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BlogTrust Me

Keeping the Band in Tune

by Ron Potter September 21, 2015
Image Source: Kevin Dooley, Creative Commons

Image Source: Kevin Dooley, Creative Commons

It’s all well and good to be a focused leader. That’s essential for helping an entire organization lock in and stay on target. But the supreme returns are reserved for focused teams. Just as every leader needs to clarify issues concerning personal passion and achievement, the team must undergo a similar process. A focused leader needs to lead a focused team.

Ron Rex, field vice president of Allstate Insurance, says:

On any given Monday, American businesses opens up their doors with no clue as to what or when to focus. A leader creates extreme focus!… In order to create extreme focus a leader must develop a constant flow of information that describes the progress toward a goal. On any given day, the culture of an organization will create distractions to goals. These distractions can be the normal business flow of others to out and out combat against current achievement. A leader that intends to create extreme focus on a goal or set of goals must be prepared to fend off organizational disruption from those led. This is achieved by creating an atmosphere of work and information that at times may seem attacking to the status quo but must always lure the team to focus harder on fewer things. In American business today, focus is the one weapon that is not subject to the decisions of others.

While consulting with one client organization on leadership matters, my colleague Wayne and I kept hearing from the high-level executive team that they were all averaging more than eighty hours a week. During the training we did with this group, the topic of the heavy work schedule kept surfacing.

We decided to put what we were doing on pause and take a closer look. Some questions needed answering: First, how could these executives keep up this schedule without destroying themselves, their families, and their teams? Second, with such demands on their time, how would they be able to change ingrained habits and actually start doing this “leadership thing” that they knew was important, but they never seemed able to focus on long enough to accomplish? Would our recommendations, if followed, now cause them to have to work ninety hours per week?

To get hard data on how these executives were allocating their time resources, we decided to use the Stephen Covey view of time management found in his book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change. Covey’s Time Management Matrix shows four categories of activities:

We asked the team to spend two weeks tracking their time and scrupulously recording what they were doing during these 80-hour marathons. We tallied the results and created a page on a flip chart for each person, cataloging that 8 of their 80 hours went to task A, 6 hours went to task B, and so on. All 160 hours were accounted for in this way.

The group assembled to hear the results. We wish we had a videotape of the assorted jaw-dropping responses we observed as we first revealed individual patterns and then moved on through a discussion process for the entire group. It was interesting and a bit entertaining when one person would identify an item as Quadrant III (urgent, but not important) and someone else would say, “Time out! If you don’t do that task for me, I can’t get my work done (Quadrant I)!” It took a great deal of negotiation to reach a team consensus on which activities belonged in which quadrants. However, through those negotiations, we discovered just exactly what each person needed.

In many cases one person or team was generating an entire report that took a great deal of time, while the person who needed the data might use only a single crucial piece of data from the entire report. Once we determined that the one piece of data could be generated easily and, in many cases, could be retrieved on demand by the recipient from a database, a gigantic amount of busywork was eliminated.

After completing the negotiations over quadrant assignments, we added up all the hours and determined that about 20 percent of the hours fell in Quadrants I and II (the categories that really matter if you want to focus the team), while 80 percent fell in the less important Quadrant III.

You can imagine the stunned silence that settled like a black cloud in the room. Finally one executive said, “You mean we accomplished all of our important work in sixteen hours and the other sixty-four hours each week were spent on busywork?” The answer was yes. More silence followed.

How had this bright, talented, and obviously hard working “band” gotten so out of tune, so unbalanced? For one thing, they had never sat down together for this kind of discussion and negotiation. The positive result was that they eliminated a tremendous amount of busywork right on the spot. As a team, they came to grips with the focus-destroying enemy called “the tyranny of the urgent.”

If we stopped by your place of business and did the same exercise, what might the results be? Have you and your team identified the important versus the urgent? Do you spend your time and energy on the important?

Don’t let that happen in your organization. Work hard at focusing the team.

