From the category archives:

Management

I was on the phone with someone this morning who I should have talked with a month ago.  I had kept putting the conversation off.  Not because I didn’t want to talk with them, but because I couldn’t get myself organized to have a productive conversation.

She said, You must be very busy.

Not in any unmanageable way, I answered.

What I explained was that the restructuring process that we are undergoing at NCI is progressing in an orderly and productive fashion.  There isn’t an unreasonable amount of time that needs to be spent on it, and the key issues are well-defined and being advanced by a team of very capable professionals who do this kind of thing all the time.

But it does create a distraction.  In the face of uncertainty you spend time thinking through the different possible outcomes and waiting for the next development, which help you narrow that range of outcomes.

We brought the top management together this week to talk about where we are.  I outlined my belief that as a company we’d come through two critical phases:  the first, where we reacted to the economic downturn; and the second, where we created new frameworks for recovering.

We were now at the third phase:  The selling phase.  And, I observed, we weren’t moving with as much purpose and effectiveness as I wanted.

The problem, I think, is that we still believe we are mired in uncertainty.  The questions “When will things improve” and “Will things get any worse” are central to our conversations.

That has to change.  The real questions need to be “What did we do this week and how did it work?” and “If things didn’t work the way we expected, what should we change?”  And then, we have to make the changes.  The only way to have these conversations is to track, report and discuss specifics.  Otherwise, you end up mired in generalities.

The challenge is to really demonstrate the mental fortitude and discipline to face forward.  I acknowledge it’s hard, but boy, it’s necessary.

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Go read this five-part blog series from Erroll Morris and then ask yourself the question, How do I make sure that I know when I’m wrong?

Morris is writing about a condition termed Anosognosia, which you can broadly define as not having a clue how wrong you are. No matter how smart we are, none of us are exempt from the condition: we all will encounter the famous “unknown unknowns” that influence our life on a macro- and micro- scale.


As one expert tells Morris:

But when you’re incompetent, the skills you need to produce a right answer are exactly the skills you need to recognize what a right answer is.

The challenge for those of us who are in positions in responsibility is to minimize the potential for anosognostic behavior as much a possible.

The most important way to do this on a daily basis is to try to see things through other people’s eyes. When someone presents an alternative point of view, no matter how aggressively or impolitely, we are obligated to try to understand how that point of view makes sense to them.

When you are in a position of putative power and authority this is one of the hardest disciplines to exercise. But it is one of the most important.

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The important of accepting yourself and engaging with the people around you in challenging times

March 3, 2010

This has been a challenging time to be in a job. The industry doesn’t really matter, although the industries that I’m close to — housing, multi-family, media, marketing and publishing — have experienced challenges on an order of magnitude that none of us could ever imagine. But for everyone, the work of going to work, [...]

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When’s the last time you told a story?

September 17, 2009

We all love stories and we all love to tell stories. The line of a narrative, with colorful characters, personal touches and suspense and excitement, captures us and engages our imagination.
Why then do we lose touch with the power of story-telling when we approach our business life? Do we think it’s self-indulgent? [...]

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What can we give to the people in our companies?

September 17, 2009

What should we do when the bottom has fallen out?
When you run a company, you intersect with hundreds of lives in dozens of ways. You have some degree of authority, you have a meaningful amount of responsibility, but in the end, you have only a limited amount of control.
The control in your company rests [...]

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American Express gives me a lesson on what not to do with Customer Experience

June 9, 2009

A bad, bad, bad customer service experience with American Express.

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Challenge the status quo & strip everything to its essentials: Pithy lessons from a great entrepreneur

May 31, 2009

Simple and potent guidance from a great entrepreneur: Yves Chouinard

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