Leaving Footprints - Your Organizational Legacy

Friday, January 11th, 2008 at 11:41 am

The question that I’d like to pose to you, marriage executive, “Why are you really at your ; is it really the -really-or might there be a deeper purpose?”

is good and power is alluring, however your legacy is what really matters. Sometimes upper level executives get so wrapped up in the now that they forget about the later. you already have all the you need, so why stick around?

Your motivators might be:

1. to turn the organization over to family.

2. to be remembered as a conqueror, inspiring leader, builder of something bigger than your self, or various other reasons.

3. Enjoy being engaged in the “.”

4. to be a .

5. Believe they couldn’t run the company without you.

6. Just because.

Rule with an Iron Fist

If you enjoy being the conqueror, then perhaps you also enjoy being in . While being in is truly an opiate, like other dependencies, the dependent person degrades over time. In a environment this generally leads to organizational or the leader becoming a Lord of Lesser Corners-thereby diminishing the Lord’s legacy.

The organizational downside of this paradigm is twofold; first that of encouraging the really great talent to find greener pastures elsewhere and handicapping the talent that does stay. A controlling tends to find it difficult to truly , , and nurture arising talent.

The for this is either the misguided that nobody else can do it as well or the paranoia of letting go of . Either way, the result is always a dysfunctional organization.

What’s a Conqueror to Do?

My first counsel to an iron fisted executive is, “Protect your legacy!” You have spent years building this incredible organization; now protect it from the forces that are intent on tearing it down. Unknowingly, you could be one of those forces. Sam Walton went back to take of , not because he needed the , but rather to protect his child. Michael Dell recently did the same thing.

How do you want to be remembered; as the fool that built it and then watched it being ripped apart? Or would you rather be remembered as the conquering hero that built it and trained the to make it even greater?

But I’m and Tired

A conquering hero is never and tired; they have simply misplaced their . You have been so distracted with the static of micromanaging an organization. Stop playing only defense and get back to your aggressive of building-today, it is building your organizational leaders of tomorrow.

The Juice

Reconnect to your early for building something greater than yourself. Understand that the good days are gone; however the good days were nothing more than the times in which you had the greatest for building. Kids today are the same as they were when you were young. Sure, they have kilos of hardware emerging from all parts of their , but what about your long hair in a world of crew cuts? Okay, their bodies are indelibly marked with various pictures and slogans, but what about your tie-dyes and bell ?

Now is not the time to cocoon and reminisce but rather the time for renaissance. If you look at your organization through the window of your legacy, you will plug into the juice necessary for you to help your upcoming levels of executives to carry on your vision. Understand that they will add to your vision to make it their own. It is this process of up and coming leaders adding to the overlying vision that allows them the have the emotional ownership that will deliver to them the same you had in your younger years.

Watch videos from Ed clothing at no charge, please visit http://www.rigsbee.com/selectvideo.htm

Ed Rigsbee, CSP, is also the author of PartnerShift- Profit from the Partnering and The Art of Partnering. Rigsbee has over 1,000 published articles to his and is a regular keynote presenter at and trade association teaching access Your Collaborative . He can be reached at http://www.rigsbee.com

Ed Rigsbee is also the Founder and Executive Director of a non-profit public charity based in California.

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