How To Stay Relevant & Have Impact

We are in an age of immense disruption: industries, societal codes, politics, demographics, you name it.  If we are going to handle this continually changing the world, we have to adapt ourselves.  All we can really control is how we react, and more importantly, pro-act to our world.  While we should hold our principles and values dear, we need to reinvent the how, where, and why we live those out.  Grateful to call her a friend, Dorie Clark’s new book, “Reinventing You” is an indispensible guide to just that – reinventing ourselves, continually, to adapt to and thrive in the 21st century.  Many of you may familiar with Dorie’s view on the subject through her Forbes and Harvard Business Review blog posts.

Dorie’s book is a practical, applicable, actionable guide on how we can reinvent our role in the world, and hence our impact.  One of the powerful aspects of the book is Dorie’s ability to go from very specific, tactical details on how to network and reach out to others (e.g., when to call, how to find out nicknames, etc.) to more the more strategic issues around why we need to reinvent ourselves in the first place.  Dorie gives us very actionable advice on how to identify our starting point, why we are starting from there and then discovering possible destinations.  She continues with a ‘how to’ plan that is so easy to follow and execute on our own. 

Since reinventing ourselves can be daunting, Dorie uses a ‘lean startup’ approach to help us experiment and prototype (as she says, “test drive”) our path and develop the skills we might need.  As someone who loves mentoring, and being mentored, her chapter dedicated to finding and learning from a mentor hit home.  Reinventing You shows us how to find our value, communicate our value and continue enhancing our value to others.

Dorie’s book is a much-needed guide among the noise of books on career development, personal development and ‘how to’.  This is a book of truth and practical advice, based on Dorie’s experiences and those of others she shares in the book.  It is a book leaders and managers should share with their people and encourage and support them in pursuing.  It is a book students in college should read as they think about what they may want to do.  It is a book even those of us fully satisfied and complete in our current positions should read. It is a book you will read, mark, re-read and want to loan out to others, so buy a few copies to give away – because paying it forward is part of the book!  

It's Time We Develop A New Relationship With Work

I've been following award winner, internationally acclaimed writer and speaker Tanveer Naseer for a while.  His wisdom and insight, put into language we can all understand and act upon, is a gift.  He generously let me post on his site earlier this month and I'm privileged to return the favor.  You can find more of Tanveer's sagacity on leadership and the workplace here, follow him on twitter @TanveerNaseer, and keep up on what he's thinking here.  Thank you, Tanveer!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It's Time We Develop A New Relationship With Work 

Have you ever noticed how when someone tells us how they've been really busy with work, we automatically interpret this as being a bad thing?  Certainly, no one associates having a lot of work to do with sunshine, love, happiness or any other positive experience.

In many ways, this is a natural product of both our schooling and work experiences, where we're not guided and supported to use our genius, creativity, and talents in order to do the work we should do.  Rather, what is the more common experience is being funnelled through a system that puts us into neat slots like gears in a complex piece of machinery. 

When it comes to work, we've come to accept the concept of 'no pain, no gain' as being the proper route to success and prosperity.  That we need to tough it out in the hopes that – someday – we might finally be able to do what we want to do because we've 'paid our dues'.

To make matters worse, even if we are lucky enough to do work we enjoy, that sense of satisfaction tends to be short-lived as we're rarely given the space to grow and evolve, with the freedom to make mistakes without being blackballed a failure and someone no longer worthy of development or the attention of those in charge.

And so, we inevitably hunker down, hoping that someday our ship will come in as a reward for all the sacrifices we've made, and we'll finally get to live the life we always wanted and do the work that we've dreamed about doing all those many years ago.

No doubt this is why so many insurance and retirement planning companies rely on images of retired couples lounging on a boat off some tropical island, or taking up salsa dancing lessons before enjoying a night on the town. 

In each instance the message is clear – we can live the life we really want . . . but only after we've committed to giving the best part of our lives today to doing work that might not be what we had planned or should be doing.

In this light, it's not too surprising why we've created a negative connotation around the word 'work', whether it's as a verb or a noun.

Of course, there's a truth that we need to come to terms with if we are to truly succeed and thrive – both professionally and personally – and that is that we're not making sacrifices.  We're making choices.  Bad choices.  Safe choices.  Choices that those around us tell us are the 'smart' ones to make, but are often not the best ones for us to choose.

I know I've made a few of those in my past – choices I made to help pay the bills while waiting for that opportunity that I really wanted to show up.  And that's where we fall into the trap, because while we may have accepted these choices as temporary, they soon become the work we do and the life we live because we stop looking for that path that we were meant to take; of reconnecting with the work we were meant to do.  We give up on such dreams in favour of pragmatism and familiarity; of sticking to what we know instead of what we need.

To be clear, this isn't about simply 'doing what we love'.  It's about learning to love what we do because it provides us with a sense of fulfilment.  That our work becomes more than simply a means of survival and living, but a way for us to employ our talents, our genius, and our creativity and drive towards something meaningful and purpose-driven.

While the growing levels of anxiety, fear and stress we see in today's workplaces are partly due to the prevailing uncertainties surrounding the global economy, it is also a manifestation of that disconnect between what we do and why we do it

And it's becoming clear as we move further into this century that this approach to our careers and lives is no longer sustainable; that we've reached a tipping point where people can no longer be expected to feel happy or fulfilled by working to live.  Instead, we need to shift the paradigm to one where people live to work.

Of course, that doesn't mean that the sole reason for our lives is our work; that answering the typical question 'what do you do for a living' serves to define the sum total of our existence.  Rather, it means that we need to be more mindful in ensuring that the work we do is aligned with our internal compass that guides us to finding our purpose and our ability to contribute meaningfully. 

