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June 6, 2010
Persistence Matters
by Bob Tschannen-Moran
Laser Provision
The military has a term for what happens when priorities and planning go awry: OBE -- Overtaken By Events. John Lennon put it this way: "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." We all know that feeling and experience. It is universal because no one controls life. But we can control our response to life. Do we quit or do we persist? Do we give up or do we hang on? Although it doesn't help to do the same thing over and over again expecting different results, it also doesn't help to stop looking for alternative approaches and goals. With lots of engaging quotes from notable leaders, this Provision shows you how.
We're in the middle of a series on leadership and it's time for the perennial rant about the importance of persistence. As we have explored in recent weeks: Priorities Matter and Planning Matters. But without persistence they are both for naught. That's because events have a way of overtaking even the best of leaders. But great leaders hang in there and find a way through.Now that's persistence. And it's called for in every imaginable
circumstance and situation. To quote Michael Jordan, one of the most successful
basketball players of all time: "I have missed more than 9000 shots in my
career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to
take the game winning shot… and missed. And I have failed over and over and over
again in my life. And that is why I succeed."
Or, again, in the word of another US President, Calvin Coolidge: "Nothing in
this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more
common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius
is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated
derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan ‘press
on’ has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race."
Are you beginning to get the message? Persistence is not only required to be
successful as a leader, it is what we expect of leaders. Take the tragic oil
spill on the Gulf of Mexico. Who would have been satisfied had BP, the company
responsible for the oil spill, abandoned their efforts after the first cap
failed work? Or after the "top kill" effort failed to work? Or after the diamond
saw failed to make its cut? No one! We are all encouraged and hopeful now that
the second cap is in place and beginning to divert some of the oil.
Leadership means responsibility and, sooner or later, responsibility means
persistence. That's not to say, of course, that we just keep doing the same
thing over and over again until it works. As Einstein once remarked, "The definition of insanity
is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."
But Einstein also gave the following explanation for his many discoveries: "It's
not that I’m so smart, it’s just that I stay with problems longer."
Persistence, in other words, means that we take a "win-learn" approach to life
rather than a "win-lose" approach. Those with a "win-lose" attitude are quick to
give up. "We've never done it that way before," represents the end of the
conversation. It is offered as a reason to not try something rather than as an
invitation to try something.
Leaders see things differently. Robert Kennedy, US Attorney General when his
brother, John F. Kennedy, was President, memorably put it this way: "There are
those who look at things the way they are, and ask why. I dream of things that
never were, and ask why not?" Perhaps he learned that as a child: "I was the
seventh of nine children. When you come from that far down you have to struggle
to survive."
Coaches sometimes give the impression that with just a little coaching people
can take the effort out of life. Au contraire! "Life is difficult," to quote the
opening line from M. Scott Peck's famous book, The Road Less Traveled.
There's no way to take the effort out of life. No approach can get rid of the
fact that life takes work. But we can make work fun. And once we do that, I
would remind you, work stops being work. It just becomes the stuff we love to
do.
When things don't go our way, the key is to adjust and adapt. Sometimes, we can
try a different approach and we can be successful with our stated goal (like BP
with the oil spill as they continue to drill two relief wells). Other times we
have to change our goal. Even so, however, life still takes work to make it
through to a new goal. It's not possible to get away from that.
Different approaches and goals are the stuff of coaching. Coaching is the
possibility profession because of how we navigate with curiosity through what
works now and what could work better in the future. In that sense, coaches are
persistence partners. We refuse to take "No!" as a final answer, because we know
there are no final answers life this side of the grave. There is tomorrow. There
will always be new approaches and goals to explore.
So make that be your mantra for life. As Thomas Edison once noted, "Many of
life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success
when they gave up." If we stop trying to figure out a better way, or if we stop
aspiring to a better tomorrow, then our leadership will limp along ineffectively
with moans and groans from both ourselves and others. If we hang in there,
however, with a possibility mindset, there's no telling the energy and
effectiveness we can generate.
Coaching Inquiries: What kind of mindset do you take in life and work? Would you
describe yourself as more or less resilient? What brings out your resilience?
What enables you to hang in there until you discover new possibilities and new
ways forward? Who can be your persistence partner in whatever challenges you are
facing?
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