Sunday, December 12, 2010

Equality of Opportunity VS Meritocracy

A few days ago I posed you a question via my various social media accounts.


I asked, 'what do you believe in above all else?' The responses I received were really interesting and interestingly, very similar. It made me think about what my 'not negotiable' values are. In the response of wikileaks and the millions of people who have recently demonstrated the importance that free speech plays in their lives, I wanted to figure out what cause or idea resonates the most in my life (and yours, hence the question).


I dismissed general slogans such as Freedom, Equality and Respect as they are obviously important and required ideals in any well functioning society but leave more questions than answers. They have so much grey, so many caveats that they make me uncomfortable.


After much consideration, and like many of you, I couldn't pinpoint one single ideal but rather I settled on two - Equality of Opportunity and Meritocracy.


Meritocracy is very important to me. It is the idea that reward is given to the person who is most deserving of it. Meritocracy would not allow Prince Charles to rule Britain (and Australia for that matter) purely because of his blood line. It would not allow Sarah Palin to be a potential presidential candidate because of popularity alone. We would ask, ‘is this the best person to do that job?’ I put to you that in both examples above, the answer is no. In fact, in Prince Charles’ case, meritocracy would challenge the very idea of monarchy itself.


In a society ruled by meritocracy in its purest form, where you end up is determined by your ability alone. That seems fair to me. But as you are no doubt now saying to yourselves, 'what is the point of meritocracy if some people have an easier path than others? Of course their outcome will be better.' Quite right you are.


How can meritocracy exist when some people have access to great education and others have none at all? When some people can move passed illness or injury due to world class medical assistance and others are forever plagued with aliments that are easily treated in a more developed or prosperous environments. Surely here, meritocracy is meaningless.


If ability and ability alone determined outcome, as I believe it should, we would (and should) see far more minorities assuming positions of power and success. But we don't. We don't because meritocracy can only work when people start from the same point.


Enter, Equality of Opportunity. This is the idea that everyone is provided the same base from which to build their lives. That does not mean that everyone finishes the same way, like socialism for instance. It represents the idea that everyone is provided the same essential ingredients to succeed (education, health care, food, etc) and then it is up to them to do with that what they can. Some will invariably succeed and other will invariably not but their starting point would not be the determining factor.


Equality of opportunity would mean that all people, regardless of background, culture, language, sex, sexual preference, religion and any other variable you can think of, start the race from the same line.


That too seems fair to me....

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Wikileaks - my musings

I know I know you are sick to death of the topic but the wikileaks saga has captured my interest and focus more than anything else has in years.

Some of my thoughts in no particular order:

- The fact that western govs are frantically changing legislation to stop wikileaks from operating, directly indicates that to date, wikileaks has not broken any laws - if they had, they would have just been arrested.

- The information censorship of wikileaks is as oppressive and undemocratic as anything in China, Russia or the middle east. American politicians calling for the assassination of Julian Assange for information distribution should be read as his leaked docs in action...life imitating leaks so to speak....

- Democracy is not a 'choose your own adventure' novel. It doesn't apply in some situations but not in others. Just because the information is hurtful to the govt of the day doesn't make it any less worthy of exposure. The govt is elected by us. they work for us. the information is ours.

- The idea that the information being exposed endangers lives can not be supported by fact. To date no one can point to a single incident of wikileaked info directly leading to deaths of civilians or govt operatives.

-I am yet to be convinced that what wikileaks is doing is any different to what the news organisations used to do, when they were more competent. If the NY Times broke these stories in the 50's would we be listening to the same outcry? No they'd be getting pulitzers.

- The fact that our major on and offline institutions can be coerced to infringe on wikileaks rights without a charge being laid is frightening. we should not be discussing what Zuckerberg and Facebook are going to do with our information, we should be asking what is a democratically elected government doing restricting the rights of a media institution that as not broken a single current law?

Fight on wikileaks, fight on....

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

I have succumbed....

I have succumbed to business catchphrase clique.

I tried to fight it for so long. The ROI, PPP, CSR set have long espoused ideas which can be neatly wrapped into a cute little box, easily digestible for the rest of us.

I'm afraid it gets worse, much worse. Today I am going to join the ranks of the offenders. I stand before you guilty of a crime against business language.

To that end, I would like to introduce you all to my little friend, ROR.

ROR is simple to say, simple to use and pack one hell of a punch!!!

ROR, or Return on Reach is simply an executive and board tool for determining the extent to which your company drives value in proportion to it's market reach. Measured against a number of variables such as sales, staff cost, advertising spend etc....

For instance, if Facebook with 500 million members (a big big reach) generates $2BN in annual revenue how does that really compare with a single city television network with a maximum market of 9 million homes driving $600 million in revenues? Changes the perception of value and success a little bit, no?

We've been doing some comparisons of media entities, big and small at Mummu HQ and the results are both surprising and fascinating. We are now starting to measure all of our own media assets (and we have few of them) against an ROR criteria - and it works!

So go forth and sing ROR as loudly and proudly as you throw out it's cousins, ROI and CSR....

I feel so cheap and tawdry now....