By Joanne Maly
April 30, 2010
The Power of Simplicity

Quiet. Solitude. Peace. Purity. Simplicity. Beauty.
Important words. Words that are at the core of each one of us. As persons. As professionals.
And again, as individual persons first.
Whether our role in life is as a business professional, a medical professional, an artist, a teacher, an athlete, or a politician, a government employee, a student … one pervasive need is simplicity.
A very inspiring video of a 7-year-old Texas girl and young gospel singer named Rhema Marvanne singing a simple rendition of Amazing Grace gave me a moment of reflection this morning before I began a busy day, followed by a busy weekend, in a busy month, in a busy life.
The purity of the song and the quiet acoustic presentation of the music itself helped remind me again in my own personal life – and in my business life – to get to the core of the message, get to the baseline, drown out the noise, stay focused, and remain grounded.
Solutions, results, and success will follow.
Quiet, solitude, peace, simplicity, and beauty will follow.
I’ll leave you with that simple message today and with this moving video.
I’d love to hear your thoughts. Please feel free to share your comments in the section below.
This post is dedicated to a new friend, T.C., who works passionately and importantly to find the baseline message amidst the noise and mentors many in pursuit of that goal.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Reddit, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook Fan Page.
Feel free to join the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook page as well for regular updates on excellence, creativity, management, leadership, motivation, marketing, and corporate communications.
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By Joanne Maly
April 23, 2010
It’s Contagious.
I love the new definition of contagious these days. Not medically speaking, of course.
For many businesses, the trend du jour is to be perceived as different, bold, edgy, creative and fun — and to have your message spread with a mind of its own.

The goal is to have your message reach potential eyes, ears, fingers, computers, ipods, ipads and mobile phones as quickly and as broadly as possible.

Undoubtedly, there are many an ad agency and product company who woke up this very morning hoping that someone on their staff would have a simply genius idea today. And they hoped that idea would result in a print ad, tv commercial or online video that in turn would then spark a contagious flurry of viral proliferation throughout every social media medium.
The Old Spice – If You Have It – commercial continues to have its own afterlife on the internet for instance, long after the actual spot aired on tv.
The ideal scenario is to have the germ (ahem, I mean concept) eventually disseminated across Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Plaxo, FriendFeed, Hulu, MySpace, Google and Bing, etc. The inspired graphic, the 30-second tv spot or the one-minute video would catch the imagination of the public and in a nano-second, we would see the idea-as-a-finished-product then proliferated across the world’s airwaves and web-ernet with immediacy and ‘contagious’ enthusiasm.
An example in point: the Roller Babies viral video produced by Evian cleverly spread the product’s targeted message across the internet through subtle fun.
Instead of virus symptoms being the topic reserved for doctor offices, we now spend time talking about viral basics in our conference rooms. We analyze an idea for success fundamentals such as message clarity and visual creativity. We probe ideas for elements of uniqueness, factors of fun, the possibilities for success, and hopefully, the potential for a full viral outbreak.

Last year’s amazing public singing debut of Susan Boyle on Britain’s Got Talent swept through social and traditional mediums with a vengeance. Companies dream of a similar word-of-mouth success.
This new world of viral thinking has added a whole new world of fun and energy to business.
In essence, we have a new vernacular for successful marketing and advertising. And the word contagious now enjoys a whole new reputation.
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Reddit, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook Fan Page.
Feel free to join the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook page as well for regular updates on excellence, creativity, management, leadership, motivation, marketing, and corporate communications.
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By Joanne Maly
February 7, 2010