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BlogTeam

How to Form a Gang with Convicts

by Ron Potter September 17, 2015
Source: Feans, Creative Commons

Source: Feans, Creative Commons

An article on a UK engineer using his skills to prove he should not have received a camera generated speeding ticket (love this guy) contained the lines:

Knowing you’re right doesn’t always help. Convincing others of your rightness can, at times, be impossible. All you’re left with is your conviction. (From Chris Matyszezyk)

Now some of us (maybe most of us) are happy to be simply left with our convictions. A team full of people holding on to their own convictions is not a team, but a group of convicts. (In this case, convicts are people holding on to their convictions.)

Notice that the two definitions for the word conviction are:

  • A firmly held belief or opinion
  • A formal declaration of guilt

Are you guilty of holding on to your beliefs or opinions? This is a tough one.

On the one hand, we do want to hold on to our beliefs and values. They’re what guide us through tough and ambiguous times and what helps us discern right and wrong. But I think we need to be careful (and clear) about what are our true beliefs values and what are simply opinions—when opinions turn to hardened beliefs, we’re in danger of becoming “convicts.”

Convicts don’t make great teams, they form gangs.

Chris McGoff in his book Primes has a great line on this concept:

Do you use facts like a drunk uses a lamppost, as support rather than illumination?”

Have you figured out how to distinguish between your beliefs and opinions and how you can let other people in on that understanding?  As Chris encourages, check your facts!  Not just what the facts are and if you have understood them accurately but how are you using them: simply to support your belief or opinion or to illuminate the situation and help discover how other people view the same facts and reach different conclusions?

Convictions are good.  Just make sure you’re using them to build great teams and not just form gangs.

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BlogTrust Me

Focus Is as Difficult as Hitting a Baseball

by Ron Potter September 14, 2015

The importance of focus cannot be overestimated. And channeling your passion into meaningful achievement is one of the toughest things you can do.

Pete Rose, the baseball player with the most hits of anyone who ever played the game, once said, “See the ball, hit the ball.” Sure, Pete!

Source: Rafael Amado Deras, Creative Commons

Source: Rafael Amado Deras, Creative Commons

Think of the challenge: A pitcher stands sixty feet, six inches away from you with the goal of throwing a round object, three inches (seven centimeters) in diameter, past you. In your hands is a round, tapered pole, thirty-two to thirty-six inches in length, otherwise known as a bat. Your goal is to swing the pole and hit the ball only when it enters a small predefined area called the strike zone. (Note: You are referred to as a batter until you actually hit the ball!) In the hand of a professional pitcher, the round object will arrive to meet your bat traveling ninety-plus miles per hour. No wonder even the best batters generally only become hitters in about one-third of their attempts. That’s not a success ratio for which we would compliment a brain surgeon or a litigation attorney.

My colleague and Trust Me co-writer Wayne once attended a reception at the Louisville Slugger Museum where the world-famous bats are crafted. Amid the memorabilia of the museum is a caged area where you can select a pitcher (folks like Roger Clemens or Randy Johnson) who then appears on video on the big-screen monitor and throws a pitch to a stuffed catcher. The radar gun shows the ball (coming from a hole in the video monitor) approaching at ninety miles per hour.

While he was watching this impressive display, former major league pitcher Orel Hershiser came up and overheard him say—as the ball whizzed by—“I could hit that.” To which Mr. Hershiser instantly chuckled and commented, “No, you couldn’t!”

He was right, of course. To hit a baseball requires great skill, a lot of practice, and our favorite word of the moment: focus. Pete Rose remains the all-time master of focus in baseball. It is reported that he could actually pick up the spin of the ball as it left the pitcher’s hand. Therefore he could “read” how the baseball seams were tumbling or curving and detect the kind of pitch that was coming at his bat. Good eyesight? Perhaps. Great focus? Absolutely. Rose was so intent on getting a hit that nothing robbed him of focus.

Achieving such consistent focus is a quality of every effective leader. In his book In Search of Excellence, Tom Peters called focus “sticking to the knitting,” which means that successful companies do not stray far from their central skill. Leaders of excellent organizations keep everyone’s eyes focused on “the ball” by not allowing distractions to drift them away from the core of what they do best.

That’s what we like to call “doing the right things right.”

