Archive for TVL

To All The Folks I Labored with, On Labor Day, 2010

Since I started my career in 1972, I’ve worked for seven companies, including four that I founded and owned:

Sorgel-Lee Team from Baseball Card

The Sorgel-Lee Team, circa 1981

  • Sorgel-Lee Riordan (aka Sorgel-Lee Multimedia, Sorgel-Lee, and, after I left, Sorgel Studios)
  • Brien Lee & Company
  • Video Images
  • Visuals Plus
  • TVL
  • Brien Lee Creative Solutions
  • Brien Lee VideoStory

In all of these, I had hiring and firing responsibilities.

Most of these were in Milwaukee, with branches or side trips into the Chicago market, as well as New York / New Jersey market, where I am sitting now.

It’s a beautiful, temperate, sunny labor day morning. I’m sitting on the back porch typing, and thinking about a labor day with high unemployment rates and so little corporate reinvestment, in either equipment, outside services, or hires.

I’m looking over a nearly 40 year career and thinking about all the people that made it possible– the staff “laborers” who wrote scripts, mounted slides, directed shows,

First Creative Solutions Team

Creative Solutions Team, circa 2001

Mark Augustine & friend

Mark Augustine & friend

went on shoots, retyped scripts, cursed at computers, mixed soundtracks, edited video or film, and developed trusting clients. The people who were on the 24 hour edit benders, some miles from home, miles from the security of s normal job, who made me and our clients look so good. There were hundreds– we hired when the people were right, not the economy.

I think of creative suppliers who took our ideas and melded them into music, or animations, or dramatic footage, and the young “kids” with no resumes we hired who later became superstars in their own right. I’m proud of that.

I’m not going to name names. But do the math– one person was with me for 17 years, helped launch a branch in New York City, and worked on some of the earliest interactive video in history. A few others were with me for five years plus– including one person who pronounced s/he never stayed at one place for more than a year or

two. I guess we kept things interesting. I know we always trusted out employees’ talents.

As time flew by, some went on to start their own companies, or launch new careers in various new fields of endeavor.

They all had once thing in common– they took the work “labor” seriously. They worked hard. Beyond the call of duty. The learned lots, added much, and almost always

Amy Hansmann, Dan Ramsey

Amy and Dan edit a Walgreens spectacular

became better than me at their particular creative specialty.

I also had remarkable business partners over the years. But that’s a different story.

Here’s to hard work and hard workers. Happy labor day, and thank you, fellow workhorses.

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To Slide or Not to Slide, That is the Question: Or, Why PowerPoint Doesn’t Have to Suck.

Old style Kodak slide

Slides are how we made our money and made our name.

I love slides. Grew up with them, made shows with them., started a business with them, made friends with them, won awards with them.

Today, the word “slides” has a revised but logical meaning: Powerpoint slides (or Keynote, if you prefer.)

On linkedIn, there is an ongoing discussion on whether speakers should uses slides or not. Actually, the very thought is even more daunting to these “Presentation Gurus” (the name of the group): the question was really “Is there ever a time when a speaker shouldn’t use slides?”

Here’s my quick answer:

Average speaker: No. Always use slides.

Good speaker: Maybe, depending on the size of the crowd. But take advice from a pro PowerPoint person or consultant.

Great Speaker: Yes, go without slides if you can see the eyes of everyone in the room. Or….

Great Speaker: No, use slides, if you’re speaking before 500 or up. Great speakers can use slides effortlessly, have slides that are appropriate and not overwritten, probably don’t even look at them during the presentation, and in many cases have an a-v technician changing the slides for him or her.

The best speaker I ever saw– and he always used slides– was former Chairman and CEO of Walgreens Dan Jorndt.

He could hold a room of 5000 or more in the palm of his hand. No podium. He danced across the stage, in a whirlwind of positive thought. His speeches were carefully written, but delivered in a breezy style that allowed for adlibbing, which he often did– or seemed to at any rate.

But Mr. Jorndt had a secret weapon. Behind the screen, or in the booth, and– for much of his career– behind a computer, was the head of the Walgreens Meetings and Media department, David Harnish. David is an important person at Walgreens. I fear the executives still don’t know HOW important. He is the keeper of the flame, the corporate culture, and the internal audio-visual face of Walgreens. He knows video, interactive, asset management, and of course, slides. And he knows creative communications as good as any client I ever had.

A blank slate: the PowerPoint Editing Interface

A blank slate: the PowerPoint Editing Interface

Slides more recently means PowerPoint.  But David started at Walgreens literally making “real” physical slides, first primarily on an early computer graphics system using Zenographics software, later  via video on the TVL electronic presentation system, and today, on PowerPoint. Don’t get me wrong: David no longer pushes buttons; but he continues to set the standard for how slides should support speakers, not dominate them.

He knows how many words to use, what photos or graphics are necessary, and what fonts work and don’t work. He knows layout and balance, much of it which might “break the rules” of the way PowerPoint wants you to lay things out.

Whether it was multiple slide projector speaker support, or TVL electronic slide speaker support, videodisc, or PowerPoint speaker support, David and Dan Jorndt made each other look great.

Now understand, I think Dan is a great speaker without slides. But with slides? oh, my.

So, to slide or not to slide, that is the question. When you’ve got a great speaker and a great support team, the answer isn’t so black and white.

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