What Makes an Awesome Board Member
What Makes an Awesome Board Member
(This post was requested by my long-time Board member Brad Feld and is also running concurrently on his blog today)
I’ve written a bunch of posts over the years about how I manage my Board at Return Path. And I think part of having awesome Board members is managing them well – giving transparent information, well organized, with enough lead time before a meeting; running great and engaging meetings; mixing social time with business time; and being a Board member yourself at some other organization so you see the other side of the equation. All those topics are covered in more detail in the following posts: Why I Love My Board, Part II, The Good, The Board, and The Ugly, and Powerpointless.
But by far the best way to make sure you have an awesome board is to start by having awesome Board members. I’ve had about 15 Board members over the years, some far better than others. Here are my top 5 things that make an awesome Board member, and my interview/vetting process for Board members.
Top 5 things that make an awesome Board member:
- They are prepared and keep commitments. They show up to all meetings. They show up on time and don’t leave early. They do their homework. The are fully present and don’t do email during meetings
- They speak their minds. They have no fear of bringing up an uncomfortable topic during a meeting, even if it impacts someone in the room. They do not come up to you after a meeting and tell you what they really think. I had a Board member once tell my entire management team that he thought I needed to be better at firing executives more quickly!
- They build independent relationships. They get to know each other and see each other outside of your meetings. They get to know inviduals on your management team and talk to them on occasion as well. None of this communication goes through you
- They are resource rich. I’ve had some directors who are one-trick or two-trick ponies with their advice. After their third or fourth meeting, they have nothing new to add. Board members should be able to pull from years of experience and adapt that experience to your situations on a flexible and dynamic basis
- They are strategically engaged but operationally distant.  This may vary by stage of company and the needs of your own team, but I find that even Board members who are talented operators have a hard time parachuting into any given situation and being super useful. Getting their operational help requires a lot of regular engagement on a specific issue or area. But they must be strategically engaged and understand the fundamental dynamics and drivers of your business – economics, competition, ecosystem, and the like
My interview/vetting process for Board members:
- Take the process as seriously as you take building your executive team – both in terms of your time and in terms of how you think about the overall composition of the Board, not just a given Board member
- Source broadly, get a lot of referrals from disparate sources, reach high
- Interview many people, always face to face and usually multiple times for finalists. Also for finalists, have a few other Board members conduct interviews as well
- Check references thoroughly and across a few different vectors
- Have a finalist or two attend a Board meeting so you and they can examine the fit firsthand. Give the prospective Board member extra time to read materials and offer your time to answer questions before the meeting. You’ll get a good first-hand sense of a lot of the above Top 5 items this way
- Have no fear of rejecting them. Even if you like them. Even if they are a stretch and someone you consider to be a business hero or mentor. Even after you’ve already put them on the Board (and yes, even if they’re a VC). This is your inner circle, and getting this group right is one of the most important things you can do for your company
I asked my exec team for their own take on what makes an awesome Board member.  Here are some quick snippets from them where they didn’t overlap with mine (with only two inside jokes that I couldn’t resist putting up for the Board):
- Ethical and high integrity in their own jobs and lives
- Comes with an opinion
- Thinking about what will happen next in the business and getting management to think ahead
- Call out your blind spots
- Remembering to thank you and calling out what’s right
- Role modeling for your expectations of your own management team – Do your prep, show up, be fully engaged, be brilliant/transparent/critical/constructive and creative. Then get out of our way
- Offer tough love…Unfettered, constructive guidance – not just what we want to hear
- Pattern matching: they have an ability to map a situation we have to a problem/solution at other companies that they’ve been involved in – we learn from their experience…but ability and willingness to do more than just pattern matching. To really get into the essence of the issues and help give strategic guidance and suggestions
- Ability to down 2 Shake Shack milkshakes in one sitting
- Colorful and unique metaphors
Disclaimer – I run a private company. While I’m sure a lot of these things are true for other types of organizations (public companies, non-profits, associations, etc.), the answers may vary. And even within the realm of private companies, you need to have a Board that fits your style as a CEO and your company’s culture. That said, the formula above has worked well for me, and if nothing else, is somewhat time tested at this point!