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BlogLeadership

Character vs. Competence

by Ron Potter September 10, 2015
Source: contemplativechristian, Creative Commons

Source: contemplativechristian, Creative Commons

Tyranny of Competence

Bob Quinn in his book Deep Change introduced us to the concept of the “Tyranny of Competence.” This is a person that is so good at the skills of their job, leaders will tend to overlook their other flaws in character.  They assume the character flaws would never cause enough negative issues to overcome the positive impact of being really good at their job.

Don’t ever think that.  The destruction caused by lack of character is always greater than the competency provided.

Steven Covey gave us the image of leadership, being equal parts character and competency. You can be the most competent person ever, but without good character, you’ll never become a great leader.  Conversely, you can be a person of utmost integrity and character, but without being competent at what you do, you’re no longer trustworthy and therefore will never make a trusted leader.

I’ve always been a little surprised at the lack of visibility around this issue. I’ve often thought that maybe I’m more tuned into the destructive aftermath of this character issue than the executives I work with.  And quite honestly, the measurement systems of our corporate environments tend to be more competency based than character based.

Rock Stars of Competency

Then one morning I experienced a little incident that added some clarity.  Because of a heart operation and subsequent complicating factors, I had been living in a hospital environment. Beyond dealing with my own personal health issues, the thing that occupied me the most was observing the culture of an operating hospital from a patient’s (customer’s) point of view.

Now, a hospital is certainly competency-based. Without a doubt, I want the most competent surgeon handling my heart so I can get healthy. But it’s amazing that even at this “rock star” level of medicine, how much of a difference character makes. From the patient’s point of view, the doctors I consider the best are the ones that treat me as a human being. I have been very blessed with great doctors but what’s even more interesting is how the hospital staff reacts to these surgeons.

The high character surgeon treats the staff with respect and relates to them as human beings, even as simple as using their name. The entire staff is very eager to provide to the patient whatever the doctor thinks necessary for the health and well-being of the patient. However, when the doctor forgets to exhibit that good character to the staff, the patient actually suffers. The staff goes back to a checklist approach.  It’s clear that the overall care of the patient diminishes when the providing doctor doesn’t demonstrate good character, but assumes it is only great competency that gets the job done.

Character Based Environments

Below the doctors are the nurses and the rest of the caring staff. Down here, it’s character that makes the difference. Without exception, these nurses and “techs” (one nurse and one tech assigned to each patient) are there to help you get well. There are still competence issues of taking “values”—pressure, temperature, weight, etc. and administering meds—but for the most part they mainly want to know how you’re doing and what they can do to make your stay more comfortable. The most precious commodity is sleep. And while the timing of the system conspires against you, many of the nurses and techs will delay almost anything if they think it will allow you to sleep just a little bit longer. Except Alex!

Don’t Be Like Alex

Alex is a young, energetic tech who was new to me until one morning. At 5:00 a.m. (one of the few times during the day that I could actually fall into a deep sleep) Alex bounded into my room, turned on the lights, and asked if he could check my weight. My answer was, “No!” Undaunted, Alex wheels in the scale (light still on) and offers to help me out of bed. It’s obvious he’s not going to leave so I slowly bring myself to consciousness, drag myself out of bed, stand on the scale, and satisfy Alex that he’s done his job. He even encourages me to get some sleep as he departs with his poundage figures in hand.

My reaction to Alex’s overall performance?

Competent? Yes.

Showed character? No.

Overall, rude, obtrusive, failure as a tech.

In competency based environments, lack of character is always destructive but may be under the radar.  In character based environments, lack of character is seen as complete failure.

The message in all of this is balance, balance, balance.

Regardless of which aspect is more valued in each environment the best leaders, the most cherished and valued people are the ones with both great competencies and the same time exhibit the greatest of character. They are respectful and treat others with great dignity.

If you yearn for success, be the best you can be and at the same time, care and respect those around you for who they are.

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BlogTrust Me

2 Qualities of Highly Developed Focus

by Ron Potter September 7, 2015

I have found that two personal qualities combine optimally to create a leader of highly developed focus: passion and achievement. These form the boundaries of focus.4546017269_ddac803025_z

Passionately-Focused Leaders

Staying focused is virtually impossible without passion. So how do you identify and capitalize on your passion in the leadership setting?

