Tag Archives: scribbles writing

Photo by Martijn Baudoin on Unsplash on scribbles writing blog by Julie Lary

Vitality of grocery stores

Originally published on LinkedIn  For many years, I was obsessed with grocery stores, writing a series of articles on marketing from the grocery aisles. I’ve always felt grocery stores were the great equalizer, appealing to people from all walks-of-life and ages from bubblegum-popping teens shopping for chips and soda pop to senior citizens choosing colorful […]

photo by Anna Dziubinska from Unsplash on scribbles writing

Socialism, Oh no!

Originally published on LinkedIn on February 4, 2020 There’s a tendency nowadays to label every government program, regulation, and policy as socialism, a menace akin to cancer with the propensity to destroy countries, demotivate citizens, quash capitalism, and extinguish freewill. Okay, I exaggerated. My embellishment, however, isn’t more outlandish than denying aspects of American institutions […]

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Balance Between Security and Overreach

Originally written for LinkedIn Last month, TIME magazine featured “The Defining IDEAS of 2019,” one being the worrisome future of surveillance in China. In Chongqing, an area with 15.35 million people, there are 2.58 million surveillance cameras, creating what the writer called an Orwellian ratio of one camera for every 5.9 citizens. The key advantage […]

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Overcoming the fear of block chain

As a consultant who’s assigned a range of projects that deal with new and emerging technologies, I’m fearful I’ll be asked to develop content for solutions, which are technically above-my-head. While I’m competent, writing lightweight marketing and sales communications, I’d be at a loss if I was asked to write anything in-depth like a white […]

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Perspectives on a Brief Candidate

Originally published on LinkedIn on August 24, 2019 An acquaintance on LinkedIn recently asked me to refer her for a job.  While I barely knew her, she had extensive experience, and had grown in her roles. After receiving her resume, I wrote her a glowing referral then forgot about the matter until she contacted me […]

Edu Lauton image from Unsplash on scribbles writing

Raising the curtain on over-functioning

A few weeks ago, I attended a webinar on project management. The presenter reeled off a list of objectionable behaviors, naming “over-functioning” as one. He was swiftly interrupted and asked to clarify. After all, to do more than expected seems like an admirable trait. Over-functioning, as the presenter explained, is stepping in and doing someone […]

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Cracks in morality aren’t the exception

Circumstance is the ultimate determination of morality, the crux of my latest article on scribbles

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Add Close-to-the-Customer as Stable Jobs

During the week, I’m enmeshed in writing about IoT- and IIoT-enabled solutions. For nearly every application, I ponder, “How will this generate more jobs?” The usual answer is it won’t. Several weeks ago, however, I arrived at the conclusion you don’t need to be a technical whiz or brilliant data scientist to remain gainfully employed. […]

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Tomorrow’s Automats

The way we “obtain” food, is constantly evolving. Are the automats of yesteryear making a comeback?

Photo by Eddy Klaus from Unsplash on scribbles writing by Julie Lary (rajalary)

Everyone’s working, but fewer careers.

Reading megabytes of articles, I tried to find a few morsels of optimism about the future of employment. The concept of having a career is being replaced by short stints at various companies or becoming a part of the gig economy, characterized by short-term contracts or freelance work.

Then I went on vacation to San Juan Island.