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Get-it-Done Groups: Start Finishing!


I know what I need to do. I’m smart. I know how to do it. I should just do it. But somehow, it never quite gets done.

— Everyone who has to control their own time, about some part of their life


It Happens to High Achievers. They Just Don’t Talk About It.

Are there important goals you’re not achieving, results you’re not getting, progress you’re not making?

You’re smart. You’re capable. You “should” be able to get everything done. After all, you’re always “busy,” aren’t you? Yet somehow, things always seem to get left behind. That project that isn’t quite done or that expense report turned in late.

It feels terrible to know what to do and still not have it happen. Sometimes you neglect an area of your life or business out of necessity. Tradeoffs are necessary.

Other times, it’s just procrastination and foot-dragging, plain and simple. But high achievers? We never admit it. Not out loud at least…

I’m Stever Robbins
Author of “Get-It-Done Guy’s 9 Steps to Work Less and Do More” Host of the “Get-It-Done” Podcast

Willpower doesn’t work

Everyone has an area of their life that needs improvement. But willpower is not going to solve those problems. Willpower is not enough to finish that project, complete that website design, or anything else that needs to get done.

To make matters worse, the urgent can supersede the important. Even though just five concentrated hours of work is all you need, somehow a project takes months to finish.

“That New App” Won’t Help Either

The first tool anyone reaches for today is their smartphone and the latest app. Want to lose weight? Quantify yourself with an app! Want to meet people? Grab an app and start swiping.

These apps will not help you get things done. They aren’t addressing what really matters.

What does matter?

People.

Introducing “Get It Done Groups”

You know when things get done? When other people are involved. For a decade, I’ve run “Do-it Days” to use community support to help get things done. This group helped me write the final draft of my second book in just 20 days.

If human contact can make such a difference in one day, image the impact for weeks and months? This is what the Get It Done Groups offers you.

This Course Includes:

  • Dedicated Accountability Buddy to Help You Get Unstuck: This is your partner for daily check-ins to help you get moving on your to-do list.
  • Individual Coaching Sessions: My office hours are open every week to support you
  • Tools to Overcome Obstacles: These will help you overcome procrastination, interruptions, fear, perfectionism, distractions, going off course, or anything else that might hold you back.
  • Do-It-Days: Twice a week days are designed to provide you with turbo-charged productivity
  • System to Make Progress on Your Most Important Project: Whether you have a personal or professional goal, the Get it Done Groups will make sure you stay on track.
  • Community Support: In addition to your accountability buddy, you’ll have access to the entire Get-It-Done community. We support each other to help one another move forward.
  • Online Learning: Educational modules help reset your mindset in order to get things done.

How I’ve Helped Other Students Get It Done

  • Joyce Testimonial: “I had been thinking of starting a business for 2 years. In 3 weeks, I moved from idea to a concrete plan and conducted two experiments to test my plan. The support from the group made it possible.”
  • Wes Testimonial: “I determined what one thing I should be focusing on in my business right now, and executed on that focus for a solid two weeks of real productivity”
  • Eileen Testimonial: “This community has been a total game changer for me. It’s added back all the elements I miss from my old office job – team and individual accountability, brainstorming and problem-solving with really smart people”

Frequently Asked Questions

I have a chaotic travel and work schedule. This program was designed so you can do it from anywhere, at any time. With only a couple of exceptions, every element of the program will be recorded and you can work through it when it fits into your schedule. The only real-time coordination that’s required is finding a time to check in weekdays with your accountabilibuddy for 5 minutes. Do-It Days and office hours, should you choose to use them, will also require some time synchronization.

I don’t have enough time in the day for another program. Precisely! That’s what this program addresses. It’s designed to take only about 5-10 minutes a day. The power comes from how you design your initial check-in, so those 5-10 minutes orient you and trigger accountability towards whatever will get you furthest along.

I have a vacation scheduled for part of the time. That’s fine. If your accountabilibuddy doesn’t have the same vacation schedule, we’ll find a temporary match to fill in when one of you is on vacation.

I already know everything I need to do. This program isn’t about knowing; it’s about doing. If you’re moving as fast as you want, in the direction you want, this program isn’t for you. But if you know you should be doing something that somehow just isn’t getting done … Get-it-Done Groups will help you make progress.

Commit to Making Progress

The program runs for three months to make sure you achieve your goal within one quarter. What you need to bring is a high level of engagement, a willingness to share feedback, and the willingness to be a strong accountability buddy to help someone else reach their goals.

We have an ongoing community of Get-it-Done Groups so far, and not only does the program work, it works very, very well. Attendees used were able to establish new routines, finish projects, and tackle things that had stalled:

  • Finish building a product that has been under construction for the last year.
  • Find the “one thing” to orient a business around, and align the business strategy in that new direction.
  • Consolidate a dozen different products and brands under a single umbrella.
  • Plow through intense client workload at the height of tax season.
  • Begin incorporating personal branding into ongoing marketing, and then into a full set of business-building experiments.

Get-It-Done Group will also lend itself to projects that take more time to come to fruition:

  • Experimenting with different marketing strategies.
  • Writing a thesis.
  • Testing different business brands.
  • Finish building a product that has been under construction for the last year.
  • Find the “one thing” to orient a business around, and align the business strategy in that new direction.
  • Consolidate a dozen different products and brands under a single umbrella.
  • Plow through intense client workload at the height of tax season.
  • Begin incorporating personal branding into ongoing marketing, and then into a full set of business-building experiments.

Where Do You Want to Be 3 Months From Now?

I’m sure there’s something on your to-do list either personally or professionally. Can you look yourself in the mirror and tell yourself that you will accomplish it within the next 3 months on your own?

If not, I welcome you to join our community. The Get-It-Done Groups are the real deal for achieving your objectives. You probably have some extra time on your hands as well. Take advantage today by joining a Get-It-Done Group.

