Why is it so difficult to get ready?
The time to start getting ready is before we need to be.
We don’t get ready because the problem hasn’t yet kicked us in the head. It has only started getting ready to do so.
We don’t get ready because we don’t see the early warning signs. Like the meteorologist who doesn’t make time to look at the radar and satellite images, if we don’t look, we can’t see. And if we’re really busy, we don’t make time to look. What if it was part of our job to look at the satellite images? Who in our company should have that job?
We don’t get ready because we don’t heed the early warning signs. Seeing the warning signs is much different than justifying the reallocation of resources because someone says the tea leaves suggest an impending problem.
We will solve no problem until it’s too late to do anything else.
We don’t get ready because we forget that it takes time to get ready. We do so little getting ready, we’re unfamiliar with the work content and timeline of getting ready. We forget that getting ready is on the critical path of problem-solving.
We don’t get ready because everyone is fully booked and we have no excess capacity to allocate to getting ready. And by the time we free up the resources to get ready (if we can do that at all), we miss the window of opportunity to get ready.
We will solve a problem only after exhausting all other possibilities.
We don’t get ready because the problem is someone else’s. If we don’t have capacity to get ourselves ready for our problems why would we allocate the capacity to get ready for someone else’s?
We don’t get ready because we try to give our problem to someone else. Isn’t it easier to convince someone else to get ready than to do the getting ready ourselves?
We will solve no problem until we know we’ll get the credit.
We don’t get ready because problem avoidance won’t get us promoted, though putting out a fire that could have been avoided will.
If a problem is avoided, there is no problem. And since there’s no problem, there’s no need to avoid it.
We don’t get ready because there’s no certainty a problem will be a problem until we have it. And we can’t get ready to solve a problem once we have it. Getting ready requires judgment and trust – judgment by the person who sees the early warning signs and trust by the person who allocates the resources. It’s that simple.
Because we’ve conditioned people to be afraid to use their judgment, they don’t use it. And because we’ve conditioned people to be afraid to spend the time needed to build trust, they don’t build it.
Now that we have these two problems, how can we make it safe for people to use their judgment and spend the time needed to develop trust?
Image credit — Leonard J Matthews