This blog assumes that blind spots of power come with the CEO role no matter how good or true or well-intended you are. You can't afford to have them. So I give reminders of what I have seen in my experience to help you see. Or try to see. Monday morning practical tips will help you sharpen up and see what tweaks you and your blind spot. A little whack on the side of the head with your Monday morning coffee.

Monday, March 31, 2014

BLAH BLAH BLAH BUSINESS BOOKS



There really are a lot of blah blah blah business books.
As a top executive you can get quite cynical as authors sell their very simple
model for a very simple problem that with a very simple matrix can make them a lot of money.  Give me a good matrix and I'll show you a best seller.

But there are some good business books too.  Mostly I read to solve a very specific problem.  I don't tuck in with a business book every night.  Usually I scan several books and put together my own concept or practice that fits exactly what I'm working on.

Today, one book keeps coming to mind because it is a remedy for the biggest blind spot of all which is the inability to see your organization as 
a live changing perhaps declining system.  You probably know the book.  It is HOW THE MIGHTY FALL by Jim Collins.  It gives the symptoms of various stages of decline that ring absolutely true to me.  

Here's my challenge.  Invite fifteen people to a lunch with you--randomly selected, various levels.  Make it an invitational to see who wants to play.
Ask them to read the book and assess which stage your company is in based on the indicators in the book.  Don't be blind to the idea that your company might be in the beginning stages of decline.  If you get news you don't like, have another lunch.  Then do something about where you land in the decline slide.  It's a hopeful book. 

 Seeing clearly saves a lot of money and opens lots of opportunity.  And it is the rare executive who can see without the blinders of over optimism, believing their own Wall Street spin, or who can tolerate seeing failure.  I bet this book has not sold as well as Jim Collin's others and it should because it forced a close look at reality.

Monday, March 24, 2014

DOING A VERY TOUGH THING FOR ANY EXECUTIVE



I'm putting my family first.
Visiting grandchildren in Mexico.
Already have 5 ideas to talk about.
Turning from compelling work for family is not easy.
It takes a firm priority
And discipline
And then fun and satisfaction.
Same as any other goal, I guess.

Monday, March 17, 2014

REMEMBER WHEN YOU CARED MORE ABOUT THE "WHAT" THAN THE "HOW"?



WHAT do I want to create?
WHAT idea intrigues me enough to disrupt things?
WHAT can I do better than anyone and that I LOVE to do?
WHAT do I keep thinking about and then shrug off as not possible?
WHAT am I afraid to do for fear of looking foolish?
WHAT would make me look forward to the day?
WHAT do I read that invigorates me?
WHAT do I see as a trend that makes me curious enough to study it?

The constant focus on "how" can be deadening. Efficiency, effectiveness, 
logistics, improvement. Taking the "now" and making it better. Good.
Needed. But not where your CEO brain needs to be all the time.

You have constant day to day demand of reporting results, managing people, resolving the  crisis of the day and monitoring progress--
selling and telling your story to different stakeholders. Needed. Yes.
But very present tense. Your CEO brain needs to be interested in the future.

Back to the "what" that would make you start the same company again.
Juicy, scary, compelling, exciting, just risky enough to keep you on your toes--fun.  

WHAT is the growth engine, not how.








Sunday, March 9, 2014

LET'S HEAR IT FOR WANDERING AROUND!


I'm thinking about Tom Peter's today and his book Passion for Excellence.
If you don't have the book (or the passion) go get it.
The tenets of the book hold over time.

One of the basics of his research about excellence was the habit of leaders to wander around. It was called Management by Wandering Around.  By the way, it was not called Leaders Deigning to Say Hello with a wave like the Pope's.

It was about staying in touch with the people and the business by talking and probing and guiding and listening by walking around without any intention but connection.  It should be one of the most nourishing things a leader can do--for the business and it's people, but primarily for you as the top leader.

Don't be blind to the fact that you can become under-nourished yourself as you get too distant from the life blood and vitality of your enterprise.  You lose the passion for what your business is about.  You lose the pleasure of leading.
You lose the advantage of seeing and hearing future possibilities (and problems) before they emerge too late.  And don't be blind to the fact that much of leadership is managing.  Managing is a good thing, not a lesser thing than leading.  Try a little MANAGING by wandering around. Less grandiose.  More effective.  More fun.

Monday, March 3, 2014

SERIOUSLY?? STILL CHOOSING FEAR OVER SKILL?




I continue to hear overtly or in more coded language that fear is necessary to motivate people to do their best work.  

How Cro-Magnon can we continue to be?

I hate to tell you but there is plenty of fear in the air without using it as a leadership tool. Fear of a world economy gone berserk, fear of acceleration of natural disasters that break everyone's bank, fear of self-destructive political violence.  Hellooo.  That should do it in the fear department for almost anyone.

Continue to use fear if only by innuendo (like suggesting your direct report's job is under threat unless he or she  solves problems that you yourself cannot). Hope you get the irony there.

So keep using fear if you want:

People to do good work only when you are present

To give people motivation to steal and lie and pay you back

A workforce focused on its own security instead of your customer

To be seen as powerless unless using punishment

Talented people to leave the minute they get the chance

A workforce without initiative who does only as told

Customers who can smell the oppression in your store or office

This is what you are choosing if you choose or use fear to motivate.  Duh?