IT Leadership Change Under Consideration…

…or perhaps it should be?  Imagine receiving the resignation of your top IT executive.  Would you be concerned or relieved?  If you would be relieved, then it might be time to consider a change in IT leadership.  But, before listing all the problems you perceive with your current IT leader, consider stepping back to see the bigger picture.  Start with a macro view of how the IT function works (or doesn’t) within your company today. After all, it’s solutions you’re after…not scapegoats.
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On the surface, you may appear to have a people problem.  Digging deeper may reveal multiple process and product problems well beyond the scope of the person in your cross hairs.  If not addressed, those same problems will likely torpedo your next IT leader.  And so IT goes…

In fairness, you could be right about the need for an IT leadership change…and likely are. Your gut usually is right, but it’s also telling you that you need to be sure. It’s the right thing to do by both the person and the company. Firing/hiring key executives is risky business. Ever more so within the ethereal IT realm. You know this. If you doubt it, then try recalling the last strategic initiative wherein IT was not a critical success factor.

That’s why it’s so important to view this important decision through 3P glasses –people, process and product. Before finalizing such an important personnel decision, you may want to consider getting a third party opinion. In doing so, you should look for someone without intimate knowledge of your organization. Why? Because you already have plenty of input from insiders.  What you need now is an outside expert opinion from a trusted advisor. If that advisor validates your leadership concerns, then you’re ready to make the first of two tough decisions –firing your current IT leader and hiring their replacement. Because now you know with confidence…IT’s time for a change. And that’s a big relief.

 

It Would Be Naughty To Open This Before December 26

December truly is the most wonderful time of the year.  I particularly like the time between Christmas and New Years.  For B2B businesses like ours, the last week of the year allows us to merge into the slow lane along with customers more focused on PTO hours than IPO dollars.  While I admittedly use some of this time to plan for the new business year, I use most of it to do some serious soul searching.  To ponder the year soon to pass and the one to soon be grasped.  Had I known then what I know now, what would I have done differently?  What do I need to know now in order to squeeze every drop of destiny out of the coming year?

RedConverseAllStars

This month, in anticipation of my most wonderful week of the year, my mind went to goal-setting and my memory went back almost fifty years ago to Mt. Tabor Elementary School in New Albany, Indiana.  Before my young basketball career came to an inauspicious end, I looked forward to getting a new pair of Converse All-Star tennis shoes at the start of the season.  Oh how I loved those shoes!  Back then, they only came in white, but I recently bought myself a too cool for school pair of red Converse high-tops.  And, the memories came flooding in…

…we were playing our crosstown rival when suddenly I found myself in possession of the ball.  I’m not sure if I actually stole it or if the opposing player accidently passed it to me.  Either way, I was absolutely sure of what I needed to do next.  So, I shifted my All-Star peds into overdrive and headed to the rack.  As my one shining moment unfolded, I could hear the roar of the crowd and see my name headlining the sports page in the New Albany Tribune.  No doubt, the fans were thinking the same thing I was –HE…COULD…GO…ALL…THE…WRONG WAY!  Yes sports fans, this Mt. Tabor Tiger ran as fast as he could and jumped as high as he could in a misguided, albeit heroic, effort to reach the opposing team’s goal.

Little wonder why not long thereafter, I traded in my beloved shoes on a pair of Speedos, preferring the cold, wet and chlorinated life of a swimmer to that of a directionally challenged basketball player.  That proved to be a great move, one that continues to this day.  Swimming remains my primary form of exercise.  Lord willing, I’m determined to continuously swim my age in minutes until I trade in Carmel’s Monon Center pool on a true infinity model with an eternal warranty.

What about you?  What are you hoping to find at the end of the earthly portion of your spiritual journey?  In doing your own soul searching this time of year, how certain are you about the goals you’re striving for?  As I once was, could you possibly be running fast and jumping high towards the wrong goals…ones that at the end of your days won’t matter any more than my one not-so-shining moment on the hardwood?

