Are You A Green Thumb Leader?
by Eileen McDargh
From my home office,
I can look out
and see my garden. It's loaded with wonderful,
terrible sights,
sights that mirror much I find in many of our
companies. You'd
recognize it too.
There are roses
speckled with mildew
and rust from the fog carried on the breath of El
Nino. Weeds have
taken over many patches of dirt, despite the fact
that I have gone
over them with a hula hoe. (For the non-gardener,
that's a triangular
hoe that saves your back while weeding. Supposedly,
you scrub away at
the ground, loosening the weeds -and anything else
that stands in the
way-while leaving the good soil behind.) The rogue
cherry tomato plant
however has taken off . again. Sticky green arms with
tiny
green/yellow fruit now stretch in all directions. The
plant must have
been the gift from some bird that dropped a seed as
it flew to a nest
in the pine tree. I didn't think a cherry tomato
would grow in that
patch of adobe clay. My feathered seed-sower proved
me wrong.
What I must do to
get my garden back
in shape, to make it world class and ready for the
competitive eye of
my next door neighbor, is exactly what every leader
must do: seed,
feed, and weed. How I perform seeding, feeding, and
weeding depends
upon the season, the unexpected turns of nature, and
the makeup of my
garden. Walk with me through my garden and you'll see
the analogies
for our work world.
Consider the
"season". In today's 24-hour, global economy,
it would appear that there is no season, anything
that distinguishes
night from day. Grow, grow. Sell, sell. But the
smart leader watches
the sky, reads the clouds, and can tell when there
are shifts to
indicate a new season. Bring products to market at
the wrong time or
introduce an idea without understanding timing and
the "garden" can
quickly resemble a piece of scorched earth.
Watch for
trends. Read
magazines like Executive Excellence, Fast Company
and American
Demographics. Subscribe to TrendLetter. Explore new
planned
communities and see how people are choosing to
live. Study mail
order catalogs. In these latter two areas, you'll
find a move toward
"Main Street U.S.A.". Sure, high-speed
connections and technology
are placed in the home, but new designs incorporate
walking paths,
close-at-hand stores, and alleyways connecting
homes. Technology
will be used for information but the technology
backlash is for
creating places of human, real-time interaction.
Levenger's, the
mail order catalog for unique office and library
accessories,
features rotary dial phones. The catalog copy
reads, "You don't have
to program it!"
Give credence to the
unexpected and control what you can
control.
The El Nino
weather that not only raised havoc with my roses
but spawned
dangerous storms and opposing draughts throughout
the world is an
example of our helplessness to control some of our
environment. The
same thing is true in business. Market turndowns, a
coup in Africa,
the scandals of a Presidency, an airline strike-you
name it-there
are many things that can impact our business. A
green thumb leader
takes all possible precautions and then remains
flexible and ready
for the unexpected. Scenario planning, a strategy
first employed by
Royal Dutch Shell, brings experts from a wide range
of fields to
discuss actions if different scenarios take place.
Scenario planning
allows you to think out-in advance-various options.
In like fashion,
my corner of the garage has all the tools, sprays,
and plant potions
for probable surprises.
Plant seeds and give space
to the sowers.
A green thumb
leader knows that it is
only through dialogue that ideas can sprout and
take root. Instead
of jealously guarding "my ideas, my client, my
territory", a leader
with an eye toward growing a garden takes no
ownership but rather
seeks to find which seeds have merit. Like the
biblical passage,
some seeds will whither on rocks or find little
moisture in shallow
soil. But others will be carried to places where
they flourish.
As for giving space to the sewer, consider my
vagabond tomato plant.
In like fashion, where are the unexpected
opportunities that can
spring up if allowed to flourish? When newcomers
bring ideas from
other industries and businesses, are they welcomed
or are they
rooted out because "that's not how we do
things here".
Feed different plants
differently.
Not every plant is fed the same thing, yet all
plants must eat. My
roses need a systemic for the rust and mildew,
along with a topical
spray. My oranges just need some citrus fertilizer
every now and
then. A green thumb leader understands the truism
that "nothing is
so unequal as the equal treatment of
unequals". Just as each voice
has its own unique sonogram, each employee,
associate, stakeholder
needs a unique blend of "food". For some,
it's "numbers". "Give me
numbers and I thrive." For many, it's the
opportunity to learn and
advance in knowledge. For others, it's the engaging
nature of the
work itself that offers fulfillment. One size does
not fit all.
Weeding is backbreaking
work.
A hula hoe alone will not suffice. It was not
enough to turn over
the soil and think that I had emptied my garden of
the weeds. In
fact, because I didn't bend over and get close
enough to the ground,
I picked up only the surface "weeds".
What I really had managed to
do was to churn the stronger ones into a hiding
place where they
surfaced stronger and more invasive then ever. A
green thumb leader
hates this part of the task. It means fact-finding.
Accountability.
And time. Not everything that is "green"
belongs in my garden. Not
every associate belongs with you. In fact, firing
customers at times
can also be the healthiest long-term fertilizer for
a vibrant
business.
Take time to stop and smell
the roses.
I can get so overwhelmed with the "work"
of my garden that I forget
why I planted it. Just sitting by the side of the
garden, watching
my neighbors' delight when I deliver bouquets to
their doors, or
smelling the fragrance in the evening are all the
reminders I need.
Why have you planted your "garden"? Are
there people who delight in
the work of your hands? What is the aroma that
lingers after you
have turned off the lights for the night?
Here's
wishing green thumbs
for all of us.
© Eileen McDargh, McDargh Communications. All rights reserved. You may reprint this article so long as it remains intact with the byline and if all links are made live.
Since 1980, Hall of Fame speaker Eileen McDargh has helped Fortune 100 companies as well as individuals create connections that count and conversations that matter. Her latest book is Gifts from the Mountain-Simple Truths for Life's Complexities. Her other books include Talk Ain't
Cheap...It's Priceless and Work for a Living and Still Be Free to Live, one of the first books to address the notion of balance and authentic work. A 59 year-old grandmother, she recently returned from climbing among the highest mountains in the world. Find out more about this compelling
and effective professional speaker and join her free newsletter by visiting http://www.EileenMcDargh.com.

McDargh
Communications
(949) 496-8640
Eileen@EileenMcDargh.com
www.EileenMcDargh.com
© 2008 McDargh Communications, All rights
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