Search blog.co.uk

Thursday 8th June 2006

by williamshepherd @ 2006-06-10 - 10:05:38

David Goodstein has been on my mind all week. He died of cancer in 1997 at the age of 49 but I only found out about it on Sunday when I inserted the fateful lines in my weblog ‘working partner for the commercial development of a system dynamics model for Canadian printing firms (Interconsult, Cambridge)’ and went looking for a good hyperlink by typing “David Goodstein” +Interconsult +Cambridge +Massachusetts into Google.

The search engine returned with a number of items including The Seybold Report on Publishing Systems Vol 27, No 6 - November 24, 1997 which was given over entirely to a reprint of David’s obituary in the Boston Globe written by Clive Goodacre, chairman of the Bespoke Agency of London and editor of World Graphic Arts Technology.

I remember well the feeling one morning in Welwyn Garden City in 1976 when I turned up for work at Norton Company and walked into an atmosphere of hushed reverence instead of the bustle of a Customer Service Department busily sorting out the problems that had come in by telex overnight. Colin Brooke was the head of Customer Service and the first person I turned to when the Welwyn or Belfast factories missed a delivery to the Rotherham Warehouse for on-shipment to the Sheffield Steel Industry. He had died of a heart attack during the night. He had been his usual self the day before.

It did not matter to me that David had died nine years before. The news struck me as if it had happened the same day...with the intensity of that Colin Brooke moment. I felt haunted all day as the memories of David in my life surfaced into consciousness and refused to be dismissed. These thoughts have taken my mind off my work all week.

With any death comes regret...and guilt. I still have these feelings years later with my mother and with Connie. Then there are others who deserved my thanks but never received it...my primary school teacher Mrs. Norman at Deansfield in Eltham and Eric Littlefield my House Master at Christ’s Hospital...teachers who acknowledged and encouraged me so I became the person I am. These feelings of regret and guilt can only get worse as more and more people who have touched my life take their leave of this life. Yet when somebody goes before their time lost promise is added to the regret and the guilt.

David was a brilliant and charming man who loved his work, his family and the Jewish faith he had inherited. He was a compelling raconteur whether on the podium as the keynote speaker at an international technology symposium, in his living room or in a few snatched minutes by the copier in the hallway. David Goodstein understood Peter Drucker and the Boston Consulting Group, Boston’s Route 128 and California's Silicon Valley long before Wall Street got to grips with what this meant for America.

Already by the mid-1970s David’s radar was locking in on people and technology as the key to the future. He saw that far-flung open networks of cyber citizens would emerge to challenge the closed world of Corporate Man. David did outsourcing and globalisation before they had been named.

David Henry Goodstein was an international information technology executive and strategic consultant whose only formal training was as a computer programmer at MIT. Before founding InterConsult in 1978 he had been a research affiliate at the Visible Language Workshop of the MIT Media Lab. We worked closely together in 1980 and 1981.

When David invited me to join Interconsult he had great plans for what we could do for his firm. It was shortly after my arrival from England in the summer of 1980...with charming Swedish wife and two blond blue-eyed children in tow. Eighteen months previously David had started up Interconsult. He had landed its first big fish in the spring of 1980 with a $39 000 contract from Xerox to report on the future of Computerised Typesetting.

Interconsult was working out of a tiny cramped residential apartment...and a broom cupboard or two along the corridor. I moved the family into a house on Lakeview Avenue off Huron Avenue...a short walk from Harvard Square and the Fresh Pond Reservoir. Interconsult’s apartment block was at the end of my road of Victorian New England timber houses.

I have been a disappointment to many people...it goes with the territory...and I know I was to David who saw in me what he wanted to see and chose to disregard what I was and what I might wish to become. David had grown up in Worcester Massachusetts...Small Town America...so he was programmed to believe in progress and corporations walking hand in hand into a glorious American future. He wanted to sign up...howbeit on his own terms...and he saw my future playing out along similar lines. But he knew little about the things that really mattered to me.

I was recovering from low-level brain-washing after my five-year prison sentence in Europe with the Worcester-based Norton Company. The paternalistic corporations of the 60s and 70s burdened their high-flyers with outmoded expectations. I knew I would only ever be part of their world on their terms...and Hazel Henderson had taught me that it was possible to create an alternative future for myself on my terms.

So the task at hand was to make myself unemployable. Some might call it a Mid Life Crisis but labelling is not explaining...and the age of 33 is quite early to be afflicted. I prefer to believe that I had been educated to live a decent life. I am not sure whether I had invented the concept of A Life as a Work of Art by this time. But I started behaving as if it was my purpose in life. Oscar Wilde would have approved.‘Man’, he insisted, ‘is complete in himself.’

Trackback address for this post:

authimage

Comments, Trackbacks:

No Comments/Trackbacks for this post yet...

Leave a comment :

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.
Allowed XHTML tags: <!, p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, a, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small, img>
URLs, email, AIM and ICQs will be converted automatically.
Options:
 
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email & url)
Validation code:
Please enter the above code here:
For protection from spambots (case-sensitive).