Return Path’s Newest Board Member: Jeff Epstein
Return Path’s Newest Board Member: Jeff Epstein
I’ve written before about how much I love my Board. Well, I’m pleased to announce I have a new reason to love it – today, I’m officially welcoming Jeff Epstein to the Return Path Board of Directors. He is joining an all-star cast that includes Greg Sands, Fred Wilson, Brad Feld, Scott Weiss and Scott Petry.
I first met Jeff back in 2000 when, as CFO of DoubleClick, he and DoubleClick CEO Kevin Ryan agreed to invest in Return Path as our first institutional investor, along with Flatiron Partners. He is one of the few people who have seen the company grow from its infancy to today. Jeff has been a formal advisor to the company for more than a year, and he recently agreed to join as a director.
Jeff has all the qualities that make for an awesome board member and he’s already been an influential voice with uncommon insight and an impressive background that complements the rest of our board. As CFO of Oracle Jeff helped guide one of the world’s preeminent technology companies. He’s also served as CFO for large private and public companies including DoubleClick, King World Productions, and Neilsen’s Media Measurement and Information Group, and is a member of the boards of Priceline.com, Kaiser Permanente, Shutterstock, and the Management Board of the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Jeff is currently a partner at Bessemer Venture Partners and a senior advisor at Oak Hill Capital.
Building and managing a board of directors is one of the key functions of a CEO, and the entire Return Path team benefits from a close relationship with great industry leaders. Jeff’s appointment is a perfect example. He’s steered successful organizations through many of the same decisions and challenges that we’re facing. He evaluates issues from multiple points of view – as a senior executive, as a board member, as an investor. And he’s not quiet. On our board, that’s essential. We’re a group of strong personalities—we challenge ideas, we analyze everything, and our views don’t always have to agree.
I’ve said that one secret to running an effective board is to ask for members’ opinions only when you want them. In Jeff’s case I definitely want them. So, on behalf of the board and the entire team at Return Path, Jeff, welcome!
Book Short: Like Reading a Good Speech
Book Short:Â Like Reading a Good Speech
Leaders Eat Last, by Simon Sinek, is a self-described “polemic” that reads like some of the author’s famous TED talks and other speeches in that it’s punchy, full of interesting stories, has some attempted basis in scientific fact like Gladwell, and wanders around a bit. That said, I enjoyed the book, and it hit on a number of themes in which I am a big believer – and it extended and shaped my view on a couple of them.
Sinek’s central concept in the book is the Circle of Safety, which is his way of saying that when people feel safe, they are at their best and healthiest. Applied to workplaces, this isn’t far off from Lencioni’s concept of the trust foundational layer in his outstanding book, Five Dysfunctions of a Team. His stories and examples about the kinds of things that create a Circle of Safety at work (and the kinds of things that destroy them) were very poignant. Some of his points about how leaders set the tone and “eat last,” both literally and figuratively, are solid. But his most interesting vignettes are the ones about how spending time face-to-face in person with people as opposed to virtually are incredibly important aspects of creating trust and bringing humanity to leadership.
My favorite one-liner from the book, which builds on the above point and extends it to a corporate philosophy of people first, customer second, shareholders third (which I have espoused at Return Path for almost 15 years now) is
Customers will never love a company unless employees love it first.
A couple of Sinek’s speeches that are worth watching are the one based on this book, also called Leaders Eat Last, and a much shorter one called How Great Leaders Inspire Action.
Bottom line:Â this is a rambly book, but the nuggets of wisdom in it are probably worth the exercise of having to find them and figure out how to connect them (or not connect them).
Thanks to my fellow NYC CEO Seth Besmertnik for giving me this book as well as the links to Sinek’s speeches.
Book short: Life Isn’t Just a Wiki
Book short: Life Isn’t Just a Wiki
One of the best things I can say about Remote: Office Not Required, by Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson, is that it was short. That sounds a little harsh – part of what I mean is that business books are usually WAY TOO LONG to make their point, and this one was blessedly short. But the book was also a little bit of an angry rant against bad management wrapped inside some otherwise good points about remote management.
