In this issue...
The Conspiracy Against Strategic Thinking, by Tom Olverson and Cynthia Vives
New! Leadership Opportunities
The (Mis)concpetion of Strategic Planning in Schools, by Kevin J. Ruth
Upcoming Seminars
The Proverbial Seven Ps, by Gary Gruber
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Santa Fe Leadership Center
Monthly Newsletter
  November, 2011
 

Greetings!

We had so many generous compliments from readers on our last issue of the SFLC Newsletter on school history and culture, including this one from Brendan Sullivan, Principal of Nativity Prep Academy in San Diego, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary. Brendan wrote, "This most recent SFLC newsletter is right on time: its content gives me a solid footing for putting together what I want to say; it is a reminder that our history-only ten years in the making-is still nonetheless rich in the events and people of the past decade, and full of promise for years to come. Thank you!"

With numerous other comments like this one arriving in our in-boxes, we wanted to take a moment to extend some well-deserved recognition to two influences on several of the ideas and activities we presented in the newsletter articles. First of all, we would like to acknowledge Debbie Freed, an organizational consultant and facilitator from the San Francisco Bay Area. Debbie is a leading voice in applying systems theory to strengthening organizational culture and leadership. She presented her "Systems Lens Model of Leadership: The 5 Lenses"  to the SFLC summer cohort in July, and many of her ideas and strategies for implementation inspired the article by Carla on personal and institutional history. In addition, The Grove, a graphic facilitation firm in San Francisco who also presented this summer, also inspired the visual respresentation of the concepts that were presented. For more ideas like this, be sure to check out The Visual Meetings book by David Sibbet.

This month our newsletter focuses on a related topic, Strategic Thinking and Planning. When you aren't looking backward, you are often looking forward (and of course the former should inform the latter, if it is to be done well). We are pleased to feature two guest columns this month.  The first, "The Conspiracy Against Strategic Thinking," comes from Cynthia Vives and Tom Olverson. It is a sneak preview of a longer article that will be featured this month in Independent School Magazine.  Tom and Cynthia assert that Strategic Thinking is one the most important qualities a school head can have, yet often this quality is unintentionally dismissed or discarded from the very start of a new head's tenure, even as early as the search process itself. Kevin Ruth shares his review of Good Strategy, Bad Strategy by Richard Rumelt. If you are thinking of entering a new strategic planning process, this review will give you something to consider.  Finally, Gary Gruber reminds us what happens when we fail to plan. . . and it isn't too pretty!

So on that note, plan carefully and think strategically!  We wish you all a very Happy Thanksgiving and hope to see you soon in Santa Fe! 


Sincerely, 

  

Carla Silver                  Gary Gruber               Timothy McIntire

P.S. If you want to lead to your fullest capacity, don't forget to invest in meaningful professional development for yourself and for those with whom you work. Consider attending one of our 2012 seminars or schedule an on-site retreat at your school. Visit www.santafelead.org for more information. 

 


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leadershippositionsNew Leadership Positions

Listed below are the latest open positions featured on our new leadership opportunity board.  New positions will  be linked to our monthly newsletter. If you are interested in posting a job on our site, contact Carla Silver (408) 348-8671 or carla.silver@santafelead.org or click here to learn more. 

 

San Francisco Day School 

Upper School Head

San Francisco, CA

 

Our Lady of Good Counsel, 

Principal

Olney, MD

 

Nativity Schools of New York

President,

New York City 

 

 

 

 


 

The 2011-2012 Leadership

Seminar Schedule

smallmap

  

November 13-16, 2011 - The Art and Experience of Leadership for leaders at all points in their careers, Santa Fe, NM   

WAITLIST ONLY.  

