Posts Tagged ‘Fear’
Words To Live By
What people think about you is none of your business.
If you’re afraid to be wrong, you shouldn’t be setting direction.
Think the better of people, as they’ll be better for it.
When you find yourself striving, pull the emergency brake and figure out how to start thriving.
If you want the credit, you don’t want to make a difference.
If you’re afraid to use your best judgment, find a mentor.
Family first, no exceptions.
When you hold a mirror to the organization, you demonstrate that you care.
If you want to grow people and you invest less than 30% of your time, you don’t want to grow them.
When someone gives you an arbitrary completion date, they don’t know what they’re doing.
When the Vice President wants to argue with the physics, let them.
When all else fails, use your best judgment.
If it’s not okay to tell the truth, work for someone else.
The best way to make money is not the best way to live.
When someone yells at you, that says everything about them and nothing about you.
Trust is a result. Think about that.
When you ask for the impossible, all the answers will be irrational.
No one can diminish you without your consent.
If you don’t have what you want, why not try to want what you have?
When you want to control things, you limit the growth of everyone else.
People can tell when you’re telling the truth, so tell them.
If you find yourself watching the clock, find yourself another place to work.
When someone does a great job, tell them.
If you have to choose between employment and enjoyment, choose the latter.
If you’re focused on cost reduction, you’re in a race to the bottom.
The best way to help people grow is to let them do it wrong (safely).
When you hold up a mirror to the organization, no one will believe what they see.
If you’re not growing your replacement, what are you doing?
If you’re not listening, you’re not learning.
When someone asks for help, help them.
If you think you know the right answer, you’re the problem.
When someone wants to try something new, help them.
Whatever the situation, tell the truth, and love everyone.
Image credit — John Fife
When It’s Time to Defy Gravity
If you pull hard on your team, what will they do? Will they rebel? Will they push back? Will they disagree? Will they debate? And after all that, will they pull with you? Will the pull for three weeks straight? Will they pull with their whole selves? How do you feel about that?
If you pull hard on your peers, what will they do? Will they engage? Will they even listen? Will they dismiss? And if they dismiss, will you persist? Will you pull harder? And when you pull harder, do they think more of you? And when you pull harder still, do they think even more of you? Do you know what they’ll do? And how do you feel about that?
If you push hard on your leadership, what will they do? Will they ‘lllisten or dismiss? And if they dismiss, will you push harder? When you push like hell, do they like that or do they become uncomfortable, what will you do? Will they dislike it and they become comfortable and thankful you pushed? Whatever they feel, that’s on them. Do you believe that? If not, how do you feel about that?
When you say something heretical, does your team cheer or pelt you with fruit? Do they hang their heads or do they hope you do it again? Whatever they do, they’ve watched your behavior for several years and will influence their actions.
When you openly disagree with the company line, do your peers cringe or ask why you disagree? Do they dismiss your position or do they engage in a discussion? Do they want this from you? Do they expect this from you? Do they hope you’ll disagree when you think it’s time? Whatever they do, will you persist? And how do you feel about that?
When you object to the new strategy, does your leadership listen? Or do they un-invite you to the next strategy session? And if they do, do you show up anyway? Or do they think you’re trying to sharpen the strategy? Do they think you want the best for the company? Do they know you’re objecting because everyone else in the room is afraid to? What they think of your dissent doesn’t matter. What matters is your principled behavior over the last decade.
If there’s a fire, does your team hope you’ll run toward the flames? Or, do they know you will?
If there’s a huge problem that everyone is afraid to talk about, do your peers expect you get right to the heart of it? Or, do they hope you will? Or, do they know you will?
If it’s time to defy gravity, do they know you’re the person to call?
And how do you feel about that?
Image credit – The Western Sky
What it Takes to Do New Work
What it takes to do new work.
Confidence to get it wrong and confidence to do it early and often.
Purposeful misuse of worst practices in a way that makes them the right practices.
Tolerance for not knowing what to do next and tolerance for those uncomfortable with that.
Certainty that they’ll ask for a hard completion date and certainty you won’t hit it.
Knowledge that the context is different and knowledge that everyone still wants to behave like it’s not.
Disdain for best practices.
Discomfort with success because it creates discomfort when it’s time for new work.
Certainty you’ll miss the mark and certainty you’ll laugh about it next week.
Trust in others’ bias to do what worked last time and trust that it’s a recipe for disaster.
Belief that successful business models have half-lives and belief that no one else does.
Trust that others will think nothing will come of the work and trust that they’re likely right.
Image credit — japanexpertna.se
When The Wheels Fall Off
When your most important product development project is a year behind schedule (and the schedule has been revved three times), who would you call to get the project back on track?