Wherever you are in your spiritual journey, this is a great time of year to consider a course correction.  If you’ve yet to pass through Bethlehem on your way to Calvary, I commend that leg of the journey to you.  From the Christmas manger (Luke 2) to the Good Friday cross (Matthew 27) to Easter’s empty tomb (John 20), Jesus of Nazareth did more to change the world than anyone who ever lived.  That’s why His story, as told in the Bible, is so much a part of our history.  And, that’s why intellectually honest seekers have sought to understand it for over two millennia.
HowGoodIsGoodEnoughBookCover

Beyond the Bible, there have been countless books written about the historical Jesus and what it means to have a relationship with Him.  One at the top of my reading list is, Since Nobody’s Perfect . . . How Good Is Good Enough?  by Andy Stanley.  Should you choose to take the Bethlehem to Calvary trek, throw this book in your backpack.  It will serve you well as an easy-to-read trail map.

All to say, happy trails to you and yours in 2016.  I truly hope our paths cross, as together we run fast and jump high towards the right goals.  I can hear the crowd now –HE…COULD…GO…ALL…THE…WAY!  And I believe they’re absolutely right…again.

 

 

If You Think IT’s All About Outsourcing…Think Again!

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Staffing Insourcing

Whatever business you’re in and however tech-centric you’ve been, you’re more so today than you were yesterday and you’ll be more so tomorrow than you are today. And so IT goes, until one day we awaken to the reality that we’re all in the technology business. At that point (and it’s not a distant one), how we do IT will be THE critical success factor in determining how well we do in business and whether we’ve earn the right to continue being in business at all.

So, if technology is increasingly part of every business’s core, can we expect to see more or less outsourcing of IT? Logic says less. After all, the business case for IT outsourcing was been built upon the premise that IT was not core to most businesses. If it is becoming so, then the case for outsourcing IT is becoming weaker by the day. Enter the case for IT insourcing.

Tech companies do all they can to protect their intellectual property, but there are serious limits in their ability to do so. The harsh reality for any tech company is that most of their true IP exists between their employees’ ears. And, each of those brilliant minds comes with a pair of legs that can transport highly valued employees to another employer (or worse, a competitor), on two weeks’ notice. Then you realize that your born again tech company is frighteningly dependent upon those techies that have so unnerved you all these years. Hmmm, what’s a reluctant tech titan to do? Outsource IT and pretend that IT really isn’t core to your business? No…

…you need to insource IT…or at least those parts of IT clearly tied to what you now consider core to your business. For example, if you’re a Big Pharma company, new drug R&D is likely core to your business. So, you should probably consider insourcing most of the IT functions that support R&D. That doesn’t mean bringing your scientists’ desktop support back in-house after years of outsourcing IT. That’s unnecessary because desktop support doesn’t create a strategic advantage within the R&D function. However, the systems by which research scientists share their findings and collaborate amongst themselves might. The design, development and support of such systems could be a good candidate for insourcing.

So, by insourcing am I saying that every person involved with an insourced function must be an employee? No, but all non-employee members of an insourced project team should be eligible for hire at any time, at the client’s discretion. Conversion terms should be straight forward, affordable and pre-determined AND there should be no “sacred cows”. Meaning, all consultants are eligible for conversion, not just a subset hand-picked by their employers. It also means that the consulting firm won’t engage in any backroom monkey business meant to dissuade the consultant from accepting a fulltime offer.

Now, let’s apply this insourcing model to that Big Pharma company’s R&D collaboration system project which requires:

  • Project Manager (PM)
  • Business Analyst (BA)
  • QA Tester (QA)
  • Developers (Qty. 4)

The client currently has a BA and two junior developers available for the project, so their insourcing partner provides a PM, a QA and two senior developers to complete the team. As the project nears completion, the client wants to convert one of the two senior developers in order to retain their critical knowledge of the system. They choose the one who had the best chemistry with the junior developers while effectively training them throughout the project. Since the BA is a solid long term employee who now possesses valuable subject matter knowledge of the new system, they believe her knowledge is sufficient to compensate for the absence of the Project Manager who’s scheduled to roll off. The QA tester, though no longer critical to the new system, did such an excellent job that the client decided to convert and redeploy him to an entirely new project. So, two of the four consultants utilized on this project were ultimately converted to fulltime employees, thereby allowing the client to retain mission critical intellectual capital created during the project and two proven performer new employees.

