The Story of Stone Soup with a New Twist
An old folktale tells of a traveler passing through the countryside, weary and hungry. No one would welcome him, for they had little to share. The traveler entered a village, and after being turned away from several doors spotted a large kettle in the town square. This sparked an idea.
He announced to all within reach of his voice, "Since there is nothing else to be had, I will make a pot of stone soup."
Soup from stones? Who had ever heard of such a thing? The villagers were at once engaged.
The traveler gathered stones, washed them, and put them in the pot full of water. He built a fire, and the water began to heat. The traveler tasted the soup and said, "This is good, but it would be much better with an onion or two."
One villager said, "I have a couple of onions in my root cellar." The onions were added to the pot.
The traveler similarly called for carrots, potatoes, cabbage, seasonings, and meat. Each villager had something to spare, and all were added to the pot.
When the stone soup had finished cooking, all the villagers and the traveler sat down to a heartier meal than any had seen in days.
We are launching a new program in the spirit of stone soup. Dialogs has a lot to offer and so do you as a member of your local business community. Look around our site – you will see that Dialogs develops powerful data-driven web and mobile systems that provide profound impact on our clients' operations. Our work is the foundation for strong businesses. We can provide the kettle for the stone soup.
As we worked on our new grant program, the thought occurred to us that each project was a business incubator:
- our clients will improve their operations and revenue with enhanced e-business tools
- we will generate work for local creative and development talent
- together, Dialogs and grant recipients will improve the local community.
With stone soup in mind, we considered what we could do to improve opportunities for local businesses and talent. Here's what we came up with:
- focus on communities that are often eclipsed or bypassed by local larger communities. Example: Choose Cedar Rapids over Des Moines; upstate New York over New York City (the hungry village)
- Offer a grant or donation of our Dialogs Framework software plus a portion of our development services to small- and medium-sized businesses and organizations (offer a carrot)
- allow local talent to build as much of each project as possible through internships (the village's meat and potatoes).
And so, digital stone soup. Join us. Build your business while feeding your village.
Recent Articles
To do today: change your LinkedIn password.
Your LinkedIn password may have been published on the web.
The web is a non-linear experience.
If you're not leading your customers through your website, you're driving them away.
You can’t afford perfection.
Don’t worry about it. Nobody can.
Do you know who you are?
Many businesses do not understand their own business model.
Find experts you trust, then trust them.
Remember, the reason you hire experts is because they know things you don't.
iCloud configuration for shared Apple Store content
Get the most out of iCloud without simplifying yourself into a mess.
An argument for onshore outsourcing.
People with direct and indirect contact with your customers affect your brand.
Designers: The giant Google Panda is watching.
You tell your clients that design matters, now Google agrees.
Every start-up requires sweat equity or real equity.
There are no exceptions.
You tweeted what?!?
Why shareware and social networking don’t mix.
Our customers say it best
I really can't recommend them enough, first and foremost because they have really earned my trust. They are extremely conscientious and thorough, and I have no hesitation in placing our key data and processes in their care.
— Waco M.