 

Register Now For:  Interim Headship: Design and Implementation in Real Time, March 3, 2012, Seattle following NAIS

 

 

Teacher as Leader: Learning Effective Leadership,

March 8-12, 2012 Santa Fe, NM WITH GUEST FACULTY: Stanford University Senior Scholar, Ann Lieberman   

   

Leadership Unplugged: The Inner Work of School Leaders, April 22-25, 2012, Santa Fe, NM  

  

Registration coming soon for:  

 

July:The Art of Innovation, Hillbrook School, Los Gatos, CA 


October:
The Art and Experience of Leadership, American School in London   

 

November:

The Art and Experience of Leadership, Santa Fe

 

 

Visit the Santa Fe Leadership Center Website for more information or contact Carla Silver with any questions.   

 

 

 

SFLC Advisors
"Los Sabios" 
 

Rick Ackerly,

Consultant and Author

Peter Branch,

Head Emeritus, Georgetown Day School, Executive Director, Washington Ballet 

Paula Carreiro,

Head of School, Beauvoir

Peter Cheney,

Former Executive Director of NAES

Norm Colb,

Head of School, Menlo School

Lisa Darling,

President, United World College-USA

Phil Deely,

Consultant, Philip Sedgwick Deely and Associates &

Interim Head, The Roeper School 

Sandy Drew,

Senior Development Consultant

Richard Kassissieh,

IT Director, Catlin Gabel School

Tony Gerlicz,

Director, American School of Warsaw

Coreen Hester,

Head of School, American School of London

Greg Papay,

Partner, Lake Flato Architects
Mark Silver,

Head of School, Hillbrook School

David Streight

Executive Director,

Council for Spiritual and Ethical Education (CSEE)  

 

 

 


The Conspiracy Against Strategic Thinking  
By Tom Olverson and Cynthia Vives  
 
Cynthia Vives served as head of two NAIS schools for eighteen years, most recently at Visitation Academy in St. Louis. Tom Olverson has served as head of two NAIS schools for twenty-five years and is currently head of The Rivers School in Massachusetts.
 
The most important asset a school possesses to bring about deep, meaningful and sustainable change is the head's capacity to think strategically.  Next to character, thinking strategically is the most important element in leading an independent school.  Sadly, however, forces conspire to inhibit, if not completely block, this essential attribute from ever manifesting itself.

 

The search process itself inaugurates an unintentional misdirection of thinking when the consultant crafts the expected position statement that invariably outlines some of the challenges the school faces.  This position paper reinforces what is known as the deficit hiring process, though rarely ever publicly addressed.  When one head retires or resigns, by choice or not, what dominates the conversation within the search process is what was not done, resulting in the quest for that individual who possesses all the attributes that the outgoing head did not.   These "ideal" characteristics often dominate the narrative that continues throughout the search process and, in fact, into the early years of the Head's tenure.  Once a new head takes over, the trustees expect her to immediately address these real or perceived negative patterns of behavior or process.  Instead of beginning the important work of deeply understanding the school - its history, its culture, its identity, the manifestations of its philosophy, all critical elements in developing a vision - the head finds herself in the role of chief problem solver.   Simply stated, she has stepped into the "trap," giving up what might have been an invigorating exploration of what "could be" into the abyss of "fixing" what was, all in an effort to please anxious constituents, most especially the Board - all done in good faith, trust, and a skewed understanding of what will be best for the school.

 

The conspiracy against strategic thinking is reinforced as administrators and teachers, unsure of the expectations of the new head, inevitably go to her to solve their problems.  The new head, in all probability, earned rave reviews as a problem solver in a middle management position at a previous school.  The temptation to default to the familiar is great.  Too often, new heads think that they are on track for the eventual articulation of a vision by interviewing some faculty and administrators.  What often happens, however, is that information gathered this way leads to problem solving in the guise of strategic thinking.  Interviewing key people is a useful first step in data collection.   But if this initial step is poorly designed, it will become just another tool for the ongoing identification of problems.  If the goal is to develop and articulate a vision that inspires, such must be clearly stated up front, and a solid process designed to achieve this end.   If not, even more pressure will exist for the new head to become the master problem solver.   Faculty and staff will continue to assume that once their problems have been heard, they will be addressed.