Please feel free to reach out if you have questions and would like to discuss attending.

What do CEOs do? A CEO Job Description

What do CEOs do? A CEO Job Description

The Chief Executive Officer is one of the most coveted titles, and least understood jobs in a company. Everyone believes that CEOs can do whatever they want, are all powerful, and are magically competent. Nothing could be further from the truth. By its very nature, the job description of a CEO means meeting the needs of employees, customers, investors, communities, and the law. Some of a CEO’s job can be delegated. But several elements of the job must be done by the CEO. Read on for the details of what makes a CEO.

What is intrinsic to the CEO’s job?

This isn’t a traditional job description; it’s an examination of the actual roles that a CEO plays (legally or de facto) within a company. A CEO’s job description includes a few important areas. Any individual CEO may take on any tasks that they wish, but these are the things that can’t be delegated:

  1. Setting strategy and direction
  2. Modeling and setting the company’s culture, values, and behavior
  3. Building and leading the senior executive team
  4. Allocating capital to the company’s priorities

While a CEO may get input for some of those duties, it is the CEO’s—and only the CEO’s—responsibility to perform those well. Being the CEO, they can spend the rest of their time doing whatever they decide they want to spend their time on. But ultimately, everything else about a given CEO’s job is optional.

Success as a CEO requires more than just knowing the CEO’s job description. A CEO needs to know how to measure their success as a CEO, avoid the pitfalls that are unique to the CEO’s job, and conduct themselves to stay sane and skillful over time.

A CEO Job Description, Part 1

Admit it. We all feel a touch of awe when someone has it: the CEO title. The power, the salary, and the chance to Be The Boss. It’s worthy of awe!

Too bad so few CEOs are good at what they do. In fact, only 1 in 20 are in the top 5%[1]. Many don’t know what their job should be, and few of those can pull it off well. The job is simple—very simple. But it’s not easy at all. What is a CEO’s job?

More than with any other job, the responsibilities of a CEO diverge from the duties and the measurement.

A CEO’s responsibilities: everything, especially in a startup. The CEO is responsible for the success or failure of the company. Operations, marketing, strategy, financing, creation of company culture, human resources, hiring, firing, compliance with safety regulations, sales, PR, etc.—it all falls on the CEO’s shoulders. Being responsible means that the CEO is the one held accountable for the success of the company’s efforts, across the board. But of course, the CEO doesn’t actually do all that work.

The CEO’s duties are what she actually does, the responsibilities she doesn’t delegate. Some things can’t be delegated. Creating culture, modeling values, building the senior management team, financing road shows, ultimate approval of how money gets spent, and, indeed, the delegation itself can be done only by the CEO.

Many start-up CEOs think fund-raising is their most important duty. I disagree. Fund-raising is necessary, but the CEOs contribution is in building a superb business with the money raised.

Setting strategy and direction

What is the CEO’s main duty? Setting strategy and vision.The senior management team can help develop strategy. Investors can approve a business plan. The Board can approve, advise, or ask the CEO to revise a business strategy. But at the end of the day, it’s the CEO who ultimately sets the direction:

  • Which markets will the company enter? Against which competitors?
  • What will the company’s product lines be?
  • How will the company differentiate itself? Will it be low cost? High service? Convenient Locations? Flexible financing? High-touch? Mass produced?

The CEO decides, sets budgets, forms partnerships, sells off incompatible product lines, makes acquisitions, and hires a team to steer the company accordingly.

Modeling and setting the company’s culture, values, and behavior

The CEO’s second duty is building culture. Work gets done through people, and people are profoundly affected by culture. A lousy place to work can drive away high performers. After all, they have their pick of places to work. And a great place to work can attract and retain the very best.

Culture is built in dozens of ways, and the CEO sets the tone. Her every action—or inaction—sends cultural messages (see “Life Under a Magnifying Glass”). Clothes send signals about how formal the workplace is. Who she talks to signals who is and isn’t important. How she treats mistakes (feedback or failure?) sends signals about risk-taking. Who she fires, what she puts up with, and what she rewards shape the culture powerfully.

This can not be emphasized enough! People imitate a CEO’s behavior when deciding how to act. The book Pre-suasion by Robert Cialdini, documents at length the ways in which, for example, a dishonest CEO makes employees feel as if they can cut corners, steal from the company, and generally behave according to those same standards.

A project team worked weekends launching a multimedia web site on a tight deadline. Their CEO was on holiday when the site launched. She didn’t call to congratulate the team. To her, it was a matter of keeping her personal life sacred. To the team, it was a message that her personal life was more important than the weekends and evenings they had put in to meet the deadline. Next time, they may not work quite so hard. The emotion and effect on the culture was real, even if it wasn’t what the CEO intended. Congratulations from the CEO on a job well done can motivate a team like nothing else. Silence can demotivate just as quickly.

If vision is where the company is going, values tell how the company gets there.Values outline acceptable behavior. The CEO conveys values through actions and reactions to others. Slipping a ship schedule to meet quality levels sends a message of valuing quality. Not over-celebrating a team’s heroic recovery when they could have avoided a problem altogether sends a message about prevention versus damage control. People take their cues about interpersonal values—trust, honesty, openness—from CEO’s actions as well.

Building and leading the senior executive team

Team-building is the CEO’s #3 duty. The CEO hires, fires, and leads the senior management team. They, in turn, hire, fire, and lead the rest of the organization.

The CEO must be able to hire and fire non-performers. She must resolve differences between senior team members, and keep them working together in a common direction. She sets direction by communicating the strategy and vision of where the company is going. Strategy sets the direction for the senior team, who in turn set it for the rest of the company. With clear direction that everyone understands, the team can rally together and make it happen.

