Effective corporate rebels turn to one another

People who change the world in small and big ways, rebel FOR change they believe will make a difference.  They are also keen observers and want to work with others to make the possible real. Over the holidays I had the luxurious pleasure of re-reading author and leadership activist Margaret Wheatley’s book Turning To One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future.

Here’s an excerpt that captures the behaviors of those with a desire to lead.

Turning to one another

Ask “what’s possible?” not “What’s wrong?”  Keep asking. Notice what you care about. Assume that many others share your dreams.

Be brave enough to start a conversation that matters.

  • Talk to people you know.
  • Talk to people you don’t know.
  • Talk to people you never talk to.

Be intrigued by the differences you hear.

  • Expect to be surprised.
  • Treasure curiosity more than certainty.

Invite in everybody who cares to work on what’s possible.

  • Acknowledge that everyone is an expert about something.
  • Know that creative solutions come from new connections.

Remember, you don’t fear people whose story you know.  Real listening always brings people closer together.

Trust that meaningful conversations can change your world.

Rely on human goodness. Stay together.

Margaret Wheatley

The courage to change: a business story

The audience quieted down after the CEO introduced the keynote speaker.

A woman came on the stage and sat on a chair.

“What is she doing just sitting there?”

“They pay these presenters so much that she’s probably getting ready to be ‘creative.’ God help us.”

Then the speaker began. But with no words.

“Is she really doing what I think she’s doing? Oh, my God.”

“Don’t look away now. I think I know what’s coming. The conference organizer must be shitting his pants.”

“No way. This is effing unbelievable. This so gross. Oh, geez, she’s eating it too.”

The 500 people were here to hear about innovation and organizational change, and here sat the keynote speaker picking her nose, and then putting her finger in her mouth.

“Friends, the reason why people and companies don’t change is fear. A tribe of alpha fraidy cats will never be successful.

“The next time you’re brainstorming new approaches, think about me picking my nose in front of this esteemed audience.

“If I can pick my nose in front of 500 executives, you can be courageous enough to try new business approaches.”

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Note: today’s prompt for my writing group — write about something you’d never do, but might. This story  is the result. Imagine being at a conference where someone did something so radical to make a point?  If you’ve ever seen a true “outrageous” presentation, please share!