Thursday 29 December 2011

Counting One's Blessings & Male Anorexia

As the parents of a teenage girl, my wife and I have faced a few challenges. These have included control battles about what she wears, what she eats, how much studying she does and if and where she goes out. At times his has been a real struggle, creating huge tensions between the three of us; wife, daughter and me.

Fortunately there are signs that we may be on the brighter side of the mountain now. In truth it seems to have been after she surprised herself with better GCSE results than even she expected and then embarking on a new phase of her schooling in Sixth Form.

The first sign was a lack of fight getting her up and out to school in the morning - she does it all herself. Then a strong performance when talking in front of the school elicited a lot of praise and encouragement from her teachers, we saw a new ambition in her eyes. She has since moved on in her interest in drama, taking her LAMDA (London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts) exam and, following a stint modelling on a school fashion show, she has been asked to do the same for a big Charity Show early in 2012. Linked with this she has now been on three photography shoots and from what we have seen, acted like a pro, as if she had done it all her life.

She has also been taken on for part time work in the clothing section of our local garden centre. The phrase "like a duck to water" comes to mind and she has already had good periods when she has been alone an fully responsible for the department. The feedback from others we know there has been very positive.

The last too pieces I wanted to record before I look too smug have happened just recently. Both happened yesterday. The first reacted to an disagreement we had about how high the stratosphere s above the earth. It does not matter how that dispute came up, but suffice it to know my daughter was adamant that I was wrong and she was right. Then yesterday morning she spontaneously admitted I was right. When I asked, she confirmed that she had bothered to look it up online. This effort to look something up surprised me, but more than that was the fact that she bothered to tell me I was right. In the past, to have admitted her Dad was right, would have been too painful to contemplate and thus would never have happened.

The second item was her conversation after I had taken her to see the latest Sherlock Holmes film last night. Not only did she enjoy it, but she was asking questions about the plot structure and commenting on how the film was shot and edited. This links with her work in drama, but shows a growing maturity and depth. I am very proud of her.

Putting this all in perspective is our concern and support for friends whose young son seems to have developed anorexia or something similar. We have only just learned about this, though it does seem to have manifested rather quickly anyway. A little research shows that male anorexia is rare and often not recognised until quite late. He is very successful in many ways; school, singing and sport to name but three aspects, yet somehow something is not right. In respecting their privacy it would be wrong to go into any detail here, but seeing the worry, stress and strain they are all under has certainly made me count our blessings and value them at least double.

In respect of our friends all we can do is be the best support we can be. We have been researching the topic, exchanging messages as they travel away for New Year and we will be there for them all in 2012.
Since becoming a parent, I have learnt so much about so many things I would never have dreamt I would. Male anorexia looks as it will now join the list. One thing to be thankful for is the knowledge bank that is the Internet, it makes researching topics do much easier. In case anyone else is looking for information on male anorexia, a useful link is www.anorexiaboy.co.uk .

Thursday 22 December 2011

Looking forward to Christmas



This may seem corny, but I am looking forward to Christmas....probably more than in previous years. I was trying to work out why and have come to a couple of conclusions.

The first is that we have less stress this year. We, my family area staying at home and others are coming to us. It is a little flexible but we will have something like 14 people on each of Christmas Day and Boxing Day. We catered for this number not long ago after my nieces 18th birthday party so we know we can do it relatively simply. The table is big enough! The range provides enough oven and stove top capacity. We, my wife and I, can work it well between us.

On top of that, no one has been pressured to come. My nieces want to come, as do their partners. It is quite something that they all feel comfortable to come to our home and be part of the festivities. Additionally my wife's second young cousins want to come too. This to me is a large part of what Christmas is about.

My daughter has grown a lot this year and in the last couple of weeks we have seen her take part in a couple of modelling photo shoots ahead of a fashion show next year along with starting a weekend / part-time work and seems to be doing well. She has taken on additional hours over this Christmas period and is blossoming.

Another possible factor is that I have not been employed in the run up to this Christmas. In itself that is not necessarily good, but it does mean I have not been immersed in all that Christmas is the office. No big Christmas party, no relentless eating and drinking with clients and colleagues. No commercial pressures.

In short a combination of "less is more" and a maturing of family group seem to be the key factors making this Christmas feel better. I do hope it lives up to expectations, but the signs are good.

Best wishes to everyone who has read my blog this year. If I have a wish for 2012, it is that I hope this blog receives a few more comment in future, making it a little more interactive. For my part I will continue blogging about things that catch my eye, stir my imagination or just look interesting.

Monday 19 December 2011

This year seems different!

Now it may just be me and where I find myself, but as I catch up with many people I know, the end of 2011 feels different to previous years. There are a number of signs that I will cover and see if I can draw a thread joining them at the end.

#1 This is about the attitude to working over the Christmas period and the run up to it. In previous years it has felt as if business closed after the first week of December, though many people stuck around to party, network, etc. Personally this year that fade of activity has only happened in this last week before Christmas, BUT there seem to be more professional firms who are just closing for one or two weeks, sending contractors home (on no pay!) and not even attempting to maintain a pretence of business as usual. This seems to be a mixture of two things a drive to get as much done as canbe done at the end - my guess is appraisals and the hope of bonus' is driving a lot of his, but in the same vein recognising when progress is impossible ie the period directly over Christmas and working to save any avoidable expense at all in order to put the best shine on the finances. Materially the savings are probably minuscule, but psychologically and politically they have weight.

#2 Conversation over the holidays drinks and dinners seems more earnest. I hear deep conversations about the impact of the Euro collapsing or at least a few currencies falling out. While no one knows for sure there seems to be a view that it is a matter of when rather than if. As a result debates about the notation of contracts, absence of money stocks, etc seem to have a higher seat at the table than similar topics had in previous years.

#3 I hear repeated stories about budget cuts, about "no brainier" projects failing to get approval, about it being well into Q1 2012 before change portfolio are finalised(?) - even later than usual and about big projects under review and/or perceived to be in trouble.

#4 To balance this there seems to be endless regulatory change, now topped off with the drive to separate retail and investment banking in the UK. Calls for specialists in risk, KYC (know your customer) and the data that underpins all this seem to come I regularly.

#5 I know of at least three change teams in leading banks and institutions that are trying to build a new and improved change delivery capability. They are existing contractors (perceived as expensive and transitory) and replacing them with permanent employees. The view seems tone that there are good people in the employment pool. I know a few contractors who ave had their heads turned and come back from the "dark side".

I am sure there is more I could pull out and I do recognise that I am talking about change in financial services, but ate time when there aye should be more gloom, many are rubbing their hands together and looking forward to 2012. While there may be an inordinated focus on regulatory matters and much that is expected is still unknown, there is a optimism that there will be change and opportunities. This mood is strangely more positive than previous years.

