2013 AND BEYOND –
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO WITH IT?
Rest easy. This
first-of-2013 TGIM is NOT about making New Year resolutions
… setting monthly goals … compiling daily to-do lists … targeting quarterly objectives
… committing to imminent deadlines… spelling out near-term action plans … blah,
blah, blah.
Not that those things can’t be useful.
It’s just that I’ve seen an overabundance of that kind of
commonly-prescribed-at-this-time-of-the-year “soft” advice in the waning days
of 2012. And it’s made me think –
Doesn’t anyone do long-term planning
anymore?
Granted, the pressures of just going from day to day can be
wearing given the fragile state of – fill in your own blank here – the economy,
the family, the business, the environment, the state, the nation, the world.
But maybe we are where we are these days because we have
become so focused on the here and now that we neglected to anticipate the
stretched-out future impacts of what we do in the here and now.
What’s got me thinking this way?
Actuarial tables.
I’m at that point in my life when, to my surprise, I’ve surpassed the
“Estimated Life Expectancy” projected for me in the year in which I was born.
Yup. According to the tables, odds suggest I
ought not be here.
But, given that I am:
The most recent iteration of these tables also projects that I can make it
exactly 19 years more. And, of course, for every year that clicks by with me in
it, the out date stretches a wee bit further.
So I’m now thinking:
I better be thinking longer term (not that I hadn’t been to some degree). And
I’m rounding up the actuarial guesstimate and making 20 years my operative
number for defining “long-term.”
TGIM Takeaway: Join me
in looking 20 years out.
TGIM CHALLENGE #1: Although I discouraged too much
backward-looking in the New Year’s Eve TGIM #389, today I suggest you take
a moment and reflect on 20 years ago – 1993.
I have a 1993 flashback experience almost daily. As my nearby friends know, I'm still driving my family's new-in-'93 Buick Special. However, I will not let this prevent me from also looking forward. |
Anything new and different in your life since then?
Damn right there is.
TGIM CHALLENGE #2: So what do you think 2033 will look like?
As challenging and confounding as the days have been lately
(or maybe the span of time should be stated “up to now”), there are many, many
more ahead. The speed and enormity and all-encompassing nature of the changes
we have faced and the changes we will face will overwhelm us if we let them.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: Don’t let them. Whatever you’ve done to get
to this point will not be enough to move you, your business, your loved ones,
and your community forward. Neither you nor I can sit on our accomplishments
and coast.
TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: Learn as if you were going to live forever
– because you just might.
- That means preparing your mind to accept ideas such as living “forever.”
- That means staying current and connected to what’s going on in the world, not just your narrow area of interests.
- That means accepting some truths that you now hold dear may be proven untrue and so must be unlearned.
- That means determining that technology may advance in ways that require you to relearn old, comfortable behaviors in order to survive and thrive.
- That means deciding that change is good, even when it comes as an upsetting surprise and challenges your every plan.
“Change is the process
by which the future invades our lives.” The famous futurist Alvin Toffler
said that in 1970.
Don’t wait for the “invasion” to overwhelm you. Begin today
to go out and greet it.
Today is the first day of the rest of your life. Trite (since
1965) but true. Resolve … set as a goal … add to your to-do list … the
assignment to routinely look at the long term and adjust accordingly.
We all must be forward looking; far more than another round
of one-year-limited New Year Resolutions would take us. I think I’m fairly
safely assuming that you’re not (much) older than I and I hope your health is
not immediately imperiled. So don’t limit your resolving … goal-setting …
to-doing … etc, etc to the instant 360+/- days remaining in 2013.
“The best way to
predict the future is to create it.” Management thought leader Peter
Drucker (1909-2005) said that.
Let’s get creating.
And I look forward to comparing notes with you in 2033.
Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P.S. The greatest adventure is what lies ahead.
Today
and tomorrow are yet to be said.
The
chances, the changes are all yours to make.
The
mold of your life is in your hands to break.
-- J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) told
us that in The Hobbit
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