Passion is a craving deep within us, that yearning for something we feel we just must have. It surfaces in a multitude of ways.

Finding our passion includes dreaming big. Ask yourself some questions:

  • What is my burning passion?
  • What work do I find absorbing, involving, engrossing?
  • What mission in life absolutely absorbs me?
  • What is my distinctive skill?

Answers to questions like these will point you to your passion.

A friend of ours, the late Leonard Shatzkin, had a passion for mathematics that helped him become a pioneer in understanding the technicalities of inventory management. He developed a model of inventory control using linear regression that proved to be revolutionary for two companies he headed. But his passion didn’t just stop with benefits for his own organizations. Leonard then devoted the rest of his professional career to telling anyone who would listen about maximizing return on investment and minimizing overstocks.

That’s what passion is like; one way or another it demands expression. Even after his death, the effects of Leonard’s passion live on. His ideas and systems serve many individuals and organizations well.

Too often we allow old habits, the rigors of everyday life, and our ongoing fears or frustrations to impede our passion. We are cautioned by friends: “Don’t be so idealistic.” “Don’t be so daring.” “What if you fail?” These kinds of comments can shrink our passion so that we settle for working in fields away from our passion. We abandon it, we make do, and we play it safe.

Just as a mighty river needs a channel, passion needs a channel and a goal. Without such restraint, the result is a flood, a natural disaster. You need to make certain that you control your passion, not the other way around.

Properly focused passion changes us for the better and often helps shape organizations, even nations. So dream big. Identify what motivates you to get up in the morning. Discover where you can make a difference, based on what “floats your boat.” Some people spend their lives looking at the flyspecks on the windshield of life. Dreaming big and fulfilling your passion help you look past the flyspecks to the beautiful world on your horizon.

Achievement-Motivated Leaders

Along with passion, a desire to achieve motivates a leader to a higher level of focus.

I have concluded that leaders with an achievement-motivated style (balanced by humility) have the most constructive approach to work. Typically, they do not waste time on projects or matters outside their vision. They determine what is important, that “something great,” and they seek to achieve it.

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “The reward of a thing well done is to have done it.” Every January millions of people watch the Super Bowl. During the awards ceremony after the game, we see players with big smiles. What are they shouting about? Not about money or fame, but about the ring. Each player on the winning team gets a championship ring—a symbol of reaching the pinnacle of the sport. Nothing else compares to having that ring. It is proof of the ultimate achievement in football. That’s what motivates an achievement-oriented person.

Achievement-motivated people need feedback. They seek situations in which they get concrete feedback that they define as job-relevant. In other words, they want to know the score.

People with a high need for achievement get ahead because, as individuals, they are producers. They get things done.

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BlogTeam

3 Keys to a Great Team

by Ron Potter September 3, 2015
Source: Petras Gagilas, Creative Commons

Source: Petras Gagilas, Creative Commons

We celebrated the life of a great team builder recently. Dr. Carl was 83 years old when he passed away. Carl, as we comfortably called him, was our family doctor for many years who cared for us through minor illnesses and major auto accidents.

The overflowing crowd at the church came from the many circles of Carl’s life. His family including his wife and sister, three kids with their spouses and many grand children laughed and cried at the memories of their husband, brother, dad and grandfather.

And yet the room was filled with friends, colleagues from the medical community, patients like ourselves, members of the police department and members of his local church.
And while we might not consider the hundreds of people at that church today a traditional team, we feel like a team. Carl’s team. What was it about Carl that made us all feel close to each other today, even if we had never met before?

As the pastor began to share, often through tears of his own, he began to emphasize three major traits of Carl that seemed to come through loud and clear over a lifetime:

  1. Humility
  2. Kindness
  3. Patience

Humility

Humility is the foundation and bedrock of any great leader. We called him Carl. He was comfortable with that. He didn’t insist that it be “Dr. Such-and-such”. It was Carl. He was there to help.

