Everything And Everyone |VERIFIED|
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It's kind of an angry song. That person is within everybody, I think everybody has this ability to try and be everything to everyone, to try to please. I think there are two aspects of it - there's the pleaser, who doesn't always show his true self, always plays nice and as time goes on shows more and more of himself, but there's also the people who are everything to everyone who are manipulators and users.
It's impossible to build a business and market a brand in a way that serves everyone. First of all, you can't possibly please everyone all the time and, secondly, you can't possibly offer everything that everyone would want all the time either. It's simply impossible.
But, when running a business, we can't help but want to maximize our opportunities, so we avoid saying no to anything. We want to please everyone and we want to give people everything that they want, so we say yes all the time.
As a result, we try to go for the broadest range of product features and services in an attempt to get as close as we can to offering everything for everybody. We feel better doing that because it feels like we are reducing risk and keeping our options open.
When we try to be everything for everybody, we run the risk of being nothing for nobody. We end up watering down our business proposition and our brand promise in an attempt to be as broad as possible. We become so vague that no one knows what we are offering and our potential customers turn to other, more specific options.
Get specific about your business assets. Really hone in on the skills that you are best suited to offer your customers. Don't try to do everything; do what you are best at. Concentrate on offerings where you truly are better than your competitors. Focus on your competitive advantages and make those the core of your business. When you get specific about clearly defined offerings, you'll find you can make them even better and more innovative as you become an expert in your chosen field. Your goal is to be the best available at one or two things, rather than just average on a bunch.
With this change, I could already see the time returning to my schedule, which meant more moments to focus on my husband and child! All that being said, there certainly were days I felt bad not connecting with everyone or doing all the things.To get through this hurdle, I made a conscious effort to feel more at peace with my life in other ways that felt meaningful to me, such as turning to prayer/meditation, journaling/writing, talking with a trusted companion, doing something active, and getting off social media. (Note: This last one was a BIG one! By limiting my time on social apps, I found a huge weight lifted off my shoulders when it came to the pressure to do it all!)
You cannot be everyone's friend, mentor, companion, lifeline, confidante, airport picker-upper, publisher, soulmate, meal ticket, patter-on-the-backer, lover, mother, feedback giver, wine pourer, yoga buddy, movie date, editor, nail polisher, fiasco fixer. Not everyone will like you. You won't like everyone.
Let me reiterate: You absolutely cannot make everyone happy. (So stop trying.) It's a no-win situation. It'll drain you and leave you like a pile of coffee grinds. People will be disappointed for various (often weird) reasons. Sometimes those reasons will make sense, sometimes not. Sometimes those reasons will be fair and sometimes fair is just another word for a place where they have funnel cakes and roller coasters.
Let's do our best to keep moving forward with less second guessing and worrying, less "I-wish-everyone-loved-everything-I-said/did/wrote/wore." Less, "I am a bad/mean/awful person because I had to say NO."
RAPP: I think I did when I was younger. But I think, like, I am someone who - like, I wear my everything on my sleeve. So I think I kind of hopefully make it very hard for people not to take me seriously because I'm quite aggressive, and I'm quite delusional.
RAPP: I think that kid was really, really, really judgmental of everything that she was. I would hear a lot of, like, homophobic things or, like, very, like, ignorant comments, things like that. And I was also such a perpetuator of those things. I was so homophobic to myself to the point where, like, I wouldn't come out to anybody. And I'd be, like, kind of judgmental when I would, like, be seeing someone who wasn't a man, or I wouldn't be in, like, a heteronormative relationship. I did that. And so does Leighton.
RAPP: That song, to me, feels like I, like, shed a skin that people knew me from - right? - because everyone knew me - who did know me - from a Broadway time, from a very specific relationship, from a very specific way I presented myself. And a lot of that had to do with, like, me trying to make myself smaller to, like, make someone else comfortable. But when I wrote "In The Kitchen," that was like, I have had enough of that.