 

Shallow visions also conspire to derail strategic thinking.  These visions emerge, not from a deep understanding of the school but rather from the values and assumptions of the head.  A new head may be enamored with the power of technology and establish a vision that has technology as the centerpiece, no matter the needs of the school.  The new head may be attracted to the latest fad in education, making it the core of her vision. Perhaps, the new head wants to use an idea from her previous school, or she may even "borrow" an idea from another successful competitor school.  In each of these cases, shallow thinking rules the day.  As a result, the chances of achieving the vision are minimal.  The head has become her own worst enemy.

 

Strategic thinking requires a disciplined process of gathering information and synthesizing that information in creative ways.  A real vision should be one that aligns with the school's mission and inspires, from the depths of the school's legacy and history, and is coupled with a courageous "eye" to the future.  Such a vision emerges from the head's analysis of mission, identity and a realistic understanding of the tools for implementation available to the school.  When a new head is encouraged and freed to engage in strategic thinking, extraordinary possibilities exist.  What the school has done well is significantly strengthened, and what was once deemed unimaginable becomes an exciting reality.  The doors are now opened for new horizons! 

Editor's Note: Look for Cynthia and Tom's more in-depth article on strategic thinking in an upcoming issue of Independent School Magazine.

 


Job Opportunities Postings to Benefit School Leadership 
The new addition to the SFLC web site listing career opportunities for educators is a terrific extension of the services and support offered by the Santa Fe Leadership Center.  As a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting individuals and schools in their quest for outstanding leadership, the Center is very pleased to be able to add this feature at this time. We believe this service will assist those schools seeking qualified candidates to extend their reach and it will provide a place for those looking to advance their careers through new opportunities.

The announcement of the opportunity gives the basic information, a quick link to the school's web site and more often than not, a link to a job description in some detail.  Contact information is provided that makes access to the appropriate individuals easy and efficient. Our intent is to help people consider these opportunities and to provide additional information that will help prospective candidates make critical and timely decisions.

We would appreciate any feedback that you have about how you see these leadership opportunities being presented and how we can further help and support your work, whether as a school in recruiting candidates or as a candidate searching for a new position.  Have a look also at our complete list of services and support of which this "Leadership Opportunities" posting is our most recent being offered.  Thanks in advance for your interest!

Click here to learn more or post a job. All new positions will be featured in the Monthly Newsletter (see sidebar) 
 

The (Mis)conception of Strategic Planning in Schools 
by Kevin J. Ruth

Kevin is an independent school educator, a trustee at an independent school in Virginia, runs a blog on independent schools  (Introit), serves on two non-profit boards, and is a Fellow in the Royal Society of Arts (UK). In addition to teaching one section of Latin at Tower Hill School (DE), he is the Executive Director of eSchool Network, an initiative that will launch on January 1. If you are interested in this unique approach to online learning, please visit the working (fully functional on January 1) site at www.eschool-network.com.

The following article was originally printed on Introit September 11, 2011. 
 

Most schools have bad strategies. At least, that's what author Richard Rumelt would say. His recently-released volume, Good Strategy, Bad Strategy, incorporates multiple examples from organizations (including schools) that highlight the difference between good strategy work and bad strategy work. Rumelt has been engaged in strategy work for over thirty years, and is no-nonsense when it comes to pointing out "strategies" that really aren't strategies. His approach works: readers learn quickly how to spot bad strategy.   

 

I read the tome fully twice, with the critical eye of an independent school person who has been engaged for several months in research on strategic planning in our schools, including an analysis of 50+ recent strategic plans from diverse independent schools. Rumelt's work is insightful, possessing a clarity rarely encountered when it comes to strategy work. My review of Rumelt's work, therefore, contains what I intend to be constructive criticism of strategy work in independent schools. At times, I may be rather blunt; such bluntness is intended only to underscore a point.