The Google Parisian Love commercial might just be the quietest, most creative, classiest, memorable spot of this year’s Super Bowl.
Super Bowl XVIV is now history – and the hundred-plus $2 million commercials have had their 30 seconds of glory – or not.
Part I of this casual look at the impact of Super Bowl commercials ended with the thought that perhaps this annual advertising ritual reflects who we are at this point in our history and perhaps also helps sew the very fabric of our culture. After tonight’s commercials, I am reflective.
Are you as well?
I don’t recall as intense of a pre-Bowl ad frenzy as this year. What impact has social media played in the global grassroots conversation about the good, the bad, the ugly commercials? How much Twittering, FaceBook posting and blogging was going on during the game between the Indianapolis Colts and the New Orleans Saints? There might not be a definitive answer to those questions, but there is no mistake that Bowl viewers were anticipating some daggoned good ads to complement the four quarters of passing, tackling, whistle-blowing, chest-butting, touchdown dances, and on-screen animated scrimmage line drawings.
One of the most humorous 30 seconds in the game actually was part of the ‘real’ game, and not during the commercial breaks. The second half began with a mound of scrambling of 250 – 300 lb. men grabbing for anything that felt like loose pigskin. You had to laugh.
But I digress. There were definitely some good commercials as well during the 2010 Super Bowl including:
- Volkswagen’s Punch Buggy ‘That’s Das Car’ spot;
- the Doritos spot where the young boy warns his mom’s date to keep his hands off his mom and off the little boy’s Doritos;
- the Coke spot in which a sleepwalking man in the deserted outdoors opens a fridge and opens happiness;
- the Simpson-themed Coke commercial, again with the open happiness theme;
- the E*trade spot that added a young girl to the voice-over toddler conversation this year;
- the artistic Kia spot highlighting the company’s great car finishes.
For the consumers who wanted to have a say in which commercials they thought were the strongest, there were many options this year, including the MSNBC.com online ballot.

And not to be out-done by a competing network, CBS had their own website-driving concept.

Have you voted yet? Which was your favorite commercial in Super Bowl 44? Which commercial was your least favorite?
And… if you didn’t catch the Part I blog post of And Let the Annual Advertising Ritual Begin – The Super Bowl vs. The Super Bowl Commercials, you can find it here.
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Reddit, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook Fan Page.
Feel free to join the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook page as well for regular updates on excellence, creativity, management, leadership, motivation, marketing, and corporate communications.
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By Joanne Maly
January 23, 2010

Courtesy of the Flickr photostream of tomt6788
Excellence Exemplified … quietly
Two events in our own family lately have me reflecting today on the power of individual people in the world around them. One of these family events will be written about another day. The second event though is the focus of today’s post – the death of a special person this week – an aunt (M. B.) – who, simply said, exemplifies excellence.
When I began writing Simply Said blog posts, I knew that I wanted to write about the people and things that inspire me. In-turn, my hope was to inspire readers. My focus would be on excellence in business, in creativity, in marketing, in communication, in leadership – and I’d like to add – life.
There are people in my own life who I could name in a nano-second who define for me ‘the best’. The best CEO. The best corporate executive. The best marketing mind. The best social media trend-setter. The best professor. The best political leader. The best friend.
The most creative musician. The most talented artist. The most Renaissance-like thinker. The most charismatic personality.
To me, M. B. characterizes the impact that one person can make in the world without headlines, clamor and fireworks. Her quiet, understated beauty of spirit evolved throughout her life into an inimitable power that radiated to those who came in contact with her. The person who met her on the elevator at work. The colleague who sat next to her in the office. The person sitting next to her on the bus. The children in the neighborhood. The women and men in her community. Her friends. Her family.
With my marketing hat on, I could say that ‘M’ was the epitome of the concept of viral marketing. She touched a person, a life, a day. That person was then calmed, inspired, loved. That life was then left changed. That day was then left whole. The chain had begun. That chain of events would continue. Then multiply. And spread … virally.
There is a magic that some people can bring to the world just by the simplicity of being who they are. ‘M’ was this type of magical person with an engaging heart and giving soul. An excellence that so many of us aspire to model.

