Posts Tagged ‘football’

Thursday Thoughts: You’re as good as your good people

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In my Saturday Morning Book Club we are currently reading The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership by legendary pro football coach Bill Walsh.

Walsh changed the way football is played. And he transformed a franchise that was in shambles – the San Francisco Forty-Niners – into one of the greatest dynasties in the history of the sport.

He was a football genius. But he was a leadership genius too.

Many forget that Walsh was not only the head coach responsible for the X’s and O’s on the field, but also the General Manager – the leader tasked with staffing the entire organization.

Walsh was a firm believer in the idea that a leader, and the organization he or she runs, can only be as good as the people they hire.

He illustrates this in the book with a lesson he learned while on Paul Brown’s staff with the Cincinnati Bengals. One game day the bus taking the team from the hotel to the stadium became lost. After it became obvious to Brown that the driver did not know where he was, he barked at the driver: “Fella, I’m not mad at you, I’m mad at the person who hired you.”

Brown understood that his anger was pointless if directed at the bus driver. He was just doing what he was hired to do: drive the bus. The true responsibility lay at the feet of the person who placed Brown’s team in the hands of this unprepared driver.

Walsh took this lesson to heart and created a list of essential traits of staff members in a winning organization.

I have excerpted them here:

  1. A fundamental knowledge of the area he or she has been hired to manage. You may think this is so self-evident it’s insulting to include. However, often we are tempted to hire simply on the basis of friendship or other user-friendly characteristics. They can be important. Expertise is more important.
  2. A relatively high level of energy and enthusiasm and a personality that is upbeat, motivated, and animated. Groups will often collectively take on the personality of their department head. A negative, complaining staff member will be emulated by those he or she is in charge of. So will a positive go-getter.
  3. The ability to discern talent in potential employees whom he or she will recommend to you.
  4. An ability to communicate in a relaxed yet authoritative – but not authoritarian – manner.
  5. Unconditional loyalty to both you and other staff members. If your staff members are chipping away at one another, the organization is weakened from within – like a tree full of termites. There is, in my view, no offense more serious than disloyalty.

The big picture? If you want to succeed as a leader, recognize, like Walsh, that the people with whom you surround yourself can be the difference between winning and losing.


Thursday Thoughts on Leadership: Leaders Are Not Always Predictable

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Leaders are not necessarily predictable people. Being unpredictable will keep the team from falling into a mental comfort zone. By suggesting that a leader needs to be unpredictable, does not mean they should not act the same way regardless of the circumstances. Those they lead should be able to anticipate how a leader might think and or act, because after all the act of leadership implies that your followers have a sense of where you are going. Great leaders are purpose-driven and their actions arise from an observable belief system and common goals. However, if the leader becomes too predictable, it will affect their ability to keep their people sharp and on their toes.

In managing a real estate office and coaching real estate agents, I have always believed that you should create an environment that is positive, conducive to growing, motivating and above all, challenges people to do their best. As a leader, you have to achieve this without becoming predictable.

The most effective leaders often have the quality of being somewhat unpredictable. They understand that if they are predictably difficult or predictably easy going, their charges will become predictably comfortable and will not be ready for the next opportunity or the next challenge. In real estate or any highly competitive environment, feeling comfortable is the first step on the road to complacency. Complacency is the most insidious disease in the world. It sits on your shoulder telling you everything is fine and that you don’t need to improve.

In last year’s Super Bowl between the New Orleans Saints and the Indianapolis Colts, one team fell victim to this. Obviously, both teams represented the best of what the National Football league has to offer. Great owners, great coaches and great players were represented on both sides, as well as great preparation. The game represented the culmination for what some players was a lifetime of training and preparation for this moment. At the start of the second half of what had been a close game, but one that had definitely started to favor the Indianapolis Colts, both in the score and the play on the field; a bold and unpredictable decision was made and it changed the tide of the game. The Saints Head Coach, Sean Peyton, decided to try an onside-kick, a highly questionable and very risky play that is an attempt to surprise the receiving team. So risky in fact, that it had never been attempted at this point in any of the previous forty-three Super Bowls.

The Saints not only recovered the ball, but regained the momentum in the game and went on to dominate the second half en route to the first championship in team history. They were not complacent; they were ready for the unexpected. I guarantee that when the play was called, they were as surprised as anyone, but they were ready for it. The Colts were not, they were complacent. No one had ever tried it, why would the Saints try it now? Peyton has created one of the most dynamic offenses in the league because he does not always do the predictable. He does not follow the script on how football should be played. He trusts his players and makes decisions based on the expectation that they will succeed. In turn, because his players know that he can call any play at any time and for any player, they are always ready to execute at any moment and in any situation. In fact, the player that made the biggest play was not a star, but a reserve, someone who barely gets on the field. But all men on the roster know they are accountable.