When the project’s unrealistic cost constraints wall of the design space where the solution resides, who would you call to open up the higher-cost design space?
When the project team has tried and failed to figure out the root cause of the problem, who would you call to get to the bottom of it?
And when you bring in the regular experts and they, too, try and fail to fix the problem, who would you call to get to the bottom of getting to the bottom of it?
When marketing won’t relax the specification and engineering doesn’t know how to meet it, who would you call to end the sword fight?
When engineering requires geometry that can only be made by a process that manufacturing doesn’t like and neither side will give ground, who would you call to converge on a solution?
When all your best practices haven’t worked, who would you call to invent a novel practice to right the ship?
When the wheels fall off, you need to know who to call.
If you have someone to call, don’t wait until the wheels fall off to call them. And if you have no one to call, call me.
Image credit — Jason Lawrence
The Five Hardships of Success
Everything has a half-life, but we don’t behave that way. Especially when it comes to success. The thinking goes – if it was successful last time, it will be successful next time. So, do it again. And again. It’s an efficient strategy – the heavy resources to bring it to life have already been spent. And it’s predictable – the same customers, the same value proposition, the same supply base, the same distribution channel, and the same technology. And it’s dangerous.
Success is successful right up until it isn’t. It will go away. But it will take time. A successful product line won’t fall off the face of the earth overnight. It will deliver profits year-over-year and your company will come to expect them. And your company will get hooked on the lifestyle enabled by those profits. And because of the addiction, when they start to drop off the company will do whatever it takes to convince itself all is well. No need to change. If anything, it’s time to double-down on the successful formula.
Here’s a rule: When your successful recipe no longer brings success, it’s not time to double-down.
Success’s decline will be slow, so you have time. But creating a new recipe takes a long time, so it’s time to declare that the decline has already started. And it’s time to learn how to start work on the new recipe.
Hardship 1 – Allocate resources differently. The whole company wants to spend resources on the same old recipes, even when told not to. It’s time to create a funding stream that’s independent of the normal yearly planning cycle. Simply put, the people at the top have to reallocate a part of the operating budget to projects that will create the next successful platform.
Hardship 2 – Work differently. The company is used to polishing the old products and they don’t know how to create new ones. You need to hire someone who can partner with outside companies (likely startups), build internal teams with a healthy disrespect for previous success, create mechanisms to support those teams and teach them how to work in domains of high uncertainty.
Hardship 3 – See value differently. How do you provide value today? How will you provide value when you can’t do it that way? What is your business model? Are you sure that’s your business model? Which elements of your business model are immature? Are you sure? What is the next logical evolution of how you go about your business? Hire someone to help you answer those questions and create projects to bring the solutions to life.
Hardship 4 – Measure differently. When there’s no customer, no technology and no product, there’s no revenue. You’ve got to learn how to measure the value of the work (and the progress) with something other than revenue. Good luck with that.
Hardship 5 – Compensate differently. People that create something from nothing want different compensation than people that do continuous improvement. And you want to move quickly, violate the status quo, push through constraints and create whole new markets. Figure out the compensation schemes that give them what they want and helps them deliver what you want.
This work is hard, but it’s not impossible. But your company doesn’t have all the pieces to make it happen. Don’t be afraid to look outside your company for help and partnership.
Image credit — Insider Monkey
Uncertainty Isn’t All Bad
If you think you understand what your customers want, you don’t.
If you’re developing a new product for new customers, you know less.
If you’re developing a new technology for a new product for new customers, you know even less.
If you think you know how much growth a new product will deliver, you don’t.
If that new product will serve new customers, you know less.
If that new product will require a new technology, you know even less.
If you have to choose between project A and B, you’ll choose the one that’s most like what you did last time.
If project A will change the game and B will grow sales by 5%, you’ll play the game you played last time.
If project A and B will serve new customers, you’ll change one of them to serve existing customers and do that one.
If you think you know how the market will respond to a new product, it won’t make much of a difference.
If you don’t know how the market will respond, you may be onto something.
If you don’t know which market the product will serve, there’s a chance to create a whole new one.
If you know how the market will respond, do something else.
When we have a choice between certainty and upside, the choice is certain.
When we choose certainty over upside, we forget that the up-starts will choose differently.
When we have a lot to lose, we chose certainty.
And once it’s lost, we start over and choose uncertainty.
Image credit — Alexandra E Rust
520 Wednesdays in a Row
This is a special post for me. It’s a huge milestone. With this post, I have written a new blog post every Wednesday evening for the last ten years. That’s 520 Wednesdays in a row. I haven’t missed a single one and none have been repeats. As I write this, the significance is starting to sink in.
