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» Were Tactically Strategic! from The Happy Burro
  Ever feel like you’re working with that sort of strategy? It is easy to get wrapped up in the tactics, working hard to execute flawlessly, and call it a strategy.  Weve always done it this way Seth Godin has a great lens on the diff... [Read More]

» With a Servants Heart from The Happy Burro
Instead of trying to recruit others to help me, I set out to figure out how to recruit myself to help others. My blogosphere friend Valeria Maltoni recently wrote a spectacular post about strategic quitting. You can find it ... [Read More]

Comments

mvellandi

Buona sera Valeria,
Great points on thinking in terms of the team. Although I have various skillsets, I have to remind myself of the following: What are my core competencies now? What are those of the people I know and partner with? How can I leverage the two to do better work or offer a better service? With this in mind, what kind of role/position do I want to grow into? I want to be an excellent project manager in all my undertakings.

I like strategic pruning in a timely fashion. It feels so good to the psyche to consciously say 'no' with intent based on insight and understanding. It's so much healthier than a passive acceptance that 'things didn't work out' because 'I got busy' or some other excuse.

Richie

Great article Valeria,

It's always easy to make great decisions in retrospect! The difficult thing is making a decision now with the information you have at hand.

Society and culture tends to lead us to believe that successful people were always that way.

The reality is closer to what you mention at the beginning of your column--success often comes after many failures, and many years of hard work.

Lewis Green

Valeria,

"When something you're doing is not working, don't do more of it, do something else." If we marketing consultants could convince clients of the above lesson, we would provide a great service.

Jen

Ciao Bella Valeria,

You speak of organizations as living and organic. How timely because I just revisited "Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World" by Margaret Wheatley. She delves into organizations as whole systems, and speaks of fractals:

"All fractal patterns are created as individuals exercise both freedom and responsibility to a few simple rules. Complex structures emerge over time from simple elements and rules, and autonomous interactions."

Fluid relationships and shared meaning are the lifeblood of such open-source, fractal network communities.

This is why I'm so excited about Philadelphia CoF and the way in which it is deepening/expanding.

Moo,
Jen

Valeria Maltoni

Mario -- yes, the pruning analogy works well in the spring. You do sound very Italian by name, are you? Sometimes looking at things from a slightly different angle makes an enormous difference in the contribution we can make.

Richie -- this is such a treat to have you back in this forum, and in rare form. Hindsight being 20/20 and all that, I think the most difficult action step for me is taking no action. At least not how I envisioned it.

Lewis -- that one sentence saved me more time and effort over the years than anything else I could be writing in this blog.

Jen -- so glad you could stop by. You have been a fantastic gift to the network and to me personally. Thank you. I like the autonomous interactions piece. Often we feel the need to control interactions as the only way in which they may be meaningful. Nothing could be farther from the truth.

Joe Raasch

Valeria,

You nailed the key to success in just about any endeavor that involves other people:

"Instead of trying to recruit others to help me, I set out to figure out how to recruit myself to help others."

It is with a servant's heart that we can reach our goals.

There may be situations that require leading from the front. These are typically short-term and situation-specific to a milestone towards a long-term goal. Leading through others versus feeding the ego to have to lead from the front is engaging, successful, freeing, and more fun!

Jen

Joe, that line deeply inspires me as well.

Cultivating the servant heart is a spiritually purifying experience. When one leads from this space, control becomes unnecessary and remarkable / miraculous outcomes unfold.

Valeria, torchbearer and servant heart -- I am elevated by your energy and presence. Philadelphia CoF holds a special place in my heart because it is a community of connections rather than transactions. A rare gem...

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