As an office manager, one method I used to help keep agents on their toes was in the way I announced sales results. Each month, instead of just posting what the top performers did, I would post what everyone did, even if they had no sales in the period. It kept everyone accountable and on their toes. Remember, our business of real estate is not for the weak-willed or faint of heart. It is for those of us that get sick to the stomach if we are not in the top 10% in any competitive environment. I can still recall seeing first-hand how it motivated the agents to be sure and not show up at the bottom of that list with a goose egg by their name.

Ideally, those you lead are driven to excel by the expertise, inspiration, motivation and example you offer. Many times it takes more than that. Sometimes changes are necessary, sometimes opportunities spring up or challenges present themselves out of nowhere. The leader who exhibits some unpredictability and thus instills an ethos of always being ready in the team will achieve success. Who knows, maybe some day you will be asked to make the most important play in the most important game of the season and the success of the entire team will ride on whether you are ready for the challenge or not.


Monday Mojo: Finding Your Meaning and Purpose in Life

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Last Wednesday I had the privilege of attending the 17th Annual Silicon Valley Prayer Breakfast in Palo Alto.  The theme was “Finding Meaning and Purpose in Life”.  There were two incredibly powerful speakers.  I walked out humbled and inspired. I walked out determined to find my meaning and purpose in life.

First was Tim Borland – in 2007 he ran 63 Marathons in 63 days.  Why you ask?  Tim’s life mission is to advocate for children in need by using his gift in endurance running.  Click on the link below and watch this video – this is Tim’s meaning. This is his purpose:

Tim’s four keys to finding meaning and purpose in life:

  1. Focus on the needs of others before ourselves.
  2. Develop an accurate view and understanding of fear.  He said fear of failure is a dream crusher.
  3. Be willing to risk it all.
  4. Pray for a God inspired vision.

Second was Joe Ehrmann. He played football for the Colts for 13 year and was named Colts’ Man of the Year.  In the same year Ehrmann played in the Pro Bowl he watched his brother Billy loose his fight with cancer.  This experience caused Ehrmann to rethink and reorder his priorities in life. Ehrmann spearheaded the construction of a Ronald McDonald House in Baltimore in memory of Billy. In the off-season, Ehrmann attended classes at Dallas Theological Seminary and, following his football career, he graduated from Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, specializing in urban ministry. He was ordained in 1985. Parade Magazine name Joe the “Most Important Coach in America” due to his tireless efforts to change the culture of sports.  Joe and his wife Paula co-founded Building Men and Women for Others to help every man, woman and child reach his or her potential.  He was also the recipient of the National Fatherhood Initiative’s Man of the Year Award.

This is his meaning. This is his purpose:

As a Pastor for more than 25 years of his life he has been with many people as their life on earth ends.  He said – all people care about at the end of their life is who did I love and who loved me, and did I make a difference.  Nothing else matters – not money, not fame, not power – nothing else.

Two ordinary men doing extraordinary things.  So, what is your meaning and purpose in life? If you don’t know – find it!


Thursday Thoughts On Leadership: What Is So Special About Leaders?

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What is so special about leaders? Do we ever really stop to ask ourselves this question? There are a million different responses, but consider this one … they bring out the best in us. Leaders recognize what is possible before we do. They recognize the potential in an individual and perhaps more importantly, they know how to bring it to the surface.

Consider, Joe Montana. We all know how his story ends, but do you know how it started? As a freshman at Notre Dame in 1974, Montana was the seventh string quarterback. The following year Dan Devine, the newly hired coach stated to his wife after being impressed by Montana’s performance during training: “I’m gonna start Joe Montana in the final spring game.”  When she replied, “Who’s Joe Montana?” Devine said: “He’s the guy who’s going to feed our family for the next few years.” Today we all recognize what Dan Devine recognized in that spring training game in 1975. It is a difficult task to find six better quarterbacks in the history of football than Joe Montana, much less on one college football team. It took a leader with vision to see that.

Montana did go on to have a very good college career at a highly regarded college program, yet when he entered the NFL draft in 1979 he was once again overlooked. He was selected in the third round by the San Francisco Forty-Niners because Bill Walsh, like Dan Devine before him, recognized the potential that everyone else missed.

Walsh knew that in Montana he had found the perfect understudy to lead his team and execute his plans. As Montana related years later in the foreword to the book, The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership, “He (Walsh) had in his mind this ideal – an image of perfect football – couple with the nuts-and-bolts details of how to accomplish it, which he then taught … the place you dreamed of but didn’t know you could reach? Bill Walsh taught me how to reach it. He taught all of us how to reach it.”

I do not have any doubts that Montana believed he could make it in the NFL, but having a leader like Walsh who believed he could be one of the best ever played a vital role in Montana achieving that status. When others see potential in our abilities and they believe in us, and they reinforce that belief every day through their interactions with us, we are strongly influenced by that support. Our Chairman, Bob Moles played that role for me. If the potential exists within us, it will come out when a leader takes the time to bring us along.