USE THE RIGHT MEASURES WHEN DEVELOPING YOUR INCLUSIVE AND EQUITABLE CULTURE

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USE THE RIGHT MEASURES WHEN DEVELOPING YOUR INCLUSIVE AND EQUITABLE CULTURE

Every private company, governmental agency, or non-profit organization I work with to develop a culture of inclusion and equity agrees that integrating regular measure of key performance indicators is a critical piece of the strategic plan. Now, new research from Glassdoor sheds new light on the importance of not only making sure to gather the right data, but to also be certain that you are collecting the data from a diverse group and correlating data with social identity indicators.

Measuring gaps in inclusion and equity satisfaction surveys by correlating data points with employee race and ethnicity showed a very different climate than generalized data synthesis did. Not shocking, but easy to overlook, were data showing that “even within the same workplaces, employees from different backgrounds routinely report different views of how equitably (or not) employers are acting toward underrepresented groups.” An aggregate of all data points may incorrectly imply that an organization has a healthy culture of workplace diversity and inclusion. This limited approach may obscure the reality of possibly large gaps in opinions among similarly situated employees from different demographic groups. Glassdoor discovered that in fact, on the question of how inclusive and equitable the culture is within a variety of different organizations, “Black or African American employees in particular are experiencing or perceiving a stark diversity and inclusiveness crisis [with] little evidence, in their view, that the situation is improving.”

The research looked at 12,435 ratings collected between early 2020 and the present and found that the average individual employee rating of their company’s culture was 3.73 out of 5 stars. Black or African American employees’ ratings were nearly 8 percent lower, at 3.49, while Hispanic/Latinx employees’ ratings were above average at 3.80 and Asian employees’ ratings were even higher, at 3.98. These data makes demonstrate the likelihood of a blind spot in climate surveys that report only aggregated data from all employees.

The Glassdoor data suggest another area of concern regarding traditional DEI training programs. The gap uncovered has been growing since 2019, “expanding from 0.2 to 0.6 stars (on a 1 to 5 star satisfaction scale) despite many employers increasing investments in D&I programs in the last two years.” Too often training begins and ends with developing awareness of unconscious bias. This is necessary, but far from sufficient to develop a sustainable inclusive and equitable culture.

DEI programs should focus on the broader skill set of developing culturally competent individuals in addition to making structural and process changes to the organization itself. Cultural competence requires awareness of unconscious bias and more. Training and development also should focus on awareness and sensitivity to one’s own cultural heritage, curiosity, acceptance, and respect for cultural differences, a variety of conversation skills, relationship-building skills, and advocacy skills.

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5 Tips for Adaptive Marketing: Reimagining Marketing and Business Development

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5 Tips for Adaptive Marketing: Reimagining Marketing and Business Development

The COVID pandemic has made this world and how to operate in it very different for everyone. Lawyers and their clients are no different. Some of the changes in how we connect with one another, build relationships, and work together will stay with us for years. The changes brought upon us by this pandemic are on top of the massive changes that followed the technological revolution of the early 21st Century.

Background

Marketing is connecting with prospective clients in meaningful ways. The decisions that prospective clients make whether to connect with a particular lawyer in the first place and whether to hire that particular lawyer are, like all decisions, influenced by emotions.  Without emotions we would not be able to make choices. We would have difficulty making any decisions.

The pandemic, the economic collapse associated with it, and the fight for racial justice have increased all sorts of feelings, from empathy to anger and from fear to stress. It makes sense to adjust marketing efforts to take account of these pervasive feelings and ask what it means for lawyer marketing. That is what follows here.

Connecting the right lawyer, service, and experience through the right message at the right time in the right platform/space with the right possible clients or referral sources is not easy. Marketing may still be about the people, the message, and the platform; however, clients want something different from their lawyers today.

Even before COVID, the role of client began to change. Clients, patients, and university students transformed into consumers, and, as consumers, they began to make known the value they expected in return from upholding their part of the transaction and paying high fees. Historically, in marketing, we evaluated what clients needed. Now, it makes more sense to take a deep dive into what they want.

Many times, clients want a relationship, rather than a pure transaction. As part of that relationship, they want a reduction in stress and certainly not more stress added on to their already stressful existence, part of which is the reason they reached out to a lawyer in the first place. What this means is that the marketing message and platform must change to reduce stress and also respond more acutely to the wants of the prospective client, especially when it comes to a prospective client making an initial selection of possible lawyers to work with.

Personal Brand

None of this changes the need to be clear about your brand – the image you want to project to the world – your strengths, values, and what makes you distinct from your competition.  Strengths are still measured by your specific skills or abilities like your technical legal expertise and your core competencies, which you use when you communicate and work with other people. However, in today’s world, you may want to highlight your approach to working with clients or your values that others may find attractive. There has been a transition in emphasis from client needs to client wants and also from goals to values. This is because values are the glue in a relationship. They represent commonalities that matter most and are the foundation for building trust.

 

Value Proposition

None of this changes the need for an attractive value proposition.  If anything, this has become even more important. The shift from goals to values is just the beginning. Also, we are moving away from highlighting legal solutions to highlighting how a lawyer can help a client move closer to the client’s vision of a successful outcome. Clients want to know how you will help them continuously move in the direction of a better situation through the experience of working with you.

A value proposition is what you are offering to provide in exchange for your fee, that is also what your prospective client wants.  Prospective clients want their lawyers to help them create new value, protect existing value, or restore value lost. Besides the product or service, you are selling, you are selling a particular experience.

Your value proposition only matters from the client’s perspective.  What value do they conclude they are receiving in exchange for what they give up financially and emotionally? To answer this question, think of your service, outcome, and experience of working with you as the value they are measuring.

 

What is Adaptive Marketing?

What has definitely changed and what needs to be reimagined is how to adjust effective messages, platform options, and what clients want.  When people are feeling anger, intolerance and marginalization, fear, and stress, these feelings affect what they want and the message they will be receptive to hearing. Lawyers need to adapt their messages and platform to the changing wants and emotions of people, all while maintaining an attitude of ”let’s try this and see what happens.” There are five areas ripe for reimagining: (1) digital connections; (2) relationships in place of transactions; (3) the need for authenticity as a lawyer; (4) mastering empathy; and (5) developing adaptability skills.

1.    Digital Connections

Since we cannot easily meet or connect in person without a lot of physical barriers, initial contact will be digital or traditional advertising. Use your digital options to connect and consider the brand and value proposition to emphasize.

At a minimum, consider that your website and LinkedIn are verifications, as is Google My Business. Make sure they show up when you google your name and your law firm’s name. If they do not, take the time to create or improve these digital assets.  Once you have a website, posting regularly helps improve your digital presence, especially if your blogs are naturally responsive to google prompts and questions of your ideal clients. This is how people will find you when they don’t know you but have a question you can answer or a problem you can solve. You have many options.