Most of the posts I’ve written at the kitchen table with my earbuds set firmly in my ears and my family going about its business around me. But I’ve written them in the car; I’ve written them in a hospital waiting room; I’ve written them in a diner over lunch while on a three-week motorcycle trip, and I’ve written them at a state park while on vacation. No matter what, I’ve published a post on Wednesday night.
I write to challenge myself. I write to teach myself. I write to provide my own mentorship. I have no one to proof my writing and there are always mistakes of grammar, spelling and word choice. But that doesn’t stop me. No one limits the topics I cover, nor does anyone help me choose a topic. It’s just me and my laptop battling it out. It doesn’t have to be that way, but that’s the way it has been for the last ten years.
I used to read, respond and obsess over comments written by readers, but I started to limit my writing based on them so now my posts are closed to comments. I write more freely now, but I miss the connection that came from the comments.
I used to obsessively track the number of subscribers and Google analytics data. Now I don’t know how many subscribers I have, nor do I know who has visited my website over the last couple of years. Now I just write. But maybe I should check.
When you can write about anything you want, the topics you choose make a fingerprint, or maybe a soul-print. I don’t know what my choices say about me, but that’s the old me.
What’s the grand plan? There isn’t one. What’s next? It’s uncertain.
Thanks for reading.
Mike
image credit — Joey Gannon
If you’re not sure…
If you’re not sure, it likely hasn’t been done before.
If you’re sure it’s been done before, teach someone how to do it.
If you’re not sure, you may not know how people will respond.
If you’re sure how they’ll respond, why bother?
If you’re not sure, you may be onto something.
If you’re sure, it’s re-hash.
If you’re not sure, it deserves your time.
If you’re sure, it deserves to be done poorly.
If you’re not sure, the uncertainty may be a sign of importance.
If you’re sure, it’s important someone else does it.
If you’re not sure, it may be a big learning opportunity.
If you’re sure, take the opportunity to learn something else.
If you’re not sure, your idea may threaten the status quo.
If you’re sure the status quo will like it, commit to something else to threaten the timeline.
If you’re not sure, it will be exciting.
If you’re sure, it will be exciting to grow someone worthy.
If you’re not sure, invest the time to figure out the fundamentals.
If you’re sure, invest in a future leader and teach them the fundamentals.
If you’re not sure, do it anyway.
If you’re sure, do something else.
Image credit – Nik Wallenda
The Difficulty of Commercializing New Concepts
If you have the data that says the market for the new concept is big enough, you waited too long.
If you require the data that verifies the market is big enough before pursuing new concepts, you’ll never pursue them.
If you’re afraid to trust the judgement of your best technologists, you’ll never build the traction needed to launch new concepts.
If you will sell the new concept to the same old customers, don’t bother. You already sold them all the important new concepts. The returns have already diminished.
If you must sell the new concept to new customers, it could create a whole new business for you.
If you ask your successful business units to create and commercialize new concepts, they’ll launch what they did last time and declare it a new concept.
If you leave it to your successful business units to decide if it’s right to commercialize a new concept created by someone else, they won’t.
If a new concept is so significant that it will dwarf the most successful business unit, the most successful business unit will scuttle it.
If the new concept is so significant it warrants a whole new business unit, you won’t make the investment because the sales of the yet-to-be-launched concept are yet to be realized.
If you can’t justify the investment to commercialize a new concept because there are no sales of the yet-to-be-launched concept, you don’t understand that sales come only after you launch. But, you’re not alone.
If a new concept makes perfect sense, you would have commercialized it years ago.
If the new concept isn’t ridiculed by the Status Quo, do something else.
If the new concept hasn’t failed three times, it’s not a worthwhile concept.
If you think the new concept will be used as you intend, think again.
If you’re sure a new concept will be a flop, you shouldn’t be. Same goes for the ones you’re sure will be successful.
If you’re afraid to trust your judgement, you aren’t the right person to commercialize new concepts.
And if you’re not willing to put your reputation on the line, let someone else commercialize the new concept.
Image credit – Melissa O’Donohue
As a leader, be truthful and forthcoming.
Have you ever felt like you weren’t getting the truth from your leader? You know – when they say something and you know that’s not what they really think. Or, when they share their truth but you can sense that they’re sharing only part of the truth and withholding the real nugget of the truth? We really have no control over the level of forthcoming of our leaders, but we do have control over how we respond to their incomplete disclosure.
