Human Resource Functions in the Early-Stage – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Human Resources:

Over the last several weeks, we have been sharing some concepts for leaders considering making a transition from a large company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage venture.

Leaders who have built an effective set of skills while working for a large company are needed in the early-stage to help bring innovations forward in the market. The risk of all of us being “Amazoned” in the not-too-distant future is real. Being on the forward edge of innovation in the early-stage is one way to stay ahead of the threat of becoming extinct as marketplaces become more efficient in serving customers.

The focus for today’s topic is on establishing a human resource function in the early-stage. In the typical scaling up phase of an early-stage company, a formal human resources function is usually one of the last functions to be brought in house. There are plenty of exceptions but in general, most early-stage companies rely on their leaders and the occasional consultant to help create some degree of process around what would be characterized as a human resources function.

Senior leaders transitioning from a large company to the early-stage world bring a strong foundation in effective human resources. However, the big difference is leaders now have a sense of being all alone in making the decisions and executing the plan. They certainly gain input from advisors, consultants and lawyers, but in the end, all eyes are upon them. It’s the leader who is asked, “What do you want to do?” This is a much different experience than having an internal team of HR professionals and lawyers guiding each step of the way.

There is a misconception that many leaders have when transitioning to the early-stage environment. Leaders often make comments like, “I could never move fast enough in my large company…” to hire or fire someone, or give promotion. There were always so many guardrails, paperwork, and obstacles. “…I can’t wait for a small team where I can move quickly on personnel decisions.”

The reality is that yes, leaders can move quicker on decisions. However, leaders in the early-stage have a different set of guardrails and obstacles to think about in making decisions on personnel.

Given time and money are always in short supply, leaders face the challenge of balancing getting the most out of the team you have versus making some quick firing-hiring decisions. They also face critical vacancies with not enough bodies around the table to get the work done.

Sometimes balancing some positive and negative at the individual level is a bit more complicated. For example, sometimes working as best you can with a non-A player for the near term is a wise choice over having a major gap in a critical-need position.

In addition, when leaders are faced with pending financing of the company like a Series A or B round closing, there are risks to implementing major changes within the team, especially changes in functions that potential investors consider critical to the stability of the leadership team. These are never easy decisions, but in contrasting leadership in a large company to that in an early-stage environment, they both come with their own guardrails and obstacles that may hinder a leader from moving quickly on certain people management decisions.

One additional point to note about moving fast on people management decisions in a small company. Investors do not invest in a company to pay for litigation expenses caused by an employee or former employee issue that arises. Leaders need to be very thoughtful about the discipline with which they implement their own people management processes to ensure people are treated fairly and to minimize the risk of resources being allocated to items that are not creating value for the company.

In most cases, leaders in the early-stage are building these processes from scratch and are fully accountable for them.

Strong leadership is needed in the early-stage marketplace and leaders from large companies have the skills and experience to create great value at the forward edge of innovation. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, the early-stage market provides a wonderful environment for leaders to learn, grow, and bring world-leading innovation to the market.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Leadership in the Early-Stage – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Leadership:

Over the last several weeks, we have been sharing some concepts for leaders considering making a transition from a large company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage venture.

Leaders who have built an effective set of skills while working for a large company are needed in the early-stage to help bring innovations forward in the market. The risk of all of us being “Amazoned” in the not-too-distant future is real. Being on the forward edge of innovation in the early-stage is one way to stay ahead of the threat of becoming extinct as marketplaces become more efficient in serving customers.

The focus for today’s topic is on describing effective leadership in the early-stage. There are fundamental leadership principles that are consistent across all job titles, levels, and sizes of companies. Bookshelves are full of leadership gurus pontificating on variations of a common core set of leadership principles. The intent of this writing is not to repeat these generalizations but to describe how effective leadership is delivered in an early-stage company.