Kindness

Exhibiting kindness. Carl did not merely deal kindly with you as a patient, but with you as a human being. We don’t give kindness enough credit in building great teams. If you desire a great team, care for them greatly.

Patience

“Well, he was working on patience,” as the pastor said, but as you listened to the stories, the impatience was with himself or things or circumstances, not people. He was always patient with people.

We were part of a great team today and it felt good!

Have you thought about humility, kindness and patience being tools of a great team building effect? If you haven’t, you’ll never be a part of that great team.
Tell us your stories about how one or more of these tools have been used (or abused) on your teams.

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BlogTrust Me

Doing the Right Things Right: Focus

by Ron Potter August 31, 2015
Image source: Hernán Piñera, Creative Commons

Image source: Hernán Piñera, Creative Commons

The sun is a powerful source of light as well as energy. Every hour of every day the sun showers the earth with millions, if not billions, of kilowatts of energy. We can, however, actually tame the sun’s power. With sunglasses and sunscreen, the sun’s power is diffused, and we can be out in it with little or no negative effects.
A laser, by contrast, is a weak source of light and energy. A laser takes a few watts of energy and focuses them into a stream of light. This light, however, can cut through steel or perform microsurgery on our eyes. A laser light is a powerful tool when it is correctly focused.
Leaders cease to be powerful tools when they are out of focus and their energy is dispersed rather than targeted. The following is a not-uncommon scenario:

You know the drill. It’s Monday morning. You arrive at work exhausted from a weekend spent entertaining the kids, paying bills, and running errands. You flick on your PC—and 70 new emails greet you. Your phone’s voice-mail light is already blinking, and before you can make it stop, another call comes in. With each ring, with each colleague who drops by your office uninvited, comes a new demand—for attention, for a reaction, for a decision, for your time. By noon, when you take 10 minutes to gulp down a sandwich at your desk, you already feel overworked, overcommitted—overwhelmed.

Rather than resembling a laser, too often we seem like the sun, just going up and down, splashing our energy anywhere and everywhere.

Focus management

David Allen, one of the world’s most influential thinkers on personal productivity, argues that the challenge is not managing our time, but managing our focus. He believes that with all that is being thrown at leaders, they lose their ability to respond. However, he is quick to add that most leaders create the speed of it all because we allow all that stuff to enter into our lives.
What happens to our energy? Allen says,

If you allow too much dross to accumulate in your “10 acres”—in other words, if you allow too many things that represent undecided, untracked, unmanaged agreements with yourself and with others to gather in your personal space—that will start to weigh on you. It will dull your effectiveness.

Not only will your effectiveness be dulled but so will your power. Instead of being like a steel-cutting laser, you will be like the sun, putting out energy with no focus. There needs to be focus because life is not just about running faster or putting out more energy.

The energy of stress

Another problem with unfocused energy is stress. When leaders are so wrapped up in all that is going on around them, they lose their ability to respond effectively. The stress comes from not performing at the level of expectation, which causes more stress. Leaders need to find ways to pull away or systematize the “stuff” so they can focus on leveraging their passion and realizing their goals.
Daniel Phillips, chairman and chief executive officer of SilverBack Technologies, says,

I’ve been innovating, building and growing start-ups for more than 15 years. I am energized by working with emerging technologies and have years of experience leading companies through the important growth phases from start-up to public offering or private placement, and beyond. Having led several ventures through these challenging phases,
I have learned that the most important leadership quality is “focus.”

With so much going on around leaders, focus may seem impossible or improbable to achieve. Employees, phones, pagers, e-mail, cell phones, problems, crises, home, family, boards of directors, and other people or things demand so much. We tend to spend our time managing the tyranny of the urgent rather than concentrating our efforts on the relevant and important things that make or break an organization.
So what should we do? Is it possible to better focus your focus?
The next few Monday blogs will focus on just this. Stay tuned as we zero in on what it means to focus.

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BlogCulture

Be Bold, Buy a Toyota

by Ron Potter August 27, 2015
Image source: Daniel, Creative Commons

Image source: Daniel, Creative Commons

I had to chuckle when I heard this latest marketing campaign from Toyota.

