Market Motive, the startup I joined in 2009 (as employee #2) has been sold to Bangalore-based Simplilearn.
Author Archives: Chip Street
Screenplay Polish Goes Wildly Right
I don’t always get to see what happens to a project when I’m done with it… and this writer was so kind and generous with his feedback and updates that I just had to share.
Kong: Skull Island — How A Professional Translator Brought The Novelization To Japan
Learn what it takes to artistically translate a book into another language while both respecting the original story and speaking to a new culture.
Writing, Marketing, The Curiosity Gap, and Art School
A while back a friend and I were talking about The Curiosity Gap, and how it works in art and marketing.
And I made this connection.
5 Tips For Managers To Ensure Your Team’s eLearning Success
If you want your team to bring their “A” game, you’ve got to make sure they’ve got an “A” game to bring,
But it’s not enough to just find the training they need.
How To Rock At Online Learning
While a flexible training schedule can be great for busy working stiffs and family folks like us, and the dynamic digital materials may actually be more up-to-date than a print textbook, there are also challenges to e-learning that you need to meet head-on.
Howard Stern Said A Thing That Matters About Storytelling, Authenticity, & Marketing
I was pleasantly surprised to see this quote from Howard Stern… with years and years of experience interviewing people, mostly celebrities, mostly celebrities who are hawking their latest projects, this passage from Howard was telling, and oh-so-true.
7 Steps To Team Training Success
If you’re a training and development pro, you know it’s tough to show training ROI because it’s tough to set training goals in the first place, much less hit them.
How Data Geeks Are Changing Politics Forever
It happened in 2007.
That’s when data changed American politics forever.
From Screenplay to Novel – How One Short Scene Became A Whole Chapter
Here’s the story behind what turned a simple cutaway scene in the screenplay’s third act into a whole new chapter in the novel – and why I think it works.