  •  Website

  • Linked In

  • Traditional Advertising

  • Google My Business

  • Blog

  • Instagram

  • Tic Tok

  • Email campaigns

  • You Tube

  • Videos

  • Chatbots on Website

  • Twitter

  • Facebook

  • Yelp

  • Avvo

  • Lunch Club

  • Google Reviews

  • SEO 

2.    Relationships before Transactions

The attorney-client relationship is more than a series of transactions. Connecting on a human level could ultimately result in stronger client loyalty and a client, who becomes a brand advocate after the working relationship ends. This is often the end result when clients feel recognized and appreciated for who they are.

Lawyers often focus on the legal problem and legal options.  Instead, shift your focus from task to relationship, during marketing throughout the working relationship, and even after the legal work has ended. The ache for human connection is greater today than it has been in quite some time. The fact that over the past year more people have flocked to online dating, online therapy, and classrooms that emphasize community as much as learning, should tell you something about how the world is changing.

Lawyers often miss easy opportunities to create that sense of connection and community with their clients. In a recent survey I conducted, several opportunities for easy wins stood out. (1) Client intake is an early connection with your brand.  Whether you take on the client or not, they will be a word-of-mouth marketer or detractor for your brand. In a recent survey 75% of lawyers surveyed did not use an intake form. (2) Non-engagement letters are easy to use as a matter of habit. How you respond to a person who does not end up as a client is part of the personal touch you offer or hold back. The same survey showed that 75% of attorneys did not use a non-engagement letter. (3) Client onboarding is a chance to talk to a new client about mutual expectations and preferences about communication and the internal processes you use. It’s an opportunity to introduce clients to your team and brand, and offer a personal touch. Only about 50% of lawyers said they do this. 

Communicating well during the relationship, is also the best way to avoid malpractice claims. “In a world that now offers us seemingly endless ways to communicate with one another, it is surprising that the majority of legal malpractice claims are related to administrative functions, and particularly, client communication.” This is from a 2019 Above the Law post. Less than 75% of lawyers say they check in with their clients at least every 6 weeks, and when it came to asking clients for feedback, which offers the dual function of conveying to the client that the relationship matters and capturing the client’s perspective on the working relationship, 25% of lawyer said they never ask for feedback, 25% said rarely, and 50% sometimes. No one surveyed said they often or always ask for feedback.

Don’t end communication when the working relationship ends. Keep in touch in between or after a working relationship ends.  It’s easier now.  Coffee or cocktails over zoom. An email to check in. Be creative.

3.    The Need for Authenticity

Communication is key and it works when you add in authenticity. When your actions are in alignment with your core values and beliefs, you are showing your true self and how you feel, rather than showing people only a particular side. Of course, this means you need a degree of self-awareness of your values, motives, emotions, preferences, and abilities. Where possible, bring yourself to the relationship.  Do you write and record songs or make pottery coffee cups? Share across common interests or interesting reads. Are you struggling with homeschooling or vaccine worries? Share a favorite recipe or place for a hike. If you are an avid networker, make connections that are mutually beneficial to your client and someone in your network. Where appropriate, share your passion. Whatever it is, share it.

4.    The Need for Empathy

Empathy is how we connect with one another’s emotions by catching somebody else’s feelings, attempting to understand what someone else is feeling and why, and offering compassion - the motivation to improve others’ well-being. Stanford University psychology professor Jamil Zaki explains that “the world is full of daily battles in which we’ve consciously or subconsciously sorted ourselves into “us” and “them” camps.” Superimpose your position as an empowered expert and your client as the person depending on your expertise and it creates even greater distance.

It’s easy for a client to feel that they are the “us” and you, as the lawyer are the “them.” Empathy helps with marketing by seeing a client’s problem from the perspective of the client and understanding the cost-benefit of the solution you are offering as they feel it. Also, empathy encourages a client to be open and honest and if you provide difficult feedback to your client with empathy, they are more likely to use it because they won’t feel attacked.

In business development, it’s easy to forget about the fundamentals of communication, such as we all have our default and preferences in styles.  Differences in styles can set off an unconscious “us” versus “them” thinking and role assumption.

These differences are apparent when you begin to notice. Some people are very expressive, while others are more analytical.  Some are more driving while others are more amenable. Some people show more emotions when they communication and others hold back. Some make more statements and others ask more questions. The best way to connect is to flex to the other person’s style when you want to reduce tension, which right now is running high for most of us.  So, first pay attention to how much emotion they show you and flex to that.

5.    Develop Adaptability Skills

When it comes to marketing and business development, like running your business in contrast from practicing law, you have to be open to new ideas, to experimentation, and learning from mistakes and failures.  You have to be nimble and be able to adapt to a quickly changing world.  So, you have to know a little something about changing, when change is hard.

When change is difficult it feels like a loss and when we try something new, we feel unskilled and like we don’t know what we are doing. That’s natural. If only it were as easy as an animal who can change its colors to blend in with its environment.  But, it’s not.

So be prepared.  Tell yourself it’s okay to feel uncomfortable but instead of pushing back, lean into the discomfort.  Be willing to try and experiment until you find what works best for you to display your authentic self or write blogs that jump to the top of a good search.

People have an innate tendency when faced with change.  What’s yours? Are you the catalyst, who comes up with ideas, the theorist, who looks for a path forward, a stabilizer, who looks for reasons to stop change, or an improviser, who is impulsive and wants to start without a plan? Knowing your default response helps. Is your tendency to find a path to risks and “no” to change? If so, step back for moment, take a pause, and play devils’ advocate.  Find a path to “yes.”

Change that enables the capacity to thrive is hard, but worth the effort. Be able to discern between what you need to preserve about your practice and what you can let go. If you need a new skill, get it. You can learn relationship-building skills, how to be authentic, empathy, and adaptability.  They foundation is a willingness to experiment and be okay with anything less than perfection, which for lawyers feels like an awful mistake, but it’s not. Be okay with feeling incompetent and know that the more you practice the more your feelings of competency will grow.

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The Business Case and Blueprint for Leadership Development

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The Business Case and Blueprint for Leadership Development

The Value of Leadership Development Programs

The cost of Leadership development programs is not only financial.  They also divert lawyers’ time and attention away from the legal work. It makes sense to know whether the return on that investment will outweigh the expense.

There is a plethora of research showing a direct correlation between the perception of leaders as outstanding and their organization’s revenue generation, profitability, employee productivity and retention, and customer loyalty and satisfaction.[1] Any company, regardless of purpose, industry, or headquarters, performs better with excellence in leadership as perceived by others. While some results of the research are expected, others are quite surprising.

It is not surprising that organizations with poor leaders perform poorly. It is surprising that organizations with average leaders are substantially outperformed by those with outstanding leaders.  The collection of skills that make this difference is also surprising.