In the perspective of the current Covid-19 crisis and the ongoing Black Lives Matter movement, we recognise our own privilege. We understand the need to take a fresh, hard look at our culture and its history, and we undertake to do that in relation to the particular heritage we are focussing on and seeking to repurpose for new times. The decolonization of British history and society is a long-term endeavour, part of the ongoing dismantling of systemic racism. Working constructively and receptively with our partner organisations and people and communities across Birmingham, we will do everything we can to promote that necessary and important change. In response to Black Lives Matter, we will be making concrete anti-racist changes to the project, to be announced in due course.
Disney pushed back on Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis earlier this year for his push to ban discussion of sexual or gender identity in young students' classrooms. Hollywood celebrities and Disney staff were outraged, dubbing the legislation the "don't say gay" bill. Chapek now says Disney is trying to be "everything to everybody."
Creating a more inclusive culture is not about including everything and everyone. To obtain meaningful results that matter without causing more problems than it solves, inclusion must be strategic, rooted in your existing organizational identity, values and business goals. High-performing organizations and teams are effective because they have a clear sense of purpose, expressed in clear goals. Having a clear identity is necessary to fulfill those goals, and identity is influenced by values. Whether conscious or not, every organization has values that are expressed in rules that dictate which behaviors are rewarded and which are rejected.
You can't be everything to everyone. This is something most of us understand very well in our own personal lives, but it can be easy to lose sight of this maxim when building a business. You want to make as much money as possible, which means appealing to as many people as possible. The problem is that not everyone likes, wants or needs the same things, so if you attempt to broadly appeal to everyone, there's a chance you won't appeal to anyone.
This extends beyond the generic concept of everyone on earth. Your target audience also can't simply be everyone who might use your product, at least not if you want to have an appealing brand identity.
If you have a coffee shop, then your potential audience is everyone who enjoys coffee or needs to use the bathroom while out shopping. This cannot be your target audience. Will your coffee shop be high end or low end? Appealing to hip youngsters with tattoos or older folks who just want a place to relax while drinking their liquid energy? Are you making your own coffee blend or selling someone else's? Will you have food? If so, is it actually good food?
What's most important is that your business have personality. That personality might be calm and relaxed. It might be warm and friendly. It might be all business all the time. It might feel like a carnival or an art museum. If you try to build a business that is everything to everyone, it may just end up being nothing to no one.
I think of this in the following context: when someone tries to be everything to everyone, they end up being nothing to nobody. That of course is a double negative, but I believe expresses the intent of what I am looking for very well. That is, you end up being the opposite of everything to everyone. Can anyone think of a opposite that would fit well in that phrase that is gramatically correct?
In the second year of the plague, I tired of certain apocalypses, especially those featuring a foreign pathogen that destroyed everything in its wake, leaving behind a radically diminished population or a world teeming with zombies. It was apocalypse overload, with the forests burning, heat waves, fascists in the streets. I still liked the fantastic dystopias, with aliens or upside-down worlds, because their chaos felt companionable but not too close.
Much of Everything for Everyone fills out the cavities of this we, giving it texture and complexity while allowing for ties of solidarity to emerge through the work of communization. This work, here brilliantly defined as the transformation of dead property to life, takes resources that were once private and remakes them for everyone, creating an infrastructure of schools, detox centers, hospitals, factories, and food distribution networks. In this accounting, communization is a transformative process that redistributes social goods, but also builds new lines of solidarity between the people who do this work. With a shared investment in the everyone that thrives, new affinities emerge, bringing together dance kids, vets, first nation peoples, sex workers, migrants, street gangs, hospital workers, techies, and trans and gender nonconforming folks.
The belief that everything in the universe is part of the same fundamental whole exists throughout many cultures and philosophical, religious, spiritual, and scientific traditions, as captured by the phrase 'all that is.' The Nobel winner Erwin Schrodinger once observed that quantum physics is compatible with the notion that there is indeed a basic oneness of the universe. Therefore, despite it seeming as though the world is full of many divisions, many people throughout the course of human history and even today truly believe that individual things are part of some fundamental entity. 2b1af7f3a8