Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Do We Always Stand Still When We Do Nothing?

Activity does not always equal action.

What sort of challenges and tribulations were waiting for you when you showed up for work this morning? Weren’t there leftover problems from yesterday, all mixed up and merged with the new ones that cropped up overnight?

Managing that never-ending flow of issues might not be fun, but what choice do we have? Can you even imagine a world of smooth-flowing business and a lack of crises? It might sound utopian, but surely you must realize: it would be a little eerie.

Maybe even a little boring.

So this is the business model we’re stuck with: problems arise, we address them, then we await the next problem. C’est la vie. Viva la business.

But here’s one of the dangers of being the habitual problem-solvers we are: We come to think that action, any action, in the face of challenge is virtue. Action, we think, is always preferable to inaction.

It calls to mind the scene of the man searching for his keys under the light of a streetlamp. He’s fairly certain that’s not where he dropped them, but that’s where he’s searching, because that’s where the light is.

We’re in danger of acting just as irrationally when we jump to our feet, thump our chests and wave our arms in the air at the first sign of trouble. We’re driven to act, or more accurately, to react, because a leader must confront problems. That imperative can be so all-consuming that sometimes we forget to ask the most elementary leadership questions, like Is action even necessary at this point?

Action requires a plan. A plan requires fully understanding the problem and what a successful outcome looks like. Activity may make things worse. Action is better. Sometimes doing nothing helps the drama to subside so the real problem can be assessed. Never confuse activity with action.

It goes against the grain, but sometimes the best response is to do nothing. Or at least, wait until the sun comes up, and then search for the keys where they really might be.

The C4:
  1. Business, like everything else, is governed by inertia. That’s great for growth and upward trajectory, but it instills a mindset. It leads us to think that activity is action, and that all our actions drive us forward.

  2. No, sometimes it’s just busywork. Just the spinning of wheels. Sometimes we force ourselves to act, in response to events or sometimes in response to nothing at all, without stopping to wonder if inaction might have been the better course.

  3. Your business may be in motion (of course it is) but that doesn’t mean you always have to be in motion, too. Your acumen, instincts, and best judgment might well advise you to take it slow, to be deliberative, to keep still and wait to see what happens. If that’s what your inner voice is telling you, then listen.

  4. Yup, it comes down to a judgment call. You decide when to jump, and when to sit still. Sorry hoss, but that’s the gig you signed up for.