Notebook #5. Not Mambo #5
The following is a timed writing reflecting on a short video lecture. I know it will be well thought out and cogent, but at it is certainly nothing more or less then my opinion based on what I think I know. (I don't know that much)
Who am I following? Who did I enroll?
- Who am I following? I follow my faith, my wife, and a guy I work with. I also follow a number of business authors and others who probably spend too much time on twitter, but at least they have something to show for it - i.e. real products and companies.
- What does it mean for me to be enrolled in that journey? It means I'm a member of a faith community and I can't think of a better thing to be enrolled in considering the climate today. I mean climate as in people not temperature. Faith helps keep your head on straight and surrounds you with like minded people to help you along your way. If I don't follow my wife I'd probably get lost. Family keeps be focussed on the important things like relationships and responsibilities. Without family I'd probably binge work, read, or bicycle. All good things of course, just in slight moderation. I follow the authors and co-workers because I've lived in two organizations for my adult work life. Outside opinions and ideas keep my brain working. Not thinking is not an option.
- What commitments are you making and what compromises do you refuse to make? I'm making the commitment to try to continuously learn more and hopefully become a better leader. It isn't always easy but I will not cheat. When I scan the rearview mirror I want to be proud of what I've done with no compromises.
- Now that I considered the people I'm enrolled with, what would it mean for someone to be enrolled in following me? It would probably be a disaster. With all the people I do follow, I do lack the focus needed to tie it all together. I think the focus is narrowing, but at this point I'm too (self-diagnosed) ADD to put it all together. It would mean an exercise in exploration and not always being content with what is. It is a bit of irony that as a service employee I despise paying others to do service work for me. Not because I don't trust, but because I want to do it on my own.
- Are they getting the same satisfaction as you are? No. The people I follow seem to have a purpose, ideas, and a focus that keeps them moving each day. I move a lot, in different directions. People following me would probably get a tummy ache.
- Are they making the same commitment?
- What are they seeking?
- Think about the C people in my organization and then figure out what about their role makes them act like C people? Are there round holes for these round people?
I'm skipping 6-8 simply because I don't know how to answer those at the moment. I think #8 is a simple yes. There are round holes for everybody, they just don't have to be in my organization. They are C people (those waiting to be told what to do) because they are either afraid to take the initiative, don't want to take initiative because it isn't "worth it", or they simply aren't motivated to think while at work. In a knowledge economy work has to be stimulating, although I think many parts of my job are stimulating and can't understand why others don't share the same excitement. Perhaps they (C's) are just waiting for someone to fire them so they have the permission to get out and try something that really resonates with them.
Notebook #2
Prompt: What about your leadership journey might not work? Does describing the chasm in front of you make it more likely that you'll fall in?
Simple answers. Everything and yes. Everything might not work and describing the chasm can only guarantee that I am likely to fall into it. I vividly remember mountain biking in the woods (we don't have mountains in Michigan) and crossing a narrow bridge thinking to myself "don't hug the edge, don't hug the edge" so what do I do? Hug the edge so close I heard a gasp from the rider behind me. Thankfully I didn't fall in, but I went exactly where I told myself not to go.
Or is it that simple?
Of course everything could fail and chances are even if you planned out your worst case scenario you might encounter more failure that your pessimistic self had planned on. Isn't that leadership? Perhaps the concept of going from point A to point B totally pain free isn't a mark of good leadership, but instead great planning and low risk taking.
