Got a business story (or two or three) to tell?
We’re looking for bloggers for our “business ethics” section of The Good Men Project. Do you have stories to tell about the business world that come from a male POV and will give readers insights into the changing business landscape in today’s world? We’re looking for a variety of perspectives — high tech, start-ups, manufacturing, HR, finance, creativity, entrepreneurship, investing, business school, the changing economy, building a business for social good. The ideal writer would commit to at least once a month and up to once a week, but we also take submissions on a less formal schedule.
We don’t pay for content — but we offer a large, growing and engaged platform — almost 2 million pageviews per month from 242 countries around the world. We also have a network of hundreds of writers and editors and relationships with mainstream media including Huffington Post, The Daily Beast, CNN, WSJ, Toronto Globe and Mail, The Atlantic, Forbes Blogs and many others.
Please email lisa@goodmenproject.com if interested.
Photo: ElvertBarnes / Flickr























What a great opportunity, thanks for sharing!
I’m interested.
Ure P Auckland
Organisational Growth Coach
& Principal
Authegrity
http://www.authegrity.com
http://www.facebook.com/upa1111
http://consciousorganisations.blogspot.com.au/
http://ureonlifeandsoul.blogspot.com.au/
http://www.facebook.com/authegrity
https://www.facebook.com/ConsciousOrganisations
http://au.linkedin.com/in/urepauckland
I will write about business if you pay me. If you get 2 million page views per month, then I’m guessing that you’re making between 20k-50k per month from advertising. I don’t see how anyone who has the wherewithal to write about business ethics would agree to do it gratis. Do you want people who actually have experience in the business world or do you want unpaid interns?
Hi ‘dungone’. An interesting challenge.
For my part I see ‘The Good Men Project’ as a wonderful contribution to the community of men world wide. I don’t see it as a profit making concern so much (at this stage anyway) as an enterprise doing something that is valuable to our community, with some support from advertising to help it exist.
I would be happy to donate my time to writing inspirational material in a place where it will get a lot of page-views, and where my return is a global profile as a thinker in ethics.
I do bring 30 years of business experience, board experience, start-up experience, merger experience, practical business ethics experience, experience of gold standard cultures, and experience of doing things the wrong way and learning.
This last year I made a commitment to give service to my community through joining a Men’s Gathering Organising Committee. It has taken a lot of time, but as well as giving me immense satisfaction I have had amazing opportunities, gifts, friendships, and happenings occur in my life that make me immensely grateful for having chosen to give service. That men’s organisation too struggles with some roles being paid (certain facilitator roles for certain events) and others not (committees, facilitators at other types of gatherings). It would not exist without the men who donate their time, and I expect the same is true too for TGMP.
I remain interested to contribute to TGMP, and I know I can rely on the universe to reward any efforts in a fashion that serves my highest good.
We all choose how and where we give of ourselves and on what basis and I respect that for you a call to be an unpaid volunteer does not appeal, for me I respect the call from GMP and the basis on which they exist reliant on some volunteers.
Regards…Ure P Auckland
Well now. Business?
What I see today is businesses that try to cater to the whims of people who do not want to work. It takes 5 people to do what one person did 30 years ago. Every business needs rules and they need to enforce those rules impartially.
If a person, regardless of their sex or race does not perform their job correctly, then fire them. Enough of this mamby-pamby crap.
If I pay you as anemployee, then I expect you to perform as an employee. There is no work ethic left in this country.
Breaux would never allow that kind of attitude. A person has to earn respect. It isn’t free.
Check out Breaux, An American Icon