
“We” versus “Me”
Create a sense of community within your organizations. Yes, the profit motive is important, but your organization has a real opportunity (and, I would argue, an obligation) to help build the emotional intelligence, self-awareness, situational awareness, and lifelong learning skills your employees need to succeed at work and within the broader community.
Silence is Complicity
There is only one way: forward (which, by the way, is the motto of my home state of Wisconsin) and together. We cannot move forward if we’re so polarized and fixed in our thinking that the act of “listening” to the other side amounts to canned, party-approved responses that paint political opponents and our neighbors as “enemies” and “evil.”
You Can Predict the Future!
It should be no surprise to frequent readers in this forum that the tools needed to improve the accuracy and fidelity of business forecasting are pinned in the tenets of continuous improvement and organizational health. The “ah ha” moment I hope you’ve had is the importance of having strong financial modeling skills embedded in your organization.
Cultivating the Inner Eye
The first step on the journey to strengthen the fidelity of our inner eye is to recognize our obligation to learn and continuously improve. Without a strong inner eye, we become rigid, fixed and unyielding. Without a strong inner eye, it is difficult to see ourselves as part of the solution to challenges. We easily fall into the trap of a blame mindset and are easily swayed by strong voices that are not our own.
Family First, a Christmas Special
It’s a common refrain from both employers and employees: “My team is a family,” or “Come work for us, our company has a real family atmosphere.” While typically meant to convey a sense of warmth, belonging, and bonding, I believe the word “family” should exit our business vernacular and be reserved for reference to our core family units.
The Lessons We Teach Our Children
It was a magic show. A magic show presented during a global pandemic that has killed millions. To help keep everyone safe from the virus and allow the “show to go on,” the organizers instituted a very simple attendance criteria that everyone wear a face covering to limit the spread of airborne particles that contain infectious disease.