One of the most exciting, and at the same time daunting, aspects of leadership in the early-stage is that as a key leader in the company, you actually own it. This is one of the major realizations of leaders coming from a large company into the early-stage. There is no set of heavy-duty consultants putting together some glossy matrix plan of actions along with some mandatory online training program to reinforce the company plan. As a leader in an early-stage company, you own the culture and you own the leadership framework the shapes it over time.

Over the years of building early-stage companies and guiding others to do the same, there are a few common patterns in the execution of effective leadership. Below are a few highlights:

Alignment

Given the limited resources of time and money in the early-stage, it is critical that there is very little wasted motion on work that is not aligned with the operating plan. A leader in the early-stage has no place to hide. Starting with the overall strategic intent of the company, where we are going, why it is an exciting pursuit, how we describe our vision, mission and values in words, images, etc. are all personally owned by leaders in the early-stage.

The alignment as to the direction of the company extends from a high level all the way to the individual objective of each team member. Everyone should be able to clearly say, “I know what I need to do every day and I know how my work supports the overall direction of the company.”

Communication:

Effective communication in the early-stage is not something that is handed off to someone else who will set the tone, draft the memos, create the cadence of meetings, etc. Effective leaders in the early-stage realize the importance of communication to ensure the alignment described above is achieved. In addition, effective leaders are intentional about prioritizing time and effort to develop and execute an overall communications plan to ensure the company, team members, and investors are all aligned around the key items.

The development and execution of a communication plan begins with clarity of words, images, and documents that become the tools to drive alignment around the key tasks of the company. These tools are consistently used in the routine cadence of weekly meetings, hallway conversations, recognition tools, performance management process, etc. to ensure there is limited wasted motion in the company on non-essential work.

Communications to investors in private companies is much different than large publicly traded companies. Effective leaders communicate consistently and clearly to investors to ensure no one is left in the dark. They communicate how their invested dollars are being utilized and to prevent the unfortunate “surprises” that emerge in the early-stage.

Transparency:

As we mentioned before, there is no place to hide in an early-stage company. News on customer mishaps, product failures, employee friction, etc. rarely go unnoticed by the full team. Effective leaders in the early-stage are very open about the issues in the company. They communicate the brutal truth with regards to the critical elements of the company like raising capital (or not raising capital), cash runway, product data readouts and implications, etc.

There is no playing the blame game for leaders in early-stage companies. They own the plan and the execution of the plan. Sure, a board of directors will have oversight and approvals on major budget items and strategic decisions, but owning the direction and owning transparency within the communication is a common thread among effective leaders in the early-stage. 

Leadership in the early-stage is truly a capstone course and an exciting opportunity for leaders from large companies to leverage all the great foundational leadership traits they have developed over the years to make a real difference in the innovative early-stages of the marketplace.

Strong leadership is needed in the early-stage marketplace and leaders from large companies have the skills and experience to create great value at the forward edge of innovation. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, the early-stage market provides a wonderful environment for leaders to learn, grow, and bring world-leading innovation to the market.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Operating Plan Development and Execution – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Operating Plan Development & Execution:

Over the last several weeks, we have been sharing some concepts for leaders to better understand as they consider making a career transition from a large multi-national company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage business.

Leaders who have built an effective set of skills while working for a large company are needed in the early-stage to help bring innovations forward in the market. The risk of all of us being “Amazoned” in the not-too-distant future is real. Being on the forward edge of innovation in the early-stage is one way to stay ahead of the threat of becoming extinct as marketplaces become more efficient in serving customers.

The focus for today’s topic is on the importance of developing and executing an operating plan. Leaders in the early-stage are accountable to a much greater degree for a fully interdependent operating plan than their peers in large companies. Leaders in large companies tend to be responsible for example the commercial growth of a product/product line, but not necessarily the ongoing development of the product for other applications or specific improvements. Even division leaders in most large companies have responsibility for a narrow swim lane compared to leaders in the early-stage.