And that’s why we say if you think IT’s all about outsourcing…think again. Think insourcing, because however tech-centric you think you are today, you will be more so tomorrow…come to think of IT.

View our current December newsletter for more information regarding this topic: If You Think It’s All About Outsourcing…Think Again!

Supporting Links:

Why Software Is Eating The World
Everyone is a Technology Company
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IT’s Train Wreck Tuesday!

Having founded our company on the last April Fools’ Day of the 80’s, I’ve found a regular dose of humor to be an effective antidote to the night sweats that afflict those of us foolhardy enough to enter the world of entrepreneurial terror. After all, when you lose your sense of humor…you lose. Over a quarter of a century later, I now realize that the many lessons learned along the way might also be helpful to our clients and prospects, particularly those atop the IT pyramid known as Chief Information Officers (CIOs) and the legions of underlings aspiring to become one. To my observation, when it comes to C-level seats in any organization, none is hotter than the one occupied by the CIO. Which could explain why CIOs tend to age in dog years and have a shelf life akin to sushi.

Then IT came to me. While conducting a retained search for a client company’s first ever CIO, I started rediscovering truths about IT learned over these many years, yet never creatively chronicled for the benefit of the Phi Kappa CIO fraternity. And yes, IT is a very male dominated industry. For every Marissa Mayer (Yahoo! CEO) there are hundreds of male counterparts. Note to female IT executives –stock up on Ray Bans because your future is so bright…

So I wondered, how could we begin sharing this treasure trove of high tech wisdom in a way that would not only inform, but also entertain, our beleaguered brethren (and the occasional member of the Yahoo! Sisterhood)? Enter Comedian Jeff Foxworthy with his famous and fabulously funny “You might be a redneck…” shtick, such as:

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You might be a redneck if…you list “beginner’s luck” as a skill on a job application Comedian Jeff Foxworthy

I figured two can play at this dumb as a fox game, especially if our CIO and wanna be friends from around the country play along. So whada ya’ say, let’s play “IT’s Train Wreck Tuesday”!

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If your CIO reports to someone other than your CEO or President #ITmightBeATrainWreck

SuperCIO

If your CIO “owns” every project in the backlog #ITmightBeATrainWreck

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If your CIO couldn’t find the easy button with a GPS and a flashlight
#ITmightBeATrainWreck

You get the idea…and we welcome yours. Just pass them along to @blouis and let us know if you’d like to take the credit or remain anonymous lest your boss get onto you. Speaking of CIO’s superiors, you too are invited to play along. No doubt, you have some very valuable insights into how to avoid IT train wrecks…or some painful clarity into how to cause one. Either way, the Phi Kappa CIO fraternity and Yahoo! Sisterhood would appreciate your contributions.

As always, IT’s harder than it looks. Keep IT to 140 characters, picture optional, hashtag #ITmightBeATrainWreck required. We’ll post the best of the best every Tuesday. And now…it’s time to play IT’s Train Wreck Tuesday!

The Road To Humility Is Paved With Humilation

Recall, my first book seeks to answer this question — what has being in business for life taught me about the business of life? The following excerpt was not an easy one to write. But, if one person finds solace in my story, it will have been worth the pain, because…

The road to humility is paved with humiliation

“Why are you so damned arrogant?” shouted my red-faced manager, slamming his notebook down on the coffee table between us. It was a fair question from my former sales partner, now my boss. I would soon find out why he was so frustrated with me. Twelve years my senior, unbeknownst to me, Don was fighting for my job behind the scenes. My thirty something arrogance wasn’t making it any easier. A few weeks later he came into my office to let me know he’d lost the battle.

It was the Thursday before Easter of 1989. As soon as Don walked through the door, I knew from the look on his face what he was about to tell me. “What’s up, Don?”

