A Better View
“To the right, to the right, to the right, to the right
To the left, to the left, to the left, to the left”
- Cupid, The Cupid Shuffle
It’s a late summer Sunday evening. The air is warm but cooling as the sun begins to dip in the sky and my daughter and I cruise along with windows down, radio blaring...enjoying the moment. We’re driving toward the sun, a big bright deep orange ball still hovering just over the horizon. As we slow to a stop at a stoplight, I briefly entertain a thought of how bright the sun is while simultaneously turning away to look at something else. A few seconds later, from the corner of my eye, I catch my daughter whipping out her phone, aiming at the sun, zooming in, and snapping a couple of pictures...trying to capture the perfect shot.
From her vantage point just a couple of feet to my right and 6 inches lower, the sun was already disappearing into the horizon, its glow bursting up from beneath the horizon, illuminating the sky. Until I glanced at her phone screen, I couldn’t see it. But she could.
From my vantage point just a few feet away, all I saw was something ordinary. The beauty was there, I just wasn’t in a position to observe it.
Curiosity invokes movement and
movement alters our perspective.
We’re often like this in our businesses and relationships. We’re in a hurry. Our sights are set on a target as we rush toward it, missing things that can, and sometimes should, grab our attention and alter our path.
- We have a plan, designed with the best information we had at that moment, and we’re determined to stick to it.
- Our company has been successful and has continued to repeat the same playbook for years with increasingly reduced returns.
- We have an employee who’s struggling and we miss the opportunity to see their strengths, help them develop, and place them in a position that leverages their skills.
- We have an employee who’s crushing it and, motivated to preserve a good thing, we fail to understand their strengths and ambitions and allow them to hurdle towards burnout or frustration, maybe even feeling like they’re stuck, though they long for something different.
- We discuss and reject project ideas because all we see is a ‘big bright sun’ and miss the magnificence of the ‘sunset glow’.
Plans are absolutely necessary if we want to move a business forward. They provide clarity in thought, movement, responsibility, and communication. Likewise, individual roles are necessary. They tell us where each person’s responsibility lies within the structure defined to support the execution of the plan. Without them, too much ambiguity exists to operate as a team and play within our roles.
But, as leaders, our responsibility extends beyond defining, implementing, and executing against a plan. Our role demands we possess the ability to look beyond the plan, view of the market, understanding of the opportunities, and defined roles within our teams to observe new perspectives for what could be. And while a new perspective may not change anything, it could absolutely change everything.
How do we intentionally build and strengthen the skill of observing new perspectives?
- Slow down and let your mind wander - Take time to slow down and observe. Let your mind wander. It’s hard to recognize something different or better if we’re moving too quickly to see it. What aren’t you seeing that someone else is?
- Be Curious - To be curious is to embrace the reality that you don’t have all the answers. That you can learn more. That your eyes can be opened to something new. Curiosity invokes movement and movement alters our perspective. How can you ‘move’ a few feet to gain a new vantage point?
- Lean into dissenting views - When encountering opposing views, do your best to set aside your ego and ask, “What do they see that I don’t?” It may be nothing, but then again, it may be something significant. Seek to understand their perspective and be open to observing a different view.