Even though these differences exist, the fundamental skills and discipline of building a solid operating plan is where leaders from the large companies can clearly add value in early-stage companies. There may be a few more swim lanes added to the plan, but the principles of setting clearly defined goals, establishing timelines, risk assessments, etc. are all well within the skills and experience of most senior leaders from large companies.

From an operating plan development standpoint, most leaders coming from a large company to the early-stage are often surprised at what may seem like a little bit of chaos that seems to take place. It seems quite glamorous to outsiders envisioning 3–5 people sitting around a table making plans, super quick decisions and running a company. However, there are plenty of examples that reveal how this quick, sometimes undisciplined process, can lead to wasted resources, chasing one great idea after another, and not making methodical progress towards important milestones. Large company leaders can often instill a level of rigor and discipline in the operating plan development process that drives greater focus and achievement for early-stage companies.

When it comes to executing the operating plan, leaders transitioning from large companies often get a reality check of how much hands on in the process they actually become. Most large company leaders have teams who do much of the blocking and tackling work — determining vendor qualifications, running an RFP process, building communication tools (e.g., making the slides and writing the memo), coordinating meetings, making initial proposals, etc. Nothing gets done in the early-stage unless leaders do some, most, or maybe even all of the work. Efficient execution at this stage means time and money, both of which are in great need in early-stage companies.

Looking across both operating plan development and execution, the striking difference between the experience of large company leaders compared to early-stage leaders is in the clear measure of value creation that is built in an operating plan. Each milestone/deliverable is specifically tied to the value creation of the company. A milestone or key deliverable is not set just to meet some category on an annual performance grid or developmental goal. Milestones in the early-stage are driving value for the company, encouraging investors to commit more capital, etc.

Strong leadership is needed in the early-stage marketplace and leaders from large companies have the skills and experience to create great value at the forward edge of innovation. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, the early-stage market provides a wonderful environment for leaders to learn, grow, and bring world-leading innovation to the market.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Solving Problems – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Solving Problems:

Over the last several weeks, we have been sharing some concepts for leaders to better understand as they consider making a career transition from a large multi-national company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage business. The forward edge of innovation happens in the early-stage across all industries. Large companies have transferred massive amounts of resources from internal R&D functions to business development efforts focused on acquisitions and licensing deals as the primary means for remaining competitive in a global marketplace that continues to accelerate innovation outside of the 4 walls of large corporations.

Leaders who have built an effective set of skills while working for a large company are needed in the early-stage to help bring innovations forward in the market. We hear from leaders everyday who are energized by leveraging their skills and experiences to create their own unique path to a fulfilling professional journey in the early stage. In addition, the risk of all of us being “Amazoned” in the not-too-distant future is real. Being on the forward edge of innovation in the early-stage is one way to stay ahead of the threat of becoming extinct as marketplaces become more efficient in serving customers.

The focus for today’s topic is on helping leaders understand the pace and focus on solving problems that consumes the time and energy of teams in the early stage of innovation. Leaders in large companies are typically not problem-solving significant business issues on a routine basis. There are teams that meet at regular intervals to assess the health of the business and routinely rely on committees to bring about potential solutions to business challenges. The rate and pace of problem solving is on a quarterly and annual basis.

Leaders in early-stage companies are typically in daily problem-solving mode. The agency required to switch from C-Suite level strategy to immediate fire-drill, problem-solving mode is a critical element of leadership in early-stage companies. Typically, within large companies, leaders will use the cadence of large, routine meetings to kick around ideas on defining the problem, think about it some more, maybe bring in some consultants to discuss, and typically postpone a decision or action until gathering some additional information. In early-stage companies, there is a bias for near term action (today, tomorrow or before the end of the week). This is a major difference in the cadence when compared to large companies.

The pace of problem solving and decision making is rapid in early-stage companies. However, it should not be viewed as just “winging it” either. This is precisely why leaders from large companies are needed in these early-stage companies. They bring a foundational discipline to think through issues thoroughly, weigh the benefits and risks in a thoughtful manner, etc. Disciplined decision making is desperately needed in early-stage companies and leaders coming in from large companies need to be sensitized to the reality that we need that decision today, in this meeting, as opposed to waiting until the next meeting to make that decision.