Don’t underestimate the power of setting direction. In 1991, at Intuit’s new employee orientation, CEO Scott Cook presented his vision of Intuit as the center of computerized personal finance. Intuit had just 120 employees and one product. Ten years later, it’s a billion-dollar company with thousands of employees and dozens of products. Worldwide, it is the winner in personal finance, bar none. The success is due in no small part to every Intuit employee knowing and sharing the company’s vision and strategy.

Allocating capital to the company’s priorities

Capital allocation is the CEO’s #4 duty. The CEO sets budgets within the firm. She funds projects which support the strategy, and ramps down projects which lose money or don’t support the strategy. She considers carefully the company’s major expenditures, and manages the firm’s capital. If the company can’t use each dollar raised from investors to produce at least $1 of shareholder value, she decides when to return money to the investors. Some CEOs don’t consider themselves financial people, but at the end of the day, it is their decisions that determine the company’s financial fate.


Footnotes for Part 1

[1] Pay no attention to the math background peeking from behind the curtain… back

Measuring Success as a CEO.

Knowing the job description is a good first step for a CEO, but to know how she’s doing, she needs to design her own measurement system.

Unlike inconvenient lower-level jobs, no one tells the Chief Executive how she’s doing. Do managers let her know she’s undermining their authority, making poor decisions, or communicating poorly? Not likely. Even when a CEO asks for honest feedback, the fear is there: non-flattering feedback may stall a promising career[1]. Even when a company uses 360-degree feedback, no one penalizes the CEO if she doesn’t act on the feedback.

The Board of Directors supposedly oversees the CEO, but they are far removed from day-to-day actions. Over time, they can evaluate performance, but they look mainly at share price and company strategy. They are rarely interested in—(or qualified to comment on!)—the CEO’s daily behavior.

But the CEO’s daily behavior will make or break the company! The CEO’s duties don’t change because they are unmeasured. Indeed, lax measurement makes it easy for the CEO to feel confident, even when she shouldn’t. Good feedback is the only way to know what’s working, but share price simply doesn’t do it. External measures measure the company, not the link between the CEO’s actions. A low share price tells her something’s wrong, but it doesn’t help her figure out what.

By measuring her performance based on her duties, a CEO can learn to do her job better. As explained in part 1, the CEO’s job is setting strategy and vision, building culture, leading the senior team, and allocating capital. The last of these is easy to measure. The first three are more of a challenge.

How does a CEO know she’s doing the vision thing? It’s hard. Having vision isn’t enough—that just takes a handful of mushrooms and a vision quest. Communicating the vision is the key. When people “get it,” they know how their daily job supports the vision. If they can’t link their job to the vision, that tells a CEO that her communication is faulty, or she hasn’t helped her managers turn the vision into actual tasks. Either way, a CEO can monitor her success as a visionary by questioning and listening for employees to link their jobs with the company vision.

Culture building is subtle, the culture a CEO sees may be very different from the culture of the rank-and-file. One company had a facilities policy that all equipment within 450 feet of the senior management offices was kept in top working order. Senior managers saw a smoothly running company, while everyone else saw neglect and carelessness.

Surveys about openness, values, and morale can be used to develop a measure of culture. The questions to ask aren’t rocket science. The book First, Break all the Rules gives a great questionnaire for measuring overall culture. Also, check turnover. When 95% of your workforce says they can’t wait to get to work, something is going right. If people rarely leave, and if it’s easy to attract top talent at below-market prices, you can be sure the culture plays a large role. If people leave (especially your top performers), again—look to culture. And don’t underestimate the power of walking around and counting smiles. If people are having fun, it will show.

The CEO’s success at team-building can often be measured through the team. Teams usually know when they’re effective. They can also rate their team using assessments that measure specific behaviors. For example, “I can trust my teammates.” “My teammates deliver their part of the project on time.” “Every member knows what is expected of them.” Regular team self-assessments can help the CEO track the team’s progress and hone her abilities to keep the team running smoothly[2].

Easiest to measure is a CEO’s capital allocation skill. In fact, financial measures are the ones made public: earnings and share price. But how can a CEO link those to her actual decisions? Working with her CFO, a CEO can devise financial measures appropriate to her business. Sometimes traditional measures are most appropriate, such as economic value added or return on assets (for a capital-intensive company). Other times, the CEO may want to invent business-specific measures, such as return on training dollars, for a company which values state-of-the-art training for employees. By monitoring several such measures, a CEO learns to link her budget decisions with company outcomes. Ultimately, the CEO’s should be creating more than a dollar of value for every dollar invested in the company. Otherwise, her best bet is to return cash to the shareholders for them to invest in more productive vehicles.

In startups, earnings begin low to nonexistent, and share price is more about salesmanship and vision than earnings. So the CEO gets almost no useful feedback about her capital allocation wisdom. She doesn’t know whether a dollar spent on a slightly nicer-than-necessary copy machine is wasted or is a wise investment in a long-term. Careful attention to the design and tracking of financial measures can help her prepare for the transition to an earnings-driven company.

In his 1988 Annual Report, Berkshire Hathaway chairman Warren Buffett included an excellent essay on CEO accountability. Click here to read Mr. Buffett’s observations on CEO measurement.


Footnotes for Part 2

[1] The CEOs don’t help the problem. Many of my CEO clients highlight the value of honest feedback from their coach. Yet they complain about employees who disagree with them, just don’t “get it” or don’t have enough information “to understand the real issues.” In a coaching call, they can hear feedback and consider it. At work, they treat disagreement as dissension, and then wonder why everyone’s a “Yes man.” back

[2] There are dozens of team effectiveness surveys. You can start by checking out http://www.cambriaconsulting.com, http://www.ccl.org, and http://www.pfeiffer.com. back

Pitfalls and Solutions for the CEO

A CEO can tank a company by not understanding their duties, or failing to set up good measurement systems. But it’s also true that the job itself can screw up the person, as well. It’s said that power corrupts, and few positions are more powerful than CEO. While the USA may be a democracy, our companies are legal dictatorships with the CEO calling the shots(1). While she may be having a great time playing Boss, the position may be taking a very human toll.

