DEVELOPING THE PROPENSITY TO SEE, TO MOVE AND TO FINISH
Just sharing one of my random musings. I must say upfront, it's an extended piece. So bear with me.
I reckon most readers are already familiar with the concept that everything we do, especially the more elaborate endeavours, always happens three times.
First, in our mind as a mental construct. A thought. An idea.
Second, as a conceived plan of action, often written down on paper, as we organise our thoughts to formulate our intended strategy ~ to put it to work in some way.
Third and finally, as a physical reality, when we execute our final plan in the real world, business or otherwise.
From my decades of exploring personal as well as professional creativity, I have come to the conclusion that all three parts are critical components in the entire strategy formulation and execution process.
The first part involves the ability to see the whole thing in one's mind's eye, so to speak. Not only that, catching a soft glimpse of it in the first place counts too.
Therefore, suffice to say, if we don't see it, we don't get it.
To my chagrin, I have come across folks out there who don't get it at all, despite the fact that we have done our best to paint the scenarios for them.
Oftentimes, they like to ask for more "information", thinking that more "information" will help in decision making. They don't realise that, as long as they don't know how to use the given "information", i.e. how to draw pertinent insights or "connect the dots", so to speak, the given "information" is just "data".
As a result, they end up unwittingly in data-smog.
At this juncture, I like to make some distinctions:
- "data" is raw and neutral to everyone;
- "information" is what you have made sense of the given "data";
- interpreting "data" requires imagination as well as ingenuity, because you need to see the "form" first, which is a root in "in-form-ation".
Seeing can seemingly be a tough problem for many people, especially those who have low default setting.
My good buddy based in Mumbai, India, Dilip Mukerjea, likes to use the analogy of the thermostat.
With low thermostatic settings, they can only see ahead all within the scope of their own self-imposed limits.
"Closed minds" is another category of people in similar fashion. "A frog in the well" comes to mind too.
Worst still, there is another category - those with "truncated perspectives".
Creativity guru Dr Edward de Bono has spent his entire professional life talking about this critical issue, which he calls "the perceptual phase of thinking".
Other experts have taken a different and creative spin to the phenomenon, and they include: Mark Brown, Joel Arthur Barker, Wayne Burkan, Jay Abraham, John Hagel, John Seely Brown, and Erich Joachimsthaler, just to name a few.
To me, seeing the world out there clearly is always driven - and fueled - by our curiosity or inquisitiveness ~ our sense of wonder and sense of discovery. Our passion, as a whole.
That's why most experts have maintained that we should continue to be child-like as we move into our adulthood, but remember, don't be childish.
You can pose yourself a couple of self-check questions to help you see better:
- what do I choose to see?
- where do I direct my attention?
I am confident by doing this regular self-check on your own, you can get out of what I call the 'Tetris Effect'.
The second part involves clarity of thought.
To me, clarity comes from seeing - and understanding - the big picture, as well as figuring out all the specific tasks, big and small, that are needed to be done in order to attain the results we want.
That is, seeing the forest and the trees.
To use an interesting analogy from the late Singapore's senior statesman and former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, we must have the "analytical ability", "helicopter ability", "imagination" as well as "realism" ~ having a good feel of the pulse on the ground.
Without sounding too arrogant, some people are just too muddle-headed when it comes down to planning. Sad to say, they like to go in all directions.
"Multi-tasking", they say in defence of what they are doing. As a result, nothing works.
Worst still, unintended delays always come to play.
To me, this is primarily a problem of attentional focus on priorities. What matters most, so to speak.
Productivity guru Stephen R Covey had done a lot of elegant work here. Go and digest his potent stuff, especially understanding his 'Four Quadrants'.
Once we can stay focused on our priorities and objectives, it is very easy for us to be flexible in our approach with problems or challenges that pop up along the way. More importantly, to deal with the major issues at hand.
I reckon the following self-check questions can help in developing the power of clarity:
- what do I really want?
- what do I believe?
The third and final part involves action-mindedness. Move it, as the four characters in the popular Madagascar movies love to sing along, to be more precise.
Some people often get stuck with too much logical thinking, and often find themselves hard to move their butts. So, they stay put, and create unnecessary inconvenience to others who happen to be their collaborators.
Do these people - I like to call them, bench warmers or fence sitters - fear the unknown? Maybe so, or more likely, they just love to stay in the comfort zone.
Others are too focused on the "negatives", and as a result of which, they can't seem to see the "positives" and/or "interesting aspects" at all, resulting in inaction on their part.
One particular sage advice I have always followed all these years is that "Action has Consequences".
The consequences can go either way, good or bad. What we can learn from the consequences of completed actions are:
- what works?
- what doesn't work? Why?
- what can we do now to make it work better next time?
Without action, nothing moves. I believe Einstein once said that too.
It is pertinent for me to highlight that moving - or getting things done - is just one thing, finishing what we have started in the first place is significant too.
In other words, successful endeavours depend on the initial move, as well as the next one, and all subsequent moves.
More explicitly, success in any endeavours is always a function of correction. It is natural to stay off course, even for a rocket that goes to the moon. Hence, making corrections and adjustments along the way is part and parcel of the long haul.
There is another interesting perspective to this phenomenon.
To draw an analogy: we are either at 211 or 212.
For the uninitiated: water is hot at 211 degrees, but boils at 212 degrees. And with boiling water, comes steam... steam can power a locomotive. The one extra degree makes the difference.
I reckon Sam Parker and Mac Anderson, who initiated this concept of 212: The Extra Degree, said it best:
"212° is not only a message of action - it's a message of persistent and additional action - the continual application of heat (effort) to whatever task or activity you undertake in order to achieve not only the primary objective you seek, but to reap the exponential rewards that are possible by applying one extra degree of effort."
In other words, staying on course with persistence and perseverance really counts at the end of the day.
It is pertinent for me to highlight that, sometimes, we need to channel our concerted efforts on the small, manageable tasks first, prior to gaining sustainable leverage to gradually conquer the larger ones.
Peak performance experts call this the 'Zorro's Circle'.
Have you watched the entertaining swashbuckling movie, 'The Mask of Zorro'?
In the movie, Anthony Hopkins, who played Don Diego de la Vega, aka "Zorro Senior", took under his personal tutelage a drunken convict, Alejandro, played by Antonio Banderas, who had once saved his life.
Both had a common agenda: revenge against the Spanish governor & his henchmen, but the older "Zorro Senior" wanted to train Alejandro as his replacement, "Zorro Junior", so that both could achieve their aims together.
Unfortunately, Alejandro was obsessed by personal vengeance and was really out of control.
That's when "Zorro Senior" taught "Zorro Junior" the reality of "what is the point of power when there is no control". In the movie, he called it the Training Circle... the Master's Wheel.
I recommend readers to go and watch - or rewatch - the movie.
Unfortunately, there are also some people out there who like to stick to the old way of doing things, despite knowing the fact that the novel approach produces more benefits.
They choose to hold the dogged view that the past = the future.
So, they like to go out there to do what they have done before, and yet expect to get new results.
Einstein once illustrated this as "temporary insanity".
Professor Don Sull of the London Business School calls it "active inertia".
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