Of course the change people will need to be agile and maybe a little patient, but there are more smiles than frowns, and plenty of networking underway.

I will look back at the end of Q1 and consider how it all pans out. Meantime I will be interested to hear how anyone else finds the closing weeks of 2011?

Wednesday 14 December 2011

The worst Christmas carol ever?

St Edmunds College Chapel
On Monday we attended my daughter's school's carol concert and encountered what I think is possibly the worst Christmas carol ever. While being a strong Catholic school (no we are not catholic), it always manages a welcoming, inclusive carol concert in their old chapel. The choir features soaring descants and they get the "length" just about right at a little over an hour.

We have attended most years and once again they did it well this time. As usual they mix traditional and lifting congretational carols with choral pieces. These are largely familiar and include "Oh Come All Ye Faithful" at the end. This is a carol that was composed by a member of the college, John Francis Wade, in 1760 and first performed when the school was in exile as the English College in Douai, France. This year they had the original manuscript on display and sang the first verse in Latin. That was interesting.

Having said they did well, the order of service included "Of the Father's Heart Begotten" as a congregational hymn in the middle. I had never heard of this before and found that it rather like a dirge and difficult to sing. Of course a lack of familiarity did not help, but the problem was fundamentally deeper than that. I found the lyrics barely scanned, the music was pretty much of a drone and no descant to rescue it.

I felt it spoilt the flow and tone of the service. To me, and I am not "churchy", carols should be uplifting, inspirational and most of all enjoyable and engaging. This was not. Such a shame and, in my opinion, and unusual failure of judgement.

It reminded me of a Phil Collins concert at Wembley a few years ago. At this event Phil Collins played a very mixed bag of songs with no apparent shape or pattern. It was interspersed with continual pleas to give money to the homeless. As a paying member of the audience it felt as if he was playing to please himself, not to entertain or engage. All in all it was a big disappointment.

While I recognise that the primary reason for going to church/chapel is not to be entertained, engagement is critical and ever more important, so I will leave the reader to draw their own parallels.

My parting words are to suggest that anyone who has responsibility to put together the running order for a carol service should fight any temptation to include "Of the Father's Heart Begotten"!

Thursday 8 December 2011

Greater than the sum of the parts - the importance of integrity!

I am just heading home from an enjoyable and reinforcing evening with ex-colleagues. These were from one of the high performing teams I have blogged about previously. We slipped into an easy repartee and banter that lasted throughout the evening. There was a tolerance of our individual differences and a reminder of how we leveraged those same differences to create something that was greater than the sum of the parts.

In talking with a friend beforehand, I had commented that in part this great team and others hinged on the fact that the leader was comfortable in their own skin. Without this they cannot assemble the right collection of individuals and then preside over them as a team.

The other criteria came out more explicitly. It seemed that we all had someone who is/was there bĂȘte noir. For me this hinges on personal integrity ie lie to me and let me know you have lied (I am pretty smart!) and we will have problems in future. Interestingly, given we all operate in the world of financial services, there was unanimous agreement that personal integrity is the floor for building trust and being within the circle of trust. This really should not surprise me, but it does in a world where one wonders what values survive.

It fills me with a renewed optimism and a clear yardstick to use in future. As they say, "caveat emptor".

Monday 5 December 2011

Why does your golf ball go where it does??

I have been playing golf for around 20 years and my enthusiasm still outweighs my ability. While I can hit a long, straight ball (and these are the ones that bring you back!) they are still in the minority. It could be something to do with a lack of skill. I struggle to play any game requiring me to hit a moving ball and am still amazed I can hit a golf ball.

I have had lessons and heard my teachers tell me to feel the club head open, or the shaft kick, or my body tense. In truth I struggle with these verbal prompts. I am a physicist by training and I like to understand how things work so the when I found a good set of diagrams in Golf World in February 1995 they helped me a lot, particularly the last two. I slice the ball rarely now, though I do still hook badly at times. I still hit the "full range of shapes", but not on demand.

This makes my game rather unpredictable, but understanding the combination of events that lead to a particular outcome does help my quest to improve.

I came across a digital copy of these diagrams on an old hard disk the other day and in case these are of help to others I thought I would reproduce them here. I hope they will help others who "learn" in this way.




















Tuesday 29 November 2011

Catastrophic change and the safety of buying IBM.

For a while now I have been advocating that the business world I inhabit has undergone a paradigm shift or, in mathematical terms, a catastrophic change.  What I mean by that is there has been a fundamental change in many of the assumptions affecting business and as a result we need to think about and manage business and its resources very differently; a transformational change from one working framework to another.

As business has realised that it no longer knows what it thought it knew and has less idea about how to move foreward with confidence there has been a commensurate change in risk appetite and thus behaviours. Not surprisingly there has been move to risk aversion, not only on a corporate level, but also, more relevantly, on a personal scale. This is, in my opinion, driving some counter-productive behaviours.

When I started working some years ago, there was a management saying that no one got sacked for buying IBM. There may have been financially more advantageous deals around with other manufacturers, but IBM was the "safe" decision. Well in the current world it seems that the equivelant position is to be seen to be trying something new (with new people). It seems that to draw upon past experience and personnel involved in the "old" business is the risky option, even where they have shown an ability to adapt and create. Much safer to do "new things" with "new people", because even if the result is no better then at least you tried.

This is a bit like throwing the baby out with the bath water. The big unspoken risk is that one makes a poor trade, bringing in blatant and unfounded opportunism in place of good judgement, resilience, and other qualities that are still relevant and valuable. In contrast those that are already in the company have a bond and an understanding that helps them work together (the operative word being TOGETHER). Yes, they may need new skills, they may need a refocussing of mind and body, but at the core they already work together. They also probably know many of the issues that have been faced and the pitfalls to come. To discard this carelessly seems wasteful, yet it is the most common pattern I observe these days.

Part of this problem is changing the "contract" with existing staff, frequently undermining loyalty, trust, respect, etc. and thus engagement and commitment. It is not surprisng when this elicits what are seen as undesirable behaviours. I have spoken of reciprocity, of investing before one expects to accumulate. Of course it is much more comfortable to bring in people you know, but that just makes a bigger group who do not know the company. Usually it is more devisive than constructive, even if it does give an illusion of quicker progress. I can think of a number of examples, that I won't identify, where after an initial burst of progress, things slow right down as the newcomers (re-)discover all the previous staff already knew.

So you get my view? It is to build on the positives. By all means augment them and weed out the irrecoverables, but be very wary of wholesale turnover when you see it in teams that are meant to be delivering significant and startegic change to you.

Now I would like to explain Catastrophic change as I think the mental image will help you identify it when you encounter it in your world.