It’s all too easy for the CEO to become a …; jerk(2)  …; without realizing it. They can forget—if they ever knew—what it was like to have a boss. They are free to ignore feedback that they don’t want to hear, and no one will call them to task for it. They can bypass the chain of command when they want to meddle. They can give themselves raises and genuinely believe they deserve it. And most dreadfully, they can forget what it is like to be “one of the little people”:

workerI have to leave early today.
CEOWhy?
workerTo pick up my kids from daycare.
CEO Oh… (looks genuinely perplexed) Why don’t you have your nanny do that?
workerI don’t have a nanny.
CEOOh…; wanders away with a mildly confused expression

The worker was an incredibly productive person. She worked harder than the CEO, got more done, yet couldn’t have afforded a nanny if her life depended on it. The CEO didn’t intend to be a jerk, but his lack of empathy didn’t win many supporters.

A CEO can become arrogant by externalizing blame

Having no day-to-day accountability for her actions can also turn a CEO sour. When things go wrong, she can blame everyone around her without facing her own shortcomings. “My employees just don’t get it,” proclaims the CEO, never thinking for a moment that she is the one who hired them. Did she hire incompetents? Or has she failed to communicate goals consistently and clearly? “Market conditions have changed.” she declares. A nice excuse, but isn’t it the CEO’s job to anticipate the market and position the company for success under a variety of scenarios? Without someone to keep her honest, she can gradually absolve herself of all responsibility.

Believing in a title can lead to overconfidence

Arrogance also threatens a CEO. “Because I am CEO, I must know the business better than anyone else.” It has been said, but it just isn’t true. No CEO can be an expert in all functional areas. A CEO who is doing her job is spending time with the big picture. If she knows the details better than her employees, she’s either hiring the wrong people or spending her time at the wrong levels of the organization. It’s appropriate for a CEO to manage operations if absolutely necessary, but she should quickly hire good operational managers and return to leading the whole business.

If she also comes to believe that the CEO title grants infallibility, watch out. Even the Pope is only infallible a couple of times each century. But CEOs can reinforce their delusions of grandeur by giving themselves higher salaries (surely she deserves it! After all, salary benchmarks show how underpaid she is) and more perks. Then when layoffs come, the CEO wants applause for having the moral strength to make “hard choices,” quietly overlooking how her own poor decision making led to the need for layoffs.

CEOs can stop learning well

Of course, once infallible, there’s no more to learn, and a CEO may quietly stop learning. Without daily oversight and high quality feedback on how she does her job, she can mistakenly believe her actions lead to success. In reality, she may be doing the wrong thing, but her staff may be working around the clock to cover for her.

Furthermore, sins of omission aren’t penalized. A CEO who does an adequate job, but far less than she could/should have done—goes unnoticed. In hindsight, XYZ Software(3) could have had a $1 billion market niche, and gone public with a valuation of tens of billions. Instead, it stuck to one product, had little understanding of its markets, and ignored competition. Yet it still went public in a $300-million IPO. Was management penalized for a lack of vision and market responsiveness? Hardly! The top managers walked off with $60 million apiece, reinforcing the notion that they had done a great job. Yet with a slightly grander vision, the company might have been 10 or 100 times its size.

Setting vision is the CEO’s job, but nothing tells her if her sights are too low. She isn’t penalized for missing the grander vision. Such sins of omissions are a CEO’s worst enemy. She can be lulled into mediocrity by not knowing what would have been possible. The four-minute mile was considered impossible…until Roger Bannister ran it. Now, it’s commonplace. Likewise, a CEO may limit herself by not realizing she can do her job better.

Though salary benchmarks are common, performance benchmarks are surprisingly rare. Quality learning demands a CEO benchmark herself against other superb CEO’s. Her central learning question is not “are you doing a good job?” but “are other CEOs doing a better job and if so, how can you learn to measure up?(4)


Footnotes for part 3

(1) Ok, ok. Technically the Board of Directors has hire/fire authority over the CEO, but the Board can’t control day-to-day operations. And while there are certainly boards that replace inept CEOs, it takes sustained incompetence over a long time to move a board to action. So for practical purposes, the buck stops with the CEO. back

(2) Her employees may use less diplomatic terms. back

(3) Names are changed to protect the innocent. back

(4) An excellent book on management best practices is “First, Break All the Rules” available by clicking here to go to the books page. back

Coaching tips to stay sane and skillful at the top of the heap.

These coaching assignments will help an executive avoid some of the pitfalls of the CEO job. They are simple, easy, and won’t take much time. They’ll help a CEO stay connected with workers, keep herself humble, and increase her learning while becoming more successful. The suggestions strive to be quick and easy to do, while still producing real results.

Make Space to Practice These Assignments

Set aside 5 to 10 minutes, daily, to developing as a leader and human being. This will be the time you think about the below topics and set your mind for the day. Schedule the time if necessary. Just make sure that you do what’s right for your growth.

Pace yourself. Life is long. Adopt these suggestions one or two at a time, and practice until you make them your own. Then move on. Forcing won’t help; this is about developing at your own natural rhythm. Do one assignment for a few weeks, then move on to another. Keep the ones that work for you and drop those that don’t.

Staying connected with “the little people”

Cultivate an attitude of respect—your respect for them. The “little people” are the ones turning your vision into reality. Meditate on this for a few minutes and ask yourself whether you can their jobs as well as they can. If you can, then you’re not hiring the right people—go change that! Otherwise, once a day, go talk to one of your low-level employees—someone more capable than you in their area of expertise—and learn from them. Choose a different person each day. Get as close to the front line workers as possible.

