Dr. John Plastow

Executive Coach, Strategic and Creative Consultant, Pastor, Professor

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September 25, 2014 by John Plastow Leave a Comment

Ducks!

One of my favorite phrases is “I’m getting my ducks in a row.” For some reason the image of a flock of ducks organized in neat rows and columns, like a well-practiced marching band, just puts a smile on my face.  Anyone who knows me at all is aware of my fondness of ducks in general, but more than I like ducks, I really like it when things are organized!  I love it when my ducks are in a row.  In fact, one of the things I’m really good at is bringing order from chaos, so if I come across a bunch of chaotic and disorderly ducks, I get all tingly inside in anticipating the order which I’m going create!

Okay, I understand that this conversation is yet to be helpful, and is perhaps just a little bit strange. However, I bring up the mental picture of the ducks, marching along to the theme song of the old movie Bridge Over the River Kwai because I believe one of the things that exemplifies a great leader is that they have their ducks in a row.  Part of who a leader is, is organized.  Now, I’m not saying that all leaders have desks clear of clutter or that they never miss a detail.  That’s not the type of organization I’m talking about.  What I’m saying is that great leaders have a clear picture in their mind of what they need to do to get from point A to point B in everything from a single task to a project to an organizational mission, and they stay on top of it all.

Personally, I currently I have a lot going on. This time of year is the busiest for me as I am in the final 100 days of active production for the biggest event of my year.  I just released a book, I’ve got another writing project just getting started, doctoral studies, and so on.  I have no choice but to stay on top of everything.  When I look at my calendar and things-to-do list, it seems that there is always a deadline approaching.  Actually not seems, there is.  The way I do it all is to keep a big picture view and force myself to stay ahead of the schedule, never allowing myself the luxury of procrastination.  With my ministry, I stay planned six weeks ahead of the weekly services; with the production, I have a timeline of tasks I’ve developed over the years that tells me exactly what I should be doing as the opening approaches (It’s a 12-18 month timeline, by the way); and writing projects are broken down into reasonable chunks of creative time that gradually come together for a finished work.  School, however is especially challenging with the immense amount of reading, research, dialogue, and writing required.  But I have found that if I continually view the whole forest, the individual trees are not as imposing, and I am able to keep things moving (and stay out of the way of falling trees)!

A few weeks back I wrote about some of the things a person can do to be a high-capacity leader. Consider this post to be a few more that you can use.

  1. Always keep a big-picture view. Heifetz, Grashow, & Linsky, in their 2009 book The Practice of Adaptive Leadership, refer to this as taking a “balcony view instead of a dance floor view.” I believe leaders have to be actively on the dance floor, but their perspective has to be from the balcony. It’s like playing chess — the best players see the whole board with each particular move they are considering.
  2. Carve out time to think about the final objective. Some call this leading with the “end in mind.” The end doesn’t just happen; leaders need to think about it first. Once they know the end, or at least have some picture of what the end looks like, they can get to work.
  3. Make lots of lists, put yourself on a schedule of time blocks devoted to particular projects, and practice another thing which defines a leader – discipline. Great leaders do what they need to do before they do what they want to do. Always.

Add those three tips to your how-to-get-things-done arsenal and I promise you’ll have a better chance of keeping those pesky and unpredictable ducks in the rows you need them to be in. Quack!

Lead well.

Remember – All Things Leadership is now a book!  Available through most bookseller outlets.

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