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“We cling to our fairy tales until the price for believing in them becomes too high.”
Ransom Riggs
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“The best way to expose our ignorance is to hold on to biased ideas and opinions, because we fear giving the upper hand to the other side.”
Charles F. Glassman
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Business is a tricky combination of adapting and consistency.
Suffice it to say discerning what to keep and build some consistency, and what to change or adapt, is, well, the key to creating a successful business.
Letting go of shit is difficult. We all know that.
But. Knowing when to hold on to something is just as difficult.
Simplistically:
<1> many organizations are burdened with older employees who tend to hold on based on their experience, and
<2> many organizations are burdened with younger employees who tend to let go of existing ideas and opinions based on their lack of experience.
Both sides are stubborn, fearing to give the other the upper hand.
And that is where business really needs to get its shit together. This whole ‘upper hand’ thing.
Because success isn’t about compromise it is more often about good ideas winning no matter where and when and who they come from.
When someone or a generation feels like they have the power, or run the risk of losing power, they do stupid things. Obviously, the business pays the price, not the person doing the stupid things. That is why adapting and selecting what to be consistent about should be about anything but power. It should be about creating a culture & organization in which old & new is debated and ‘the good of the organization & business’ decides what to hold on to and what to let go of.
Far too often the power structure in a business <and this can be one individual wielding an inordinate amount of power or an age group/cohort fighting for their space> holds the ‘fairy tale’ success formula, uhm, until the price for believing them becomes too high.
Unfortunately that moment is often too late to ‘fix’ what has gone wrong.
Regardless. A business’ success, and flaws, is typically driven by a couple attitudinal things <a> a general feeling that you could be doing better and <b> the virtue of the participants.
Doing better.
There is gobs of pressure put on a business both internally and externally. Internally <be successful or be fired> and externally <the market is brutal on any business which does not show growth>. Even if the business has been steadily improving someone will be hammering away on either how terrible things are or how much better it can, and should, be.
Virtue of participants.
A business, in order to function efficiently and effectively, is dependent upon the virtue of the participants. A lack of virtue engenders wasteful transactions, wasteful actions and breeds an overall monitoring cost which can paralyze an organization from any movement or adaptation.
Both of those things I just shared are power. They both have the power to do good, and bad, for a business. What I mean is that the price for believing, disproportionately, in doing better is virtue-driven – that can make the price too high to meet simple ‘doing better’ objectives.
Power, ultimately, resides in, and will always, identifying what should remain consistent and when & where to adapt. All of that is organizationally driven and not individually driven. And yet … it is the individual who must assess all actions & behavior with the intent to always seek when ‘the price in believing something becomes too high.’
In the end I would simply note that the strongest most powerful thing you can do for a business is to understand that doing better with virtue can work.
This is not a fairy tale.
Just know there are no shortcuts and it isn’t easy — you have to work for it.
You have to find ways <just having it as objective will not work>. You have to somehow do something, sometimes anything on occasion, all the while keeping your head on straight and go do something that saves … well … the business <which is kind of like saving the world>.




French values of
… well … I fear that they only believe they can change the world through more altruistic pursuits and not traditional business. And, yes, they are important and good pursuits but, from a larger perspective, business drives the world. Business makes shit that makes lives easier and healthier and impacts the home and life in ways that it is difficult to imagine let alone outline in a few words <and the business office/working groups creates behavioral cues which ripple out into culture>.


It is also sometimes suggested that Life is big & full, therefore, living it fills up so much space and time that if you do just that, live it, you should be satisfied because, what the hell, there isn’t a whole lot more room for anything else because it is so big & full just by living it. This seems to suggest that simply living life, and making it through life, is some achievement in and of itself. I will not argue that simply surviving can be a skill, but that’s kind of like at the bottom of the Maslow expectation in Life pyramid.


laughter that pepper dysfunctional functional family moments.



As a business manager you end up grasping a couple of truths about your employees and their relationship with what they do, their work, their careers and the company.
Work is called work, and not ‘play, for a reason.
come to grips with a job in which they are not in an overly stimulated relationship with.




So. We all need validation.
And, yes, that is a fair worry.
Some people don’t need this often — kind of like maybe once a quarter you receive some validation that you don’t suck as a leader.
We all need some validation on occasion.
Look. Haven’t we seen those people who go 110% all the time on everything? And they get tired. And often frustrated. And they often don’t seem to get as far in life as you would expect for all the energy they have invested. While they may debate with me (because they feel like they are making the choice that has to be made, i.e., I am ‘working at being successful in life’), the reality is they aren’t making any real choice. Anytime you do something 100% of the time you haven’t made the tough choice. Shit. You actually haven’t made any choice at all. The switch is simply flipped into a default mode.
Life is about balance. Balancing rest and energy. But this is where stagnancy or indolence issue steps up to the plate. Because happiness can be such a struggle and ‘doing nothing’ sometimes seems the easiest thing to do. It isn’t (no matter how it may look or feel at the time). You HAVE to invest some energy at some point. If not for you then you have to for those around you. Because in the end we see that the energetic displaces the passive. Even if the passive is “good” (intentions or in heart). Because evil is restless. And energetic.


let it out, and shine, and grow. It is kind of like the latin thought of
born finished and we don’t need others to piece us together and that each of us is strong enough, and born good enough. The thought that all we have is within us.
So. We talk a lot about the fact you cannot run away from things and far less about avoiding.
over 5 billion+ queries a day. This means information is everywhere — regardless whether it is good information or bad information.
In a perfect world you can decide to avoid the real world of the office intrigue and just do what you believe is the right thing to do for the business and ‘do.’
While you may not care about business or business politics my point is my point — you cannot avoid the world to conduct yourself in the ways & means you want to conduct yourself. You are stuck with the world, and in the world, whether you like it or not.