Listen with an open mind and learn. Learn about their job. Ask what works for them and what doesn’t. Above all, listen to their comments without judgment. Your goal is to connect with their experience of the world, not impose your own. Learn about their life. Find out what motivates them. Why did they come work for you instead of somewhere else? Simply by spending a few minutes understanding their life, you can greatly increase your appreciation of how they’re different (and similar!).

Share your vision and job with them, from a position of service. Pretend that your job is to make this person a success. Ask them how their job fits into the work the company does. If they don’t know, take on the responsibility of helping them understand how their job links to the vision. Clarify any confusion they may have about where the company is going. And ask them what you can do to help them succeed at doing their best. Then do it.

Staying humble

Acknowledge, often! Without your employees, your dreams and plans wouldn’t amount to much. Take every available opportunity to acknowledge the contribution of those around you and give them credit, especially in public. Feedback is rare in most companies, and positive feedback is rarest of all(1).

“Get” that it’s all your responsibility. When things don’t go the way you want, take responsibility—whether or not it’s your fault. The mindset of responsibility will put you in a much more powerful place than the mindset of blame. Regularly review circumstances asking, “What could I do differently (or stop doing) to make a positive difference?” Identify the action and then take it. You’ll be surprised how much more power you have over externalities, operating from responsibility rather than blame.

Gather honest advisors to hold you accountable for your behavior. Sometimes a Board of Directors will give honest feedback, but they are removed from your day-to-day behavior. Actively solicit feedback from third parties: friends, peers, associates. Share your issues and how you’re handling them, and ask for an honest assessment. Everyone in a company is accountable to someone for their behavior, except the CEO. Make yourself accountable as best you can.

Identify your limits. Ask, “can someone else in the world do my job better than I am currently doing it?” If the answer is Yes, seek out that person and ask for their guidance in getting better. If the answer is No, validate that answer by asking your advisors, competitors, suppliers, customers, and employees. Many companies have crashed and burn because they believe they were the best, for no good reason but pride and ego.

Create measurable performance criteria for your executive team, including yourself. Make sure people within the organization know your goals, and know what you can be counted on to do. Hold yourselves accountable. If you don’t meet your goals, withhold your bonus, take no raise, and treat yourself exactly as you would treat an employee who missed their targets. It sends a powerful message to the company that you’re serious about performance.

Ask your direct reports, your Board of Directors, and anyone else you work with for feedback a couple of times a year. You can use a 360-degree feedback process or simply ask in an e-mail. It’s a lot easier to hear feedback on your performance if you’ve explicitly asked for it.

Videotape yourself receiving bad news. Watch the videotape and decide whether or not you would want to work for that person. If the answer is No, learn to chill when you hear bad news.

Learning well

Study excellent CEOs. Call a CEO you admire and invite them to lunch. Exchange tips and adopt tactics that others have found useful. Read books like First, Break All the Rules, which are broad-based studies of habits of top-performers. Adopt at least one new habit a month.

Create systems for gathering feedback. Interview customers, competitors, analysts, and others in your industry to know how your company and products are perceived. Make sure you’re gathering feedback that will disconfirm your beliefs about the world, as much as confirms it. For example, if you think you’re #1 in your market, don’t just ask customers why they like your products. Ask what other products they use, and how your products fall short.

Spend time learning about the fundamentals of a CEO’s job:

  • Setting strategy. The strategy and vision for the company determine where everyone will focus their efforts. Find a vision and strategy and use it to align your entire company.
  • Creating the corporate culture. Your culture will determine what people do and don’t try, who will stay, who will leave, and how business will get done. Culture starts with you. Decide how you want people to act and start modeling the behavior publicly.
  • Capital allocation. Every dollar you raise and spend should produce more than $1 of return for the company, or it’s a waste of money. Learn how to make these judgements.
  • Hiring and Firing. The job of executives is primarily team and culture building. Hiring and firing are must-have skills. Read, take classes, and review past hiring successes and mistakes. Do whatever you can to hone your abilities.

Raise the Bar

Hold yourself to higher standards next year than you did this year. Challenge yourself to learn to get more done with fewer hours and fewer resources while creating a more balanced life for yourself.

These are just a few of the things you can do to increase your chances for success as a senior executive. I also believe in working with a coach to identify and overcome (or compensate for) blocks in your performance. Success can be had with many different skill sets. The more you learn about yourself and your capabilities, the better you will be able to shape a job that works for you. The more you learn about the capabilities of those around you, the better you will be able to build teams that produce spectacular results.

Do Great Things!


Footnotes for Part 4

(1) Social psychology has shown that rewarding desired behavior is far more effective than punishing bad behavior or non-performance. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, our culture has evolved around using punishment as the main way of controlling behavior. Unfortunately, punishment doesn’t work very well. Interestingly, animal trainers have known this for years. For an excellent book on the subject, check out Don’t Shoot the Dog by Karen Pryor. back

Further Reading

You may also enjoy the article The Executive Mind-Set and my book on business leadership, It Takes a Lot More than Attitude…to Lead a Stellar Organization.

Back to Stever’s articles index

Episode 555: Recycling

Episode 555: Recycling

In Episode 555, I mention sources about the origins and usefulness (or lack thereof) of recycling: The origins of anti-litter campaigns. Basically a corporate strategy to shift the cost of reusability from the corporate income statement onto the communities. This is...

Ten Cultural Career Lies

Things “they” told us that just might not be true.

Related article: How to write a good cover letter.

Download Ten Cultural Career Lies as a PDF

In April 2008, I gave a talk at Harvard Business School on the Ten Cultural Career Lies. These are things I believed for most of my life. Recently, the conventional wisdom started seeming suspect. I called several of my classmates who are all mid-career and asked what had led to their successes and failures. Upon close examination, much of what I had believed to be true about careers did not seem to hold.