Catastrophic Change

Some years ago a college friend gave me a book that is now rather yellowed, called " Catastrophe Theory" by Denis Postle. It is by necessity a branch of complex mathematics with multiple "dimensions" and some wonderful names like parabolic umbilic. In it however is a simple diagram that I have held in my head and used a number of times to understand this type of change.

In essence the the concept is that there are behaviour surfaces that represent all the likely behaviour for a set of conditions. Let us take an example of trust and argue that it is a function of both credibility (ie can they do the job required) and confidence (will they do they job required). The red surface below represents all the levels of trust that could exist for the various levels of credibility and confidence.


Now if that surface was not smoothe like that but had a fold in it as illustrated below.




While much "normal" change can be pretty much undone by reversing the factor that created the change, a catastrophic change cannot. For example a 1/2 % change in interest rates will change business behaviours in some way or another. This could be modelled and factored into business plans etc. The reversal of that 1/2% change would reasonably be expected to largely reverse that position, bringing the world as a whole back to pretty much where it started.



The implications are twofold. Either you choose stay on a new "level" with new rules about action and reaction, change and resistance. Your new realities will be truly new and you will need to find new measures of progress and recalibrate success. One implication is that "IBM" may no longer be the safe option!

IF you really need to regain your original position it will be a much harder longer path through areas you are unlikley to have experienced before. This may be so different and so tortuous that it may be practically impossible to recovery to position A.

In this latter case there is a grieving/acceptance process to deal with the loss of the old reality.

I have found these diagrams and thinking useful on a number of occassions and think they are very relevant today. Do let me know what you think?

Thursday 24 November 2011

Can you be trusted? Is this limiting your effectiveness as a leader?


I feel today that a number of things I have discussed here and with others in the past are coming together. The latest trigger was two minute webcast from John Kotter, the well-known expert on change, entitled “Leveraging Trust to Achieve Buy-in”. There are some very strong messages in there and I commend the investment of two minutes.
 
For the record, the other threads were:-
  • when something has come up three times it is something that warrants your attention and action,
  • there is something really special about being in a high performing team and I have been lucky enough to be a member of more than one. The spirit of trust as opposed to distrust was one of the most obvious differences
  • there is the trust formula that I have shared before
  • some recent work I have been doing mentoring a developing executive.
In truth the significance and trail works backwards. It started with a discussion over lunch about why this executive was not getting the performance they expected from some key some key members of their team. We looked at whether they had a team or a group and what situational style might be required (as against the one they were employing). We also looked at the responsibility for performance, ie if the team member lacks either the aptitude or the training required for the required outcomes then responsibility rests with the manager to resolve. Included in this, is the question about whether they understand what “good” looks like and feels?

If, however, it is a question of attitude then it is the employee's issue and requires different behaviours from the management. This situational adjustment is not always easy for a manager, especially those who focus solely on their own framework of values and need or those see consistency as a virtue.  In truth these are not in conflict. One can be exceedingly consistent in the vision one sets for results and behaviours and the personal values one exhibits; this does not mean you cannot respond to different individuals in ways that are most appropriate and effective for the time and place.

We then moved onto the question of trust ie did the team members trust the manager? We used the trust formula that says that trust the result of

(credibility x reliability x intimacy) / (self interest)

The intimacy here talks about does the other person know you well enough – not that they know everything, but that they can connect and empathise with you. The powerful denominator of “self interest” relates to how they perceive your motivation ie in their  interest, yours or the more general good.

The Kotter webcast ties the question of trust into parallels with ones personal life. The comment that struck most was “if I trust you, when I listen to you, I am not looking for ulterior motives so I listen more carefully to what you say…….and if indeed you are saying something sensible I will buy it……if trust goes up, buy in goes up to.”

I have seen the positive impacts of this many times, but not as many as the times when a lack of trust impeded progress. After training and working with American Banks at the start of my career, I joined Flemings (since bought by Chase and then subsumed into JP Morgan). It struck me there that having grown from being a smaller family firm and still private heavily influenced by the family, the environment was one of trust. If you were hired and proved your ability in the first 12-24 months you entered into a “circle of trust” that opened opportunities and supported real progress. In terms of the formula one had proved credibility and reliability, achieved an appropriate intimacy and had aligned interests.

It would be wrong to suggest that the world has not changed, especially financial services. We now have a greater focus on risk management through checking and double checking; keeping evidence of anything and everything that might come under scrutiny. I would also suggest though I have no data to support it that an individual’s average time in post and time with employer has reduced. This makes the development of trust more difficult. By way of reference, at Flemings a high proportion of the company including the leadership teams had been with the company for at least 10 and often more than 20 years! This is not something that can be easily duplicated, but the key lessons can be taken and applied.

So put this all together, and top it with the positive feeling when someone has stated that they trust me with something they are developing( and have acted on that statement) and the pieces feel as if they are building.

This last item is my concluding thought/observation for this blog and it is the power of reciprocity. It is not rocket science to see that it is easier to be trusted when one trusts in return. Indeed initiating the spirit of trust will often elicit valuable responses and acceleratinge understanding, engagement and commitment.

To me trust is the key to delivering success in many aspects of life. In busines, the more common and mechanical leadership development tools can be viewed as mechanical first-aid to compensate for low levels of trust. I suggest that the nurturing of trust is where we, as leaders, should place our effort to improve.

Three closing questions to reflect upon:-
  • Who should you trust more and what will you do to do that?
  • How easy is it for others to trust you?
  • When was the last time you demonstrably trusted a member of your team, as opposed to holding back or double checking?
Please share any thoughts or experiences.

Thursday 17 November 2011

Are we trying to bolt the financial stable after the money has gone?




This morning I joined a discussion about how to mitigate the risks of financial firms failing. This was prompted by the recent default of MF Global, but there is a growing list that will continue to extend. Other names include Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns, etc.

In our increasingly complex and joined up world this is becoming more of an issue as the numbers and impact seems to grow day by day. Not long ago the failure of a company was largely a local or national issue, now it is rarely less than an international concern and many are truly global. While the complexity of modern derivatives definitely adds to the worries, the simpler, cash markets ( ie simple trading of straight forward assets such as stocks and bonds for cash settlement) are far from sorted.

The group was drawn from the "post trade" community ie those concerned with recording and settling (ie completing) the deals that have been done. As such it was not surprising that their focus was largely infrastructural ie rules, responsibilities, checks and balances.

I took two things away from this session. The first was the acknowledgement that the rules differ across the world. What may appear to an outsider to be two similar trades (or contracts) may well be governed by very different rules and require intervention by different people. Compounding this is the reality that not even the two parties to the trade may not see the situation in a similar way. These differences are often encased in local legislation and embedded regulation. Changing it is not easy and will take time.