Leaders are required to be strategic planners and design step-by-step processes for reaching performance goals, like revenue and profit targets. If they are good leaders, we expect them to meet targets. In fact, there is a direct correlation between the strategic planning capability and organization efficiency, effectiveness, and financial performance. It makes sense that the better leaders are at designing and implementing plans for improving revenue and profit, the better the plans and their execution, and the better the results.

There is also an unexpected, direct correlation between key performance metrics and the perception of people as excellent leaders because of their strengths in helping colleagues solve a problem, seeking out others’ ideas, or a variety of other interpersonal skills, and those skills related to agility, learning, and change. People are evaluated by their bosses, peers, and direct reports as outstanding leaders because of these skills and behaviors and not whether or not their organization is profitable, yet organizations are considerably more profitable when leaders are perceived as outstanding in these skills.

In the legal field, there are always skeptics, who may argue lawyers, legal departments, and law firms are different.  Yet, across all industries interpersonal skills matter and their absence often overshadows any value of extraordinary technical expertise. In 2008, the Korn/Ferry Institute published their research showing that the characteristics of “best-in-class general counsel, [are] the same as those defining a Best-in-Class leader.” They were the ones with leadership skills for making complex decisions, managing diverse relationships, creating and innovating, inspiring others, driving results, and getting things done.[2]

It’s not difficult to imagine that people will stop listening to the regular instigators of conflict or the narcists who repeatedly talk about themselves. Yet harmony-seeking, selfless leaders who lack strong interpersonal skills lead companies where knowledge is not shared, ideas are never developed into valuable assets, and collaborative, trusting relationships are never forged. The cost is often existential. I’ve work with several law firms that no longer exist, despite strong revenue and profitability because partners needed harmony and avoided conflict and difficult conversations, literally, at all costs.

What is Leadership?

Leadership is the intentional influence of others to complete projects that require a group effort. Some may argue that there are no group efforts to deliver legal solutions. Law is packed with people who have a preference for independence in their work and a love of applying deep legal expertise to solve problems. However, as the general counsel of a large international company, it’s easier to see that the evolution in role parallels that of the Chief Financial Officer twenty years ago.

Today’s general counsels, along with their CEOs, choose their role. It is between aligning the legal function’s strategy with that of the company or being a technical expert with many different areas of the law. The deep legal expertise is still needed; however, a new set of responsibilities for general counsel has emerged. It includes delegating tasks to the right legal subject matter expert while also assuming a leadership role as strategy partner with the CEO and entire senior leadership team. It is not difficult to see the similarities with the law firm’s managing partner and practice group leaders.

This is a consequence of complexity. Today’s business world is complex as much as it is complicated. The challenges are like managing traffic and building the engine of an automobile. And, so is today’s world for the client who is looking for help managing their wealth, navigating governmental obstacle courses to protect assets, or recovering value lost. It’s the complexity, volatility, lack of clarity, and lack of predictability that requires lawyers have much more than deep legal expertise to help their clients in the ways clients expect and want.

It’s interesting that there is a collection of leadership skills that show up over and over as being correlated with excellence even though research also shows that excellence in leadership is all about the fit between what the leader does and what the organization needs.  Winston Churchill was not recognized as an excellent leader until Dunkirk and after WWII, he was voted out of office. There are lots of stories about people who were successful leaders in one organization only to be fired for poor performance shortly after moving to a new one.

Leadership is about competencies (sometimes called skills, capabilities, abilities), not styles or business models per se. Competencies are expressed through every style that meshes with every law firm from those with a lockstep compensation business model to those with an individual achievement model. A decision to skip leadership development based on the belief that lawyers and law firms are too different from every other business is not a logical, analytical, or sensible decision. It is contrary to the existing evidence. When a firm or law department is not performing up to its highest potential, that, in fact, is evidence of the need for leadership development.

The answer to the question of whether or not leadership development is sufficiently valuable is obvious when you examine the right data. If data about the law firm or law department’s key performance indicators is weak or average, the value of leadership development far outweighs its cost. The trickle-down effect of good or bad leadership will always impact productivity, client satisfaction, employee and associate retention, profitability, innovation, revenue, and culture.

Designing Leadership Development Programs

Focus on Excellence

Design leadership programs to develop excellence in the competencies that matter most for the organization, industry, role, and career level. Extensive research tells us that poor leaders cost an organization in lost revenue, profitability, and employee performance but the surprise is that the performance difference between organizations with average leaders and those with outstanding leaders is dramatic. Aim for excellence in leadership. Great matters.  Good is not good enough.

The aim of most developmental programs is to eliminate weaknesses instead of developing strengths. There is a difference between a fatal flaw or career stopper and a weakness. Research has repeatedly shown that selecting one to three skills that are among the relative strengths of a person and honing them is more likely to propel the person’s career forward than is turning a weaker skill into an average skill.

Focus on select behaviors

Include the behaviors that routinely show up in high-performing organization across all industries, geographies, and organizations and a variety of research studies. There is considerable data that successful leaders are achievement-oriented, able to influence the thinking, emotions, and actions of others, and are able to learn and adjust to change. Many of the related behaviors are:

1.    Making complex decisions

2.    Demonstrating a learning mindset and resilience

3.    Taking initiative

4.    Mediating and negotiating conflict and differences

5.    Establishing stretch goals and plans to achieve them

6.    Building relationships and influencing people

7.    Attracting, developing, and optimizing diverse talent

8.    Being courageous, trustworthy, and authentic

9.    Being flexible and adaptable

10. Have a client and outside focus

In addition to behaviors that routinely show up in high performing organizations, legal expertise, financial acumen, technology competency, and ethics are important capabilities for lawyers. Communication for lawyers includes capturing and retaining the attention of prospects and clients through conversations about how to create, retain, or recover what the client considers valuable in addition to advocating, mediating, and negotiating to resolve conflict. These are the differences that explain why excellence is also a matter of “fit” between the leader and organization. Yes. There are some leadership differences that legal industries leaders need.

Each capability is really a combination of different skills, behaviors, and approaches. For example, having a client focus, means developing and demonstrating an understanding of what motivates your clients’ decisions.  It means knowing what they want and expect, rather than what legal solutions they need. Communicating with clients means explaining legal solutions and client responsibilities clearly and concisely and also conveying empathy and understanding of their perspective on value because value to a client is not how much time it takes you to have a conversation or write a brief. Having an outside focus means noticing changes on a macro and micro level, from your prospective clients and competitors today to economic, demographic, and social changes that affect who your prospective clients and competitors may be in a year and your options for connecting with them.

Measure Using Standards

Since the measure of effective leadership is the perception of subordinates, peers, and bosses, use a 360º assessment tool to establish baseline and capture improvement measures before and after developmental efforts. A well-validated 360º assessment is the best predictor of leadership talent potential and the best measure of current levels of competencies. A good assessment defines the behaviors being measured and on a Likert scale will measure degrees of excellence. Once you have data about the baseline and improvement aims, you can create a step-by-step action plan for leadership performance improvement.

