Several weeks ago, I shared the above Venn diagram in a status update.
With 20k+ likes and comments on LinkedIn and over 2.2k retweets and
favorites on Twitter, it's become the most viral update I've shared to
date. As a result, thought it might be interesting to provide some
additional context on where the diagram came from.
It all started
in a meeting where a talented team was presenting their plan for a
potentially high impact initiative. Midway through, they covered the
measurable results they expected to achieve in three years. Granted,
they were being somewhat conservative, but their objectives were still
way off what I would have expected them to be targeting based on the
addressable opportunity and the assets we were bringing to the table.
Without
hesitation, I challenged the team to increase their long-term goal by
roughly 20x. Regardless of whether or not they could hit the target
(which I think they can), the point was to get them thinking much
bigger, without constraints, and to start by asking the question, "What
would it take...?"
Dream Big
Oftentimes, my
favorite exchanges are with people who are naturally predisposed to
think at truly massive scale and without limitations. When well
reasoned, that kind of vision can be highly inspirational, change the
way teams solve for a specific opportunity or challenge, and ultimately,
transform the trajectory of a company. During this particular meeting, I
ended up writing down two simple words to capture this quality: "Dream
big," with the intention of cascading the theme more broadly.
Get Sh*t Done
Almost
immediately after seeing those words in writing, I realized the message
was incomplete.The team leading the discussion that day may have been
conservative in their approach to articulating what was possible, but
they were also highly capable and credible -- and had a proven track
record of delivering results. Demanding excellence is an important value
for us. It's something I would never want taken for granted or crowded
out by the singular objective of thinking at scale. Asking people to
dream big without delivering on the vision was not only an incomplete
sentiment, it could carry the unintended consequence of producing
pie-in-the-sky thinking without anything to show for it.
If a goal
is truly visionary, it's going to be confronted by doubters, skeptics,
and those threatened by its realization. As a result, there will always
be walls put up on the way to achieving the objective. Some of the most
capable people I've worked with know how to go over, around, or straight
through those walls by virtue of their resourcefulness and sheer force
of will. In other words, they just "get sh*t done."
I added those
three words to my notes, drew overlapping circles around "Get sh*t done"
and "Dream big", and thought about how invaluable it is to work with
people at the intersection of the two.
Know How to Have Fun
It
then occurred to me that I've known a number of people who embodied the
ability to dream big and get sh*t done, but who also proved very
difficult to work with. Perhaps shielded by the immense value they
brought to their respective organizations, they never cultivated the
ability to manage compassionately,
or even cared to. Rather, they did things their way and expected
everyone around them to adapt accordingly. More often than not, that's
exactly what people did.
While this has clearly proven to work at some now legendary companies, it's not an easily scalable or reproducible model, it's not necessary,
and in my opinion, it's not fun (I say in my opinion because there are
those who will argue that winning is fun, regardless of the means
employed).
I've reached a point in my career where I want to be
surrounded by people who not only share a vision, but a genuine
commitment to upholding their company's culture and values. They are
team players, don't take themselves too seriously, and "know how to have
fun." And with that, I added a third circle to the Venn diagram.
At
the nexus of these three circles are the people I most enjoy working
with. I'm extraordinarily grateful to have the opportunity to do that
every day.
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