 

Strategy and Strategic Plans in Schools

From the use of "blue-sky objectives" (i.e. wishful thinking) to a permafrost of educational jargon to lists of 100+ "action steps", strategic plans in independent schools fail to be effectively strategic. It would be more accurate to describe them as "comprehensive to-do lists," with the occasional item that has true strategic implications.    


In independent schools, "strategic plan" is an ersatz term for what would be otherwise clear nomenclature for other kinds of plans. For what it is worth, I offer my own nomenclature below:

  1. improvement plan - how a school can improve in specific areas (fundraising, curriculum, etc.) that show some degree of deficiency, relative to "best practices"
  2. evolution plan - how a school evolves in order to continue to meet its mission
  3. community-building plan - how a school rallies its community in order to broaden a base of support for its day-to-day work in terms of meeting its mission; acts as an emulsifying agent
  4. capital campaign plan (or: resources plan) - how a school can gain insight into the feasibility of conducting a capital campaign for bricks-and-mortar, endowment, etc. An early feasibility study, in disguise.

Each plan has its time and place within a school. In most cases, it is easy to make an argument that supports the fashioning of one of these plans; they are, after all, useful in terms of articulating where a school is, institutionally. Unfortunately, schools tend to blend/blur several of the aforementioned genres, calling the result a "strategic plan", reinforcing the (mis)conception that strategy is incredibly dense and complex. In fact, the use of the term "strategic plan" only obfuscates the reality that the various pieces are not linked in an efficacious manner.    

A real strategic plan, for example, would not emulate template-based strategic planning, which is what the majority of schools appear to follow: outlining the process and people involved; restating the mission, philosophy, and history of the school; outlining some goals (sometimes mislabeled "strategies"); and listing (or referring to) many 'action steps' to follow. This template has produced a level of comfort over the years...and, I would argue, complacency.        

 

Rumelt is, if anything, clear in what he says about strategy. Permit me to highlight the areas of importance, from his perspective, when it comes to separating bad strategy from good strategy.    

Bad Strategy

Rumelt writes that "bad strategy is not simply the absence of good strategy. It grows out of specific misconceptions and leadership dysfunctions." He identifies four major hallmarks of bad strategy:

  1. Fluff - "a form of gibberish masquerading as strategic concepts or arguments." In other words, people tend to use "big" words that are unnecessary and refer to esoteric concepts.
  2. Failure to face the challenge - "when you cannot define the challenge, you cannot evaluate a strategy or improve it."
  3. Mistaking goals for strategy - "many bad strategies are just statements of desire rather than plans for overcoming obstacles."
  4. Bad strategic objectives - "objectives are bad when they fail to address critical issues or when they are impracticable."

For schools, bad strategic objectives often arise in the forms of slogans or superficial statements. One example would be, "We will work to identify areas of improvement in school communications." How is that a strategy? It sounds more akin to ongoing improvment work; to elevate it to the status of a "strategy" or "strategic objective" is giving it a status it doesn't merit.   

Schools, as academic communites, are also prone to using "fluff" in their plans, given that "fluff has its origins in the academic world" (37). Rumelt insists that it "masquerades as expertise, thought, and analysis" (38). A classic example that we see in schools falls along such lines as:  "we are a school with strong, bright faculty members who instill a life-long love of learning." Fluff. No esoteric terms, to be sure, but what does this phrase really say? Answer: that "we're a school." A superficial restatement of the obvious. Mind you, there's nothing wrong with reminding ourselves that we love learning and that we wish to instill a love of learning in our community, but isn't that our mission? How is it strategic? Mission does not equal strategy.

