I am sorry

As a leader, saying I am sorry is your responsibility. It helps healing and looking forward, it gives perspective, it makes you human.

It is also your responsibility to not make of I am sorry an empty sentence. If you find yourselves saying that too often, as a reaction to the same situations, it should be clear it is time for you for a change.

Spineless

Once you have put something out in the world, it is your responsibility to ensure it is used in a proper way.

Shifting the responsibility to users and customers is just spineless.

A different route

What if a simple task, instead of fueling regret for the lack of a challenge, would push us to give our best consistently?

What if a simple goal, instead of fueling discontent for the little reward, would make us full?

Difficult, complex, busy, huge are often considered measures of success and satisfaction.

You can take a different route.

The right example

If you do really care about the well-being of your employees, set the right example.

Go on holiday.

Avoid late night emails.

Go home early.

Take time for a walk.

Delegate and prioritize.

Do not be always on.

It starts with you.

Seek outliers

If you seek change, looking at what the person sitting next to you is doing won’t help much.

At best, it will make an easy excuse to use when you want to fall back to your old habit.

Go as far from the mean as you can, instead. Learn about what’s been tried a few times only, about what’s new, about what’s not been tested yet.

Seek outliers.

That’s the path to change.