The book was a particularly interesting read juxtaposed against Simon Sinek’s Leaders Eat Last which I just finished recently and blogged about here, which stressed the importance of face-to-face and in-person contact in order for leaders to most effectively do their jobs and stay in touch with the needs of their organizations.
The authors of Remote, who run a relatively small (and really good) engineering-oriented company, have a bit of an extreme point of view that has worked really well for their company but which, at best, needs to be adapted for companies of other sizes, other employee types, and other cultures. That said, the flip side of their views, which is the “everyone must be at their cubicle from 9 to 5 each day,” is even dumber for most businesses these days. As usual with these things, the right answer is probably somewhere in between the extremes, and I was reminded of the African proverb, “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go farm go together” when I read it. Different target outcomes, different paths.
I totally agree with the authors around their comments about trusting employees and “the work is what matters.” And we have a ton of flexibility in our work at Return Path. With 400 people in the company, I personally spend six weeks over the summer working largely remote, and I value that time quite a bit. But I couldn’t do it all the time. We humans learn from each other better and treat each other better when we look at each other face to face. That’s why, with the amount of remote work we do, we strongly encourage the use of any form of video conferencing at all times. The importance of what the authors dismiss as “the last 1 or 2% of high fidelity” quality to the conversation is critical. Being in person is not just about firing and hiring and occasional sync up, it’s about managing performance and building relationships.
Remote might have been better if the authors had stressed the value that they get out of their approach more than ranting against the approaches of others. While there are serious benefits of remote work in terms of cost and individual productivity (particularly in maker roles), there are serious penalties to too much of it as well in terms of travel, communication burden, misunderstandings, and isolation. It’s not for everyone.
Thanks to my colleague Hoon Park for recommending this to me. When I asked Hoon what his main takeaway from the book was, he replied:
The importance of open communication that is archived (thus searchable), accessible (transparent and open to others) and asynchronous (doesn’t require people to be in the same place or even the same “timespace”). I love the asynchronous communication that the teams in Austin have tried: chatrooms, email lists (that anyone can subscribe to or read the archives of), SaaS project management tools. Others I would love to try or take more advantage of include internal blogs (specifically the P2 and upcoming O2 WordPress themes; http://ma.tt/2009/05/how-p2-changed-automattic/), GitHub pull requests (even for non-code) and a simple wiki.
These are great points, and good examples of the kinds of systems and processes you need to have in place to facilitate high quality, high volume remote work.
Stamina
Stamina
A couple years ago I had breakfast with Nick Mehta, my friend who runs the incredibly exciting Gainsight.  I think at the time I had been running Return Path for 15 years, and he was probably 5 years into his journey. He said he wanted to run his company forever, and he asked me how I had developed the stamina to keep running Return Path as long as I had. My off the cuff answer had three points, although writing them down afterwards yielded a couple more. For entrepreneurs who love what they do, love running and building companies for the long haul, this is an important topic. CEOs have to change their thinking as their businesses scale, or they will self implode! What are five things you need to get comfortable with as your business scales in order to be in it for the long haul?
Get more comfortable with not every employee being a rock star. When you have 5, 10, or even 100 employees, you need everyone to be firing on all cylinders at all times. More than that, you want to hire “rock stars,” people you can see growing rapidly with their jobs. As organizations get larger, though, not only is it impossible to staff them that way, it’s not desirable either. One of the most influential books I’ve read on hiring over the years, Topgrading (review, buy), talks about only hiring A players, but hiring three kinds of A players: people who are excellent at the job you’re hiring them for and may never grow into a new role; people who are excellent at the job you’re hiring them for and who are likely promotable over time; and people who are excellent at the job you’re hiring them for and are executive material. Startup CEOs tend to focus on the third kind of hire for everyone. Scaling CEOs recognize that you need a balance of all three once you stop growing 100% year over year, or even 50%.