A strategy, after all, is "a way through a difficulty, an approach to overcoming an obstacle, a response to a challenge" (41). The 50+ plans I've studied in detail, in large measure, rarely portray any strategy: they're not showing a clear way through a difficulty, presenting an approach to overcome some obstacle, or responding to a challenge. For example, many recent plans [post-2007] could be reduced to the formula of "increase enrollment [aka market share], control existing costs, and look for additional sources of revenue." There might be all kinds of "texture and detail" (41) in such plans, but the elephant in the room is ignored: 1) enrollment has fallen precipitously, 2) costs are out of control, and 3) additional revenue is needed to keep the doors open. Urgency and the necessity of correcting course is the elephant in the room, but anyone reading the plan won't see it because the plan doesn't mention it! As Rumelt notes, "If you fail to identify and analyze the obstacles, you don't have a strategy. Instead, you have either a stretch goal, a budget, or a list of things you wish would happen" (42-43).   

Probably the greatest example of bad strategy in schools is mistaking goals for strategy. "We will be the school of choice in [name your city/market]." Or "We will delight our community with innovative curricula." Or again, "We will work to support the surrounding community." Or perhaps, "We will research ways to offer increased benefits to our faculty and staff." Is there a point of leverage here? "A strategy is like a lever that magnifies force." Yet, in the aforementioned examples, it is clearly absent. They are not bad things, per se, yet they're not strategies; rather, they are aspirational goals. An actual strategy might read, "We will increase faculty and staff salaries by 10% within two years by increasing Annual Giving by 5%, with the result of increased attraction and retention of faculty."   

In other words, don't confuse performance goals with strategy. If schools would benefit from a resource plan (or a progress plan, evolution plan, etc.), then great! Just don't call it a strategic plan. What is more, a real strategic plan is episodic at best: opportunities, challenges, and changes don't occur like clockwork every three years, five years, seven years, or ten years. They occur when they occur, and that is when schools should formulate a strategic plan.


The hard thing for schools, though, is that we must choose, i.e. we must make choices, when focusing on a true strategic plan. By choosing on what to focus, we necessarily must choose to focus on one thing (or perhaps a few), setting aside other things. When we don't do this--when we focus on 10 things--or 25 things--or a to-do list of 130 things, the result is "amorphous strategy" (59). In schools, where we struggle to please many different groups for many different reasons, the notion that we should narrow ourselves runs contrary to our existence. It is perhaps paradoxical that our schools, whose existence is predicated on choice within the market, struggle to make choices themselves. In other words, the essential difficulty in creating strategy is choice.   

Good Strategy

"Good strategy works by focusing energy and resources on one, or a very few, pivotal objectives whose accomplishment will lead to a cascade of favorable outcomes" (53). It is identified by what Rumelt calls a "kernel," which contains three elements:

  1. diagnosis - "simplifies the overwhelming complexity of reality by identifying certain aspects of the situation as critical" (77)
  2. guiding policy - "overall approach chosen to cope with or overcome the obstacles identified in the diagnosis" (77)
  3. coherent actions - "designed to carry out the guiding policy [;] steps that are coordinated with one another to work together in accomplishing the guiding policy" (77)

Rumelt identifies the kernel as "the bare-bones center of a strategy [...]. It leaves out visions, hierarchies of goals and objectives, references to time span or scope, and ideas about adaptation and change. All of these are supporting players" (79).   

A good strategic diagnosis can be of the most help in an overall strategic plan. Rumelt points out the following item, which we (educators) can appreciate: "For instance, we know from research that K-12 student performance is better explained by social class and culture than by expenditures per student or class size, but that knowledge does not lead to many useful policy prescriptions" (81). In other words, if a challenge is ill-defined in a diagnosis, then the strategy to deal with the challenge will not be effective.    