M. B.
Excellence and Beauty
Small woman. Beautiful heart.
Deepest soul. Giving soul.
Laughing smile.
Twinkling eyes.
Tender hands. Warm spirit.
Quiet power.
So very missed.
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, Reddit, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing page.
Feel free to join the Lincoln Maly Marketing Facebook page as well for regular updates on excellence, creativity, management, leadership, motivation, marketing, and corporate communications.
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By Joanne Maly
October 31, 2009

I watched perhaps the best Halloween film of all time (and no, it wasn’t Halloween I or Psycho-Version IV or SabreSaw I or MyTeethWillBiteYouBad or I’ve Got Your Back-Literally).
No… I think perhaps one of my favorite Halloween movies of all time is Mel Brooks’ version of Young Frankenstein.
For 90-minutes-plus, we get to sit back and enjoy simply-silly-sublime scenes created again and again by hilarious character portrayals, crack-up antics, and ingenious scripts filled with clever double-meaning quips.
In a film filled with home-run sound-bites and visual unforgettable moments, there is one blink-of-an-eye shot that I think I had missed previously. ‘The shot’, while funny, has also stirred a visual level of meaning for me today, and ‘the shot’, and for me, its double meaning, is one that can be easily missed. ‘The shot’ has had me thinking of my own oftentimes low-level of creativity and energy at the end of a day, and definitely, at the end of a week.
‘The shot’.
Picture if you will, the beloved hump-shouldered, head-covered, cape-ensconced, bulging-eye Igor (yes, and his name is pronounced eye-gore) dutifully setting off in the dark of the night to complete his eerie mission at the Brain Depository – i.e., secure a brain for the ‘monster.’
On the door leading into the Depository, Igor spies the message:
“After 5 p.m., slip brains through the door.”

Igor - from the Mel Brooks film, 'Young Frankenstein'
How many times have I felt like I needed to send my own Igor out on a middle-of-the-night mission to make a withdrawal from the Creativity Bank, take a quick loan from the Idea Depository, or perhaps pull down just the juiciest fruit from the Best Brain Juice Orchard?
How many times have I needed my brain to be alive, sparked, glowing, and blue with energy?

And yet, alas, my brain was as dry as desert dust.
What ideas have I tried to get my own brain recharged? Plugged-in? Buzzing? I’ll share some of my own ideas, but I’d love to hear some of yours as well.
My Top Five Ideas for Generating Igor-level Brain Cell Action
(*qualifier: these are not-scientifically-proven ideas, nor are they recommended for all readers … especially suggestion #4 for those on a no-sugar-low-fat-intake-sad-life diet.)
1) Take a long walk in a spot where no one knows me, without an ipod, singing to my own music, and of course, in a place where no on can hear me.
2) Doodle. Yep, I have some colored pencils on my desk that I pick-up and ‘draw’ on plain white paper. I am not an artist, but I love the simplicity of the non-defined scribbles (oops, I mean, images) on ‘a clean slate.’ The colored pencils remind me of that youthful six-year-old creativity before I found out that (again) shucks, I am not an artist.
3) Warm up the cup of green tea I sipped in the morning, and throw in a second (hmmmm… sometimes a third) tea bag.
4) Eat chocolate chips. I learned a long time ago that it takes too long to make a batch of chocolate chip cookies from scratch … per the directions on the back of the Nestle bag of chips bag … thus, a handful of chips is often the creative vitamin I find I was needing when I hit my own 5 p.m. ‘wall.’ (note: that wall does not always occur at 5 p.m. It has been known to appear as early as 6 a.m.)
5) Close my eyes. This fifth idea for generating creativity juice is often the first, and/or the last, and for me, many times, the best personal tip to find that obscure spot within my brain to ‘get going.’
What are your own top ideas to jump-start your creative juices?
And, while you are thinking on that question… here is my own Trick-or-Treat treat for you… a clip from the Young Frankenstein film (with the oft-used-oft-imitated-but-never-truly-imitated ‘Walk this way’ line.)
A short video clip from the favorite Mel Brooks film, \”Young Frankenstein\”
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing fan page.
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By Joanne Maly
October 16, 2009
Life can be gray. Our minds can feel gray. Our creativity can seem bland. Dead. Gray. Our imagination can just seem zapped. Gray. Our energy fizzled. Our motivation zero-ed. Gray.
Good marketers and good leaders know this. Smart marketers and smart leaders however, go beyond ‘just’ the knowledge of the impact of color in their campaigns and projects. Instead, they work tirelessly until they have found ‘just’ the right message, great graphics, the ideal team, and … the perfect… colors.