There are times when leaders cannot, by law, disclose things. But, even then, they can make things clear without disclosing what legally cannot be disclosed. For example, they can say: “That’s a good question and it gets to the heart of the situation. But, by law, I cannot answer that question.” They did not answer the question, but they did. They let you know that you understand the situation; they let you know that there is an answer; and the let you know why they cannot share it with you. As the recipient of that non-answer answer, I respect that leader.
There are also times when a leader withholds information or gives a strategically partial response for inappropriate reasons. When a leader withholds information to manipulate or control, that’s inappropriate. It’s also bad leadership. When a leader withholds information from their smartest team members, they lose trust. And when leaders lose trust, the best people are crestfallen and withhold their best work. The thinking goes like this. If my leader doesn’t trust me enough to share the complete set of information with me it’s because they don’t think I’m worthy of their trust and they don’t think highly of me. And if they don’t think I’m worthy of their trust, they don’t understand who I am and what I stand for. And if they don’t understand me and know what I stand for, they’re not worthy of my best work.
As a leader, you must share all you can. And when you can’t, you must tell your team there are things you can’t share and tell them the reasons why. Your team can handle the fact that there are some things you cannot share. But what your team cannot hand is when you withhold information so you can gain the upper hand on them. And your team can tell when you’re withholding with your best interest in mind. Remember, you hired them because they were smart, and their smartness doesn’t go away just because you want to control them.
If your direct reports always tell you they can get it done even when they don’t have the capacity and capability, that’s not the behavior you want. If your direct reports tell you they can’t get it done when they can’t get it done, that’s the behavior you want. But, as a leader, which behavior do you reward? Do you thank the truthful leader for being truthful about the reality of insufficient resources and do you chastise the other leader for telling you what you want to hear? Or, do you tell the truthful leader they’re not a team player because team players get it done and praise the unjustified can-do attitude of the “yes man” leader? As a leader, I suggest you think deeply about this. As a direct report of a leader, I can tell you I’ve been punished for responding in way that was in line with the reality of the resources available to do the work. And I can also tell you that I lost all respect for that leader.
As a leader, you have three types of direct reports. Type I are folks are happy where they are and will do as little as possible to keep it that way. Type II are people that are striving for the next promotion and will tell you whatever you want to hear in order to get the next job. Type III are the non-striving people who will tell you what you need to hear despite the implications to their career. Type I people are good to have on your team. They know what they can do and will tell you when the work is beyond their capability. Type II people are dangerous because they think only of themselves. They will hang you out to dry if they think it will advance their career. And Type III people are priceless.
Type III people care enough to protect you. When you ask them for something that can’t be done, they care enough about you to tell you the truth. It’s not that they don’t want to get it done, they know they cannot. And they’re willing to tell you to your face. Type II people don’t care about you as a leader; they only care about themselves. They say yes when they know the answer is no. And they do it in a way that absolves them of responsibility when the wheels fall off. As a leader, which type do you want on your team? And as a leader, which type do you promote and which do you chastise. And, how do you feel about that?
As a leader, you must be truthful. And when you can’t disclose the full truth, tell people. And when your Type II direct reports give you the answer they know you want to hear, call them on their bullshit. And when your Type III folks give you the answer they know you don’t want to hear, thank them.
Image credit — Anandajoti Bhikkhu
Innovation Truths
If it’s not different, it can’t be innovation.
With innovation, ideas are the easy part. The hard part is creating the engine that delivers novel value to customers.
The first goal of an innovation project is to earn the right to do the second hardest thing. Do the hardest thing first.
Innovation is 50% customer, 50% technology and 75% business model.
If you know how it will turn out, it’s not innovation.
Don’t invest in a functional prototype until customers have placed orders for the sell-able product.
If you don’t know how the customer will benefit from your innovation, you don’t know anything.
If your innovation work doesn’t threaten the status quo, you’re doing it wrong.
Innovation moves at the speed of people.
If you know when you’ll be finished, you’re not doing innovation.
With innovation, the product isn’t your offering. Your offering is the business model.
If you’re focused on best practices, you’re not doing innovation. Innovation is about doing things for the first time.
If you think you know what the customer wants, you don’t.
Doing innovation within a successful company is seven times hard than doing it in a startup.
If you’re certain, it’s not innovation.
With innovation, ideas and prototypes are cheap, but building the commercialization engine is ultra-expensive.
If no one will buy it, do something else.
Technical roadblocks can be solved, but customer/market roadblocks can be insurmountable.
The first thing to do is learn if people will buy your innovation.
With innovation, customers know what they don’t want only after you show them your offering.
With innovation, if you’re not scared to death you’re not trying hard enough.
The biggest deterrent to innovation is success.
Image credit — Sherman Geronimo-Tan