Anecdotally, when the administrators stepped in to mop up at Lehman's, they were surprised(!) to find that their activities would be constrained by a myriad of local rules, regulations and contract law rather than a single over-arching framework.

The call from these post trade practitioners was for a unified set of rules and processes. While this may be the "pure" answer, it is not likely to happen quickly or in my lifetime. Undoubtedly better communication and co-ordination on the event of failure will improve matters and that may be the best interim objective.

The second point was that we are talking about a very smart business community where if a particular rule is seen to impede the realisation of profit, both corporate and personal, then it is likely some bright person will find a legitimate(?) way around that rule. Rules only wok if they are well understood and everyone follows both the intent and spirit of them. That is not the case in the more creative aspects of the financial world, rules can be considered a temporary impediment.

Not matter how good the intent and execution of the post trade practitioners, reliance on the rules seems to me to be an act of to bolting that proverbial stable after the horse has bolted.

Looking back on my career we had earlier "failures" such as BCCI, Robert Maxwell's midnight swim and Leeson's rape of Barings. While I recognise that the world was simpler then, it is true that many businesses, including ones I was involved with, made early judgement calls to either limit or avoid business with certain counterparties. We knew who the less "stable and reputable" brokers were, which banks fell short in terms of professionalism and management was ready and able to act upon market intelligence, most of which proved to be very accurate in hindsight. They did not rely on a computer or a crefit rating agency to say "No" or for the day after to act.

Somewhere we have lost these prudent and good practices, albeit in the name of making it fair for all. In practice we have once again come down to the lowest common denominator not the highest.

HSBC's threat to move its headquarters out of the UK because of what they consider to be unduly harsh capital requirements is interesting they cite the impact of the additional requirements on their already huge profits. As a modern investor do I really want a firm that is seeking to be less secure?

I applaud the attempts to improve matters, but wonder if we are aiming at the wrong target? If so how can we bring the contribution of good and sound judgement back to the fore of our increasingly troubled world?



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A Proud Man Steps Down







Yesterday Martin Johnson resigned as manager of the England rugby union team. There is some debate about whether he was pushed or jumped and that will probably become clearer over the next few days as the report on England's disappointing World Cup campaign is revealed and digested.

As reported in The Times today he left with some aplomb, refusing to allocated blame and instead and typically shouldering responsibility alone. It was reported as a sad day, and indeed the loss of contributor such as Martin is sad, but I think the sad days happened sometime ago and unless we and the RFU learn then we will see more.

Some things are irrefutable. As a leader on the field he was magnificent. His work ethic, the execution of his role as enforcer and the inspiration he gave to players around him, young and old, have long been clear and recognised.

He learnt a lot of his craft in his early days in New Zealand, his leadership skills were recognised by Ian McGeechan on the Lions tour of 1997 and he spearheaded a triumphant team of World Cup winners in 2003. This is all alongside an illustrious career with Leicester.

When he joined as England manager the RFU was already in some disarray. He went about his role quietly, but earnestly. He kept faith with some worthy stalwarts and has found some exciting talent eg Courtney Laws, Ben Foden, Chris Ashtonto name but a few. Some of his selections have seemed a little strange, but that is true of any manager.

Another irrefutable fact and one much covered in the papers is that his team let him down in New Zealand this year. During matches they were on the field, not him, and needed to step up - few did. Off the the field he should not have needed to micromanage them. They are professional players, some very experienced who were on their greatest playing field so to speak and their behaviours while under that spotlight was at best adolescent. I have blogged about this before under the heading "the clueless and the stupid" and they certainly were.

Reports from yesterday left me with the impression of a man cut adrift. He striggled with a dysfunctional Infrastructure that would have been in intensive care anywhere else. I do have a little insight into some of the recent machinations and i would challenge anyone above Martin to be proud of their contribution).

Yesterday Rob Andrew gave no support and Martin Johnson gallantly refused to criticise. Rob's view on personal responsibility obviously differs from that of many. That is a sad observation for someone I such a responsible role.

I have seen a quote attributed to John Kotter that effective leadership is about outcomes not behaviours. By this measure Martin Johnson has come up short on his own expectation and that of others. That said rugby like business is a team sport and that team is much wider that the 15 players on the field or the 22 in the match day squad. It includes the support staff and surrounding structures.

Martin deserved more support than he has received from a dysfunctional union. He rightly expected more from his players. A team has to be prepared to be led. And management team have to support each other, through the good and the bad.

I sincerely hope that a good many others are reflecting on their lack of (or destructive) contribution to events and that they sleep a lot less comfortably than Martin Johnson does now.

I am sure he has been and will continue to ask himself what he could or should have done better, but I hope that self flagellation does not last long. Sometimes circumstances to not favour even the best. I sincerely hope he finds a happier place personally and professionally.

In the same vein I hope the RFU can be man enough to learn from this and that in the four years before we are World Cup hosts the whole demeanour improves and we do not disgrace ourselves again (and I am not talking about Martin!)

We can, but hope. Maybe England should change their permanent playing strip to grey or even black. Not as homage to New Zealand but to signify the fall from grace. Let's see the white return when they deserve it.

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Wednesday 16 November 2011

The Power of Absence






Some years ago I was working with the designer or research publications. I was still relatively green in business and coming from physics background I found that the written word was not my best friend.

It was an interesting time and one thing I do remember learning was the power of white space ie the absence of text. This was used to add structure to a written page, helping the reader's eye scan for context and importance. In this instance white space was important and valuable in creating engaging publications.

A related white space called rivers was not good. A river is when a whole series of breaks between words on adjacent lines join up to create what looks like a vertical meandering river or stream in a block of text. These can be distracting for the reader and old school print skills such as changing the kerning (spacing between letters) came into play. Of course in the modern Internet world an author has little or no control over this a much software renders to its own rules and capacity. That is unless the rendering Is in the form of a picture or a PDF file.

Now to the relevance of the photograph. This is a view I came across in London today and is only there during redevelopment of the site. For the thirty years I have been in London there has been a huge blue monstrosity there preventing a view such as this. For now it is gone, but a new building will rise and create a new block. I used to work on the pink building but have never seen it from this angle before.

I have seen tens of buildings go up and down and again in my working career, but sometimes, if one uses one's eyes, the temporary absence of a building gives the opportunity to see that piece of the world in a different way. While this may not be the greatest illustration of the point it is effective.

The parallel in life is to consider the opportunity created when one spots the absence of something that has always been there. Is there a chance for a new perspective?

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Friday 11 November 2011

Way to go!

Without wanting to appear morbid this week gave a couple of twists on what could happen when you die.