Photo from the excellent Flickr photostream of ahannink (Alyssa Hannink)
Exciting colors. Blends of colors. Exotic colors. Branded colors. Eye-popping colors. Soul-stirring colors. Product-identifying colors. Product-selling colors. Team-inspiring colors. Heart-moving colors.
Successful businesses capitalize on the knowledge that color is indeed a key element to customer response. Think for a second about Apple® brand. In addition to product innovation, the calways-creative company uses color to feed their product brand buzz. Take for instance, the ipod commercials.
Ipod commercial
Color – and the absence of it – affects not just business, but our own personal lives. Did anyone ever ask you if you were having one of those ‘gray days?’ Interpretation: an absence-of-energy-and-life-and-spirit-type of day? What better way to motivate ourselves than by adding color to our lives? Colorful activities? Colorful surroundings? Colorful people? Colorful ideas?
How can you add color to your own life? And to your own career? And to the task on your to-do list at the moment? And – which colors will you add?

Color inspires creativity. Adds fun. Creates pizazz (or maybe we should say, pez). Seriously. A dynamic viral marketing tool for the Pez® product has been the creation of popular, consumer-generated, colorful, edge-cutting Pez® videos. Pez fans seem to love the colors and the fun concept of the product.
PEZ fireworks video
Colors create a ‘blip’ in our radar from the time that we are in pre-school. At the earliest of ages, we learn our name, our ‘letters’ and… what else? Our colors. We learn those colors creatively – in books, through songs, and in artwork. The beloved children’s character Kermit sang his own identifying lullaby to our children for years, “It’s Not Easy Being Green.” And to help stir your own colorful (creative) juices, I’ve included two more fun ‘color-themed’ videos.
\’I am Red\’ Video
\’Color Pants\’ Video
Personal and business inspiration can come from a potpourri of rainbow colors or from a single color treatment. Sometimes, it is the simplicity in a visual message that can produce the strongest response.

Color branding is key for many of the world’s top-ranked products. The branded single color of red is unmistakable in many of Target®’s commercials. How often have we watched a one of that company’s TV spots, with nary a mention of Target® until the final slide? Yet, we knew from the outset, that this was going to be a Target® ad.
Target\’s \’You Say Good-buy\’ Commercial
Colors are sensitive. They are individual. They are chameleon-esque. While one shade of blue creates a feeling of calm in one person, that same color can spark energy in another. I once saw a tv documentary on the seemingly endless and ongoing consumer research and tweaking that is expended to find just the right color mix – and shades of that right color mix – for the inimitable – and immensely successful – iconic Google® logo.

(from the source: http://www.google.com/logos/logos09-1.html)
Color speaks across cultures. Its language is absolutely universal. Its allure crosses over generations. Across demographics. Through political barriers. And color speaks to all of us.
\’Happy Birthday COLORS\’ by colorstv\’s
How have you seen color impact your life? Your business? Your marketing efforts? And again, how do you add color to your own life?
My wish for you is that you have days filled with colorful rainbows. May you appreciate the pallette of colorful personalities and ideas among your collegues. May your life path lead you on yellow-brick roads. May you heart be filled with blue-sky mornings and red-sky evenings. May your own imagination be sparked by autumn’s orange moons. May you find that even if you move to other countries, you find your way back to the green, green grass of home. May you dance through life with blue suede shoes, red dresses, and brightly-colored polka-dot ties. And may your challenges find solutions that bring each of you CANDY LAND®-colored successes.

Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing fan page.
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By Joanne Maly
September 26, 2009
Hmmm…. the weather…. and business.