Get more comfortable with people quitting. This has been a tough one for me over the years, although I developed it out of necessity first (there’s only so much you can take personally!), with a philosophy to follow. I used to take every single employee departure personally. You are leaving MY company? What’s wrong with you? What’s wrong with me or the company? Can I make a diving catch to save you from leaving? The reality here about why people leave companies may be 10% about how competitive the war for talent has gotten in technology. But it’s also 40% from each of two other factors. First, it’s 40% that, as your organization grows and scales, it may not be the right environment for any given employee any more. Our first employee resigned because we had “gotten too big” when we had about 25 employees. That happens a bit more these days! But different people find a sweet spot in different sizes of company. Second, it’s 40% that sometimes the right next step for someone to take in their career isn’t on offer at your company. You may not have the right job for the person’s career trajectory if it’s already filled, with the incumbent unlikely to leave. You may not have the right job for the person’s career trajectory at all if it’s highly specialized. Or for employees earlier in their careers, it may just be valuable for them to work at another company so they can see the differences between two different types of workplace.
Get more comfortable with a whole bunch of entry level, younger employees who may be great people but won’t necessarily be your friends. I started Return Path in my late 20s, and I was right at our average age. It felt like everyone in the company was a peer in that sense, and that I could be friends with all of them. Now I’m in my (still) mid-40s and am well beyond our average age, despite my high level of energy and of course my youthful appearance. There was a time several years ago where I’d say things to myself or to someone on my team like “how come no one wants to hang out with me after work any more,” or “wow do I feel out of place at this happy hour – it’s really loud here.” That’s all ok and normal. Participate in office social events whenever you want to and as much as you can, but don’t expect to be the last man or woman standing at the end of the evening, and don’t expect that everyone in the room will want to have a drink with you. No matter how approachable and informal you are, you’re still the CEO, and that office and title are bound to intimidate some people.
Get more comfortable with shifts in culture and differentiate them in your mind from shifts in values. I wrote a lot about this a couple years ago in The Difference Between Culture and Values . To paraphrase from that post, an organization’s values shouldn’t change over time, but its culture – the expression of those values – necessarily changes with the passage of time and the growth of the company. The most clear example I can come up with is about the value of transparency and the use case of firing someone. When you have 10 employees, you can probably just explain to everyone why you fired Joe. When you have 100 employees, it’s not a great idea to tell everyone why you fired Joe, although you might be ok if everyone finds out. When you have 1,000 employees, telling everyone why you fired Joe invites a lawsuit from Joe and an expensive settlement on your part, although it’s probably ok and important if Joe’s team or key stakeholders comes to understand what happened. Does that evolution mean you aren’t being true to your value of transparency? No. It just means that WHERE and HOW you are transparent needs to evolve as the company evolves.
- Get more comfortable with process. This doesn’t mean you have to turn your nimble startup into a bureaucracy. But a certain amount of process (more over time as the company scales) is a critical enabler of larger groups of people not only getting things done but getting the right things done, and it’s a critical enabler of the company’s financial health. At some point, you and your CFO can’t go into a room for a day and do the annual budget by yourselves any more. But you also can’t let each executive set a budget and just add them together. At some point, you can’t approve every hire yourself. But you also can’t let people hire whoever they want, and you can’t let some other single person approve all new hires either, since no one really has the cross-company view that you and maybe a couple of other senior executives has. At some point, the expense policy of “use your best judgment and spend the company’s money as if it was your own” has to fit inside department T&E budgets, or it’s possible that everyone’s individual best judgments won’t be globally optimal and will cause you to miss your numbers. Allow process to develop organically. Be appropriately skeptical of things that smell like bureaucracy and challenge them, but don’t disallow them categorically. Hire people who understand more sophisticated business process, but don’t let them run amok and make sure they are thoughtful about how and where they introduce process to the organization.
I bet there are 50 things that should be on this list, not 5. Any others out there to share?
State of Colorado COVID-19 Innovation Response Team, Part IV – Replacing Myself, Days 7-9
(This is the fourth post in a series documenting the work I did in Colorado on the Governor’s COVID-19 Innovation Response Team – IRT. Other posts in order are 1, 2, and 3.)
Monday, March 23, Day 7
- Wellness screening – put hot cup of coffee against my temples – now finally the thermometer works (although I can’t say that it gives me a high degree of comfort that I have figured out a workaround!)