The first is the burial of Jimmy Saville, a rather eccentric (or should we say unique?) British pop personality that my generation grew up with. He died two days short of his 85th birthday and was buried in a gold coloured coffin; gold being one of his trademark elements. More interesting was his decision to be buried on the coast as Scarborough lying at an angle of 45 degrees. Apparently this was to allow him to see out to sea! My personal image is that gravity will eventually lead to him lying crumpled at the bottom of the coffin - hardly a  dignified end in my eyes.

NOTE: I considered erasing references to Jimmy Saville in this post, but on reading it I think the image of him left as a pile of crumpled bones in the bottom of an inclined coffin does seem to be appropriate and one I will leave here.

For me the  more interesting twist was on a programme called James May's Man Lab, a programme that sets out to help modern man relearn some of the vital skills that are now in danger of being lost forever.
This week in episode 3 of series 2 they entered the space race. Well, more accurately they demonstrated how could we cheaply venture into space? With the impracticalities of lifting a person into space and tight and proper rules about what can be done to/with animals, the team decided to take the ashes of a cat and a budgie as high as they could and scatter them.

The mechanism was to use weather balloons, one filled with helium and the other with hydrogen, deposit the ashes into each ballon so that when the loss of pressure at altitude burst the ballons their payloads would be deployed, and with camera-bearing gondolas hanging beneath that could both record the journey and transmit telemetry to monitors on the ground in order that they could track and recover the equipment. Recovery of the expensive camera equipment is the key to keeping it cheap, costing just a balloon and some lighter than air gas.



Of course they made this into a bit of a race between two teams and decorated the gondolas in the style of their passengers, but it worked remarkably well. After all this is a TV programme needing an element of entertainment, but in this case it seemed not to be out of place.

Both ballons reached an altitude of around 30km, the edge of space, before bursting and the cameras provided a great record of the flight and sights as they soared and, with an upward facing camera too, the moment of rupture and the scaterring of the ashes.

You can view a clip here. 

On reflection I think that when I go, and I hope it will be a long time yet, this last journey into space and the scattering of my ashes in whatever-sphere that is, is the way I would prefer. Of course a payload of human ash will be a little heavier so I might need a bigger balloon, but still...............




Wednesday 9 November 2011

Make it good, make it last.

Having recently blogged about epitaphs, I heard Jimmy Saville's today, the one that will adorn his gravestone - "It was good while it lasted." He penned it himself.

I think one can take inspiration from this, but maybe rephrase it along these lines, "Make it good, make it last."

Postscript: With the revelations about the true Jimmy Saville I have considered erasing this blog entry, as others are erasing his memory by removing plaques, honours, etc., but have decided not to. While one could look for a different, less attractive, interpretation to his epitaph I think the sentiment is not bad and there is nothing I have said that endorses or condones any of the horrific this he appears to have done.

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NLP - a missing recording track and links with emotional intelligence





The other day I was playing golf with a friend. I am not very good, being very inconsistent, but I had just watch the majestic flight of my golf ball soaring from the face of my driver, straight, true and long. This is a rare occurrence for me. I rarely use my driver as my strength and erratic direction means I usually send it a long way into trouble and I find myself playing recovery shots from the start.

I usually use a driving iron. It is shorter, but for me more consistent ie less trouble. The difference this time was I had been watching Sergio Garcia, line up in a particular way and I wanted to try it. In truth I think the results were better, though it old just have been that was just concentrating more.

Anyway, I thought back to a round of golf earlier in the year when I played with a young prospective pro-golfer and his coach. It was interesting to watch the coach using NLP techniques to anchor good "results" and reference bad ones.

So I thought back to what the coach had been doing and tried to anchor my good drive. I replayed it in my mind and I could find the mechanical, preparatory elements along with the high of watching my ball fly and land in position "A+" (and yes I went on to par the hole in regulation), but my body has no record of the biological elements. No feel about the takeaway, the tensioning, the downswing or the release. I did it. I know I did, but it left no imprint, no feelings, no record. There was nothing to anchor to in the biomechanics of that beautiful shot.

This is not the first time I had been aware of this, but maybe the first time I realise it's significance. In golf lessons I have had professionals tell me to feel the club face open on the back swing (nothing!), to feel the tension as my body coils (nothing!), to feel the club head release at impact (nothing!), and so it goes on.

If I was recording my golf experience as a music track, it is as if the track recording the biomechanics, ie how my body does what it does, is left blank. Now I don't know if it the recording head (yes, pun intended) that is wrong or the medium I am recording too, but something is missing and probably goes a long way to explain why I am still a high handicapper who can hit some wonderful strikes, but not consistently or frequently enough to worry any competitions, other than last place.

The other resonance is some reading I have been doing around emotional intelligence and the importance of self awareness. One needs this in order to understand what to do different, when and how. I don't think I am too bad there, though I know I can and want to improve.

I want to improve my golf, but I need to work out why I a missing important information and what if anything I can do about it?


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Monday 7 November 2011

Is this Twitter's secret?

Earlier this evening I watched a programme featuring Sir Terry Wogan, a well known and much loved UK radio broadcaster and TV presenter. In the programme he was being shown the history of radio and particularly Marconi's early equipment. He was asked which he thought was best,TV or radio.

His unwavering answer was, radio.he explained that in radio it was like you were broadcasting and building a link with one or two people, and often as if it was one to one. In contrast the mass audience of TV was drawn from theatre and he thought it less powerful.

So wind the cook forward a couple of hours and my daughter comes in to tell us that Michael Jackson's doctor had been our guilty. She knew this because Piers Morgan had just tweeted it. It was as if he had tweeted it directly to her specifically.

Now Piers Morgan has thousands of followers on Twitter and wouldn't know my daughter if stood right in front of him, yet she feels a personal connection via his tweets.

Is this the secret attraction of tweeting?

If I recall properly tweeting was originally thought to be useful for family members to send quick, short messages to let each other know where they were, going or doing? Tweeting has come a long way from its origins, in a similar way to mobile phone texting (which was originally designed for telecoms engineers to send each other technical messages).

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Sunday 6 November 2011

Gravitas and First Impressions

I have posted before on the subject of gravitas and am still amazed at the number of hits my blog gets from gravitas related searches. It shows it is a topic that interests many, yet seems to lack helpful resources.

The reason for this post is a trigger from an item on Linkedin. I only made the connection as I was rakeing half a ton of leaves from my garden. I have observed before that it is often during these periods of manual exertion that my mind starts making interesting connections, and this was no different.



In this instance the trigger was a webpage ( that I broadcast via Twitter the other day ) and concerned 5 ways to make a good first impression. The connection in my head was that the factors that help make a good first impression are also those that help sustain a good impression and thereby there is a link with previous posts about developing gravitas. The key point being that building gravitas is far harder if your teh first impression to make is not a good one.

