Or, that you shouldn’t believe everything you read. The firm I worked for had ten corporate values printed in the back of its annual report. Number ten was, “Have fun!” Late one afternoon, about six months into the year, one of my first year colleagues had the temerity to ask Dan, the senior associate who was our drill sergeant, “Hey Dan, one of our corporate values is ‘Have fun!’ When do we get to have fun?” Face reddening, veins bulging, Dan’s reply was “Not until your third year!”
But the biggest thing I learned that year was how not to lead. The senior partners in our department led through fear and intimidation. A typo in a proposal was cause for being publicly called out and dressed down in an all hands staff meeting. Leaving the office before 7:30 or 8:00 pm was seen as a lack of commitment. Yelling at subordinates was the norm. There were good cops and bad cops to keep you on your toes. The threat of firing was always in the air. I often said to myself, “If I ever lead a group of people, I’m going to do the exact opposite of everything they’re doing here.” That actually ended up being a pretty good running start on an approach to leadership in the jobs I had after that one.
My Wall Street days came to mind recently when I was listening to an executive speak to a group of high potential leaders I’m coaching.
Second, keep a long term perspective. Even if a tough assignment lasts for three years or so, that’s still a pretty small percentage of a thirty or forty year career. In a commencement speech at Stanford a few years ago, Steve Jobs made the point that you can never connect the dots in advance, you can only connect them in reverse. In other words, it’s only after we’ve lived through something that we have the perspective to understand why we had to go through it.
What difference has it made or would it make to you to ask yourself, “What am I supposed to be learning from this?”






Scott,
The sad truth is, we have to work at having fun. What I mean is, if we don't schedule it or engage in fun intentionally fun takes a back seat.
Love your work,
Leadership Freak
Dan Rockwell
Posted by: Dan Rockwell | June 21, 2010 at 12:17 PM