How do these two apparently separate categories relate? And, how does the weather tie-into a blog post reflection on inspiration, innovation, and creativity?
The weather can of course provide us with an always-safe entry-point topic when we find ourselves at a networking meeting; when we are chatting with a potential customer; or, perhaps, when we need a buffer conversation before a meeting begins.
Actually though, the weather is a lot like business … and life.
Weather is global and multi-demographic. In fact, weather is possibly one of the purest examples of a multi-dimensional product. Weather transcends language, cultures, generational differences, sex, intellectual abilities, academic degrees, professions, left and right brains, and even Myers-Briggs personalities.
But, for a moment, I’d like to go one step deeper and explore how the weather resembles the challenges – and the rewards – of our own creative paths.
Would you agree that we all have droughts of energy, inspiration, motivation and direction?

And, then there are rainy days – or worse yet, a complete rainy week. These weather elements can indeed tax our patience and drain our creative juices.

On the flip-side though – if we think positively – these same rainy days can also offer a sense of quiet, rhythm, and calm that can be perfect for nurturing new life, new ideas, and fresh buds of creativity.
Can you recall one of those exciting, don’t-happen-often moments when you had a lightening-bolt, aha brainstorm thought. Or, better yet, a lightening-storm moment.

Seconds like that stand out in each of our memories. If we can capture the power of these episodes, they could perhaps result in the launching of an innovative new product, defining a new campaign, and even determining our own future.
No doubt too, we can all relate to those mornings that we walk outside to start our day and we abruptly face a sea of fog.

These days are not totally unlike those mornings when our brains seem filled with their own mental haze and, try as we may, we too have zero visibility and little direction. We persist though, knowing that we have to find a way to work through the grey mist. We’ll quickly grab an extra cup of cappucino with a dab of cinnamon and nutmeg, or (foregoing any diet resolutions) we munch on a rich, chewy, double-chocolate brownie before our first meeting (and yes, it is ok to have a brownie for breakfast.)
Then, there are of course rainbows – and rainbow moments.

Have you ever been in a meeting when the ideas start percolating and then one suggestion literally feeds off the one before it? The energy can be so positive, that we could almost swear that we can taste ‘it’. Allowing and encouraging a full-color-spectrum of original ideas can, in fact, add to the very color of our company. Absolutely, creativity and positive energy is contagious. We can experience our own multi-colored, panoramic, inspired – and inspiring – creative phenomenon.
Many of us can relate as well, to those days when it seems that we have been dealt with a hurricane-force workload. We can begin our day with an organized, quiet schedule that then, quite literally, blows apart with unexpected tasks and must-do’s. We’re then confronting a tornadic force that needs to be reckoned with immediately.

We can be beaten-down by the forces of the winds upon us – or, we can choose to see these times as opportunities for more creative approaches to weathering the storm.
There are occasions, too, that I can remember in my own career and life where I ended the day with a complete brick wall – and, at the same time that I needed to be thinking of a ‘new and awesome idea’ for a client’s Marketing Plan. My brain cells might have been churning, but I was only ending up with a grey, blank night sky. However, after some sleep and brain cell ‘rest’, I would wake up at 4 a.m. with my own sunrise – fresh thoughts and new ideas.

Literally, it was a new day – filled with energy, vibrancy, and color. These sunrise mornings are a good reminder too – for business, and for life – that outstanding sunrises often follow dark, dreary evenings.
And, likewise, if we can continue to think positive, even bitter winter days filled with ice and snow don’t have to be negative, dead, non-motivated days. Instead, winter weather actually adds a crispness to our thinking.