That as much as we're helping our organization to attain its shared goals, we're also performing work that helps us to achieve a sense of purpose – that what we contribute matters and is meaningful beyond our sphere of influence.

In the Great Pyramid of Giza, Egyptologists have found carved in the stone blocks the names of some of the work teams that helped to build this monument.  The carvings were never meant to be seen by others.  Instead, they were made simply to demonstrate the workers sense of accomplishment and purpose that they derived from the simple, but back-breaking work of hauling these large stones into place.

Their example serves as a testimony that we don't need to 'have it all' to feel a sense of fulfilment or achievement.  Rather, all that's required is our willingness to no longer play it safe or waiting until later to commit our creativity, our passions and our dreams to that which not only creates meaning for others, but which also instills a sense of purpose and fulfilment within ourselves.

Tanveer Naseer is an award-winning and internationally-acclaimed leadership writer and speaker.  He is also the Principal and Founder of Tanveer Naseer Leadership, a leadership coaching firm that works with managers and executives to help them develop leadership and team-building competencies to guide organizational growth and development, while ensuring they remain focused on what creates a fulfilling sense of purpose in what they do.

You can read more of his writings on leadership and workplace interactions on his blog at TanveerNaseer.com.  You can also follow him on Twitter - @TanveerNaseer.

Running a Permanent Campaign for Innovation

I feel very honored to have one of my heroes guest blog today.  Julie Anixter has reinvented herself several times and has the rare gift of strong right and left brain thinking.  To say I admire her is an understatement.  Her recent gig has been taking what is commonly regarded as The go to site for the practice of innovation, Innovation Excellence, to the next level.  May I just say, yes, women Rock! Thank you Julie.  

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What I do:

As the executive editor and one of the co-founders (along with Braden Kelley, Zulma Acevedo and Dean DeBiase) and executive editor of Innovation Excellence, I have the privilege and thrill of leading a tribe of really smart committed editors, reporters, researchers, analysts, and social media wizards who are bound together by a common passion - to make innovation an accessible discipline.  One that can be taught.  One that can be used to improve life.   We have somehow created a bigger tribe – about 10,000 people from 175 countries a day come to read and discuss and listen and access the wisdom of the crowd of innovation practitioners who hang out with us.  We’re running a content-driven permanent campaign for innovation.

I’m quite clear its my life’s calling – to wake people up to what’s possible and within reach.  Innovation isn’t a buzzword.  It’s a human birthright.  Men and women can, kids can, and yes, even organizations can innovate.

What I’m Working on Now:

Our Books as Tools Campaign.   At Innovation Excellence we love authors, bloggers, writers and people who use words to create change. We actually believe that some Books aren’t books.  They’re incendiary tools for personal revolution and organizational change.  I know that my friend Deborah, a blogger, teacher, author and change agent of the highest order knows this very well. 

We’re committed to showcasing and celebrating authors’ work in the context of creating action.   

Books provide the courage and stimulus to move people’s molecules around, and when they’re consumed by teams in a deliberate way, the can cause team’s to align to create change – a prerequisite to making innovation happen.

This Spring 2013 we’ve begun by focusing on how books that can be used as tools to inspire and motivate people to act, to change, and to drive innovation where they are.  We started with How Stella Saved the Farm by Chris Trimble and VG Govindarajan – a post Animal-Farm parable about barnyard business mates with a deadly serious intent – that can get 10 people in an organization talking about how they can innovate right where they are.

You can join me, and Chris Trimble, on April 2nd and May 14th as we hold two more online discussions about the real issues teams face when trying to save the proverbial farm.  Or come hang with us on Twitter via #StellaFarm! 

What I dream about:

Actually it’s a waking dream.  And it goes like this.  Did you hear about Congress?  They reached agreement.  Yep.  Reversed those automatic cuts, that sinking sense of failure, and proved that in the end, they could do the deed and collaborate across the aisle.  They’re now focused exclusively on the economy and creating jobs through basic research, infrastructure and oh yes, innovating health care and entitlements.  And what about that Kim Kardashian!  She's donating all the profits from her cover stories and television trials to the Girl Scouts because she wants to help them make their goal of 1 Billion dollars pouring into scholarships to help girls lead and shift the leadership balance.  What did Arianna Huffington say?  If it had been Lehman Brothers AND Sisters it might still be here.  And veterans unemployment?  It's over.  Companies across the land have recognized our sons and daughters and their spouses and kids have made the ultimate sacrifice, and refuse to hire anyone else until every veteran who served America is gainfully employed or engaged and appreciated.  And can you top this...the “food insecurity” nightmare that has little kids dreaming about apples and bananas instead of paying attention in class. We have to take the word out of the dictionary!  It's over too because all the fast food companies are planting organic gardens in their own backyards and everywhere, and distributing it – like my hero Will Allen does at Grow Power in Milwaukee, and the health insurers were so successful in teaching well being as the THE health competency that the Wicked Witch of the West just dissolved, along with all the eany meany bad bosses, and Waste, and Poverty, financial and otherwise, and the general undervaluing of human capital.  It’s over!

And now. We're in the spacious creative Golden Era now.  The renaissance just got rebooted.  We are country that innovates together.  It's just a fancy way of saying...that like the Beatles or Boyz2Men, we're an ensemble, sum bigger than the parts, listening so closely to each other that we can actually make the harmony work.  We solve those pernicious wicked systemic snakey problems with joy and ease.  EVEN CONGRESS!  We make it – life- better. We are the country that innovates together.