One clear example of the different pace within large and small companies is the responsiveness of senior executives to customer challenges. It is a familiar scenario that as problems filter up the chain of command in large companies, there is often the frustration of scheduling conflicts that prevent important meetings with customers from happening for weeks, if not months.

The typical response in an early-stage company is almost immediate. My response to many customer issues went something like this, “I can be on a flight that lands in New York by 3 p.m. and can be at your office by 4:00 p.m. today. Will that work or do you prefer to discuss the issue first thing in the morning?”

The reality faced by many leaders making the transition from a large company to a small company is that the pendulum has shifted to where the company’s survival may in fact be in the hands of one or two customers. Therefore, everything else becomes second in priority to addressing any problems with those customers.

Leaders transitioning from large companies to the early-stage need to be problem solvers. Often these problems move beyond commercial problems to include product quality, investor challenges, and bordering on the potential ethical questions on how to keep the company going during difficult times.

Strong leadership is needed in the early-stage marketplace and leaders from large companies have the skills and experience to create great value at the forward edge of innovation. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, the early-stage market is fertile ground to learn, grow, and bring world-leading innovation to the market.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Trial and Error – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Trial and Error:

Over the last several weeks, we have been sharing some concepts for leaders to better understand as they consider making a career transition from a large multi-national company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage business. The forward edge of innovation happens in the early-stage across all industries. Large companies have transferred massive amounts of resources from internal R&D functions to business development efforts focused on acquisitions and licensing deals as the primary means for remaining competitive in a global marketplace that continues to accelerate innovation outside of the 4 walls of large corporations.

Leaders who have built an effective set of skills while working for a large company are needed in the early-stage to help bring innovations forward in the market. We hear from leaders everyday who are energized by leveraging their skills and experiences to create their own unique path to a fulfilling professional journey in the early stage. In addition, the risk of all of us being “Amazoned” in the not-too-distant future is real. Being on the forward edge of innovation in the early-stage is one way to stay ahead of the threat of becoming extinct as marketplaces become more efficient in serving customers.

The focus for today’s topic is on helping leaders appreciate the willingness to take risks, embrace failure and the “learn as you go” mentality of today’s early-stage companies. This trial-and-error mindset is dramatically different than a large company leadership mindset that has little tolerance for new methods.

In large companies, the risk to the current model (e.g., near term cash flow and fixed investments) are too high for big mistakes. In addition, most leaders from large companies have seen over time that mistakes are viewed as career ending and painful as opposed to opportunities to learn and grow. The “play the game, play it safe” mindset helps everyone sleep well for another performance period regardless of how urgently marketplace changes are emerging.

In the early-stage world, the view is fundamentally different. A critical component of success is that you take risks and often fail. The learnings gained are applied quickly and effectively to achieve the next level of growth. The team dusts themselves off, does an autopsy without blame, and climbs back into the ring.

Even though the learnings gained with this mindset are helpful to leaders in moving things forward, the reality is that sometimes mistakes in the early-stage can result in painful outcomes like a complete loss of investor capital, bankruptcy, litigation, etc. These are not the nice and clean “learnings” that we often hear from leadership gurus pontificating on the benefits of learning and growing from mistakes and failures. In the early-stage, we are talking about a real adult dose of learning that can cause real pain.

However, even with these painful lessons, the truth remains that failure and mistakes bring about great learnings.

Strong leadership is needed in the early-stage marketplace and leaders from large companies have the skills and experience to create great value at the forward edge of innovation. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, the early-stage market is fertile ground to learn, grow, and bring world-leading innovation to the market.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Job Titles – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Job Titles:

This week we will continue the series on sharing key concepts for leaders to consider when thinking about making a career transition from a large multi-national company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage business. The trend continues to be observed with today’s Great Resignation and the reality for many that the concept of working for and retiring from one company over the course of a career is no longer the dream it once was and today’s leaders are yearning to create their own unique path to a fulfilling professional journey.