An example, from the Korn Ferry Leadership Architect model and assessment defines a “towering strength” as rare, “the best people may have only a few towering strengths.” It defines a “serious issue: as a “pressing need to improve…hurting performance…career could be stalled or stopped” because of it.  A good assessment defines the skills being evaluated. An example defines the skills of “Drives Results” as a person who “has a strong bottom-line orientation. Persists in accomplishing objectives despite obstacles and setbacks. Has a track record of exceeding goals successfully. Pushes self and helps others achieve results.” Standards, objective performance criteria for leadership competencies makes a difference.

Develop Throughout a Career Using Traditional and Untraditional Tools

When the details of an individual’s career intersect with the details of an organization’s talent cycle, there is a fit. A talent cycle is the series of processes that work together to create a consistent pool of people with the right skills and fit with the organization so that the organization is able to carry out its purpose. It begins with: (1) recruiting for defined positions; (2) making the decision to hire; (3) the onboarding process; (4) the developmental and evaluation processes; (5) career advancement, reward, recognition, and compensation; and (6) termination. Development and evaluation work in tandem. 

The most widely accepted theories on how to develop new knowledge and skills in adults combine traditional learning methods, like lectures and reading with the ongoing application and practice of new behaviors over time with reinforcing and redirecting feedback to master a competency. After a person decides to strengthen a capability, that person studies and learns a new skill, then applies the skill to a real-life situation and practices it over time. Ideally, the learner receives outside feedback and reflects on its effectiveness until it becomes an outstanding strength admired by many and possessed by few people.  Sometimes performance coaching is included as a means to emphasize reflection. Coaching is the preferred method for helping senior leaders and “C-Suiters” to hone their leadership skills. Leadership development efforts that add objectively measurable value to any organization include using the skill with regular job duties. It is the extensive practice of a skill over time that transforms an average skill into an outstanding one.

An important leadership skill for most lawyers is business development. This is relationship-building communication that captures the attention of prospective clients and influences their decision to hire the lawyer. There are several components to the communication skill including understanding and being able to notice communication preferences and differences, learning to adjust your own style, and when to say what in a “sales” conversation. There is information to consume by reading or watching a video (traditional learning methods) followed with practice time including role play to improve new behaviors.  Untraditional learning methods like role-play, performance feedback, and coaching support the required practice to transform knowledge into behavior and beginner behavior into talented behavior.

People become expert in a skill with practice and coaching. Think of top athletes and musicians. They all practiced every day for many years before becoming experts in their fields. It’s the same for any skill. You learn how to do something, engage in intensive practice often with coaching, and then plateau without continued practice and an intention to improve.  Whether a leader wants to hone business develop or management skills, it takes an intensive learning period that may include watching other leaders, receiving formal and traditional training, coaching, and planning actions in advance.

[1] John H. Zenger and Joseph R. Folkman, The New Extraordinary Leader, Turning Good Managers into Great Leaders pp.31-41, 281(2020)

[2] Nancie Lataille and Gabriella Kilby, The Legal Function Transformed: Best Practices of Today’s General Counsel (2008)

 

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WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOUR MIND WANDERS?

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WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOUR MIND WANDERS?

There are many reasons our minds wander. Maybe we are feeling stressed, tired, or bored or perhaps it’s a consequence of ADHD. The scientific explanations for the wandering mind are expanding and deepening with results from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) research that provides visual data of the measure brain activity in a particular neural network.

Eva Botkin-Kowacki, in a recent edition of News at Northeastern, reported on research by Aaron Kucyi, a neuroscientist at the University. Using fMRI to measure brain activity when the mind wanders, It turns out that many more parts of the brain are involved in this “dynamic and fundamental function of our psychology.”

When subjects were not focused on the assigned task of pushing or not pushing a button, depending on the image they were shown, expected brain activity occurred in areas called the “default mode network,” an area of the brain previously noted as “activated when someone’s thoughts were drifting away from their immediate surroundings and deactivated when they were focused.” Additional activity appeared in networks related to controlling or maintaining a train of thought, while systems associated with sensory input quieted. It seemed as though the default mode network was communicating with the network related to controlling a train a thought, while shutting off the external world.

The fMRI brain patterns were similar for ADHD diagnosed people. ADHD symptoms include difficulty concentrating and also hyperfocus under whatever might constitute favorable conditions for the particular person. The study’s co-author, John Gabrieli, added that the greater the mind-wandering for ADHD patients the more daily difficulties they experience.

Also mind-wandering is not good or bad per se. The upside is that ADHD often means having a broad focus and seeing patterns, making creativity more likely. That said, when performance suffers too much, this new research suggests which neural systems to target for ADHD interventions.

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Succession Planning: What’s Your Next Step?

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Succession Planning: What’s Your Next Step?

Note: This article first appeared in the February 2021 Law Practice Today

Introduction to Succession Planning

Succession planning for lawyers means retiring, a career pivot, perhaps selling a practice, and definitely transitioning clients and open matters to another lawyer. It marks a life-cycle transition point. Psychologically, it means change and change is always hard, even when it’s a choice. Retiring or pivoting forces you to questions you may prefer to avoid.

Do you want to find an internal successor to handle your files? If that’s not an option, will you recruit someone from the outside, perhaps a junior lawyer – someone you have mentored in the past? Do you think your practice is desirable as a merger or acquisition candidate?

What should be on my “to do” list? What are the possible ethical missteps? What is my practice worth?

Law Firm Business Valuation

The underlying and unspoken assumption of succession planning is that there is value in the law firm or practice that someone else would want that outweighs the cost of its acquisition. When the value is greater than the acquisition cost, succession planning is about the logistics of complying with ethical rules regarding valuing a practice and retiring.

Law firm partners with a significant book of business have power.  If they leave without first transitioning clients, the clients will leave too. This means that managing partners have a responsibility to think about succession as a business sustainability strategy. What are the benefits of being a partner in your firm?  What is the cost to become a partner in your firm? Does your firm have a leadership pipeline to partnership?

The best succession plans are started years in advance of an actual transition and incorporate an understanding of the firm’s business model, partnership agreement, and how decisions about practice value are made.

Whether you are in a firm or a solo practitioner, take a moment to value your business. Consider the following:

•       Hard assets: cash-on-hand; property

•       Transferable, valuable, happy client relationships

•       Brand recognition

•       Skilled and committed staff

•       Embedded processes and culture of effectiveness and efficiency

•       Work in progress

•       Long-range strategy

•       Healthy capitalization

•       Receivables

•       Strong community presence

•       Positive office culture

Ethical rules affect valuation. Remember to consult your state’s ethical rules on transferring client matters, referral fees, or fee-splitting. There are often limitations. Look for obligations to keep clients apprised of possible changes in representation and their choice of counsel,  transfer files only to competent lawyers, and limit excessive valuation of good-will.  When discussing a possible acquisition, make sure to protect client confidentiality, consider conflicts, and review fee agreements in engagement letters. These issues may also affect the value a practice or its value to a particular acquirer. 