Nothing against Toyota, I’ve owned a few and had good experiences. But it just seemed ironic to say, “Be bold! Buy the most mass produced car from the largest auto manufacturer in the world!”

I work for companies that have over 30,000 employees, over 100,000 and over 200,000. And when I’m at those companies I will hear and see slogans like:

  • Be bold
  • Take risk
  • Fail Frequently
  • Be innovative
  • We thrive on creativity

And that makes me chuckle as well.

Some well documented studies suggest that once organizations cross the 150 employee line, they become, by nature, more risk adverse as they seek and require more reliability and predictability. They achieve this through standardization which is the opposite of messy risk taking innovation and creativity. An organization of thirty, fifty, or one hundred thousand has a lot of people at lots of layers with veto power.

Build it and they will come

I’ve had the opportunity to work with at least four companies who were the largest in the world in their industry, and I’ve noticed one constant phenomenon regardless of the overall culture of the company: You can always find pockets of excellence. Somewhere a leader and team are building a great culture within their sphere of influence that is bold, innovative, growth oriented, respectful, fast failing—all the aspects that make a great and productive place to work.

Another observation is that good people are always scrambling to get into these teams, divisions, or groups. When you build a great culture, you’ll never be short on talent.

Be bold. Build that great team. Be that great leader. Create that great culture. It’s fun! It’s rewarding.

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BlogFavoredTrust Me

Favored Are Those Desperate for Excellence

by Ron Potter August 24, 2015

He reduced complexities to essentials, making the game easier to learn. He wanted simple things done with consistent excellence rather than complicated things done poorly.

—Journalist William Furlong on Vince Lombardi

Image source: Wojciech Kulicki, Creative Commons

Image source: Wojciech Kulicki, Creative Commons

The game of golf requires proper equipment, good skills, countless hours of practice, tons of patience, and luck. But maybe more than any of these, golf requires a highly refined ability to concentrate. Another word for this is focus.

Chi Chi Rodriguez, a golfer on tour some years ago, was wildly popular with fans. During one Bob Hope Desert Classic, the easygoing Chi Chi (who tackled difficult putts with a toreador’s look in his eye, drawing his putter like a sword from an invisible scabbard) was in rare form. Every ball flew from his club face with tremendous power and accuracy. He tore up the course, having a birdie chance on nearly every hole. Chi Chi was confident, in control of his game, and having fun.

Having fun? Yes. On this day, like most days for Rodriguez, he was having fun. He talked nonstop to the crowd, joking and wisecracking his way down each fairway, until he reached his golf ball. Then, for a few minutes, he was all business. He practiced his swing. He measured the distance to the green. He practiced again. Then he got into his stance, riveted his eyes on the ball, and “whap!” he hit the ball straight down the fairway or near the pin.

After he noted the path of his shot, back he went to talking and performing for the crowd.

Chi Chi Rodriguez is an example of a focused person: one minute a jokester, the next a serious professional golfer, ready to fire off a sensational shot. Although he could make the crowd roar with enjoyment, when it was time to hit the ball, Chi Chi focused himself, reviewed his goal and objective, and pursued his desired result. Nothing could distract him.

Leaders need that kind of focus. It has been said that no one “can serve two masters.”  That’s a reality in all of life and certainly supports the importance of focus for leaders who want to keep themselves and their teams on target.

We have all had days when a variety of organizational “fires” needed our attention. We devoted long hours to doing “good” and often important tasks. But as darkness fell and we headed for home, we knew we had not done the most important thing. That’s what happens without focus.

Focus and passion are like blood brothers in achieving goals.

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BlogCulture

When is the Best Time to Plant a Tree?

by Ron Potter August 20, 2015
Image source: subflux, Creative Commons

Image source: subflux, Creative Commons

I was having coffee this morning with an old dear friend. He has lived a life so rich and diverse and global that it would astound most people. He also has a heavenly view of this world that helps him see things in a simple framework that brings clarity to very complex issues. And yet he said to me today that he regrets career choices that he made many years ago and feels he missed (to some degree) not living as meaningful of a life as he could have. I must admit that I was shocked by his revelation but I also believe that on this topic he was in complete error.