- Furious execution and still backlog is growing no matter how much I do – thank goodness team is growing. Never seen this before – work coming in faster than I can process it, and I am a fast processer. Inbox clean when I go to bed, up to 75 when I wake up, never slows down
- Private sector explosion – this guy can print 3D swabs – but are they compliant? This guy has an idea for cleansing PPE, this guy can do 3D printing of Ventilator replacement parts, etc. How to corral?
- Corporate Volunteer form is up – 225 entries in the first 12 hours – WOW
- Congressmen and Senators – people contact them, so they want to help, they want to make news, not coordinated enough with state efforts
- Jay Want – early diagnosis losing sense of smell – low tech way to New Normal
- Coordination continues to be key – multiple cabinet level agencies doing their own thing while multiple private sector groups are doing their own thing (e.g. App – “everyone thinks they’re the only people who have this idea”)
- Mayor of Denver just announced lockdown, I guess that trumps the state solution in town, maybe it’s ok since that just leaves rural areas a bit fuzzier
- Need to revise OS – team is about to go from 3 to 9, private sector spinning up
- Brad OS and State employee OS are different – Slack/Trello/Zoom are not tools state employees are familiar with or can even access. Now what?
- Kacey insists the team works remotely other than leaders and critical meetings so we can role model social distancing. GOOD CALL
- One of our private sector guys goes rogue on PR, total bummer – this part (comms) about what we are doing could be more coordinated for sure, but not a priority
- Lots of texts/call with Jared, such a smart and thoughtful guy, really interesting
Tuesday, March 24, Day 8
- Been a week, feels like a month
- Fluid changes to both OS for team and OS for private sector group
- Zoom licenses – state will take a couple weeks to procure them, gotta work around it with Brad
- Slack app won’t get through the firewall. Maybe IT’s supervisor can do us a favor?
- Comp – interesting expedited process – normally takes 65 days to get approval for temps, today we got it done in an hour! Comp levels seem incredibly low. But we got done what we needed to get done
- Some minor territorial conflicts with state tech team and our private sector tech team. Will have to resolve. Surprising how few of these there have been so far given that our team is new and shiny and breaking rules
- Big new Team meeting for first time with Sarah in lead, Red/Yellow/Green check-in (I like that – may have to borrow it!)
- Starting to feel obsolete – love that! Sarah crushing it, totally feels like the right leader, need to make sure she has enough support (might need an admin?)
- Also…maybe I’m not feeling well? A little worried I am getting sick. Hope that’s not true, or if it is, hope it’s not the BAD kind of sick. Going to go work from hotel rest of afternoon
- Call with Jared – concern about managing state’s psychology – testing and isolation services
- Prep for press conference tomorrow
Wednesday, March 25, Day 9
- Woke up feeling awesome – phew – hopefully that was just fatigue or stress induced
- Sarah drowning a bit, feels like me on my 3rd day so makes sense
- Reigning in and organizing private sector seems like a full time job. We are going to recruit my friend Michelle (ex-RP) to come work with Brad on volunteer management. HALLELUJAH!
- Whiteboard meeting with Kacey holding up her laptop so they can see it on Zoom – hilarious – technology not really working, but we are making the best of it
- State role – facilitate alt supply chain to hospitals since normal chain is broken…also maintain emergency state cache – complex but makes more sense now
- More territorial things starting to pop up with state government…processing volunteers
- Comms overload – here comes the text to alert you to the email to alert you to the phone call
- This team/project is clearly a case of finite resources meets infinite scope and infinite volunteer hand-raising
- Gov press conference – issues Stay at Home order through April 11 (interesting, that wasn’t in the version of the talking points I saw several hours before)
- Meeting some of our new team members. I can’t even keep up with them, I think we’re up to 15+ now. Kacey and Kyle are recruiting machines and all these people’s managers are just loaning to us immediately. Love that.
- Amazingly talented and dedicated state employees – seem young, probably not paid well, but superior to private sector comprables in some waysÂ
- Talk with Kacey and Sarah about staff/not drowning
- Kacey feels like Sarah is doing a great job, so she cleared me to go home (wouldn’t have gone without her saying ok, she understands how this whole thing is working way better than I do – I guess that’s what a good chief of staff does!)