Law Firm Roles and Responsibilities of the Business Model

When a lawyer leaves a firm affect, it may affect the firm structure and responsibilities of others left behind. Who, in your firm, is responsible for rainmaking, overseeing work processes and attorney assignments, and making sure that bills go out on time and get paid? What processes in your effective and efficient business model will change when a particular partner retires? The connection is often obvious between a particular lawyer and the percentage of revenue that person brings to the firm.  It’s not always as clear who is responsible for recruiting, hiring, onboarding, training and development, advancing, evaluation, compensation, and termination of associates and staff. It’s often even less obvious who is doing what, when, and how to ensure that quality work gets completed on time in different areas of a firm. Use the table below to better understand your firm’s business model and what needs to continue uninterrupted.

Checklist

When a firm closes or a solo practitioner retires, pay attention to ethical rules regarding file retention and ongoing cases with pending court dates. Malpractice insurance coverage is for “claims made,” so even if you are retiring you will need a “tail” policy to cover any legal malpractice claims made after those doors are closed. Make sure to:

·      Finalize any active files where possible. If you can close out a matter and client representation, do so.  Use disengagement letters and include your intention to retire.

·      Advise clients with active files of your intention to retire and their need to retain new counsel. Don’t forget to remind clients of important time limitations and scheduled dates.

·      Active litigation files usually include court or deposition dates. Request extensions, continuances, or new dates where possible. Under some circumstances, ethical obligations may require you to delay your retirement. Remember to follow court rules regarding motions to withdraw your representation and substitute new counsel.

·      Return original documents and transfer electronic files to clients. Advise clients how long you’ll be retaining files, which depends on your state’s ethical rules.

·      Make sure to document any decisions and confirm agreement by your client.

·      Check your state for ethical obligations regarding retiring or suspending your active license, including change of address and contact information.

Five Steps for Succession Planning in Advance

There are five steps for succession planning: (1) Hire right; (2) Develop People; (3) Transition Leadership and Management; (4) Transition Clients; and (5) Reward Departing Partners. Planning for the departure of partners begins several years in advance.

1.     Hire Right 

Recruit lawyers with leadership competencies or develop these skills in addition to top-notch legal skills. These lawyers will be better at managing client relationships, developing new client relationships, and support the efficient and effective running of the law firm’s business model.

Not every lawyer should become a partner; however, hire lawyers that are partnership material.  What are the expectations for partners? Should they show business development potential? Do they need to have an interest in running a department? Do you expect them to collaborate with other departments, like marketing or attorney development? Do you expect them to mentor and train newer lawyers? When lawyers are hired because of the schools attended or honors received instead of their vision of lawyering, leading and legal capabilities, who supports firm sustainability? Hire lawyers that will contribute to a sustainable culture – a diverse, equitable, inclusive culture where well-being and belonging are cultivated.

2.     Develop People

Even perfect hires need development. Train and mentor successors in marketing, client relationship development and management, law firm leadership and marketing, law firm finance, understanding the firm’s business model, and mentoring others. None of these competencies are taught in most law schools.

Make sure to:

•       Expose associates and junior partners to management issues as part of their developmental process.

•       Expose them to the  firm’s financial model and goals.

•       Include them  at regular meetings and discuss progress toward goals.

•       Share information on management decisions. Not all is sensitive or confidential.

•       Delegate issues dealing with practices, technology, marketing to associates or small committees. People learn best by thinking through difficult challenges, making decisions, and implementing those decisions.  Where the outcomes are less than perfect are the opportunities to learn and group.

•       As they develop offer them leadership position on more important issues.

3.     Transition Leadership and Management

People learn to lead and manage others by leading and managing others. Introduce leadership training and create new roles for people to learn these skills.  Have an assistant or co-managing partner or manage with a triad executive committee. People learn by watching more experienced people lead, so give them opportunities to ask questions about and how leadership and management decisions are made and participate in the discussions and decisions.

 4.     Client Transitions

No firm wants to lose clients when a partner retires, and this is preventable with planning. As uncomfortable as these conversations are, talk retirement and know when it is coming. Three to four years before a retirement, a introduce clients to other partners and associates. Allow time for trust to develop with other firm attorneys. Does your business model encourage or discourage this behavior?

In firms with sustainable business models, identify successor lawyers for each client and have them prepare to take over for primary lawyers at retirement.  Include successor lawyers in lunches and client visits and transition portions of client work to successor well in advance of transition.

5.     Reward Departing Partners

Sustainable business models generate partners who support client transitions. They are not worried about their livelihood and power. Return capital – original investment and profits-not-taken. Figure out fair value of a partner’s ownership interest and pay it. Fund retirement benefits. Consider providing compensation through of-counsel arrangement that support the mentoring  and client transition support needed for sustainability.

Conclusion

Succession planning is shifting control of the firm and clients and doing so without going awry of ethical obligations.  It answers questions about the value of retiring lawyers. It provides longevity and sustainability for a firm. Succession planning is an opportunity.  Take it.

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INCREASE YOUR CLIENTS AND REVENUE: MAKE IT RAIN!

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INCREASE YOUR CLIENTS AND REVENUE: MAKE IT RAIN!

Not everyone who needs a lawyer, accountant, consultant, or coach wants one. Not every prospective client, who wants professional services, can afford to pay your fees. The three steps to increasing your firm clients and revenue are: (1) define your target prospect; (2) tailor your marketing messages to what your target prospects want; and (3) master the sales-cycle conversation.

1.     Define your target prospects

Too many lawyers and other professional service providers fish in the wrong pond or use the wrong bait.  They do not know whether there are sufficient prospects who want the solutions they offer at the price they need to generate sufficient revenue for their business model. This may be a consequence of a practice area already supersaturated with other lawyers or productized services that are too similar or aiming at the wrong geographic or demographic target market. Alternatively, your price point may be too high, but could be reduced with the introduction of process efficiencies.

The first step is to research your target prospects to better understand what they want, what they are willing to pay, and where they are likely to notice you and what you are offering. Understand them demographically and psychologically.

2.     Tailor your marketing messages to what you target prospects want.

 Not all prospective clients, people who want the solutions you are selling, will develop an interest in your brand of solution.  Your value proposition is your solution combined with the experience of working with you. It is the client’s point of view on what they want and what they think will make them feel better, less anxious, happier.  It is how close you get to giving them what they want, not just what they need.

 There are three categories of value that lawyer’s offer clients. You can create new value, protect existing value, or restore value lost. If you what you offer leads to ways for your clients to do what they want to do, then you create value.  If it leads to ways to help your clients preserve what matters to them most, then you maintain value.  If it leads to ways to make your client whole after being physically, emotionally, or financially harmed, then you restore value.

