseas to promote and preserve our way of life.  That includes moral courage. (for inspiration go to Youtube’s site:  Eulogy for Robert Kennedy – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9JTYnMpRyg

3) Believe enough in ourselves to pull together and stop the worship of manufactured and packaged celebrities created for your convenience.  Put more faith in your ability  to bring ‘something to the game’ than the dream of ‘getting lucky’ with the unlikelihood of a stroke of luck – like winning the lottery.

Pessimism: I’m done – it’s time; time to move on

November 28th, 2009

There comes a time when a difficult situation becomes a normal existence and either you accept it or move on.  The country is in a financial crisis the likes of which, I have not seen before in my lifetime.  I may be too out front on this issue – but I think that’s better than the knee-jerk, come from behind alternative.

Of course, the political discourse always involves various levels of approval or disapproval from the party that lost the last major election. Criticism is constant and praise is at a severe deficit. No matter what happens, they could have done it better. 

The losing party is motivated by the scenario of causing ineffective government, anger and discouragement in the hopes that they will be swept into office – just to find out that they will do no better job than the party they passive/aggressively sabotaged.  In the end, the American people are the losers in this constant political war.  We’re better than this.

It’s time this country understands and accepts that a legal, constitutionally conducted election took place and the rightful winner of that event is now legally sworn into the job, generally needing our support.  This pessimism can not continue for the next 3 years – it will stifle initiative, creativity and motivation. The most economically depressed areas of the country have already experienced this. I am deep into the creation of a new business – but a major obstacle is that the service I intend to provide is elective and sales are slow due to fear of what the future is going to bring.

This country is in real trouble but not in the way that the fear mongers may have you think… The country is not turning socialist, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will end someday, there will be healthcare reform and the banks will lend again. The economic indicators are there – but these statistics are tainted by the low jobs creation thus far; the last and most painful sector expected to see improvement.

But there is no cure for a massive loss of confidence or belief in yourself when the chips are down.  We are carefully and expertly ensuring self-fulfilling prophecies come true and making ourselves 2nd best by not doing the things that made this country great.  The phrase I heard recently that best sums up the problem goes like this:  we performed socialized risk for privatized gain. The big banks, insurance companies and Wall St. speculators took money we really couldn’t spare and gambled it away for losses we can’t sustain and shared none of the wins. This is the best example that clearly shows trickle down economics fail to meet the promise of stimulating the economy.  It makes no sense to cut revenue – your source of income, and increase spending as in the action to start 2 wars and excuse the windfall profits of the major corporations.  The bailouts are the proof that corporate welfare does not work.

Our government officials put our futures in the hands of people who have no incentive to stop taking our corporate welfare.  We have $5,000/hour CEO’s, propping up their companies with the tax revenue generated by people receiving unemployment checks and others bearing the burden of their miscalculation and flat-out malfeasance. The problem with this is that individual benefits run out while corporate welfare remains constant.

Witness the unashamed handing out billions of dollars in self-congratulatory orgies. We committed corporate welfare for companies ‘too big to fail’ at the expense of the largest jobs generator – small business. 

But jobs generation means revenue and good health of the nation.  Instead, according to a study of 2009, we are now 2nd to the European Union in GDP at approximately 12 trillion dollars, 10.2% unemployment estimated and about 17% actual job loss.  Nearly 1 in 6 Americans are out of a job.

We have the most inefficient healthcare system of all the industrialized nations – with job loss, this is a bad combination.  I thank my lucky stars that I am a 20 year veteran, because when I lost my own job – there went my employer based healthcare of 10 years.  I am fully covered, but this could have gone so differently. 

Others are not so lucky. But my persnal experience in this also indicates we are on the right side of history in reforming healthcare.  Regardless of the mechanics, reform is the right thing to do.  And so is strong small business support.  The wheels are moving slowly on a train that is already late leaving the station – but it’s leaving nonetheless.  You can jump onboard or get left behind.

Currently, my days are spent trying to create my own small business of collecting aerial images.  More specifically, elevated photography. Pessimism and lack of confidence will not help.

While similar, aerial photography and elevated imaging differ slightly due to the mechanics of how both are collected.  However, the issue is really completing a task that solves a wide range of issues at a reasonable cost to the user.  An image biased toward an overhead view is the goal.

There are advantages to both methods; best of all – they do not have to be mutually exclusive but instead compliment each other.  The utility of such a service is only limited by imagination.  Of course I’d wish you’d stop by my website at:  www.beltair.org or take the shortcut to my Youtube ™ video by putting ‘beltair industries’ in the site’s search bar.

So, you can wallow in conspiracies theories, ‘gotcha’ politics, character assassination,  scary rumors, and general discontent or you and jump on board and help your local businesses. Skip the national franchises – they’ll be fine.  But ‘mom and pop’ bakeries, tire shops, cleaners, clothiers, eateries need you… I need you… There is work to be done – we are in charge of our own destinies by pitching in and helping each other out.  There is no leader or political party that ‘gets it all right, all the time’.  And it’s high time we take a greater role in doing that for ourselves.

In fact, I’ll lay out this challenge to the local San Diego business community; call me…  I promise to honor each call to support local business within reason.  But you never know; my business does well – I would want to reflect it at some point.  I’m not going buy a house or car every week.  But I have to eat, I have to buy clothes, I need tax help each and every year.  I have to consume things as a small business like business cards, printed flyers and the like – you get the idea… Call me and I’ll be there – preaching what I already practice.