The five ways to make that killer first impression were reported as:
  1. Set an intention. The most important thing to do for giving a good impression is to set your intention. This is especially important before any kind of big event where you would be meeting a lot of people — i.e. conferences, networking events or friend’s parties. As you get ready or when you are driving over think about what kind of people you want to meet and what kind of interactions you want to have. This can be an incredibly grounding experience and works very well to focus on what kind of energy you want to have for your event.
  2. Think about your ornaments. Clothes, make-up, jewelry, watches and shoes are all types of ornamentation and people definitely take these into account when making initial judgments. I highly recommend getting some of your favorite outfits or ornaments together and asking friends you trust what they think of when they see them. For many men, they do not realize that their watch can say a lot about them. For women, purses and large earrings or jewelry can also indicate a lot to a new person they are meeting. Make sure that what you are wearing and how you do your hair or make-up says what you want it to say to the people you are meeting for the first time.
  3. Be Conscious of Your Body Language. Body language is a crucial part of first impressions. Everything from your posture to how you carry yourself to the way you’re angling your body. Often, simply being aware of your body language can result in immediate improvements. Another way to examine your body language is to look at yourself on a video walking around a room. Subconscious cues to keep in mind include noticing where you point your feet, the position of your shoulders, and the way you shake hands.
  4. Avoid bad days. People who go to cocktail events or mixers after having had a bad day typically continue to have a bad day. If you are in a depressed or anxious mood, others will pick up on this from your facial expressions, comments and body language. If you’re having a bad day, stay home! Otherwise, find a way to snap yourself out of your bad mood. I find working out or watching funny YouTube videos before events often gets me in a more social, feel good mood.
  5. Be interested and interesting. If you are truly interested in meeting people and are open to learning about who they are, they will get this in a first impression. We have all had the experience of meeting someone and knowing instantly that they were dragged here by a friend and are just waiting to get out the door and head home. When you are meeting people for the first time approach others with a genuine interest in who they are. This is often contagious and you will have better conversations and lasting connections when you are interested because they become interested.
I have lifted these literally as I think they are well written and convey the intended message well. I think they are all relevant to someone who wants to develop gravitas. Certainly #2 and #3 are things I have written about before. #5 with #1 relate to being prepared for and then delivering in a way that engages and impresses.

#4 is also very relevant and is about self awareness and emotional intelligence. It is far harder to recover from a bad encounter than it is to put one off until a better time. If there is someone you need to impress, be honest with yoruself about whether this is the time and place that is most advantageous. If not look for ways to improve the situation, even if it is only allowing you ten minutes to talk a walk and refocus. Be positive and active and most people will respond well.

Remember your value and keep focused on #1 ie what outcome you seek from the encounter, what your intention is?

Wednesday 2 November 2011

Do you have a group or a team? It does make a difference!

In mentoring a young friend I was taken back to what I think of as basics....the stages of team formation (forming, storming, norming, performing, and dorming?) and the various team roles a la Belbin and into issues around leadership.

These were things that I was lucky to exposed to while training as a manager/leader with some great financial institutions, but it seems that in the interest of expense management (or should I say avoidance) it seems the younger generations have been short changed. Now I can go a long way to address that gap and am happy to do so. Alternatively there are shelves and shelves of books in WH Smiths or Waterstones or on Amazon that can be purchased and read if one is motivated to do so.

The interesting thing and the reason for this post, is that I was reminded about a missing question that really precedes and of the other stuff I have mentioned. This question was posed to me a few years ago on a half day seminar on managing international groups of individuals involved in projects. It is.......

Are you trying to manage a team or a group? 

The importance of the question is that each is rather different and requires different engagement from you as the leader.This tends to be amplified by distance where communication is poorer ie less face to face and more text or voice only, where it is more difficult to convene groups if only in terms of times in the day, and cultures may be different. I have seen and been involved in a number of instances where a manager tried to manage a team as a group, or a group as a team. The results were not pretty for anyone and tended not to deliver or survive long.

So what is the difference between a team and a group for this discussion? I am sure there are many erudite studies that could be quoted but these two illustrations.


A Group
A Team












In essence a Group of people who, in order to perform their role do NOT need to interact a lot with each other. Yes, the need direction and co-ordination, but will often have little interest in their peers activities and problems and will consider "team" events a wasteful investment of their time. Broadly speaking the best a group can be is the sum of its parts.

A Team in contrast can only perform their individual and collective role by interacting a lot between each other. In fact the leader (in red) is often part of that team. An example is a football team where the players need to understand their roles, communicate and adapt dynamically to circumstances and cover and support each other in ways that may not be entirely predictable at the start. While the manager is not on the pitch during the match his decisions and instructions contribute to the on field play. If the right bonds and behaviours are not engendered then the team will never be greater than the sum of the parts.

If one has a group then the leader needs to be more directive, providing co-ordination (personally or ensuring it happens) and acting as an information hub, receiving and broadcasting. It is likely that the primary interaction will be one-to-one rather than group meetings. When group meetings occur their are likely to be motivational rather than problem solving.

Teams in contrast need the leader to adapt behaviours to their maturity, While at the start they need directional leadership, as they mature they take collective charge. Interaction is largely group oriented and often focussed on problem solving. One-to-ones will occur, but will focus more on coaching and personal development.

I may well return to this later, but I thought it worth capturing and sharing.

Sunday 30 October 2011

....as a practising millionaire....

My daughter made me laugh out loud yesterday. At 16 1/2 she has just secured her first part-time job, working at a local garden centre. She went off to interview quite nonchalantly so I was interested what sort of questions she was asked.

Picking her up yesterday after she had slept at a friends I took the chance to enquirer how the interview had gone.

She told me she was asked what she wanted to do at university, to which she answered, "English and drama". She was then told that she would like the questions as they has been set by a psychologist friend of the interviewer.

The first was about what she thought of people who had good fortune? This was when she creased me up. She sincerely and genuinely said, "Well, as a practising psychologist I knew what the questions were getting at".

This was from the girl who has completed just six weeks of her psychology A-level. When I laughed and questioned her positioning as a practitioner, she said that was what her teacher kept telling the class.

I guess this is how we build confidence in our youngsters and it is no bad thing as long as it has a balance and does not create unachievable expectations.

In this instance my daughter smiled and was able to laugh at m challenge in a friendly and positive way. It will be interesting to see where psychology features in her future.

Meantime I am wondering how best to engender these words from my own mouth, ".......as a practising millionaire....."




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Thursday 27 October 2011

Fabulous Autumn Colours

This autumn has been unusual.....unusally warm and pleasant such that last Friday, mid-october, I was playing golf in shirt sleeves. 

In our garden we have seen a second round of pollen in late September and the leaves seem to be late to fall. Now the maple tree in our garden is a beautiful and rare shade of red. I hear that there is a scientific explanation for the colours, but I thought instead we could just record and share them.