 A good value proposition quickly tells clients why working with you will make their lives easier and better. That spikes curiosity and interest in your brand of solutions, rather than that of your competition.

 3.     Master the sales-cycle conversation

 When a prospective client is curious about you and your firm because they want what you are offering, the next step is to have a conversation. Instead of thinking of this conversation as an opportunity to tell the prospect what you will do and how you will help, think of it as an opportunity to develop a relationship and demonstrate that you understand what they want.

 The key to converting a prospect into a client is communicating in way that first engages the prospect. Different people are more receptive to different communication behaviors – the “how” of communication.   Once engaged, influencing a person to become a client is a matter of saying the right things at the right times. Our Rainmakers Incubator Workshop is where you’ll have an opportunity to learn and practice these techniques.

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STRATEGY STUCK? EXPAND OR CONTRACT. GO DEEP OR GO WIDE.

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STRATEGY STUCK? EXPAND OR CONTRACT. GO DEEP OR GO WIDE.

By Susan Letterman White

Did you notice the picture with this post? Not everyone does. Some people have a natural tendency to jump to the words. Now, that I’ve brought it to your attention, what do notice? Take a moment. Take it in. I’ll come back to it in a bit.

Leading your business or yourself and career means motivating action. Action leads to change and change is the aim of any strategy. You plan and implement a series of actions to reach goals or increase your knowledge or ability to reach those goals. That is strategy.

Here are two examples. (1) A governmental department wants a more inclusive and equitable culture. What actions will it undertake to make that happen? By “it,” I mean who, with sufficient power, will do what by when and how. (2) Joey wants more a more organized and efficient law office. What will Joey do by when and how, to bring order and efficiency into each aspect of Joey’s business model, from marketing to workflow processes? In both instances, the people, who are expected to act are unlikely to overcome inertia without sufficient motivation.

What do you do to motivate? What can you do to inspire, when you or your team feels stuck? Psychologist, David McClelland, explained that people are motivated by their own internal desire to achieve, to belong or be affiliated with a particular group, to control with power. What motivates you? What motivates the people on your team?

Yet, even with motivation, there must be enough to overcome inertia. Everyone resists change or at least some aspects. It tends to feel like a loss or an unclear, confusing, or chaotic experience. We don’t normally seek those emotions and clouds over our observation and judgment. Consider adopting an adaptive perspective of experimentation and adjustment when leading and facing change. If you are coping with the uncertainty of a loss or the confusion and lack of clarity with change, knowing that solutions can’t possibly be obvious, opens the door to “trial and error.” This, begs the question of what to do if you feel stuck without a single idea of what to try.

In this situation, feeling stuck usually means you can’t see opportunities. One example is a leader without a vision. A vision is a longer-term direction based on a clear sense of purpose and its indicators and values. Without a vision, there are goals. It’s only when goals are distilled and detangled into discrete action steps in a particular direction that it becomes clear what to try. Leaders struggle with defining a vision in a way that is similar to a person who is unsure of what they want for a career. Not knowing what you want is the problem and nobody can answer the question for you. When you do not know what you want for yourself or your organization, then the solution is explore and do so in a way that expands or contracts your field of exploration. Then, go deep or go wide in any field you decide to explore. When you can’t find a field to explore, it usually means you are stuck in useless routines, repeating actions that are essentially the same or too similar for you to notice anything valuable.

Okay. Take another look at the picture. If not, expand or contract your field of vision. Do you see the image of an animal? There is cow, at least most sighted people eventually see the cow. If you know it is there, it’s easier to see. When we don’t know we are supposed to be looking for something, we may miss what is right in front of us. When we perceive by do not explore, we may not notice all that is there. When we explore “big-picture,” we may miss the delights of the details. When our field of perception is too narrow, we may miss the next best opportunity that is just slightly outside of that field.

Find all options that may address problems that seem unresponsive to your attempts to solve. When you are struggling to get enough new clients for your revenue goals or unsure about the career pathway that leads to your happiness, seek elsewhere and explore differently. If you are looking for a new job or new clients but keep “fishing in the same pond,” you may need to expand your search area. If you are connected to many prospective opportunities but not “getting them on the hook,” you may need to change your bait. Contract your exploration and focus on what you are doing, your strengths, and your limitations. If other people think of you as a generalist, it’s possible that the fit required is with a specialist with deep expertise in a limited area. Today’s world is packed with uncertainty and changing preferences by the people who have the power to hire you. Experimentation with adaptation is the solution and this begins with noticing more.

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Challenge and Focus

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Challenge and Focus

Years ago, I was a rock climber.  I loved the sport because of the feeling of focus and flow it gave me. I was happy pushing myself to do what I though was physically too hard and forcing myself to face a fear of heights, which turns out not to be as uncommon among climbers as I had assumed. I developed a group of relationships built on trust, caring, and always working to better understanding and help each other do more.  Focus, pushing beyond what seems physically or mentally possible, facing fears, and developing “real” relationships are always the ingredients to change individual habits and organization and team cultures that drive effective leadership, happy careers, and group and organizational belonging and equity for all. We all need a source of focus. What’s yours?

The feeling of climbing on rock or climbing up always put me into a laser-like focus on the moment, what was right in front of me, and what I was doing.  It amazed me because in everything else I have ever done, I’m extremely prone to distraction. Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi called this “flow” where time seems to disappear.  It’s an amazing feeling. It comes from concentration and deep absorption with whatever you are doing at the moment. This intrinsic motivation to try harder and do more, because trying harder and doing more just feels good, is difficult to find unless what you are doing is connected to your passion, who you are at the core, what matters to you most, or what you enjoy as an end it itself.

Rock climbing was physically painful and mentally challenging. However, the feeling of accomplishment as every step up got me closer to the top with a group of partners right there with me, absorbed the momentary pain and discomfort. I was aware of it, but it did not stop me from moving up.

Find your sense of accomplishment. Know what makes you tick. Develop your support network. Take the time to figure out what really matters to you. It will be easier to discover your focus and flow and then you can take on the big challenges.

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5 Tips to Notice More Business Opportunities

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5 Tips to Notice More Business Opportunities

Are you a good noticer? You won’t notice business opportunities if you aren’t good at noticing. If you spend more time noticing what’s happening in the external world or if you spend more time with the thoughts rattling around in your brain, you are probably missing a lot. We need to develop the discipline to do both. Maybe you study your surroundings like you were taught in college to study a painting. That puts you ahead of many people, and yet, you likely miss a lot that could help you notice more business opportunities.

Noticing clearly and communicating effectively seem like obvious, straightforward skills, yet our psychology seems to suggest that we’re prone to make a lot of mistakes. Why is that? Let’s start with an experiment.