Cold, challenging days demand an extra sharpness to our routine. They force us to tread carefully, to plan thoughtfully, and rise to the challenge.
So… how do you weather your own weather challenges? How have you encouraged creativity in yourself and your team despite the gray periods – the cloudy weeks? How has a storm within your own life resulted in new insights?
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn, or Facebook. And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing fan page.
Today’s Simply Said blog post is dedicated to B and R.
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By Joanne Maly
September 7, 2009
Many years ago, one of my sons had a colorful soccer coach who originally had hailed from England. With his decidedly British accent and the gift of a charismatic leader-type personality, this coach was a genius at inspiring a group of ‘ok’ high school soccer players to become better than ok – in fact, the team eventually became much better than even ‘good.’
When the coach was especially excited, you could hear his encouraging words clear across the field and far into the parent stands.
Well-done, lads!
Fine job, my boys!
Bloomin’ good run, Chad!
Well, that was bloomin’ awesome, Joe!
Why, what a bloomin’ fine goal, Bobby!
Bloomin’, bloody good, Tim!
Aaaah, the power of encouragement! And reinforcement! And telling others you believe in them! And really believing that yourself!
I’ve been thinking too about the word ‘bloomin. I like that word. Dictionary.com doesn’t agree with me. And Merriam-Webster.com doesn’t agree with me. Those websites want me to insert the word ‘blooming’ into my word search.
There is something though about the word bloomin that inspires fun, excitement, energy, and the thought that the unusual could be good.
Would I rather be my blooming best – or my bloomin’ best? Would I want my intern to give me a blooming first draft – or a bloomin’ good first-draft?
The basic point in this blog post though is deeper than a debate about bloomin’ vs. blooming. The idea is that a simple bud can become an amazing bloom. A simple idea could perhaps become an exciting new invention.

The bud.

The bloom.
However, that idea, can just as easily be squelched at its own stage of inception if shot down with the many caveats we so typically hear: “Oh, we don’t do things like that in this company.” “Nice idea, but that would never fly.” “If you could apply as much energy to your workload as you do dreaming up new ideas, this company might actually be profitable.”
Yes, an inspired thought can go only as far as a bleep in our virtual air space… or it can be encouraged, explored, and tweaked. Originality and uniqueness can become extinct in a child as young as eight – or even perhaps in a new employee of only one week – if we don’t allow the freedom to ‘bloom.’
What innovations – what creativity – what excitement our businesses could show if we would allow and ‘cheer on’ our lads, our lasses and their ideas!
And what power and what beauty our own lives could have if we would listen to our own hearts and our ‘what if’s’. Why, perhaps we wouldn’t just become a bloom – we could blossom into a whole bouquet.

The bouquet.
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
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And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing fan page.
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By Joanne Maly
August 14, 2009
The social media universe and the art world are abuzz about the discovery of a six-year-old prodigy watercolorist living obscurely (up until now) in a small English town. I have been thinking about the universality of this enthusiasm – crossing over business interests; industries; age demographics; geographical boundaries; political platforms; and levels of art sophistication.

Watercolor by six-year-old prodigy, Kieron Williamson
What is it about the story and the artist’s work that is so intriguing? The artwork is indeed wonderful. The talent in this young artist at this early age is incredible. And, the story is fascinating.
But … here’s another thought about our fascination with this new artist. We all (universally) yearn for fresh ingenuity, untainted talent, dreams, and excellence. There is a simple and unsullied beauty evidenced in this boy’s artwork.

Kieron Williamson: photo from dailymail.com
Together, we are weary of the same ‘ol and the lifeless repetition of ideas, design, words, concepts. The young artist Kieron Williamson represents a new exciting future. He symbolizes: Originality. Purity. Innocence. Brilliance.
The youth’s story is inspiring and reminds me of the rarity of ‘genius’ artists. Additionally though, the story reinforces that collectively, we have the innate appreciation for, and need for, beauty, for the unique, for ideas that stand out above the crowd, for fresh and dynamic leaders, and for excellence. In art. In business. In life. In our cultures.
Thank you young Kieron Williamson for your inspiration.
Readers: what inspires you to be inventive, creative, excellent? Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
You can read more about this young artist and view samples of his art at this dailymail.com story.
Please feel free to share your thoughts in the comment box below.
If you liked this post, please share it on Twitter, Digg, Delicious, StumbleUpon, LinkedIn, or Facebook.
And, I’d be honored if you would like to follow me on Twitter @JoanneMaly or visit the Lincoln Maly Marketing fan page.
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