“It’s not good, brother.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean…it’s not good. I couldn’t stop it. The President sent me here to tell you that your job has been eliminated.”

“You mean I’m fired.”

“Yeah”, he said forlornly, “you’re fired, Brad. I’m sorry.”

With that, one of my best friends in the world (then and now) stuffed a pink slip in my mouth and handed me my head on a platter. Though it wasn’t a complete surprise, it was completely devastating. Anyone who’s been there knows what I mean. To add insult to injury, they offered no severance and withheld my last paycheck.

A few years earlier, I received a letter from the CEO. He congratulated me on being named Salesman of the Year, saying how fortunate they were to have me on their team. Now, I was being ruthlessly terminated in absentia by his pompous hatchet man. Firings are never easy, but it is possible to carry them out without leaving employees feeling robbed of their dignity. A feeling I will never forget.

In fact, I really couldn’t forget it, so in a sincere effort to understand why I had been fired, I wrote the CEO requesting a meeting. Looking back, it was a naïve thing to do. It was effectively an engraved invitation to kick me while I was down. Kick me he did…hard. To this day, the cold-hearted and mean-spirited reply I received back from him remains the cruelest thing anyone’s ever done to me. I still have the letter as a reminder of the kind of person I never want to be and the kind of company I never intend to run.

Don was right. I was arrogant back in 1989, just before founding Ambassador Solutions on April Fool’s Day. Just before finding out in the hardest of ways that the road to humility is paved with humiliation. I can honestly say that I’m glad it happened. But for my humiliating termination experience, our first Core Value — Nurture the dignity of all people may have never been born. And, my message to the unemployed may never have been written. Both are deeply embedded into the DNA of our company and always will be.

Ambassador Solutions Celebrates 25 Years On 4/1/14!

Looking back on our twenty-five years in business, I’ve agonized over what to say about it that would pass the “so what and who cares?” test.  Certainly, most of our company’s “firsts” would miserably fail. I fear the irony of our first transaction is lost on everyone but me.  After all, I left the world of computer hardware and leasing for “the ultimate people business” because I much prefer people to humming boxes of microchips and sterile spreadsheets.

So, it was quite ironic that our first ever deal involved the subleasing of a monolithic computer paging device from Alverno Information Services on the south side of Indy to Gateway Information Services on the north side.  Never mind the irony of having just moved back to Indy so that I could introduce these long time neighbors to one another.  I’m so glad I did, because many years later, Alverno went on to become one of our largest consulting clients.

The irony doesn’t stop there, however.  I closed that first deal while standing in my garage on the phone with our soon-to-be first customer.  After almost three months of pounding the phone and the pavement, I had taken an unplanned day off.  The world of entrepreneurial terror was already taking its toll, as it often would over the next quarter century.  But, I learned an invaluable lesson that day…breakthroughs often arrive on the heels of breakdowns.

Though our first office was on Indy’s north side, ironically again, our first consulting client was United Technologies in Huntington.  Thanks so much, Julie!  Not sure what you were thinking, but so glad you took a flyer on the upstart from Indy.

Also glad we found our first consultant, Jim, up in the Muncie area, an easy commute to the client.  Jim had a photographic memory and a penchant for cheeseburgers.  If IT could be done on an AS/400, Jim knew the code to make IT happen.  Thus, Julie and Jim were the first seeds planted in our quest to grow the ultimate people business.

One final “first”, if I may.  We were truly first movers in the CRM space.  Our first CRM system wasn’t very sophisticated, but proved quite effective. It was a 3 by 5 recipe card box sitting atop my three legged desk held up by a stack of magazines.  Whenever I’d leave a message for a prospect, I would indicate same by turning their card on its end so that it stood out from the others. The resulting “dashboard” provided powerful graphical insight into my sales pipeline.  The more cards on end, the more possible incoming calls.  When there were more cards on their ends than remaining in the box, my KPI indicated it was time to go golfing and just wait for the orders to come in. OK, so I made that last part up.  But, we really were CRM pioneers.