Choose a colleague, client, friend, spouse, person-in-case-of, or neighbor. Close your eyes and try to recall the last time you saw that person. What were they were wearing? What was their emotional tenor? Can you recall their tone of voice, body language, and what they said and did? Perhaps you “saw” them on Zoom.  What was hidden from view?

If you aren’t good a noticing what is in front of you, you’re going to miss the next, best opportunity that comes your way. It probably will not appear like an opportunity at first glance. It may seem like too much effort, not right for you, or not interesting. If you want to notice more, you’ll need to change your habits and learn new behaviors.  Changing old habits and forming new ones is never easy. Put these 5 tips on a Post-It or Smartphone Note, in your calendar, or do this with a buddy for mutual accountability “check ins” until they become new habits.

1. Stop and Notice.

Notice, using every sense available. See, hear, feel, smell, taste, and the others.  What others? We have a sense of space and time, movement and position. How about noticing how awake and alert you feel or how tense or relaxed your muscles are? Add in expanding your awareness of emotions in yourself and others. There’s a lot to notice and most of us notice little.

Practice expanding your perception of what “is.” Maybe start with the room you are in. List what you notice and what you remember noticing with your eyes closed.  Practice regularly, until you notice more.

One of my trainings is problem-solving for leaders. It starts with noticing one’s internal context.  I ask people to notice feelings in their body and expand awareness of emotions. It takes practice and an expanding vocabulary for your emotions.  If the only words for emotions you know are anger, happiness, joy, love, and sadness, you may not feel contentment, pride, excitement, peace, satisfaction, or compassion.  If you don’t know what compassion feels like, you may miss out on a business opportunity to empathize with a prospective client. Also, it’s easy to have your cognitive, analytical thinking skills hijacked if you aren’t noticing when you’re feeling anxious.

2. Notice the “big picture” in addition to the details.

The patterns, relationships, concepts, and connections that we call the “big picture” in contrast the details are less noticeable to some people than to others. Perception tendencies or preferences, like communication defaults and preferences are part of being human. Maybe you pay attention to the strength and style of a handshake, the tenor of a voice, the scent of a person and a room. But, do you also look for patterns and relationships? The connections between people, people and resources, or people and power? Culture and power dynamics show up in patterns of behavior, not in the employee handbook. Do you notice who gets attention and who seems invisible in a group? Maybe there’s a business opportunity hidden there.

3. Be curious.

Think like a journalist, psychologist, anthropologist, artist and so on. Our ability to be curious, depends on our history of experiences and what we know. Everyone has binoculars and microscopes in addition to blindspots. Leadership of oneself and others requires a big dose of curiosity – the desire to be open and keep learning. Experts in innovation point to the combination of curiosity and hard work as the catalyst for experimentation, innovation, and intentional change. Changing up routines, acting spontaneously, shaking up your thinking is how to find new connections and opportunities. It’s how to notice gaps to fill with your expertise and effort. It’s how to notice the human side of problems. These are the ingredients for finding new business opportunities.

4. Avoid assumptions.

It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking you know the answer or have collected all the data that matter. Innovation intelligence and noticing more means testing your assumptions and reaching conclusions much more slowly. It doesn’t mean hesitating to reach a decision when the data is incomplete or ambiguous. The nature of complexity is that systems often have incomplete and ambiguous information. Living with a lot of complexity should not stop us from making decisions and experimenting to find solutions to problems. It does mean developing a heightened awareness of your unconscious assumptions. Everyone has them. It does mean knowing the difference between perception and data on the one hand and judgments, assumptions, and conclusions on the other. Suspend your judgment until the time is right to make a decision.

5. Change intentionally.

If you are stuck and not finding more business opportunities, it’s time to change what you are doing, how you are doing it, and when you are doing whatever you are doing. Let’s say you are right-hand dominant. In that case, you prefer to write with your right hand. With practice, you could learn to use your left hand, but it would take time, more concentration, and the early results wouldn’t be as good as with your right hand. It’s the same situation with intentional change. Do you prefer to notice and collect data or reach conclusions? Do you prefer to notice the details or the big picture? Do you prefer curiosity or making decisions?  If you have ever explored your personality using the MBTI, then you know that expanding what you notice, how you make sense of what you notice, and the way you decide and act are preferences that have become habits.  We can change our habits, expand into new habits, or replace old ones with new and better habits. If you are not getting the business opportunities you want, it’s time to change.

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Why is Leadership Difficult and Dangerous?

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Why is Leadership Difficult and Dangerous?

By Susan Letterman White

Leading can be like playing with fire. It is “difficult and dangerous work” according to the authors of “The Practices of Adaptive Leadership” . It’s taking charge of making a difference.  It’s doing whatever is necessary so that the team and organization being led reaches its objectives and maintains alignment with its purpose. What’s so difficult and dangerous with spending your time and effort trying to improve performance?!?

It’s difficult to influence others to do their part to help a group reach its goals, even a goal to make the whole (organization or team) better than its parts.  It usually means asking people to do more than they are already doing or change the way they have historically done something. People have an inherent aversion to change. So, there’s that. It’s also difficult to master the competencies that make a good leader and extraordinary leader and if you want leadership to make a difference in the key performance metrics, like revenue generation, customer and client satisfaction and retention, employee engagement, productivity, and retention, or profitability, then according to the reams of the research data you need people, who are outstanding, not just good, leaders.

It’s dangerous because sometimes it means speaking up when you see something that is wrong, which often comes with a price. You speak up.  Your boss disagrees with you and retaliates. In most instances, you have no protection. Take a look at this recent Massachusetts Appeals Court ruling to see that even though under Massachusetts law your employer would be fined for preventing you from placing in your personnel file a disagreement with a criticism placed in the file by your employer, your employer can still fire you for taking advantage of that law.  

It’s difficult for leaders and followers to act against their self-interest even when it is in the best interest of the organization. For example, most people avoid personal conflict.  Their desire to avoid conflict doesn’t disappear when people step into positions of formal authority and power.  Their desire to grow in their career doesn’t disappear either. If the recognition, advancement, and compensation processes reward behavior “A,” don’t expect anyone to engage in behavior “B,” even if that is the right thing to do and in the best interest of the entire organization. If the penalty process sanctions behavior “B” expect most people, who are not in a position to absorb the punishment without damage to avoid behavior “B.”

We’ve all read about the importance of exercising “leadership” regardless of one’s formal authority. Leadership trainings focus on leading oneself in addition to leading others. Managers are taught to use informal influence to persuade others and to speak up if they have a different perspective. However, what is the benefit to the organization when it receives data it is not interested in learning? We know how it may quickly turn into a harsh penalty for the “leader.” Unfortunately and all too often, power wins out.

Exercising leadership may put you in the line of fire and tough criticism more often than in line for praise. Are you attempting to lead a group that is firmly entrenched in its status quo? If so, expect resistance in the form of criticism. Leading is difficult and dangerous. Be sure you know yourself and why you would be willing to put yourself in danger before you start playing with fire.