This is one man’s experience. I invite you to decide if it matches your experience.

1. You can plan your career (or would even want to).

  • That’s not my experience, nor is it the experience of anyone over 35 I’ve talked to.
  • Maybe it worked in the 1950s…
  • Maybe it works in careers driven by successive degree requirements (e.g. medicine)
  • We get trained to think in terms of one-step-leads-to-another by 18 years of linear schooling.
  • So: plan less and be more. Hang out with good people doing good stuff and grab opportunity as it passes by.

2. Being the boss makes for a good life.

  • Have you ever worked closely with a CEO? It can be a great job, but it can also suck. Like any job, it requires a certain temperament and set of skills.
  • So: find jobs that suit your skills and temperament, don’t assume that the “oooh! isn’t that amazing” jobs will be good for you.

3. “Self-made” people exist.

  • The most self-made person alive still relied on millions of others to provide financial markets, schools, sewers, and the infrastructure that allowed them to go off and become “self-made.”
  • So: Recognize interdependency and build your life around positive interdependency. And when you want to learn to emulate a “self-made” person, pay attention to all the ways they weren’t self-made; that’s where the learning is. (And by the way, they may not be helpful in pointing out ways that contradict their myth.)

4. Hard work and skill will be appropriately rewarded.

  • Bear Sterns CEO cashed out for “only” $60 million. Cleaning lady @ $8/hour must work two jobs just to pay rent and still doesn’t make enough to save anything. ‘Nuff said.
  • So: understand what is rewarded (by money, power, respect, affection, time off, flexibility, freedom) and do that. If you want money, finance is the surest way to get it.

5. Do a good job and you’ll get ahead.

  • So: See #4. Pay special attention to what the people who will promote you want to see. Don’t assume it’s results.

6. I’ll work now and do what I love when I’ve made my first million, cured cancer, etc.

  • Management consulting firms and investment banks use this lie as a recruiting tool.
  • Dangerous strategy, and I know very few who’ve pulled it off. If you don’t do it, you’re left at mid-life trapped in a career you don’t like, with a non-transferable resume, and a network composed of people who are the last ones in the world who could help you do what you love. But boy, could they help you get even further in the career you despise.
  • So: Factor in your passions and ideals from day one.

7. Intelligence matters.

  • Up to a point. After that point, it can threaten people. It’s only useful insofar as you have the people/political/marketing skills to get your ideas in play. Even then, unless you’re perfect, you run the risk of overconfidence.
  • So: take classes when you need them, but stop assuming more knowledge is the answer to every problem. As a Fortune 500 ceo once confided: “business really just isn’t rocket science. In fact, to a smart person, it’s kinda boring…”

8. Achievement matters.

  • Actually not. Who you know and who thinks well of you probably matters at least as much as what you’ve achieved, if not more.
  • So: don’t get too caught up in building that great company, finishing that piece of art, or whatever. Yes, getting things done can be good. But if you enjoy and learn from the things that don’t get done, that may be enough.

9. We can control our lives.

  • Sickness, death, lotteries, luck, and love all happen. My friend just moved from Washington D.C. to Las Cruces, NM, where his snuggle-bunny has a job. That sure wasn’t planned for.
  • So: go with the flow. Learn to accept the things you can’t control. Be o.k. with that. Enjoy the process and don’t sweat it if you don’t reach the outcome. (That said, give it your best shot if you really want it.)

10. Success (money, power, achievement) brings happiness.

  • This has been disproven by tons of research. See the books Happy for No Reason by Marci Shimoff, Are You Ready to Succeed by Srikumar Rao, or Authentic Happiness by Marty Seligman.
  • This lie causes great unhappiness. See The Happy or Successful diagram below.
  • So: orient your life around happiness and look for success, not the other way around.

Happy or Successful Decision Tree

Click to view the image in full-page size.

Decision tree showing the difference between a life based on happiness and one based on success.

Decision tree: living for happy vs. living for success.

Broadway-Based Business Workshops

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Broadway Fantasy Camp, and I partner to run business workshops that use theater and performing arts exercises to tap your team’s creativity. We use concrete, business-based facilitation to tie the learning directly into your team’s outcomes.

Click the arrows to explore the topics and curricula.

Workshop Topics

CONFIDENCE IN PUBLIC SPEAKING! CONNECT TO YOUR AUDIENCE: 1000 PEOPLE. 100 PEOPLE. 1 PERSON.

According to most studies, people’s #1 fear is public speaking. Number two is death. This means, to the average person, if you go to a funeral, you’re better off in the casket than in doing the eulogy. — Jerry Seinfeld

Persuasive speaking is one of the most important skills a person can have. Virtually everyone in business needs to present ideas in a way that’s credible, authoritative, and worth taking seriously.

Effective public speaking is one of the most important life skills a person can develop. How someone delivers their message while presenting can be a deciding factor in many things such as career development, business growth and even in the relationships with friends and family.

We have plenty of outliners and presentation software for organizing content. This workshop provides the toolbox for confidence, poise, and presence needed to handle the expected and the unexpected with style.
Participant takeaways include:

  • Tools to ease performance anxiety.
  • A greater sense of confidence in presenting before an audience
  • Techniques for recreating that confidence in front of any future audience.
  • The chance to step way outside their comfort zone – and love it!

Available using: Open Scenes or Sing Broadway, Dance Broad

CREATIVITY ENHANCEMENT

Setting strategy, designing products, and problem-solving of any kind all benefit from boosting creativity. Achieving highly creative output from your team requires your team to be in a highly creative state of mind before they begin to generate options and ideas.

