Monthly Archives: October 2011

It is what it is? Not on my watch

It is what it is.

I’ve come to hate that phrase with a passion. One of our managers, whenever faced with a particularly significant challenge, will respond with that saying. I’ve decided that the next time this manager says, “It is what it is,” I’m  going to respond with, “Because we let it be.”

It’s time to stop letting things get by because they require a modicum of effort to solve. It’s time to start thinking in terms of what you can do about the problem.

One of the interview questions I’ve taken to asking is “How lucky do you think you are on a scale of one to ten?” There has been research done on this topic, and when people believe they are lucky, they end up finding more opportunities and generally seeming to be more lucky because of their openness to challenges. People that believe they are unlucky are like this manager, and they feel like things happen to them without any control over it.

Do you know someone who uses one of those “catch all” phrases as an excuse?  Will you challenge them in a similar way to look within for an answer instead of throwing up their hands in defeat? 

What you may have missed (WordPress hacked)

Hey, everyone! In the past two weeks, I’ve had a heck of a time fixing my first hacked blog. Ugh.

For those of you who blog, here’s how I fixed it. For those of you who don’t, just know that it wasn’t a quick fix to get back up and running. :-) And if you’ve run into something similar, this great article was very helpful in getting me up and running again.

The first week I was unable to log into the back end of my WordPress install (wp-admin). I would get a blank screen, which I found out is commonly called the White Screen of Death. It was incredibly frustrating, although the blog posts and pages displayed fine (some spammy looking content was inserted, but otherwise nothing was changed that I could tell).

Finally I was able to leap that hurdle. I re-uploaded the WP-Includes and WP-Admin folders from a clean WordPress installation file to my directory via FTP. That overwrote the issue and allowed me to log into the back end of my site. However, the posts and pages no longer worked. It was incredibly frustrating!

So, I resigned myself to creating a new database, exporting my WordPress file, and importing it into the new, fresh database. However, when I went to import the file into the new database, all of my posts were gone! I freaked out, honestly, because I had over 700 posts in published, private, or draft format. Scary stuff. So I went to my phpAdmin panel and logged in. There I could see within the mySQL database that the posts still existed, so that was a relief, but I couldn’t figure out how to get them out of there, and I’m no database expert.

So I talked with my best geeky friend about it and we started looking at options. We talked through the problems, and it didn’t seem to make any sense as to what the issue really was. While we were talking, he published a post as a test, and that somehow fixed the issues I’d been having!

Bottom line

I’m now back up and running and looking forward to talking about some of the great things that happened in the past few weeks, including a trip to Virginia for the Snagajob Hire Minds Summit (awesome!), a trip to Vegas for HRevolution (if you weren’t there, you missed out big time), and a day at the HR Technology Conference and Expo (Just… Wow.) to name a few.