The pictures here were taken this morning and are a sight to behold.


Beware Greeks Shopping!

On the day European leaders "agreed" a plan to resolve the Eurozone financial crisis and write off Greek debt (hence my poor headline)  I had a look in the new Westfield shopping centre in Stratford, east London. It was on my way home and I just made a small detour.

It is impressive! I realise that it still has huge novelty and "shiny" value and that it is half term, but at 4:30 pm on damp Thursday afternoon it was BUSY. Not uncomfortably busy in that you cannot move, but commercially busy. What double-dip recession?

Having visited a number of impressive malls in the US, I would say that this new one is up with the best of them. It is maybe not quite s spacious, but the layout and finish inside and out, across three or so floors is very good. Many of the brand names are ones you would see in the US eg Hollister, Forever 21, etc, but with many of our own.

Two things struck me though. The first was it was like walking around a united nations, it felt like most if not all nations of the world were represented in the people there, far more than you would find in the US , even in New York I think.

The second was that the food offerings were on another level to US malls, variety, number and maybe quality. In a US mall there is usually a fast food, food court (does what it says on the tin) and a handful of other usually chain restaurants. In contrast this Westfield seems to have loads of food places and food concessions, spread amongst the shops.

We will see how well it fares and if the other Westfield in west London suffers, but from yesterday's viewing it would be hard to know there was any financial hardship around.

Friday 21 October 2011

What will your epitaph say about you?

Many coaches and trainers will ask you to draw up your own eulogy, what you would like to be said about you at your funeral. It is a common way to try and give perspective, especially around emotional aspects of ones life. Others look for your obituary, but not everyone finds it easy to do this. There is the old adage that no one will wish they had spent more time in the office and this is undoubtedly true in 99.99% of the cases, but it often provides humorous cover for more important issues

It may be the challenge of introspection or British humility, so I suggest that you look at your epitaph, what would be carved on your headstone if/when you are buried. This is likely to be short, pithy and probably based on something someone has already said to you. It is also useful to keep in mind as a regular guide to achieving better outcomes. Of course you may not always pay attention to it, but being conscious of the content is more than half the battle.

I raise this as a good friend said something to me recently that has stuck in my mind. Before I address  that I will admit that I have half jokingly, half seriously said before that my epitaph should be:

"Never knowingly without an opinion."


This reflects my curiousity and propensity to think (sometimes maybe too much?) about things and a willingness to put that into words, especially if someone asks what I think about a subject. What comes out is usually a mixture of knowledge, instinct, and prediction, looking at the wider and future consequences of something happening now. It is just what I see, how my mind works. It is not always in line with common thinking, but is genuinely what I think.
What happened was a friend said to me that one of the challenges I had was being too honest, hence the epitaph that is now in my head:

"Sometimes too honest for his own good."

On one, very important, level I am not unhappy with that in that honesty and personal integrity  are very important to me, but there is a truth in there. His comment was that I do not always think enough about the immediate personal consequences for me when I share my thoughts - and that I must agree is true. I tend to speak the pure truth as I see it (I know that sounds pompous, but I am struggling for better words - please see the intent and not a bombastic statement) even when it is against my personal interests.
It is a useful insight and in these challenging times, one to keep very much in mind. This does not mean I will become untruthful, because I won't! I couldn't live easily with myself if that were the case, and it would show. Instead I will just keep it in mind when when engaged in those 50:50 conversations, and maybe promote my personal interest more than I have in the past.

My new target is:

This, I feel, is a betterone for success in these troubled times.

Out of curiousity, does anyone else want to share their future epitaph?

Thursday 20 October 2011

Form is temporary while class is permanent!



This is often said about sportsmen and came flooding to my mind as I watched TV last night. I chanced upon, not knowing it was on, a BBC2 documentary on the 1971 British Lions Tour to New Zealand. This was the first and indeed the only British touring side to register a series win in test matches against New Zealand. That made them special.

I am old enough (just) to have started playing rugby that year and the programme was littered with legends; Barry John, Gareth Edwards, Gerald Davies, David Duckham, JPR Williams, Colin Meads, Ian Kirkpatrick, Sid Going.....and the list goes on. These men all demonstrated huge presence and no little humility in the show, I wonder if this comes because of the events they were part of, or it helped create the events? Either way it was a pleasure to watcha nd Eddie Butler presented it with some style.

Of course this is relevant with the Rugby World Cup final coming up in just a day or so in New Zealand. New Zealand have always been at or near the top of the rugby tree and to beat New Zealand is something to savour.

What struck me though was the quality of the running rugby and teh tries scored. Yes, the programme was able to pick and showcase the best, but there seems to be no shortage of quality from that tour. It was an old style 24 match (I think), something like 8 week tour with continual movement between hotels and a balance between playing and social - it was still very much an amateur game back then.

We saw scything runs from Gerald Davies and David Duckham, sublime side-steps from Barry John who just seemed to own the field when he had ball in hand, bullocking runs from Gareth Edwards, and a 45 yard drop goal with an old style heavy ball from JPR Williams. Of course the All Blacks had their moments too, but the programme did not dwell on them.

In the intervening 40 years the rugby authorities have tried to make the game better, but in light of what I saw last night I think any perceived or claimed success must be questioned. That team, those tries (only 3 points for a try back then) and the whole experience stands the test of time and I would suggest it is a testament to class, not just form.

It is probably still available on BBC iplayer at the time of writing and I commend it to any rugby fan (well any Britsih rugby fan anyway)  as a good investment of time to watch.

Friday 14 October 2011

The clueless and the stupid! Time to come out of retirement?

What a week! Respecting chronology, I will start with the England Rugby team, or at least a number of it's members. Manu Tuilagi's dive from a docking ferry capped a sequence of dwarf tossing (well attendance at least), kissing strange blondes soon after you are married and making lewd remarks to hotel staff. These were stupid for otherwise intelligent men in a public spotlight, supported by goodness knows how many advisers. This was all on top of some pretty clueless and inept performances in the Rugby World Cup. It makes me consider coming out of 25 years of retirement, Seriously, could I do a worse job?

Then we have the bruhaha(?) around Liam Fox and his best friend/best man. It initially sounded as if it might have been a faux pas and that the quick apology could redress matters. But as the week has passed we have seen a systematic misrepresentation of Mr. Werritty's role and involvement in an unelected, unauthorised position, with cast doubt about elements of their private lives too. The last straw are the revelations of how Mr Werritty has funded his luxury travel through contributions routed via a not-for-profit company. That it has been going on so long makes it hard to believe Mr Fox did not know. If he truly didn't know then he is stupid beyond belief, if he did know then he obviously think he is above the normal rules expected of mere mortals and is obviously clueless about a) public opinion, and b) the resourcefulness of the British press to unearth wrong doing.