The guiding policy is a very useful part of one's strategy because it allows for (even encourages) flexibility. Many folks assert that the lack of flexibility is a glaring fault line within a strategic plan -- and they're right. (That's because most plans aren't truly strategic in the first place, if that message hasn't come through yet...). It "channels action in certain directions without defining exactly what shall be done" (84). Such a policy defines "a method of grappling with the situation and ruling out a vast array of possible actions" (84). The problem with vision statements, by contrast, is that they don't spell out clearly how an ambition will be accomplished. As schools, we're big on vision statements; however, have we truly considered the "chatter" within a faculty (and even administration) about how hard it is to accomplish the vision? We tend to chalk it up to internal differences (or something else that poorly defines the real problem: a lack of strategy). Happily, though, "a guiding policy creates advantage by anticipating the actions and reactions of others, by reducing the complexity and ambiguity in the situation, by exploiting the leverage inherent in concentrating effort on a pivotal or decisive aspect of the situation, and by creating policies and actions that are coherent, each building on the other rather than canceling one another out" (85). 

Strategy is about action--about doing something, so the kernel of a strategy "must contain action." What is notable is that the coherent action "does not need to point to all the actions that will be taken as events unfold, but there must be enough clarity about action to bring concepts down to earth" (87). These actions focus organizational energy. By focusing on the necessity of acting, schools can retain clarity about what is--and is not--important, and plans can be abbreviated to a more manageable size. 

Wrapping It Up: Toward a Future of Strategy Work in Schools  

The term "strategic" seems to refer frequently to decisions that are made by top management: boards, heads of school, and, sometimes, senior administrators. I submit that we over-use (abuse?) the term to mean top-level decision-making, and, as a result, the adjective has lost its clarity over time. 

Policy and design, generated by strategy, impose coherence on a system; in our case, on schools. Strategic design, therefore, is an "engineering of fit among parts, specifying how actions and resources will be combined" (92). This design benefits from the specification of what Rumelt terms aproximate objective. This objective imposes power (clear, feasible, short-term, and resolving ambiguity) over the natural workings of a system, in order to obtain a desired result. It does not look far ahead; rather, it forces the institution to take a strong position and create options, not conjecture about the unknown, which point can be met by additional strategy work when it occurs.

Rumelt goes on to discuss the importance and relevance of power, leverage, hierarchies of objectives, and the issues with what he calls "chain-link systems" in the remainder of his tome. What he returns to, though, is the importance of design in strategy. I recommend enthusiastically the section on 'the arc of enterprise" (pp. 134-141), in which he discusses how long-successful incumbents tend to decline, and how to look at companies/institutions that invade market space, if one wishes to see effective, design-type strategy.   

 

It is my belief that independent schools would benefit from moving toward design-type strategy, or what I would term strategic design, in order to better craft and integrate our actions and policies--in other words, to become truly strategic. 

The next stage of research, I think, lies in exploring what design-type strategy might mean, by linking
design-thinking with the corpus of research on which Rumelt draws so eloquently and convincingly. As he writes, "Good strategy is design, and design is about fitting various pieces together so they work as a coherent whole" (141). The threats to schools aren't necessarily "specific new products or competitive moves", but "changes that undermine the logic of [their] design[s]" (141).

 
 UPCOMING SANTA FE LEADERSHIP SEMINARS

SFLC Postcard
Wish You Were Here?  The SFLC Leadership Seminars provide school leaders with incomparable professional growth experiences. Visit www.santafelead.org for a full list of our 2011-2012 school year seminars. 


At no time in school leadership are opportunity and danger so significant as the term of an interim head. Because the occasion for an interim is yoked with transition, change, and often grieving, it takes skill, foresight, and failure-proof performance in order to cultivate a community of hope for what lies ahead.
Who should attend?
  • Any head or chief school leader who would be willing to take on an interim role now or in the future
  • School leaders who have served as Interims Trustees, Board Chairs, or Search Chairs who will appoint an Interim
  • Other school leaders who may be called upon to serve as Interim at the division, department, or group level internally in the school
The Teacher as Leader: Learning Effective Leadership, March 8-11, 2012, Santa Fe NM
WITH GUEST FACULTY: Stanford University Senior Scholar, Ann Lieberman
 
Please join us for three days of conversation, reflection, and community during which we will explore the transformational possibilities of teacher leadership in our schools.  We will discuss the many ways that teacher leadership can take shape in a school - from instructional leadership to department and team leadership to research leadership, among others.  Our work together will range from reflective exploration of who we are and want to become as educational leaders to the practical, daily challenges of working as passionate leaders in our schools. 