Twenty Years Ago

I shared with him an old Chinese proverb (or at least my paraphrase of it): “When is the best time to plant a tree? 20 years ago!”

When is the 2nd Best Time?

My friend contemplated that statement and agreed he had “missed the boat” 20 years ago. But there is second part to the proverb, “When is the second best time to plant a tree? Today!” Just because you didn’t do it 20 years ago doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it today. In fact, a tree planted 20 years ago can be for your own pleasure, a tree planted today will likely bring pleasure to others.

One of the talents of my friend is his technical brilliance. He was teaching us about “Big data” and “cloud computing” before they even had names. And he has an incredible talent for explaining it in simplistic terms that the non-technical person understands.  This talent is needed today more than it was 20 years ago. I watch business leaders every day trying to understand the technical side of the business well enough to make good business decisions.

Now is the Time!

Whatever your passion and wherever you find it, now is the time to plant the tree. No regrets only learning.

Creativity coach Ericl Maisel says that when people asks “How can I find the meaning of life?” They’re asking a completely useless question. He says: “we have to construct meaning in our lives based on everyday choices.”

It’s your choice today. Plant that tree now or continue to regret not planting it 20 years ago.

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5 Steps to Standing for Something GreaterBlogTrust Me

5 Steps to Stand for Something Greater

by Ron Potter August 17, 2015
Image source: Frank Kovalchek, Creative Commons

Image source: Frank Kovalchek, Creative Commons

As a leader, how do you get from here to there if a vision for something greater currently does not exist within your organization? Consider the following ideas.

1. Clean up your act.

It is difficult to convince others to stand for something greater if your own life and values are mediocre. Make no mistake: Regardless of what you hear from assorted voices, your personal moral standards are inseparably linked to long-term leadership success.

I once worked with a vice president of a large company who appeared very successful but did not adhere to high personal standards. He was very good at what he did and had a magnificent reputation.

This V.P. liked to call himself “a player.” Essentially, being a player meant that he messed around outside of marriage. He did not see this as wrong (pride talking) and told us it would not affect his people or the quality of the job they were doing (pride again).

Twenty-four months later, the vice president’s inability to control his pride and lust cost him everything, including his job. His clever scheme fell apart. His self-focus swallowed him up.

It’s fun to be a leader, flattering to have influence, and invigorating to have a room full of people cheering your every word. It is a powerful boost to set a direction for the troops and then draw them out to march toward the goal. However, nothing will spoil this pretty picture more quickly than a willful, proud attitude. Pride can cause an uncontrolled will, which is fatal in a leader’s life.

2. Examine your values.

While attending seminary, Martin Luther King Jr. read extensively in the areas of history, philosophy, and religion. As he read, learned, and reflected, he molded his values and vision on the anvil of discovery, questioning what he truly believed.

This kind of personal searching is essential for every good leader. How can you clarify values, set vision, get beyond yourself, and stand for something greater if you have not participated in the intense, personal struggle to clarify, define, and establish who you are as a person? As a leader you will be asked many questions—economic, moral, and personal. How will you know what answers to give unless you have wrestled with some of the questions?

The result of this struggle is personal integrity and credibility.

3. Elevate people to a higher purpose.

Lincoln motivated people by leaving his office and spending time with everyone in the government and military hierarchy. One hundred and twenty years later, Tom Peters dubbed this kind of management style as “management by walking around.” When a leader gets out and interacts with all the people, the vision is communicated, the values are acted upon, the leader is observed, and the people are inspired.

Whether or not leaders literally walk around, the important factor is elevating and transforming people to serve a higher purpose. People respond by seeking higher moral standards for themselves and the organization. A higher purpose serves to develop common ground, and the common ground leads to energy in attaining goals. It creates a center of importance around which the team can rally and be unified.

4. Seize the higher ground.

John Gardner, Stanford professor, former secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and founding chairperson of Common Cause, has written that there are four moral goals of leadership:

  1. Releasing human potential
  2. Balancing the needs of the individual and the community
  3. Defending the fundamental values of the community
  4. Instilling in individuals a sense of initiative and responsibility.