Stay tuned for more tomorrow…
Book Short: It’s All About Creative Destruction
I was excited to read Launchpad Republic: America’s Entrepreneurial Edge and Why It Matters, by Howard Wolk and John Landry the minute Brad sent it to me. I love American history, I love entrepreneurship, and I’m deeply concerned about the health of our country right now. I have to say…on all fronts, the book did not disappoint!
The authors make several points, but the one that sets the tone for the book is that like our country’s origins and culture in general, entrepreneurship is itself rebellious. It’s about upstarts challenging the status quo in some way or other with a better way to do something, or with a new thing. The balance between protecting private property rights and allowing for entrepreneurs to fail and to disrupt incumbent leaders is what makes America unique, especially compared to the way European business culture has traditionally operated (consensus-oriented) and the way China operates (authoritarian).
I loved how the authors wove a number of business history vignettes together with relevant thru lines. Business in Colonial times and how Alexander Hamilton thought about national finances may seem dusty and distant, but not when you see the direct connection to John D. Rockefeller, IBM, GE, Microsoft, or Wendy Kopp.
The book was also a good reminder that some of the principles that have made America great and exceptional also underly our successful business culture, things like limited government, checks and balances within government and between government and the private sector, and decentralized finance.
Without being overly political, the authors also get into how our political and entrepreneurial system can and hopefully will tackle some of today’s more complex issues, from climate change to income inequality to stakeholder capitalism.
At the heart of all of it is the notion that entrepreneurs’ creativity drive America forward and are a leading force for making our country and our economy durable and resilient. As a career entrepreneur, and one who is now in the business of helping other entrepreneurs be more successful, this resonated. If you’re a student of American history…or a student of entrepreneurship, this is a great read. If you’re both, it’s a must read.
A Two Week Vacation is More Than Twice As Good As a One Week Vacation
I’ve said this for years, but as I sit on the train commuting into work after a week off relaxing with my family for my Dad’s 75th birthday (or as he prefers to call it, the 46th anniversary of his 29th birthday), I feel particularly inclined to write it up!
I love my job, so I almost never mind going to work. But I also love being on vacation and traveling with my family and try to do as much of it as I can. Years ago before we had kids and became tethered to school and sports schedules, we used to take at least one full two week vacation, completely unplugged, at least once a year. I miss that!
The problem with any vacation longer than a couple days off (which is NOT a vacation) is that it can take several days to unwind, decompress from work and the small stresses of every day life, and unplug, meaning not checking email, reading blogs or the newspaper every morning, and not fidgeting every time you’re more than 10 feet away from your smartphone. Then on the other end of the trip, trying to triage email the day before you go back to work and generally gearing up for reentry into the fast lane also consume a bunch of cycles — and for me, I’ve never been able to sleep well the night before the first day of anything, so it means starting back with diminished relaxation even before walking through the office door.
So all in, that means the true part of a week-long, meaning 9-day vacation (including two weekends), is about 4-5 days.
That’s not bad. But I think you have all that same overhead associated with a two week vacation as well…so a two week vacation of 16 days leaves you with 11-12 days. Mathematically, if not psychically, more than twice as good as the standard one-weeker.
I’m inclined to start doing that once a year again, schedules be damned!
As a side note, two things I also used to do on vacation, even a one-weeker, that I am regretting not doing this time are (a) actually turning my work email account off my phone and leaving it off until the Monday morning after vacation so there’s no cheating on a couple minutes of email here or there, and (b) making sure my schedule is almost completely open that first Monday back to catch up. Next time, those two features will return prominently…along with that full second week off.
Oh, and if anyone says a Startup CEO can’t take a long unplugged vacation…I call bullshit. You may not be able to do it any two weeks of the year with no notice, but plan ahead, leave things in good order, leave someone in charge (or don’t, but be deliberate about that), and let them know where to call you in case the building burns down. It will be fine when you get back, and healthy for tour team to have a break from you as well.
