Leaving

Leaving

Everybody wants a theme song.  To make a grand entrance.  To make a dramatic exit.  They want to say something profound, drop the mic, and exit stage left.  Some people even like to make a grand exit when they leave a job.  (Remember Jerry Mcguire walking out with a loud declaration and a goldfish in a ziplock bag?)

Launch

Launch

I was visiting with a younger man and his wife on the phone last night.  He and I have spoken dozens of times, but only met on one occasion.  Though we have “known” each other only a few years, we’ve helped each other walk through some of the most aggressive moves and challenging times of our lives.  

Oxygen

Oxygen

Walter Mitty has lived such an uninteresting life that his E-harmony rep, Todd Maher, feels sorry for him.  In trying to beef up his profile, they quickly came to the conclusion that not only isn’t there anything “noteworthy or mentionable” about Walter, but he hasn’t really been anywhere “noteworthy or mentionable” either.  

Rent

Rent

We rented for quite a few years before we bought.  One of the most beautiful things was that at the slightest interruption in service of any kind on that house, I could just call the landlord.  I remember the first few times things broke and wrestling with whether or not I should fix them or ask the owner.  I usually fixed them, but I could tell by the landlord’s reaction this isn't what people typically did.

Humility

Humility

That is one of our favorite words, right?  How couldn’t it be.  It is replete with goodness, sentimentality, and doing the right kind of things.  It speaks to not having too high of an opinion of yourself.  It is one of the two things that Jim Collins identified as the key difference between “level 4” and “level 5” leaders in his classic book, Good to Great.

Choose

Choose

Do you have the right people sitting around your leadership table?  It is your right and your responsibility to choose.  The fruit and impact that the right leadership team can produce are extraordinary.  It might just be the most important thing you do this year.

Ripple

Ripple

Everybody loves their university experience and for likely different reasons than everyone else.  It is a product of the time of life, the people in proximity, the growth you experienced, and the vectoring direction life took after that season.  Mine is no different, but again, for likely different reasons than yours.

Bench

Bench

Brock Stassi and his brother Max have been bouncing around the minor leagues for years.  Baseball has been in their family for generations.  Their father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were all catchers who played in the minor leagues.  A few weeks ago, at the almost impossible age of 27, Max found out that he made the final roster for the Philadelphia Phillies.  He is finally a major leaguer.  His reaction was priceless.

Parent

Parent

Lee had a wildly successful career.  First, for a couple of decades with the Marriott corporation and then for a couple more with Disney.  While he was already successful by many measures, he didn’t became a world class leader until a wake up call in El Paso.  He was there to meet with one of the mangers who ran a hotel that Lee had supervisory responsibilities over.

Advocate

Advocate

A good friend of mine was awakened to a calling while on a mission trip to Africa.  He saw what a game-changer it was to provide fresh water to a village by drilling a well.  He had a desire to do more... He realized that if he could get other people to participate in a similar experience, it would change their lives as well.

Inspire

Inspire

Michael Mankins, a partner with Bain & Company, is a productivity expert.  He utilizes their own proprietary research, like the best academic studies from places like Harvard, and their own anecdotal evidence from their client base.  Some of the things he summarized in a recent article are powerfully illuminating.

He says that super successful companies are not succeeding due to a higher percentage of high-performers.  They actually hire a comparable number based on the studies that measure that sort of thing.  Mankins says they win by reducing institutional drag.

Archer

Archer

One of my favorite leaders runs a self-storage business.  It was designed intentionally with the latest and greatest cutting edge technology to increase the customer experience, while minimizing the need for much staffing.  If anyone could make the case for not investing in an employee development plan, this guy could.

Reception

Reception

One of my good friends was trying to hear from God.  He was sitting on some simple questions whose answers would be revolutionary in his life.   After several weeks he came back to me with an exasperated, “I’m not getting anything.”  He finally confided that his hunting lease seems to be the one place where he really think and hear.

Crash

Crash

Stephen Mansfield has a pretty interesting job.  His company specializes in helping companies and organizations get back on track after a key leader falters.  Many of those national stories you’ve heard involving financial impropriety, deception, or moral failure in pastors or business leaders has a “rest of the story” that includes Mansfield and his company.  They come in after the crash to build a path back.

Good

Good

The kind of intentional leaders who hire people like us typically have done many of the right things.  They have worked hard to hire well, attempt to take care of their employees, and some have even crafted centering values and purpose for their organizations.  These are all good things.

Architect

Architect

A mentor once said I was “cross brained." He said that I had a highly analytical (even mathematical) side but was very creative as well.  He said that that I operated simultaneously in both hemispheres comfortably rather that predominantly residing more on one side of my brain or the other.  That was helpful and clarifying.  It helped give language to some of the traffic constantly going on in my head.

Starfish

Starfish

A family is on vacation at the beach and the kids are collecting shells.  It's a well-scavenged beach, so this means that they are essentially filling their hands with fragments of shells.  One of the boys notices a beautiful starfish bobbing in the water and decides he is going to wade in and capture the prize.