The focus for today’s topic is on helping leaders understand how job structure and job titles are viewed in an early-stage venture compared to those in a large company. Leaders who are emerging from a career in a large company and considering a move into an early-stage opportunity are often concerned with job titling (C-Suite, SVP, etc.) and role specificity (what are the objectives and responsibilities of my specific job).

One of the more striking realities observed by leaders transitioning out of a large company is that few, if anyone, cares about titles and role specificity, especially in the early stage. People (including investors in the business) are more concerned with establishing clear objectives for the business and how senior leaders effectively work as a team to accomplish the company’s critical milestones. Investors are not too concerned about someone’s sensitivities around their title or their need to build their own specific sandbox to play in. Delivering on the company’s milestones is paramount.   

This is not to say that order and organizational design are absent in the early-stage world, they are not. However, the emphasis shifts much more to the accomplishment of key milestones for the business and the team’s efforts, regardless of titles or departments.

A very common experience, especially in the early stage, is for the day (or evening) to start with a major problem that needs to be solved (i.e. a major customer is not happy, a test result can’t be delivered, a product falls out of specification with no back up plan, etc., etc., etc.).  Regardless of title and department, key leaders quickly gather around the table (or a Zoom call) and begin problem solving.  There is zero tolerance for anyone to even think about “hey, that is not my department” or “it is not within my job specifications”. The team has a problem, and everyone is needed to help solve it. 

Everyone is trained and expected to run to the sound of the guns to join the fight, which is different from what commonly happens in large companies due to the many department silos that are created.

Leaders who are focused on growing and learning, and not building more silos in an organization, get an amazing energy boost when they join a company in the early-stage that is focused on working together as a team with little to no concern about titles and departments. As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, leaving our titles at the door and running in to help solve problems as a team is a foundational element to our leadership effectiveness.

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, the opportunity to be at the forefront of creating and scaling life-changing innovation in healthcare resides in the early stage. This sector needs strong leaders like yourself to drive innovation in the years to come. I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

The Weight of Decisions – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

The Weight of Decisions:

This week we will continue the series on sharing key concepts for leaders to consider when thinking about making a career transition from a large multi-national company to building the next chapter of their career in a smaller, early-stage business. The trend continues to be observed with today’s Great Resignation and the reality for many that the concept of working for and retiring from one company over the course of a career is no longer the dream it once was and today’s leaders are yearning to create their own unique path to a fulfilling professional journey.

The focus for today’s topic is on helping leaders understand the personal weight that is felt in making decisions in an early-stage venture compared to those in a large company. Leaders emerging from a career in a large company are typically well grounded with a high degree of ethics. The values established by many large companies support an effective work environment and positive community engagement. Large companies train leaders well in delivering on these values to support a healthy culture for the business. These foundational experiences for leaders are critically important to writing their next chapter outside of a large company.

Based on some real-world experience and having guided others in this journey, leaders transitioning into an early-stage business will often feel they are somewhat alone on their own island in making some difficult decisions. Navigating complex business decisions in the early-stage often seem to land in a gray area versus the black and white ethical dilemma taught in leadership development programs in large companies. The fact is that the environment of a large company often makes these dilemmas easier to identify and address. When you add the pressure of investor commitments to achieve certain milestones within specific timeframes and the desire to keep the company moving forward with needed capital, the environment is ripe for ethical challenges in leading an early-stage business.   

We have all seen over the years some poor ethical decisions made by some leaders in an early-stage, rapidly growing business. It is only those who have been down this path who can appreciate that there are always two sides to every story — and often only one side makes it into the media. 

Early-stage leaders often find themselves faced with complex decisions with no one around to challenge the ethics, investors want results, and the timeline is blinking red/critical. Leaders in the early-stage often feel an immense ethical weight on their shoulders in making these decisions. Experience would say that a trusted advisor is often needed on an ongoing basis to support leaders in navigating these key moments.