Drawing from the creativity of theatrical performance, we first provide exercises and facilitation to open up your team’s thinking, get them out of their normal “business selves,” and help them let go of their inhibitions. Then we transition directly into producing business results on the business problems your team brings to the session.

We customize each engagement to the needs of your situation. We can transition to your facilitators, or we can facilitate, guiding your group through the workshop to begin solving the business challenges of your choice.
Participant takeaways include:

  • A freer sense of how to explore business solutions.
  • Tools to boost creativity beyond each person’s perceived limits.
  • Ways of getting people out of their heads and into their playful selves.

Available using: Open Scenes or Sing Broadway, Dance Broadw

TEAM-BUILDING

Working in a high-functioning team magnifies the strengths of everyone on the team. But if a team doesn’t “gel,” it can actively keep its members from making progress.

Theatrical production requires the purest forms of teamwork. No individual can make a production a success, but any weak link can tank it. The best Hamlet in the world won’t matter if the lighting designer has the actor delivering their famous soliloquy in darkness.

Our team-building program recreates that experience in your own business. We work with your team to create a mini-production, in which every person plays a key, indispensable role. Then the fun begins. The real world production throws obstacles into the experience that the team must overcome as a team.

We then guide the group to understand how to apply the lessons from their performance to their work together. We demonstrate how to transfer what they’ve learned in the exercise into teamwork that produces business results.

During the course of the workshop we will address:

Team members needing to know and understand each others’ roles.

  • Handing off work between members of the team.
  • Setting internal quality standards within the team.
  • Taking personal responsibility for team success.
  • Replacing “It’s not my job” mentality with “It’s everyone’s job.”

Available using: Sing Broadway, Dance Broadway.

RISK-TAKING AND ELIMINATING COMPLACENCY

Innovation requires the ability to think creatively and come up with new ideas. Then, it’s time to take action. People hold back from action out of complacency, fear of failure, or being too wedded to “the one right way.”

Using theater Open Scene exercises, we help your team members approach the same situation in very different ways from the vantage of several different characters. They share their choices with each other, so everyone has the opportunity to view multiple solutions to the same circumstance.

Then the teams bring what they’ve created into discussions about your current business challenges. They apply what they’ve discovered towards a solution to those challenges.

By inhabiting a character they’ve created, people gain the confidence to go beyond their normal comfort zone.

The mindset shifts that will be explored are:

  • Complacency to engagement.
  • Fear of failure to adventurous courage.
  • Victim of circumstance to owner of circumstance.
  • Conformity to creativity.

Available using: Open Scenes

PERSONAL PRODUCTIVITY

The tools we have today give us unprecedented power in getting work done. But very same tools that give us the power can hold us back if they’re not used well. Learning how to manage our tools and ourselves, however, can help us become far more productive, with far more ease.

This workshop begins with an interactive, 45-minute 2-person musical, performed by New York professional actors, based on the top-10 Get-it-Done Guy iTunes podcast. We then move into a session custom-designed for your organization, in which we adapt the techniques so they can be applied immediately in your organization.

The goal of this presentation is to teach the group techniques that can save at least 30 minutes a day, every day, adding up to 3 work weeks per year for every participant.

We customize the session to include any areas you believe will be especially beneficial for your organization. Topics that are already built in to the presentation include:

  • Overcoming procrastination.
  • Quickly handling email.
  • Dealing with the distractions presented by technology.
  • Building stronger relationships within a team.

Available using: Work Less and Do More: The (Zombie) Musical

LIVING AN EXTRAORDINARY LIFE

How would life change if you committed to living only a life that you defined as extraordinary? This presentation/workshop explores that question.

We hear the rules we have for life success, rules like “work hard,” from the time we’re young. We repeat them to our friends, our children, and ourselves. Yet many of those rules remain unchallenged throughout our lives. Or if we do challenge them, we don’t know what to do instead.

Creating an exceptional life demands a balance between identity—who we are—and capability—what we can do. This workshop, based on Stever’s TEDx Mill River presentation, relates his experience changing the rules and spending three years driving his life towards a perfect “10″, rather than following his “should” or “ought to”s.

During that time, he created one of the world’s top business podcasts with almost 200,000 weekly listeners, wrote a book, helped with the strategy for the world’s #1 entrepreneurship school, co-wrote a one-man musical (with no prior experience), acted, sang, and danced in three musicals, co-founded two companies, and began learning to sight-sing.

Listen to the presentation and view the slides, as given to the Harvard Business School alumni organization.

This presentation takes attendees outside their normal life assumptions to explore what success means and how to achieve it:

  • Navigating your journey by map, versus by compass.
  • The role of luck in success.
  • Making luck happen.
  • Spotting opportunity.
  • Limiting risk when taking an unexpected detour.

The business-specific portion of this presentation will guide participants through creating a “life and work map,” in which they connect their daily activities to the larger goals in their life and work. It will help participants understand where their job is and isn’t in alignment with the rest of their lives, so they can begin to take ownership of their career and professional development.

Presenters

steverheadshotStever Robbins is an executive coach, serial entrepreneur, and co-designer of the Harvard MBA Foundations Program. His top-10 business podcast the Get-it Done Guy has over 23 million downloads. He was a highly-rated speaker at TEDx MillRiver. Stever is quoted widely in the media, including The Wall Street Journal, Investors Business Daily, Forbes, BusinessInsider, Inc. Magazine, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. He has appeared as an expert commentator on NBC Nightly News, ABC News Now, CNN-fn, and FOX News. He co-created and taught Using Social Capital for Career Advancement at Babson College. He is also the author of Amazon top-10 business book Get-It-Done Guy’s 9 Steps to Work Less and Do More and It Takes a Lot More Than Attitude to Lead a Stellar Organization. He holds degrees from MIT and Harvard Business School.

laurenheadshotLauren Class Schneider is the founder and Executive Producer of Broadway Fantasy Camp. She has been producing, directing, and stage-managing theatre, television and live events for almost 30 years. On Broadway, she produced The Velocity of Autumn with Estelle Parsons, High with Kathleen Turner, and Looped, for which Valerie Harper won a Tony Award™ nomination as Best Leading Actress in a Play. For 15 seasons Lauren has produced the Drama Desk Awards and served on numerous Tony, Grammy, Daytime Emmy and Video Music Award telecasts. She works with business leaders in New York and Washington, DC, to help them deliver their messages persuasively, effectively and memorably.