The cap comes with Oliver Letwin discarding parliamentary papers in a water bin in Green Park. I think this behaviour is both stupid and clueless. To try and explain it away by saying he likes to take papers and work in the park, official papers to boot, and that he only discarded non-sensitive ones is incredible.

Do these politicians have no idea how to behave or do they feel they are gods and beyond reproach? I wish I knew how to fix this, but if my daughter decides not to vote, when she gets the right, I truly could not blame her. Not only are they all as as as each other, they do not deserve our respect or support.

I once stood for JCR president on a one week, late entry campaign on what you see is what you get. I came a credible second and was able to concentrate on my other interests, but I am thinking that when I come out of my rugby retirement I will also stand as an MP.


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Thursday 13 October 2011

Kotter's 8 Steps - An epiphany.

Yesterday I listened to a webinar by John Kotter and colleagues from Kotter International ( Click for webinar ) on "leading change through turbulent times". It talks about his experience and insights into how leading companies have successfully achieved transformational change and offers a 8 step process. ( Leading Change ).

I first encountered this work at a previous employer where although not explicitly stated it was clear the new(!) CEO was trying to use it with his new (!) executive team. Not only was a Harvard Business Review article used at an executive offsite, one could, with a little knowledge, spot the attempts to address each step. It was as if the hope was that if one could do a little of each, tick all the boxes so to speak, then it would work.

Personally I would say that history will judge that it did not work and it was certainly an uncomfortable ride for those who experienced it. I sensed that something was missing, but could not put my finger on what - the webinar has now provided that insight, but I will come to that later.

I will confess to being critical of the book as I felt it allowed the reader to gain the impression that transformational change is easy, something of a predictable formula. This sense of ease has contributed to the poor results. One correspondent on a discussion board stated that they found Kotters 8 steps useful, but primarily to assess what was missing / went wrong after the fact; not before.

The parable version of the book ( Our Iceberg Is Melting ) looks at how a community of penguins reacts when it finds that the iceberg that is its home is melting. It shows how they deal with the change, individually and collectively, and has proved useful in my work by providing a new vocabulary or language to talk to and influence leaders of change.

Now I am sure I won't do full justice to John Kotter's words, so I will try and summarise here and commend that you listen to the webinar; an hour well invested for those leading change.

My summary is that the 8 steps are the sythesis of what Kotter discovered successful companies did to deliver transformational change in an environment where the pace of change, by any number of measures, is increasing exponentially. Kotter however recognises that the eight steps needs something other than the typical hierarchical organisation structure of business. While this structure has grown and been very effective in running and changing business until now, it reaches what he calls a "wall" beyond which it fails to deliver effective change. The "hardware" or structure that is needed is one of linked networks of committed people. These break traditional strata and work outside traditional control mechanisms.

This was the insight I needed. It makes a lot of sense, but still lacks the "how" in relation to creating the new structure. Indeed I wonder how well it can be effected in a regulated line of business where there is an ever increasing focus on control Typically I am thinking about financial services where I work and am very interested in how the FSA or indeed SEC would react to a regulated firm that embraced Kotter's thinking.

I am feeling re-interested in Kotter's ideas and will look at how this new structure can be created and sustained in the type of firms I work with/in. I will also look at my own behaviours in relation to leading change, I am sure I can embrace the new ways.

Wednesday 12 October 2011

Scary Symmetry

Original Picture (straightened)
My daughter has plans to act and in support of that we have agreed for her to go on the books of an agency - one linked with her school.

In order that she can be put up for jobs she needed a head and shoulder shot so on Saturday we took her to the photographer. The picture on the left is the one that has been chosen as her "image" in the online catalogue. I love the eyes, but would have liked at least a little smile, but one has to trust the judgement of professionals.

I was curious about the picture, having seen how people often have two different sides to them, so have just played a little and thought I would share it here.

I took the photograph as delivered and straightened it using Picassa. I then used a couple of pieces of software I have to split it down the middle and create two images.

Picture split down the middle of her face.


I then took each side copied it and inverted the copy to create two new images, one of her left side and its mirror and another of the right side and its mirror.

Left side and mirror image joined as one
Right side and mirror image joined as one

I was then struck that she looked pretty much the same in each other that the obvious hair element.

I then took each picture gave it a 50% transparency and overlaid one with the other (see below)

Left and Right overlaid with 50% transparency.


It is spooky how well the two matched, even the eyebrows! She must have an almost symmetrical face! I wonder how common that is?

I guess now we will see if that look is in demand?

Tuesday 11 October 2011

Precision, Pace, Performance and .............. Passion. A quick corporate health check?

A few years ago an incoming CEO asked staff for comments/suggestions on how to improve the company. I took the opportunity to raise the 3 P's, ie precision, pace and performance. In retrospect I think I should make it 4 P's and add PASSION.

Of the original three, precision could be read as "focus". At the time the company was trying to do way too much, change and BAU, and failing to do much of it properly. Ironically this increased the pressure to start more. Because only a fraction was expected to succeed one needed to start more, right?

I had previously worked in a place where we would say "not yet" and focus on a smaller agenda. The quid pro quo of saying "not yet" was a fanatical focus on delivery, on meeting our committed dates/targets. Once achieved we moved quickly on to the next piece of work.

I would suggest that in the latter situation we delivered as much if not more to a stakeholder community that had confidence and trust in our ability. To me this was preferable, but has to be earned through delivery.

Pace, could also be read as "appropriate empowerment" ie an ability to execute what is needed when it is needed or best addressed. The opposite is a fear culture where no one moves until everything has been "signed off" by everyone else. This is to protect oneself from criticism (sometimes known as CYA) and just drags out timelines. I saw a quote on a board the other day that said "Bureaucracy is the art of making the possible impossible." This is a manifestation of lack of pace.

A loss of pace starts affecting everything the organisation does and can be crippling in the current climate.

The last, performance, was actually more about poor or a lack of performance. This needs identifying and dealing with quickly. At a leadership conference, Colin Powell, ex US Secretary of State, said that a persons peers spot poor performance ahead of any one else, and when they do they look for to seevwhat the leader does about it - this then sets the tone for everyone. If poor performance is tolerated it will spread!

So now to the last "P" that knave added, passion. There has been a thread on a Linkedin discussion about whether an interim resource needs passion to succeed. Not surprisingly the consensus is "Yes", and not just interims. I missed this when I wrote to the CEO because my passion was high and overall it was at worst mixed in the organisation. That said and looking back,the lack/loss of passion spread like a contagion and is definitely worthy of inclusion.

I offer you the 4"P's" as a quick personal health check list when looking at or walking into a work situation.

Precision
Pace
Performance
Passion

Do let me know if this resonates or even better if you used it and it was useful?