Tag Archives: life

Take Up The Trombone

I had lunch with an old friend yesterday.

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(Photo credit: Angela Hawkins)

As we were discussing business he told me the story of a guy he knows who had a brilliant life strategy.  As soon as I heard it I told him it was going to be today’s screed so here it is:

Take up the trombone.

A reasonable person might ask, aside from the hours of musical enjoyment mastery of an instrument might provide, why that’s such a great idea.  As it turns out, proficiency in the trombone is a great gateway into a job with high level symphonies.  Apparently, there are just not a lot of trombonists who carry on with the instrument beyond high school, so college bands are always looking (this helps with the admissions people) and professional music organizations are in dire need as well.  There are a lot of flautists and trumpet players but very few skilled trombonists.

As I thought about it I realized that my daughter’s proficiency in an unusual instrument – the bassoon – did become a topic of interest when she was looking at colleges.  The baseball fans among you will immediately think of left-handed pitchers, many of whom have terrible statistics but the demand for a lefty starter outweighs their apparent mediocrity.

The point is that as we’re undertaking new products or new businesses we’d do well to consider the empty seats in the orchestra.  Rather than “me too” ideas we ought to be thinking about the trombone player.  How can I do something that’s both in demand and gives me a reasonable chance of success even if I’m not perfect every time?  This doesn’t imply lowering one’s standards.  In fact this strategy often requires a complete rethinking of the obvious and extra time to develop the new skills.  It does, however, improve one’s chances for lasting success.

What instruments are you playing today?  Maybe it’s time to change?

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The Four Minute Mile

Late post today so I’ll make it brief.  I was returning from some morning meetings (hence my lateness) and I heard someone talking on the radio about one crisis or another – geopolitical, financial – who knows.  They kept saying that a fix was “impossible” and spent the better part of the segment explaining why that was so.  I, of course, immediately thought of Roger Bannister.

 

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(Photo credit: I am I.A.M.)

 

Right up until that day in May of 1954, it was thought that running a mile in under four minutes was not humanly possible.  I’m sure there were a lot of sportswriters who pontificated much as did the person on the radio this morning about why that was so.  15MPH for that period of time?  No way.  I’m sure they were doing so right up until Bannister crossed the finish line in under four minutes.  To show it wasn’t some superhuman feat, John Landy finished right behind him – also under four minutes.  Suddenly, the common knowledge – and the mental barrier it imposed – changed.  Miles have been run hundreds of times under that barrier now and the record is 3:43, closer to three and a half minutes than to four.

 

We often do the same thing in business.  A sales goal is not achievable   A product can’t be built.  The person with the qualifications we really think are required for the job can’t be found so we settle on someone lesser.  Four minute barriers we can’t break.  Until we do.

 

I’ve used the Bannister example with groups before to get them to think about how our mental barriers hold us back.  What do you think?

 

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What Veteran’s Day Teaches Us About Business

It was Veteran’s Day over the weekend here in the U.S., a day when we honor the service of all of our military veterans.

Veteran

(Photo credit: Keturah Stickann)

It takes place on 11/11, a date chosen because it coincides with the formal end of World War 1. Silly humans – we thought that was the war to end all wars. We’re celebrating the holiday today and many folks are taking the day off (Federal holidays are almost always on Mondays) so I’ll be brief.
All of my social media streams were filled yesterday with people thanking veterans for their service and rightfully so. Putting your country and your fellow citizens ahead of your own wants and needs is a noble act. While it’s not on the same level, how we behave in business can mirror that action.

My inelegant analogy is that we need to put customers and their needs ahead of our own.  Shaving a few cents off of cost or improving our margins to the detriment of the customer experience or product is selfish.  Maybe we need to think of our customers as our superior officers.  When they say something, to echo the Charge Of The Light Brigade, ours is not to reason why.  We need to hear them and act.

To all our vets, thank you for your service.  To my fellow businesspeople, let’s look to the standards of excellence and selflessness demonstrated by our vets as we go about our lives – lives which others made possible!

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