john anner

author, international development expert, fundraising strategist and avid explorer

values

Time for Reinvention

family, cycling, valuesJohn AnnerComment

After nearly 13 years with Thrive Networks (formerly the East Meets West Foundation) I have moved into a new stage of pleasant anticipation. Everyone wants to know the same thing about me: "What are you doing next?" I honestly don't know. What I do know is that my life is undergoing some interesting changes. My oldest daughter has graduated from college and my next two are heading off to their own college adventure in August 2016. All certainties are now faded; there is no reason to live in this overpriced cottage in Albany, which we bought to get access to the school system. My work at Thrive Networks is finished. So what am I doing? Basically, I'm waiting for the universe to bring me something wonderful.

Patience is a Virtue

values, international development, organizational mgmtJohn AnnerComment

“Patience is a virtue,” my mother frequently remonstrated her small children, the five of us no doubt insisting that we needed something right now – a new bicycle, clothes, a snack or to be driven over to visit a friend.

As a kid, I always wondered what she meant. We all knew that patience was on the list of officially-sanctioned virtues, what was the point of reminding us?  I thought she was saying, “Patience is a good thing.”

It wasn’t until I was a teenager that it suddenly struck me; what she really meant was, “patience is one of the virtues that you should cultivate in yourself.” And not for the first or last time, I wondered if I was perhaps an exceptionally slow learner.

Values, Virtues and Vampire Squids

east meets west, international development, organizational mgmt, philanthropy, valuesJohn AnnerComment

Values are everywhere these days, dripping off the pages of corporate annual reports and the subject of earnest discussions in non-profit strategic planning sessions. The World Bank, for example, advertises their core values as “personal honesty and integrity, working together in teams, empowering and respecting others, and enjoying work and family.” Who could find fault with that? These are laudable values, and if it is true that every single person in the organization around the world holds these values dear, then the World Bank must be a great place to work.