Some thank yous are certainly in order.  First, to the clients whom we’ve been so privileged to serve –thank you!  Thank you for your confidence in our capabilities, your trust in our character and your patience with our imperfections.  We truly couldn’t do IT without you.  Second, to the employees and consultants who strive so gallantly every day to deliver on the excellence promised –thank you!  Thank you for being wonderful ambassadors for Ambassador and for making us an employer of choice among true IT pros.  Finally, to the God who has lovingly “tested us …and tried us as silver is tried” (Psalms 66) – thank you!  But for your constant presence in the life of our company, we would have no 25th anniversary to celebrate.

Before putting our anniversary milestone in the rearview mirror, I’d like to offer a few parting thoughts on the future of our industry and Ambassador’s role within IT. I believe the demand for IT consulting services will continue to outstrip supply for the foreseeable future.  There are numerous factors at work here, but the one not talked about enough (in my opinion) is the myriad of ways in which our federal government works to increase the liabilities associated with employees.  The Affordable Care Act is only one of many examples.  Employers can avoid these liabilities by utilizing contract labor for their non-core business functions, IT often being chief among them.

Add to this the severely constrained global supply of IT professionals and a picture unfolds wherein employers will take qualified talent from whoever is able to deliver IT to them.  This will increasingly come from firms providing offshore solutions with a proven track record of successfully mitigating the risks associated with such approaches.  Offshore success stories are gaining ground on the horror stories of the early adopters.

So, how will Ambassador Solutions play IT from here?  First and foremost, we will never lose sight of the fact that IT’s all about the people.  Technologies come and go, as do the firms who stake their futures upon them.  We will fiercely fight the forces that attempt to commoditize that which never can be…human beings.  Second, we will literally scan the globe in our efforts to secure the right people, at the right time, in the right place and yes, at the right price.  Third, we will move our “Discover, Invent and Innovate” Value in Action to the forefront, as we relentlessly strive to make a positive difference in every life that we touch:

We believe investigating our curiosities leads to discoveries, inventions, and innovations that improve the world around us.  To unleash individual and collective creativity, we must have the courage to test new ideas, confront possible failure and discard obsolete ideas.

“He Knew What He Had To Do, But The Thought Of Doing It Made His Knees Weak”

Welcome to #5 in a twelve part series featuring the key ingredients of our secret sauce – our Values in Action. We’ll not only tell you what they are, but we’ll show you how to apply them.  In this issue, you’ll learn from a real-life story that it’s never too late to do the right thing.

Core Value:  Pursue Uncompromised Integrity

Value In Action:  Do The Right Thing…Every Time

We are committed to doing the right thing every time with our Core Values and Values in Action as our guide. When we fall short and do the wrong thing, we make it right.

Bob knew it was the wrong thing to do.  But, he wasn’t willing to pay the price for doing the right thing.  Besides, he gave the customer exactly what he asked for –a fair market value lease extension,  just like he’d done many times before.  This time, however, he noticed a purchase option within the original lease granting them the right to buy the equipment for $250,000 less than the cost of the lease extension.

It was easy to rationalize not telling his customer about their purchase option.  After all, they leased all of their computer equipment, not wanting to carry such assets on their books.  And of course, when he told his colleagues about his dilemma, they were quick to add fuel to his fire of rationalization.  “Are you crazy?  Of course you’re not going to tell them”, they said.  So, he went back to calculating his commissions and never said a word…until 15 years later.

The guilt had become unbearable.  Rarely did a day go by without being reminded of his transgression.  He knew what he had to do, but the thought of doing it made his knees weak.  His former customer was now the CFO of a Fortune 100 company…a very rich and powerful man.  What if he demanded restitution…with interest?  He picked up the phone with trembling hands and made the call.  “Hello Andy, it’s been a long time…”

Andy was far more gracious than Bob deserved, readily forgiving him. He dismissed Bob’s actions as “business as usual” for the fast-paced times they were in.  As the weight he’d carried for 15 years was lifted from Bob’s weary shoulders, he lost control of his emotions.  At that point, Andy became far more concerned with consoling Bob than with meting out any form of punishment.  Mercy found Bob that day.