Workshop Formats

The Broadway Fantasy Camp facilitator will engage participants in introductory scene work. “Open Scenes” are short scripts with dialogue only. They intentionally lack the specifics to identify time, place, or character. Participants are divided into pairs, and each pair is given an open scene. Based on the prescribed dialogue, each pair creates a set of characters and story that they’re telling with the dialogue. They then design a presentation of the scene using pauses, action, and intonation to convey the story to the other participants.

“Open Scenes” facilitate communication, creativity, teamwork, and presenting. The final presentation communicates the story and characters with the audience. Participants learn to listen for meaning and subtext, while characterizing dynamic relationships. Since each script is used for multiple groups, everyone is given the opportunity to expand their thinking by experiencing many different interpretations of the very same dialogue they used and interpreted one way.

Open scenes are designed to expand how participants respond to and interpret the same situation, exposing them to multiple interpretations. This skill is one basis for tapping into diverse viewpoints and bringing them to bear on business problems.

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With the leadership of a Broadway music director, your participants learn a well-known song from a Broadway musical. Examples include: “All That Jazz” (“Chicago”), “Take a Chance on Me” (“Mamma Mia!”), “Any Way You Want It” (“Rock Of Ages”), “Walk Like a Man” (“Jersey Boys”), and “Oh What a Beautiful Mornin”(“Oklahoma!”).

Add to the session Broadway “tricks of the trade” and participants, (who don’t need to sing well) will be treated like pros. They will be encouraged, challenged, and taught that each voice adds to the greater good. We will choose specific vocal exercises to magnify the business topic we address in the follow-up session. By the time they’ve learned the song, participants will feel more confident, energized and part of a cohesive group, while having created a real, tangible performance.

Next, it’s time for participants to “get on their feet.” The BFC choreographer will stage the number with the group. This will involve dance steps (not more complex than the Electric Slide or Macarena) but from the dance vocabulary of Broadway musicals. Choreography is taught in relation to the lyrics, making learning easy, and reinforcing success in the process. We add props and costumes and participants are transformed into performers. Stage fright becomes channeled into excitement, and thanks to the rehearsal process, confidence is high.

You have to rehearse. It makes you better.

—David Bowie

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Work Less and Do More: The (Zombie) Musical is a 2-person, 45-minute musical about personal productivity. It follows the journey of self-proclaimed General Stever Robbins as he gives his newest zombie army recruits—the audience—their orientation lecture in preparation for their initial battle to dominate the world and secure the world’s supply of Oreo ice cream cake for themselves.

Over the course of the show, General Robbins teaches several tips for helping get things done efficiently:

  • How to overcome procrastination when there are several pending projects
  • How to quickly handle a full email inbox without going insane
  • How to avoid becoming distracted by your technology
  • How to build stronger, trusting relationships with team members
  • How to make sure you’re working towards your goals rather than getting caught in busy-work

The show is interactive, with audience interaction and participation helping to make the tips even more memorable. Following the performance, the audience can engage with a Q&A or fully customized workshop to help adapt the principles shared in the show to their unique circumstances.

Audience members have written letters several months after seeing the show, saying they are still using the tips, leaving them with major leaps in their productivity.

The theatrical portion of the workshop was composed by off-Broadway composer Joel Derfner and Stever Robbins. The business application is facilitated by Stever Robbins.

You can see a sample video from the show at http://WorkLessAndDoMore.com.

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Speaking

Stever Robbins knocking 'em dead at a conference

Stever presents keynotes and workshops on leadership, careers (and life!), and time management. Audiences and meeting planners give him rave reviews.

Schedule Stever for your event today!

 

Topics

 

Careers, Life & Success

Executive Leadership, Entrepreneurship, Personal Productivity

Videos

Stever’s YouTube channel has several samples of him speaking, including at least one video in which he’s having the Worst. Hair. Day. Ever.

Rave reviews

Stever’s past clients give rave reviews about Stever’s ability to provide just the right content for their most pressing problems. See what he can do for you

“Stever’s history with start-ups, the Harvard Business School’s ‘Leadership and Learning’ curriculum overhaul and his educational background leave him uniquely qualified to speak to a broad and diverse group of business audiences. Combine his experience base with an ability to touch all of us with an engaging and thought provoking style and you have the makings of a great session/workshop. If we all followed Stever’s advice the business world would be in much better shape!”
Len Schlesinger, Vice Chairman and CO, Limited Brands

“Stever’s not just a presenter, he’s an experience!”
Jack Canfield, author of Chicken Soup for the Soul

“Stever is a great presenter. He presents with energy, enthusiasm and displays a mastery of the material that makes it fun and accessible to the whole audience.”
Ken Blanchard, co-author The One Minute Manager

“You hit a home run for our audience. People learned a great deal and left understanding how their business works, what drives profitability, and what options they have for creating long-term business value.”
James Lavoie, CEO, Middlesex Savings Bank

“We invited Stever Robbins in to speak to our business customers about growing their companies and he was great. His insights were right on, and a number of our customers commented that they walked away with an action list of useful suggestions.”
Charles F. French, President & CEO, Union Savings Bank, Danbury CT

You can find more testimonials here.

Schedule Stever for your event today!

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