I think the biggest fear for me is the fear of failing. As a husband and father of three I need to succeed and for me success is doing well at my job so I can keep the lights on and afford a meal out once in a while. I see stepping out as a leader in the framework of going solo, or starting up with a small team of coworkers and that scares me. Not only to be responsible for my family, but for the team as well. The thing is, I don't think leadership needs to happen on such a high level. Leadership could probably be something as simple as staring a push and getting people to realize that using refillable water bottles is better for the planet. Sure it isn't big, sure big beverage will come after you because you aren't tossing their empty bottles in the recycle bin or trash, but it is a difference that anyone can make and no one needs permission to start. If we are honest with each other I'd guess that a high percentage of people have a great idea or movement they want to lead, but they are too scared to take the first step. I'm there myself. Perhaps I will fail. Perhaps I'll lead and whoever is with me will fall off a cliff like a bunch of lemmings. Zig Ziglar has a line in his motivational speeches that goes something like "Failure is an event, not a person. Yesterday really did end last night." It is so easy to look at what could or did go wrong and put a face to that failure. Stop it. Perfection is a myth, and failure is most definitely a certainty, but failure only lasts as long as you let it.
Now that I've laid out my ideas on what could fail will I fall victim to it and tumble down the chasm? If I do I hope it is one heck of a ride, but I don't think I will. I think that laying out what could fail is a great place to start and to establish that this chasm is the boundary. Some people like to think in the box, some like to think out of the box, or you could call it constraint. I think constraints are good, I doubt any fantastic creativity wasn't fueled by constraints that first seemed suffocating. I abhor it when a boss or co-worker says something like "Well, can't you just______?" NO OF COURSE I can't other wise I would have... but I didn't... because I didn't think of the problem in the terms of my boss who asked the question... and then it hits me. The solution or the answer or the thing to do next that I couldn't think of because I hadn't taken the time to appropriately define the chasm I was standing on the edge of. Chasms help us draw up the first steps in our leadership march. How do we get from A to B. Do we go around the chasm? Through it? Over it? Under it? Hey what if we filled it!? Defining failure (the chasm) gives us the space to be creative. We just have to take it.
Maybe I should get a t-shirt "Chasms are our friends"...
Notebook #1
Prompt: What is Leadership?
nstead of pointing to a leader, outline a moment when someone you respect engaged in leadership. I was competing in an adventure race with my brother in law and we were in the part of the race that required compass skills. I believe I can manage my directions quite fine on my own, but he was more than competent at using a map, a compass, and finding out where we needed to go. It was a subtle thing but his confidence showed he was choosing to lead and get us to the points we needed to reach so we could complete the task. It is quite possible I could have done it on my own, but certainly not with the speed and efficiency of my brother in law.
Next, describe a moment when you chose to lead. How is it different from the rest of the time, when you are merely managing? Reflecting on my own leadership is difficult, mostly because I despise thinking or speaking about myself in anything but a pejorative manner. Within the last year I led a change in the way we do some business at work. I'm not sure it is working out for the better, but at the same time I think that is because I'm waiting to be told to lead, or that I have permission to lead, and instead I need to choose to lead and step up. There are hurdles in the way of leading a change and sometimes it is simply more comfortable to lean against them than to climb over... or under.
o you agree that leadership is a choice? Is leadership a choice? Yes. Leadership is stepping out against what is easy or comfortable and doing something different, hopefully with at least a few supporting facts in place. I think sometimes leadership can be thrust upon someone, but ultimately an individual then has to choose whether or not they will answer that call of leadership.
Leadership is about making change. A change that might not wor. If you do the work alone, you're an artist. If you get other people to do it with you, you're a leader. Going forward, then, what is the change you're trying to make? I don't know that I have a certain change I'd like to lead at the moment. I'd love to see more people care about the work that they do instead of simply showing up to check a box and collect a pay check. Caring for customers is so easy and so overlooked and it drives me nuts. Forward is hard too, I'd like to lead forward but moving takes effort, time, and money all of which are scarce. Perhaps a bigger thing on my heart right now is less hate and more discussion. It is too easy to be victim to media or knee-jerk opinions. People I respect, and those I don't, are all subject to making quick and harsh judgments (as am I) when a little patience would go immeasurably far. Arguments seem so binary that there is no common ground on which to build an understanding. I think I'd like to lead people to listen.