It’s so often the way, isn’t it? Somebody you’re in touch with really sees the change you can help them make in their business.
The trouble is…
The person who most needs to change is someone else in the organisation, quite probably somebody very senior, perhaps the boss. They’re the business’s greatest strength but also it’s greatest weakness, simply because they have so much influence and everything they do is greatly amplified for good or for bad.
(OK, that’s assuming we’re already being the change we want to see and so on.
How do you help your contact successfully suggest a meeting with you to begin the process of change? How do you help them see what they need to see? How do you get started?
One way is to begin by seeking the problem person’s knowledge and input.
What works for you?
We’re so accustomed to ever-present change and the need to lead ourselves and others through challenging times, we’re inclined to think leadership itself is a changing field. I am anyway, or I was.
If you’re on the inside, it can be hard to stimulate change in the wider system because although you have some explicit authority, you’re constrained by your stakeholders’ expectations. We can’t really look to you to show the way on a wider front.
… as opposed to what you know about.
There’s a problem with the team. They’re not performing as effectively as we would expect…
It’s striking how some organizations think first of the scale required to roll something new out to the workforce at large—a daunting and expensive undertaking.
Well, one of the troubles with profiling…
Or you could say, “How congruent?”
How do you keep it going?
Occasionally you learn something truly new and advance the field in some way. It feels like a tiny step to you—one you hardly think worthy of the name.
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