Are you a flexible business leader?
There’s a lot of talk these days about cultivating flexibility into your business model, and how small businesses and start-ups have an innate flexibility that the mammoth companies will never be able to reclaim. Remember when you were a kid and touching your toes was no-sweat and handstand competitions were the norm? Well, that’s what it feels like to be a small business these days while the large corporations seem to be like our parents who couldn’t keep up as we ran circles around the house.
Flexibility sounds great, but there are definitely dangers of injury. Here’s seven ways your business can stay flexible without collapsing with every whim of change and innovation.
Here are 7 ways to use flexibility to become a visionary leader.
At the core of every yoga practice is the breath. Breathing makes stretching and strengthening safe for three main reasons:
As a business, practicing flexibility requires a constant and steady drive that keeps you mindful and present. It’s common for a new yoga student to try to mimic their instructor’s every move even if it hurts. Don’t do this. Your instructor is there to show you what is possible for the future. Your breath will alert you to what is possible for you in the here and now.
So what can “breathing” do for you on your path to visionary leadership?
Years ago I was a yoga instructor, and I found it fascinating that every beginner tried to act like an expert, and every expert forgot the advantages of being a beginner. Everyone wants to be an expert. However, expertise can be a trap.
It’s incredibly painful, and sometimes embarrassing, to be be new at something--especially as an adult. Kids are so much better at just flinging themselves into something new, and they’re quite confident in their abilities despite the realities of their inexperience. As an adult we know how bad we suck. But we know we can get better.
Ira Glass talks about “the gap”: where, in the beginning, our abilities don’t match our taste, or what we know we could accomplish or create.
Be willing to be a beginner. Use all the supports you can get until you can safely fly on your own. I often see yoga students shy away from using supportive props because they don’t want anyone to think they are weak or inexperienced. Own your beginner status, and utilize all the support, mentors, and help you can get.
Remember, that woman next to you in yoga class who is rockin’ the handstand, she was once a beginner too who practiced against a wall.
And everyone loves to help beginners. If you act like a know-it-all no one will help you, and that is not what you want. Ask questions. Get help. And keep practicing.
On the other hand, if you are already an expert, you might want to approach your day as if you were a beginner again. Beginners have the advantage seeing all of the options. Try not to get trapped and limited as an expert. Re-ignite that optimism and curiosity of a beginner.
Flexibility is a result of showing up every day. Sometimes the easy part is the disruptive innovation--the first day or year of excitement of a new idea. The tough part comes when all the mundane and complicated tasks start to show up. With all the talk about flexibility and disruptive innovation these days, Gary P. Pisano reminds us that
Flexibility and innovation won’t get you anywhere unless you’ve got the sustaining strength to go with it. Don’t make the mistake of limiting your practice to gaining flexibility when it is the tediousness of strength-building that will prevent you from collapsing when you finally have the flexibility to attempt that backbend you’ve been working on.
If you want to be an innovator with flexibility, yes, you’re going to have to go beyond what you are comfortable with at some point. You’re not going to try a free-standing handstand on your first day of yoga, or even within the first month. But, eventually, you have to step away from the wall and the instructor and give it a shot. You’ll probably fall multiple times. But the magic of showing up every day is that just at the moment you don’t think you’re going to do it, your feet are up in the air and everything is stable at the same moment that you’re upside-down.
I remember the first time I did a free-standing handstand. I was so shocked by the feeling of being upside-down that I lost my focus and fell flat on my face--a nose bleed resulted, but I now knew I could do it, and I smiled despite my emergency run to the bathroom.
Take risks. You’re never going to feel ready. You’re never going to feel like everything is perfect and in place. Trust yourself after months of practice and just go for it. You’ll fall, but you’ll get up too, knowing what it feels like to fall, and then knowing what it feels like to fly.
The first yoga class I ever attended won me over when I realized that at the end of every class I simply got to lay down on my mat and close my eyes and breathe. After all of that stretching and strengthening I realized how important it was for me to take time to let my body process all of that movement and work.
Try taking time to let things sink in before launching into the next phase. Let you and your employees feel the effects of sustained routine and success.
However, if you stay there too long, you might fall asleep and surpass the point of rejuvenation. If you’re breathing and alert, you’ll know when to come up and move on with your day and into the next phase.
I often saw yoga students attend class after class after class in one day. Burn out was inevitable. Just because you can take advantage of your flexibility, doesn't mean you always should.
It’s true that you can have too much of a good thing. You’ll gain more insight by walking away every once in a while to take breaks. In fact, you’ll probably get most of your “brilliant” ideas and solutions when you walk out of your office door.
Just remember to come back the next day ready to stretch and breathe again.
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