A different level of pressure is felt when leading an early-stage company compared to the pressure of being a senior leader in a large company. The common thread of principle-based behavior and ethical decision making is present in all environments, but the support and guardrails are well positioned in large companies. They are not so present in early-stage ventures.  

We have found that leaders at all levels need the support of a trusted advisor to help them shoulder the burden of the many complex business decisions that also press hard into ethical “gray areas” in the marketplace.  As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, maintaining a principled approach to decision making is critical and we all need a trusted advisor to lean on for support in those dark difficult moments.     

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage of healthcare. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

https://www.wearecomvia.com/write-the-next-chapter-of-your-career-offerings

Purposeful Work – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Over the last few months, I have received a great deal of comments on the topic of making transitions in a career and the growing wave of interest into a more entrepreneurial career journey. The trend being observed with today’s Great Resignation and the reality for many that the concept of working for and retiring from one company over the course of a career is no longer the dream compared to creating one’s own path to a fulfilling professional journey has caused most leaders to take notice and look for guidance to build a plan.

Based on this interest, I will plan to share a series of learnings over the coming weeks on some key considerations for leaders to think through in contemplating the next chapter of their careers in a smaller, early-stage business compared to the large, multi-national, headline grabbing companies. My experience has been built more in the healthcare marketplace, but I will share some general concepts that are actionable to various markets and segments. Having guided many leaders through these decision points, my intent is to provide content that is practical and relevant across industries.

The focus for today’s topic is on helping leaders understand for themselves on a very personal level, where they feel most purposeful in making a difference with their professional efforts. The stark contrast in the mindset of leaders from large companies to those early-stage ventures is in where they feel most purposeful in making a difference. Both mindsets are relevant in the marketplace. It is a personal choice for a leader to make as to where they feel most aligned and energized.

Leading effectively in a large company consumes a massive amount of energy in keeping the internal machine functioning. There are a great deal of existing processes, financial trends and people involved that keeping the current machine functioning as effectively as possible is the primary intent of the leader. For some leaders, they feel most fulfilled in making a difference by helping the existing business run more effectively.

By contrast, leaders in early-stage ventures expend a great deal of energy on the more hands-on personal impact in creating and launching products and services and scaling the business to reach a sustainable level. Leaders in early-stage ventures find purpose in taking a risk to build something compared to risk of grinding it out and staying with a large company for what seems like the potential of a nice retirement package.

The mindset of leaders who find purpose in a large company or an early-stage venture are both meaningful and relevant. There needs to be no judgment by outsiders as to what is better or worse. Leaders need to do some introspection and come to a clear decision as to where they feel most purposeful at this point in their careers.  Once they make that decision, then the guidance on what step to take in the next chapter of their career becomes more practical and directed.

As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, we must be intentional about taking steps to ensure we have the skills and experiences necessary to survive and thrive in a rapidly changing marketplace. One of those important steps is determining for ourselves how we define purposeful work.    

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@david34873

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com. I hope you find them helpful in your journey.

Also, for those leaders in healthcare, I wanted to share a link to a program specifically for leaders in healthcare who are looking for insights into building the next chapter of their career in the early-stage of healthcare. I was asked to contribute to this program based on my experience of leaving a large healthcare company and building my career in the early-stage. Please take a look at the link below.

Career Transitions – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

Our newsfeeds are full these days with stories about the Great Resignation and the rising interest of a side-hustle career on the path towards a more entrepreneurial minded professional journey. The reality of our present time is that for all of us, we need to be considering and expecting a variety of transitions in our career journey. The dream of generations before us of working for one company (“a great company with wonderful benefits”) for our entire career is no longer a practical reality and it may even be a major hinderance on our professional growth and marketability during difficult economic times.

