new-clarity

The Art of Holiday Facilitation

It is holiday season at the moment and I am on a road trip with my family. A great time to stop and unwind, or so I would have thought. Instead we planned a full itinerary where I could show and tell my young children what I value about New Zealand. This started off OK - for about five minutes - and went downhill in spectacular fashion.

I stewed for three days.

Then I realised that all I need to do is open the door to these new experiences, providing guidance where needed, to watch the joy and learning unfold.

Although I am still learning - This is the true art of facilitation and from where I find my deepest satisfaction.

Personal Sustainability

I have been reflecting on how we sustain our worlds and have come to the realisation that without sustaining our selves that anything we do in our worlds may not last at long as we intend, or end up as waste.

With this in mind I wrote the following piece to contribute to our syndicate vision for our last Leadership New Zealand retreat in November 2014.

Personal Sustainability

I am the one and only,
I make me whole or blow me apart.
My actions determine my environment
I alone choose to be sustainable, connected and whole
I feed my body, my mind and my soul
Every day – I build relationships through honour and humility.
I lament and cry to cleanse, and laugh and play to enrich

Mostly I learn, I learn to teach.

Teaching the next generation and the generations before
A mix of beauty and tragedy played out on a world stage
Raising consciousness, building bridges and feeding the world with aroha.

Holding safety; safety in place, safety in relationship and safety in self.
Breathing the air that is clean, the water that is pure and the food that is of the land.

I hold the wisdom of elders and peers and pass this on freely

This is the legacy I want “for the children of Aotearoa, New Zealand”

What is strategy?

What is strategy? This is a question I started asking myself after a conversation with @mitch_olson yesterday. I searched internally for an answer and came up with my fall-back question set – “Who am I? What do I do? Why does it matter?” drilled into me by Michael G Major at 7o.

Strategy for me falls into the “What do I do?” question. It determines what I do to approach a particular opportunity or challenge. It could be an approach to marketing or an initiative focusing on optimising process, possibly even a change in consciousness, thinking or culture. A strategy needs to be high level enough for people to align their thinking and actions to and, because of this, needs to have universal appeal to its target audience. Strategy opens up a conversation that gives a direction and permission to create a difference.

So, where does “Who am I?” fit with strategy? Who am I forms the emotional, spiritual and intellectual basis for what I do. It is the informer of strategy. “Who am I?” is a question I constantly ask – whether it is on a personal level or at an organisational level. It’s a way of validating that I am passionate about what I do.

How about “Why does it matter?” There is no point in creating strategy without meaning. I do things because they mean something to me. “Why does it matter?” is the real world litmus test for strategy. What I do matters because it needs to align with my core values and beliefs and change things in a way that further strengthen them. Strategy matters because it opens the opportunity to consciously change things that are important us, whether they are monetary, psychosocial or environmental.

So with this in mind, I’m off to re-validate and / or re-determine the New-Clarity strategy, a task that has taken years and may take a few more.

Thanks Mitch and Michael for the inspiration to write this article.

Behaviours of Goal Driven Organisations

What makes organisations set goals and work towards achieving them? More likely than not it’s the same drive that makes you do the same thing. In this blog I’ll unpack the top behaviours of goal driven organisations and provide a behaviour based checklist for you and your organisation to use.

What are the top behaviours displayed by goal driven organisations: knowing where they are headed, communicating what their future looks like, bringing people along for the ride, capitalising on established trust, rewarding progress?  In my experience its all of the above.

I often marvel at organisations that know where they are headed and wonder what I can do be more involved. They fill a behavioural need I have as a human to become an active participant in something I believe in. Like all small boys of my age I needed to be an astronaut. All because an organisation knew where they were headed, displayed a need I could relate to and captured the public imagination with that heading. So much so that this need still holds currency decades later. For the lucky ones among us following this need in themselves has resulted in a fulfilling vocation, career or recreation activity shaping that heading.

Organisations that are good at communicating what their future looks like are bellwethers of public sentiment.  They lead the way by driving expectation and building a swell of support for what they are intending to do. Most likely you are currently waiting for something to arrive from your favourite organisation rather than accept what is currently available. Buying into these visions not only drives behaviours of expectation, that manifest in future loyalty, it also guarantees interest in current offerings as people like me and you wait until the future becomes reality before investing. Guaranteeing a continued market presence.

The most successful goal driven organisations are household names, that’s because they’ve mastered the behaviour of bringing you along for the ride. Take a look around you I’m sure there are examples in your immediate reach.  Did you go to the local hardware store to replace that handle on your drawer or did you go to a hardware super store?  I went to the hardware super store because I’m on board with the message that they have everything that I will need at a good price. Our relationship is pragmatic,  not  personal, which is right on message with the organisation strategy. It pervades the customer experience, supply chain and economics.

When we trust someone or something it takes a shock to break that trust. Organisations demonstrating behaviours capitalising on established trust relationships are perceived as part of the fabric of our lives. A car manufacturer recently advertised that it built its own raw material processing plant in a bid to capitalise on progress toward achieving its goal of a purer raw material. The focus of the advertising was that it that did not trust the quality of raw material from its suppliers so took control and makes better cars as a result. This advertising not only went a long way to strengthening trust in this car manufacturers end product, it also damaged my trust in its competition and their supplier relationships. This approach engenders further trust in a market where quality is a key selling point.

Do you take the opportunity to reward yourself when you’ve achieved a goal? Goal directed organisations make a point of rewarding progress. These organisations have to measure progress to reward it. They make effective use of information and have a finger on their market’s economic and social pulse. When have you been rewarded as a contributor, as an investor? Were the rewards directly relatable to achieving a goal?  What did the rewards relate to?  I recently watched a movie where a frequent flyer was so locked in to achieving the goal of elite flier status that he made it his top priority. Now that is brand loyalty. Chances are, like me, you are a member of one or more airline loyalty programs. Hooked by the goal of a higher status or more privilege based on the number of miles you fly or the number of points earned on contributing purchases. Rewarding progress promotes an internal leadership focus on the team / product delivery and an external focus of benchmarking against the competition.

After all, what’s the use of winning against all odds if you don’t set a reward for doing so?

Is your organisation goal driven? Think about your goal horizons and use this checklist to check in with yourself:

- Your inner drive pulls you toward a vision of what is possible – Your energy attracts people who want to help you. Capitalise on their enthusiasm and keep your eye on achieving your next goal. Beware of time wasters.

- You continually reinforce your message to your target audience Your persistence feeds a familiarity that increases the opportunity for intuitive recollection. People select you because you are comfortable. Sow the right message for the right time and harvest success.

- You’ve proven you can deliver what people need and are expecting to do it again You set goals and achieve them. People find it convenient to trust you and your track record when making decisions. Weigh up ‘doing it for them’ or ‘doing it for me’ periodically.

- You set rewards for when you achieve your goals and take them You meet a goal and rewards are unlocked. People benefit from the achievement of your goals. Resist the temptation to reward yourself for almost getting there.