Gardner notes that concentrating on these aspects will direct you to higher purposes. They take the focus off of you and place it on the people around you. They enable you to let go of the things in life that do not matter and instead make time and create energy for the things that do matter: the welfare of others, the organization, and the larger community.

5. Recognize the cost.

Standing for something greater often exacts a significant price. Senator John McCain, told the story about a special soldier whom he met while a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

McCain spent over five years imprisoned by the North Vietnamese in what was called the “Hanoi Hilton.” One of the men in Senator McCain’s cell was Mike Christian.

The men were allowed to receive packages from home. McCain stated, “In some of these packages were handkerchiefs, scarves and other items of clothing.” The prisoners’ uniforms were basic blue, and Mike Christian took some white and red cloth from the gifts and fashioned an American flag inside his shirt.

Mike’s shirt became a symbol for the imprisoned Americans. Every day, after lunch, they would put Mike’s shirt on the wall and recite the Pledge of Allegiance. You can imagine that, for these men, this was an emotional and significant daily event.

One day the Vietnamese found Mike Christian’s homemade flag. They destroyed it and beat Mike for over two hours.

McCain remembers, “I went to lie down to go to sleep. As I did, I happened to look in the corner of the room. Sitting there beneath that dim light bulb, with a piece of white cloth a piece of red cloth, and another shirt and bamboo needle was my friend, Mike Christian. Sitting there with his eyes almost shut from beating, making another American flag.”

Lt. Commander Mike Christian is a real-life example of how leaders can shift their focus away from themselves, their power, and their potential to something outside themselves, seeking the greater good for others as well as for the organization and the community at large.

 

Standing for something greater moves leaders past their own interests to something that benefits everyone. It takes controlled strength not to fall back to the shortsightedness of doing things only for selfish gain or selfish reasons.

Standing for something greater means standing for something other than yourself. The cause is not “all for you”; it is something greater of which you are part. You bring value, but so do others. People whose view doesn’t reach outside themselves are ultimately limited to their own box of knowledge and vision.

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Step Back from Knowing

by Ron Potter August 13, 2015
Image source: Jin Choi, Creative Commons

Image source: Jin Choi, Creative Commons

We’ve talked about stepping back from doing. It takes a pause, a break, getting away from the dialing routine of doing in order to give yourself a chance of even writing the right questions. But how about stepping back from knowing? This actually takes courage and trust. (This concept is also discussed Warren Berger’s book, A More Beautiful Question.)

Expect All the Answers?

I’ve worked with one fortune 200 company through four CEOs. While each one has been very different from the previous one, they all have had super qualities of their own that served the company well during their tenure. However, through all of their differences, there have also been a consistent pattern in their culture that each of them has upheld. They expect their subordinates to know all the answers. The COO is expected to know the production rate on any line anywhere in the system. The CFO is expected to know the financial numbers from every level of the organization from around the globe based on last night’s results. And on and on and on.

Step Back from Knowing in Order to Compete

Over the years, this operational excellence has served the company well. But things are changing rapidly with customers, consumers, competitors, etc. And I’m afraid this inability to step back from what they know may keep them from competing well in the future. Their investors are starting to think so.

It Takes Courage

So where do we find the courage to step back from knowing. In the culture described above, it can be fatal to admit you don’t know an answer. It’s even crippling to say “I’ll find out and get back to you.” And because of that, peers tend not to question each other. This inability to question each other leaves a very low level of trust.

An Attitude of Quick Learning

I’ve covered in previous blogs the concept of a quick decision mentality vs a quick learning mentality. Quick deciding suppresses questions or any discussion that would seem to slow down or delay a decision. Quick learning, however, encourages questions. Naïve ones at that. It encourages people from different functions to question each other and to question basic assumptions. It opens our minds to new perspective, It requires us to be vulnerable, open, and genuine about what we know and don’t know. And more importantly, even when we do know, realizing that an outside naïve perspective can reveal things about our business in a way we never thought about before.

Requires a Trusting Team

The only way to be able to step back from knowing is to build trusting teams and then get away from the business a couple times of the year to step back from doing and step back from knowing.

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