Having led several downsizings and restructurings within a “great company with wonderful benefits,” I have come to realize that the appropriate question is not “if” tough times come, the appropriate question is “when” tough times will come. We have to personally be prepared to answer the question of “Am I ready?” for those tough times. The marketplace is becoming more uncertain, complicated, and intense. We need to accelerate the development of skills needed to lead our teams and guide our personal career journey in order to remain relevant and survive.

As we continue to work on building and strengthening our leadership, one of the considerations we need to think through is, “When is the right time for me to make a change in my career path?” Having been through a few transitions myself and guided some close friends through a few transitions as well, I have come to appreciate a few tell-tale signs that it is time to make a change.

Below are a few signs to consider within your own personal career journey. These signs are not intended to be clearly seen over a few short months, but more like observations over several years along a career journey.  

  1. We have stopped learning and growing. When we reach that point where the day-to-day work becomes an efficient process and we find ourselves being relaxed and comfortable more days than being a bit concerned that “I need to pick up the pace or else…”
  2. When our company has limited opportunities for new experiences and new roles. This can come about through headwinds over time from external events, but more practically speaking, this can come about from a company’s talent management process that values you gaining more functional expertise vs. cross-functional expertise or when you realize that you just don’t have enough internal support to secure that next great assignment because of an abundance of talent in the company or when there are just very few great assignments given the long term performance of the company.  
  3. When our company leadership seems to be more determined to support the current operating model vs demonstrating a willingness to embrace the accelerated pace of change in the marketplace. When leadership seems to be “riding out the storm until retirement,” we run the risk of us personally being “Amazoned” out of existence.  

As we look to build and strengthen our leadership over a long-term career journey, we must be intentional about taking steps to ensure we have the skills and experiences necessary to survive and thrive in a rapidly changing marketplace.    

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com

I hope you will find them helpful in your journey.

Making a Difference – Weekend Reflections for Leaders

As we continue to work on building and strengthening our leadership, we all have a tendency to search for new insights or some new methodology on building trust, aligning our teams and leading through uncertainty, etc.  Pick your topic of interest on leadership and we are all searching for some idea to make the tough work of leading get a little easier on our path to accomplishing our goals.

There is one action item that time and time again comes up as a main ingredient to building trust, being an effective leader, enhancing execution etc.  However, it is one action item that does not get a lot of air time in today’s discussions on leadership as it is not as bright and attractive as some “new” method for effective leadership.

The discipline to follow-up on the large and small tasks being outlined during the routine cadence of running a business and leading a team forms the foundation for our long-term effectiveness as a leader.

We have all been there…

  • the running list of action items coming out of a meeting
  • the personal recognition of a service anniversary or major event for a teammate
  • the meeting that needed to get set up for next week
  • our list could go on and on…

Something on the long list of items gets missed and dropped in follow-up. The one-off occasional misstep can be understood and most teammates are forgiving for these occasional slips. However, it is the routine “dropping the ball” that causes most teammates to simply and silently “check-out” on supporting the leaders around them.

Follow-up is the glue, the mortar, the stickiness factor…whatever you want to call it that makes all the difference in our leadership being effective over the long term or just a good person for the moment. The day-to-day implementation of follow-up will set us apart over the arc of our careers. Consistent follow-up not only enhances our execution, but it builds the trustworthy support that our teammates deserve.

There is no need to over complicate things with a new shiny solution. If we can build the muscle memory and discipline to follow-up, we will form the foundation for all other aspects of leadership effectiveness that can make a positive impact.

As we look to build and strengthen our leadership, we must continue to work on our discipline to execute on the hard work of following up. We may be strong in so many aspects of leadership, but if we fall short on sustaining the consistency of follow-up, we run the risk of minimizing our leadership effectiveness and falling short of delivering the team results we are capable of delivering.   

How can I help you today? My mobile is 269-370-9275 and my email is david@harvesttimepartners.com

Please download some FREE resources at www.harvesttimepartners.com

I hope you will find them helpful in your journey.