Who should attend?
Teachers in all stages of their careers.  Whether you are a young teacher energized to lead and create change or an experienced teacher who has worn many leadership hats throughout your career - including department chairs, program directors, class deans, mentor teachers and more.  

 


The Proverbial Seven Ps

by Gary Gruber  

Prior Proper Planning Prevents Pee Poor Performance - (or perhaps it should read Prior Proper Planning Produces Positive Productive Performance)!

I do not know who deserves credit for the seven P's but they really capture so much of why a good plan results in positive performance and a poor plan prevents productive performance.  Enough alliteration, we get the point!

I am moved to think about several experiences where good planning was essential in order to achieve the desired results and here they are, both personal and professional.  My roommate is much better in planning ahead than I am and she often books things a year in advance because she always knows the cancellation policy.  Her mantra is that she would rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it.  She is usually right.

Planned parenthood is more than an official organization and thus the advent of children can be planned, at least to some degree.  What young parents do not realize are the tremendous financial and emotional costs of raising a child.  If we did, some of us may not have had more than one child.  Yet none of us would trade them in nor the experience we have had growing up with them.  It is a terrific journey!

Family life education is an academic discipline with universities dedicating entire departments to the research and study of family systems and behaviors.  I signed up for one of those in 1969 at The Pennsylvania State University and both my masters and doctorate degrees were in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies.  Even that took some creative planning as we had no money and three young children.

In another arena which has to do with scuba diving, sailing, fishing, hiking, camping and travel, much of the planning has to do with safety, knowing what resources are needed to have a successful trip and being able to read the signs along they way.  Charts, maps, a compass, a GPS, supplies, fuel, food, proper gear, clothing and equipment must all be inventoried, checked for condition and maintained properly in order for everything to work as it should with optimum performance.  Air tanks and regulators, rigging and engines, rods, reels, boots, tents, lights, batteries and vehicles - all require preventive service and support as well as renewal when needed.  And still, the success and joy of these experiences depend upon the individuals and their skills of application to the conditions.

Planning something as daunting as a new school or a new organization is an even more challenging enterprise but we have done that and the stories are laden with a lot of time, effort and energy invested in the planning stages, sometimes an entire year of planning.  The essential ingredients in those plans have been the people who had the vision, mission and passion (see The IONS of Leadership) to garner the resources and hire the right people.  As Jack Welch says, "If you get hiring right 70% of the time, you're a genius."  I think we did better than 70% when we started and that made all the difference between succeeding and failing.

The latest trends in planning have to do with Design Thinking, and using architectural models of blueprints, as those can be altered according to needs, budgets, discoveries along the way and thus a dynamic, organic experience rather than anything rigid and unbending.  The point of planning whether strategic or tactical, whether by design or default, whether by CAD or 17 different types of engineering, the point of planning forward is to realize the dream.  I recall Zena Jacques quoting her grandfather's seven truths, one of which was, "Nothing ever was except it was first a dream."   Maybe Joseph Campbell said it best: "Follow your bliss and the universe will open doors for you where there were only walls."   And finally this:  "He who fails to plan plans to fail."  Simple stuff, really.

About Us

We are excited to meet you. We are the Santa Fe Leadership Center team, Gary Gruber, Tim McIntire and Carla Silver. Click here to read more about our careers and leadership experiences.

Please visit the Santa Fe Leadership Center to learn more about our programs and our other leadership services and opportunities.

Santa Fe Leadership Center
17 Camino Redondo, Placitas, NM 87043