The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]


Are You Playing To Succeed Or Simply Not To Lose?

Let me start by saying this post may sound harsh as fuck – especially if you’re relatively young, but hang in there.

If you can be bothered.

So a few weeks ago, I saw a chart by Edward Cotton that was designed to help planners identify their ‘super power’ to enable them to better identify their strengths and be more focused in their professional development.

It’s a generous thing to do from a generous person and yet I decided to question it.

Like a prick.

And why did I decide to do this?

Because I don’t know if people can self-define their ‘super power’.

I don’t know if people have the objectivity to be able to identify that.

More than that … I find the term ‘super power’ both misleading and potentially dangerous because what he was really helping people identify was ‘where they felt the most comfortable’.

Now I appreciate there is value in identifying – and validating – that, however it doesn’t necessarily mean that makes you good at what you do.

Which is why I challenged his chart … because as much as I appreciate it was done for absoluely good reasons, the entire industry seems to be moving further and further away from what strategy is supposed to be about.

Moving away from enabling change and creation to being a discipline that celebrates ‘self-serving, personal intelligence’.

It blows my mind how many people are writing how to do stuff without having actually ever done stuff.

Or at least, stuff of note.

To use a shit analogy, anyone can kick a ball, but few have won a European Cup.

And while everyone is entitled to an opinion, you don’t get to express it with the confidence of God when you have neither the experience or the objectivity to make an informed judgement.

But that’s where we’re at these days.

Everyone is an expert.

Everyone has ideas, opinions and viewpoints expressed as fact, law or established protocol.

Hell, even the acknowledged experts often lack the experience of making something great. Oh they’ve made stuff … but few have achieved something with gamechanging significance, and yet somehow they are positioned as commercial rockets when in reality they’re insurance salesman.

There’s nothing wrong with that except when you don’t admit that. But even then, they’re still waaaaaay better than the self-defined god.

On one level I get it.

The industry is rewarding popularity and ‘thought leadership’ [ahem!] over those who actually make stuff and so there’s a massive incentive to say/repeat interesting stuff rather than do interesting stuff … and nothing highlights how fucked our industry has become than that.

Just to be clear, I know not everyone is like this and contrary to what it may sound like, I am cool with anyone expressing their opinions and ideas.

I’m excited about it actually.

My issue is when it’s expressed with an attitude of self-righteousness.

Where any other opinion is a lesser, incorrect opinion.

Strategy is in danger of losing clarity on what it’s here to do and how we should be evaluating it.

We’re more obsessed with writing theories than doing stuff … resulting in us being in danger of becoming a discipline of paper pushers. Producers of endless digital landfill consisting of decks and newsletters that – in many cases – are not fit for purpose or usage. A back-slapping group of co-dependency … with a focus on achieving industry status rather than making work of note and change.

Now it has to be said that while it’s easy to blame the discipline, the reality is the lack of training that is being invested by agencies and companies that is a big driver of this situation.

Rather than invest in the knowledge, skills and quality of their people, they are – at best – outsourcing to 3rd parties or – at worst – leaving their people to find and fund their own development.

Seeking standardised approaches rather than valuing independent thinking.

What rubs salt into this already ugly wound is that many agencies either give away the strategy they do for their clients – preferring to make money on time and production rather than expertise and value – or acting like shit consultancies/corporate lawyers, creating endless ‘process loops’ so they can profit from keeping the problem alive rather than helping them move forward to a better place.

What the hell?!

Add to that the people agencies are outsourcing training to are often ‘teaching’ methodologies that are both generic and self-serving. And don’t get me started on the planners selling their ‘training’ when many never achieved a standard that justifies their right to teach … demonstrated by them constantly using examples they never made, post-rationalised or simply copied from those who actually did the work.

I get that sounds harsh, I get any training has some value … but this is serious stuff.

Standards matter.

Experiences matters.

Truth over harmony matters.

The reality is anything is easy for people who haven’t done it or don’t have to do it which is why I’m so enamoured with talent like Maya Thompson, Joel Goodhall, Priscilla Britton, Ayo Fagbemi, Tarik Fontenelle and Carina Huang – to name but a few – because where so many choose outlets that reinforce what they want to feel about themselves, they’re about putting themselves in situations where they’re pushed to push the work they want to create.

As I mentioned, the biggest problem here is the attitude companies and agencies have towards training and development. No one – especially junior planners – should ever have to pay for this and the fact many have to, or feel they have to, is outrageous. Almost as outrageous as those planners and experts who exploit them for personal gain.

[Which is why I must reiterate what Edward did was for entirely good reasons because he gives a shit, even if I disagree with what he did on this occasion]

However I cannot stress enough that if you want to grow, follow the advice I was given recently by a very successful football manager that I found myself interviewing.

He said: Learn from winners, not players.

I wrote about it here.

Just to be clear, this is not about age. It’s about people who have done stuff.

Who have tried, failed, explored, experimented and ultimately achieved.

At the highest level. Preferably more than once.

Now I’m not saying it’s easy.

And I know for a fact it’s not comfortable.

But it is most definitely worth it.

Because rather than feeling good about who you are and how you think, you’ll discover what you can do and who you can become.

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