Alas, Bob did the right thing.  And, it turned out better that he could have hoped or imagined.  But, no matter the outcome or consequences, the right thing would still be just that –the right thing…every time.  Just do it.

Absence of Conflict Can Destroy a Team Faster Than Any Conflict Ever Could

Welcome to #4 in a twelve part series featuring the key ingredients of our secret sauce –our Values in Action. We’ll not only tell you what they are, but we’ll show you how to apply them.  In this post, we’ll show how healthy conflict can make a team stronger, even when they don’t agree.

Core Value: Pursue Uncompromised Integrity

Value in Action: Encourage Healthy Conflict

We encourage an open exchange of ideas and the healthy conflict that naturally follows from discussing matters of substance.  We believe that unanimity is rare and therefore rarely required; while unity is essential once an issue has been fairly debated.  

Now, let’s see this value in action…on an IT project team:

The team was very excited about their upcoming project. The board had just approved a major new software initiative.  The buy vs. build decision had been made and they were going to get to build it…or so it seemed.

Joe, the Enterprise Architect and newest member of the team, was advocating a new hybrid approach to building the application.  One that leveraged Microsoft Dynamics CRM as a development platform via their “xRM Framework”.  As Joe explained, “this framework consists of four core components – User Interface, database engine, reporting engine, workflow engine.  Components common to every application which together account for the majority of the programming required.”

Joe’s argument was simple and logical –why reinvent software components if you don’t have to?  But, some of the more senior developers weren’t buying it.  After all, if software is a form of art, who wants to paint by numbers?  Besides, no generic platform could possibly be as good as one tailor-made for the system it’s designed to support.  Things were starting to heat up.

Fortunately, Kathy, the Executive Sponsor was in the meeting. She intervened before this healthy conflict deteriorated into a personal war of words.  Kathy asked the developers to express their arguments in more business versus artistic terms.  She then asked Joe to address the developers’ artistic concerns, as well as their unspoken fear of change.  Once she was confident that everyone’s concerns had been heard and understood, she called for the vote.

To no one’s surprise, the most senior developer cast the lone vote in favor of a pure custom approach.  Eric was sure he could single-handedly design and build a system from scratch that would be superior to any “Brand X” platform approach.  Nonetheless, the decision was made to build the application on the Dynamics CRM platform.  As he was leaving the meeting room, Eric turned to Kathy and said, “Though I disagree with the approach, I appreciated the opportunity to weigh in on the decision.  Guess I better start reading up on that “Brand X” stuff.”

As she walked away, Kathy thought to herself, “I’m glad Eric voiced his concerns, so the team could address them in a healthy way.”  She knew all too well that absence of conflict can destroy a team faster than any conflict ever could.

Solving the IT Consulting Contractual Conundrum

IT is what IT is…or is IT?  The IT consulting industry is unique in many ways. Chief among them is the fact that virtually every contract is cancellable at will by the client. As they should be, in my opinion. Though some may disagree…IT is what IT is and not likely to change.

Despite the freedom to cancel contracts on a whim, nearly all clients take their contracts to term except when dealing with the occasional performance issue. In those cases, the supplying firm is typically given an opportunity to backfill the under-performer. All in all, IT’s worked pretty well over the years, though there is room for improvement. But, before making any recommendations, let’s set the context.

Now, back to those cancellable contracts…There is almost always a difference between what clients have approved in their budgets and what they truly believe their needs are. For example, the budget may call for 3 months of a consultant’s time, but the hiring manager knows the project will take at least 6 months to complete. Despite being under a cancellable- at-will contract, most clients prohibit their managers from contracting for services exceeding budgetary approval. Sounds reasonable, right? Not so fast.The shorter the term of the contract, the more time/energy the consultant (and their employer) will spend finding their next gig. So, clients who bring in a consultant under a 3 month contract with “high likelihood of extension” risk losing that consultant halfway through the project. Once consultants enter the 90 day window, as the free agents they truly are, they will begin seeking their next engagement. And, this natural tendency occurs regardless of their employment type –salaried, hourly or sub-contractor. They’re all free agents today. Few IT consulting firms exercise meaningfully more control over their employees then they do their sub-contractors.

