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Go Ask Siri About Mr. Selfridge

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I’ve been watching “Mr. Selfridge on PBS.” Less popular than Downton Abby, “Mr. Selfridge” chronicles the life department store brought from those cheeky Yanks over to Britain and turning shopping on its ear.  It’s part of “The Masterpiece Classics” on Sunday night.

 httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKDA8Cam2YA

Jeremy Piven’s manic, ever-smiling, frenetic-talker character annoys me until he grew on me.  I had to do a little research.  Yes, there really is a Selfridges department stores; the first in England, founded in 1909, and still the second largest chain of department stores in the UK.  Yes, H. Gordon Selfridge did come from Chicago where he worked his way up the ladder at what is now Marshall Fields.  And yes, he really was exuberant to the point of exasperation.  That’s not the part about “Mr. Selfridge” that most intrigues me.

Selfridges changed the way women shop by putting the merchandise out for everyone to see, touch, and smell.  Before Selfridges, garments were tailored, shops were boutiques, and shopping was a chore.  Mr. Selfridge brought together shopping, dining and entertainment.  Choices became available.  Sales.  Shopping became fun.  It seems like a little thing, now, but a crazy business model, doomed to doomed to failure in 1906 England.

Mr. Selfridge also encouraged career growth for all of his employees, which was a new concept for women.  Although he paid them little, Mr. Selfridge garnered loyal employees.  He supported the Sufferage Movement movement.

You could say Mr. Selfridge changed the world when he brought the idea of “the customer is always right,” and “shopping should be fun” to Britains. That got me thinking.  At about the same time, the bicycle became a common way for women to get around, the idea self-determination, rather than a class dominated society gained momentum.

That got me thinking.  What innovations and conveniences in my life made, or might make, an impact on the future?

There are some obvious ones because the impact is already felt:

Then there is a smaller one, one that started out to improve personal security; one that changed movies, photography, communication, and how we interact with each other every day, and even how we dress.  The cellular phone; specifically the smart phone.  Here are just a few of the ways the smart phone changed our lives:

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NoVW62mwSQQ&list=PLHFlHpPjgk713fMv5O4s4Fv7k6yTkXwkV&index=1

Just as Mr. Selfridge had a vision and a plan to bring shopping to the masses, Steve Jobs had a vision that everyone would carry a computer in the palm of their hands.  My dad, who worked for Bell Telephone two generation ago, told me that Bell’s “big audacious goal” was to give each child born a phone number as part of our identity, and  we would all carry our phones with us wherever we went.  Just as Mr. Selfridge’s dream built on other technology of the era, so does smart phone technology. Mr. Selfridge’s dream helped change the economy and the social system.  The same is happening with Mr. Jobs and the Bell Telephone’s dream.

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_WXjuhZlNw

What innovation do you see now that have the potential to change how we think, live and interact with each other?

(In case you’re wondering: No one but me sponsored this blog post.)

 

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