Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Fast or Far

The other day I was listening to Al Gore's Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech and he started of with a quote from Africa - "If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, take a few people with you".

How very true. Don't we see that happening every day at work? Someone sitting up there in an ivory tower makes a statement and expects everyone down in the trenches to follow him / her with immediate effect because this new policy / process / system needs to be implemented quickly. Resources are mobilized and we get into the execution phase and find that we are inundated by issues. Why does it happen? Did we not plan correctly? I think what really happens is the real buy-in (taking a few people with us) did not happen.

We have seen this happen time and again, technology or a business process does not cause the bottle-neck. It is the people who cause the bottle-neck and in the same token it is the people who are responsible for the success of an endeavor. How can the same entity be responsible for the success and the failure?

So, the next time you are embarking on a new goal for your organization - are you going to go all alone and run fast towards your far-reaching goal or you are going to spend the time, get all the major stakeholders with you and all of you go towards the far-reaching goal together? Think about it!