The Art of the Quest
Jim Collins, in both Good to Great and Built to Last talked about the BHAG – the Big, Hairy Audacious Goal – as one of the drivers of companies to achieve excellence. Perhaps that’s true, especially if those goals are singular enough and simplified enough for an entire company of 100-1000-10000 employees to rally around.
I have also observed over the years that both star performers and strong leaders drive themselves by setting large goals. Sometimes they are Hairy or Audacious. Sometimes they are just Big. I suppose sometimes they are all three. Regardless, I think successfully managing to and accomplishing large personal goals is a sign of a person who is driven to be an achiever in life – and probably someone you want on your team, whether as a Board member, advisor, or employee, assuming they meet the qualifications for the role and fit the culture, of course.
I’m not sure what the difference is between Hairy and Audacious. If someone knows Jim Collins, feel free to ask him to comment on this post. Let’s assume for the time being they are one and the same. What’s an example of someone setting a Hairy/Audacious personal goal? My friend and long-time Board member Brad Feld set out on a quest 9 years ago to run a marathon in each of the 50 states by the age of 50. Brad is now 9 years in with 29 marathons left to go. For those of you have never run a marathon (and who are athletic mortals), completing one marathon is a large, great and noteworthy achievement in life. I’ve done two, and I thought there was a distinct possibility that I was going to die both times, including one I ran with Brad . But I’ve never felt better in my life than crossing the finish tape those two times. I’m glad I did them. I might even have another one or two in me in my lifetime. But doing 50 of them in 9 years? That’s a Hairy and Audacious Goal.
For me, I think the Big goal may be more personally useful than the Hairy or Audacious. The difference between a Big goal and a Hairy/Audacious one? Hard to say. Maybe Hairy/Audacious is something you’re not sure you can ever do, where Big is just something that will take a long time to chip away at. For example, I started a quest about 10-12 years ago to read a ton of American history books, around 50% Presidential biographies, from the beginning of American history chronologically forward to the present. This year, I am up to post-Civil War history, so roughly Reconstruction/Johnson through Garfield, maybe Arthur. I read plenty of other stuff, too – business books, fiction, other forms of non-fiction, but this is a quest. And I love every minute of it. The topic is great and dovetails with work as a study in leadership. And it’s slowly but surely making me a hobby-level expert in the topic. I must be nearing Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours by now.
The reason someone sets out on a personal quest is unclear to me. Some people are more goal-driven than others, some just like to Manage by Checklist, others may be ego-driven, some love the challenge. But I do think that having a personal quest can be helpful to, as Covey would say, Sharpen the Saw, and give yourself something to focus personal time and mental/physical energy on.
Just because someone isn’t on a personal quest doesn’t mean they’re not great, by the way. And someone who is on a quest could well be a lunatic. But a personal quest is something that is useful to look for, interesting and worth learning more about if discovered, and potentially a sign that someone is a high achiever.
OnlyOnce Now MultiLingual
OnlyOnce Now MultiLingual
If you look in the left sidebar of OnlyOnce, you will now see a box that says “Translate This Page” with a dropdown that lets you pick the language. Google Translate takes over from there and does the heavy lifting.Â
Global world…awesome service. Thanks, Google!
Thanks Brad and Ross for the tip.
Why French Fries are Like Marketing
My friend Seth has a theory about life called the French Fry Theory. The theory is simple — “you always have room for one more fry.” It’s pretty spot-on, if you think about it. Fries are so tasty, and so relatively small (most of the time), that it’s easy to just keep eating, and eating, and eating them.
I’ve always thought that the French Fry Theory can be applied to many things, usually other food items. However, I came up with a new application today: Marketing.
So why are French Fries like Marketing? You can always do one more thing. One more press release. One more piece of collateral. One more page on the corporate web site. One more newsletter. Trade show. Webinar. Research study. Ad. Search engine placement. Vendor. System. Speech. Take your pick.
The world we operate in is so dynamic that marketing (when done well) is nearly impossible to ever feel like you’re completely on top of. There’s always more to be done, and the trick to doing it well is knowing when to say “no” as much as when to charge into something.
My hat’s off to 21st century online-industry marketers. To bring this analogy back to its starting point…their plates are full!