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Systems and Structures

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Systems and Structures

By Susan Letterman White

Running a training program or a group facilitation that is part of a comprehensive plan to improve a culture of equity and inclusion, is an opportunity to distinguish between structure and system and discuss both systemic racism and structural racism. A system is a collection of interconnected things that interact and work together to create the whole. A structure is how two things are connected.

An person is a human system operating within groups and organizations, larger systems, that operate within a nation on earth within an even larger universe. How a nation or organization is structured refers to who is connected to power, opportunities, and resources and who is disconnected. The closer to connection, the closer the control.

Systems have cultures - values, beliefs, and assumptions that motivate decision-making and the distribution of power and how empowered people distribute resources and opportunities. Cultures are evidence by the existence and display of artifacts and symbols, which message values, beliefs, and assumptions. For example, portraits on the Capitol walls of both Charles Sumner, an abolitionist, and John C. Calhoun, a proponent of slavery. Cultures affect the decisions on the design of structures.

Examples of structures include how law enforcement distributes justice unequally, consciously or unconsciously is irrelevant. Where systems that distribute resources, opportunities, and experiences are lopsided, they need to be restructured so that power and its use are managed with fairness and equity. When power is not used that way, accountability necessary.

Systemic justice would hold accountable those on the ground in the Capital riot and those empowering it with false narratives of what is fact and what a fact is. Systemic justice requires an agreed-upon set of facts, that are no based on conspiracy theories untethered to reality.

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Career Planning with Resilience: Looking Back and Looking Forward

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Career Planning with Resilience: Looking Back and Looking Forward

By Susan Letterman White

January is often when we start to think about our lives and careers. It’s a great time for a new start or a refresh because we’re primed by our culture to think about a fresh start. It starts right after Christmas and continues through the end of the month with advertisements, articles, and videos telling us to think and act now.

In reality, the time to start is now, whether “now” is in January or your birthday or a career path anniversary, like the start or end of a school year, or when you need refresh your business or pivot on your career path. Planning and spontaneity in your career and business work together, which is why tenacity and resilience leadership competencies are as important as project, time, and task management leadership competencies. Similarly, your innovation and problem-solving skills are as important as your planning skills.

If you own or wish to launch a business, the foundation is your business plan and budget. If do not have a business plan and budget, now is the time to create both. The usual time we think about business plans and budgets if we are entrepreneurs, is when starting up a new business. The planning process for both, then tend to slip under the waves of doing the work we are selling. It’s important to revisit both at least annually and at that time think about your business model. The processes and structures you need to attract customers or clients interested in buying whatever you are selling, create those products or services, and generate revenue in your business bank account comprise your business model. Then ask, whether they are working effectively and efficiently. It’s also time to revisit your business model, business plan, and budget if your cash flow is not generating the profit you want.

If, instead, you are looking to advance in a career as an employee of an organization, now is the to refresh your resume and explore opportunities in the job marketplace. If you are finding there is a match between your resume and many opportunities, you will get to the interview stage. If you are not finding the right opportunities or if, you apply, but do not get to the interview stage, one possible reason might be missing skills or experiences. It’s important to evaluate your skills and experience for their match with opportunities of interest to you to get on the right career path and continue to advance toward your vision of success.

Finally, if you find that it’s difficult for you to answer the root of all career and business decisions – “what do you want” – then I recommend you explore. “What do I want?” seems to be a question that for some people becomes more difficult to answer after the age of 10. If that’s you, it’s time to find out what is blocking you from looking for and finding answers. Maybe you need to learn or experience something new. It may be a simple as changing up your routine with new books to read, new movies to watch, new hobbies to begin, or new routes to the grocery store. Or, it may be time to return to school and expand your network of relationships.

Regardless, planning and a willingness to look for ways around the walls that block your next step forward are easier with resilience and tenacity. So, remember it’s always time to look back and look forward to find your next step or a fresh start.

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Career Launch or Refresh Checklist: Look Back and Forward

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Career Launch or Refresh Checklist: Look Back and Forward

By Susan Letterman White

1. Look Back: Select your “look back” timeframe | Are these statements true for you?

  • I am happy with the salary or profit from my business generated.

  • I am happy with what I have accomplished.

  • I am happy with how my network of relationships (peers, customers/clients, referrals, support) worked for me.

  • I am happy with what I did (how/processes used) to generate my salary or revenue, goals, and network of relationships.

2. Regardless of whether you are happy or not, what went well and what do you wish had gone better?

3. What did you learn about yourself, what you want, your leadership and career skills, and your challenges?

4, Is there anything you would change if you had a magic wand?

5. Look forward Select your “look forward” timeframe | Are these statements true for you?

  • I know my goals

  • I know what I need to do to achieve each goal.

  • I have the resources (time, money, space, technology, network) to reach those goals.

  • I have the technical, leadership, and career skills to reach those goals.

6. What are your goals?

7. How will you achieve each goal?

8. What resources will you be using to reach each goal?

9. What skills will you be using to reach each goal?

10. What are your challenges and obstacles?

11. What is your plan to eliminate, go around, or manage each obstacle?

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Diversity | Equity | Inclusion:  Conversation to Action

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Diversity | Equity | Inclusion: Conversation to Action

By Susan Letterman White

I design and facilitate group conversations on systemic racism and bringing more racial and ethnic diversity into leadership and power in organizations. My groups and many of the individuals in those groups express a craving for change and a culture where honesty and differences are sought out, supported, and even celebrated. The deeper the conversation goes, the deeper the realization of how difficult it is for people without formal power and authority to change processes and structures to turn words and ideas into actions to change systemic racism. This is especially true today, where people can’t agree on what a fact is.

It’s a given that if companies want to cultivate a culture of diversity, equity, and inclusion, they must recruit, hire, and put into leadership positions, people of all races who do whatever it takes to help employees feel like they belong and have the resources they need to be successful. When leaders fall short, they must be held accountable. A commitment without accountability is insufficient for a culture change.

It’s a given that leaders must create the context where everyone feels comfortable speaking up. As my group commented yesterday, it’s easy to speak up when everyone shares similar opinions and feelings. Silencing voices, like systemic injustice, happens without you knowing. When we work in a culture that demands perfection and is intolerant of mistakes, articulating an unpopular opinion, or inadvertently misspeaking, the fear of consequences – embarrassment to being fired – overwhelms and silences people. The role and responsibilities of a leader include enabling the conversations to happen, helping people find the courage to speak up, encouraging other to speak up, supporting vulnerability, and cultivating forgiveness when mistakes inevitably happen in conversation and action. Leaders must act on their moral obligation to speak up when they see something wrong and be held accountable for the culture they create by what they do and say, staying silent, or silencing people who challenge the status quo.

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