How can we improve this situation for all parties? Clients should simply contract for what they believe they’ll truly need, and then work on getting any budgetary shortfall covered before exhausting what is approved. On those rare occasions when approval is not received, they terminate the contract, as is their right. As the owner of an IT consulting firm, I would far rather deal with the occasional problems caused by this approach versus the constant ones caused by the status quo.

This simple solution has profoundly positive ramifications for all three parties.  The client secures the services they think they truly need, while locking in the rate and greatly reducing the consultant’s flight risk. Since short term contracts are most attractive to the unemployed, a longer contract term allows the consulting firm to cast a much wider candidate net. And, perhaps most importantly, the consultant can focus on the job at hand instead of worrying about the next gig…a true Win-Win-Win situation.Consulting contractual conundrum? I think we just solved IT.

One Thing…From The Land Between

I last entered The Land Between on September 30, 2008.  It occurred during a management off-site meeting, held primarily for the purpose of planning a fast start to the coming year.  With the current year in the bag, we wanted to make sure that we entered the New Year with maximum momentum.  Just a few weeks later, we had more momentum than we thought possible…all in a downward direction.

“The Great Recession” took our company and me personally into what author, Jeff Manion, refers to as The Land Between.  Manion contends that The Land Between represents the space where God does some of His deepest work in our lives.  Having spent much of the last three plus years there, I must agree.  Though like many before me, I didn’t choose to enter The Land Between.  Few do, as Manion observes,

it’s as if the space we want most desperately to avoid is the space that we most desperately need.”

I’ve thought many times about chronicling my experiences in The Land Between.  But, every time I approached the keyboard, my fingers froze.  Something almost palpable was holding me back.  Something I didn’t fully understand and fervently wanted to distance myself from.  Something more painful and prolonged than anything I’d ever known.  Something that I desperately needed, but had desperately tried to avoid.  That something was The Land Between itself…I was still in it…but I wasn’t alone.

We were heading to a much needed spiritual retreat at the Toth Ranch in the Colorado Rockies.  It was a bright sunny day, unusually mild for late February.  Our spirits were Rocky Mountain high.  As the pre-maturely blonde designated driver, I was thoroughly enjoying the banter between the two 20 Somethings in the back and my 30 Something buddy riding shotgun.  Then suddenly, things got quiet.  “So Mr. Brad”, 20 Something Jimmy said, “from your vast life experience, what can you tell us that could help us become the best men we can possibly be?”

I pondered Jimmy’s question for quite a while.  He couldn’t have been more sincere and his buddy, David, seemed equally engaged.  I flashbacked to Jack Palance’s “one thing” discussion with Billy Crystal in the movie City Slicker.  Young Jimmy was asking me, ”what’s the one thing?”  Sensing the importance of the moment, I silently prayed, asking God to help me answer this provocative question…

Wherever you are…be there.

Wow!  Talk about cutting to the chase…five words sealed in an eternal envelope.  The profundity of this simple exhortation was lost on no one in the car that day, least of all me.  Though most always physically present for my lovely bride and five wonderful children, I’ve been frequently mentally and emotionally absent.  Choosing instead to grind on something in the painful past or fret over something in the uncertain future.  Rarely choosing to truly be wherever I was.  Though the world of entrepreneurial terror always comes with a high price tag, I made it more expensive than it needed to be.

How ‘bout you?  Do you dwell in the place Dr. Spencer Johnson refers to as “the precious present”?  If it’s the exception and not the rule…if you prefer grinding to grinning…if fretting is your first response…STOP!  You’re in The Land Between.  You’re in the space where God will do His deepest work in your life…if you’ll let Him.  Don’t panic.  You’ll be out in due time.  For now, just remember one thing –

wherever you are…be there.

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