"Cheshire Puss," she began, rather timidly, as she did not at all know whether it would like
the name: however, it only grinned a little wider. "Come, it's pleased so far," thought Alice,
and she went on. "Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?"
"That depends a good deal on where you want to get to," said the Cat.
"I don't much care where-" said Alice.
"Then it doesn't matter which way you go," said the Cat.
"-so long as I get SOMEWHERE," Alice added as an explanation.
"Oh, you're sure to do that," said the Cat, "if you only walk long enough."
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland / Through the Looking-Glass
I was recently reminded of this brilliant quote from Alice in Wonderland. If you don’t know where you want to go, any road will take you there. I’d add, though, that while you may get lucky, you’re just as likely to be dissatisfied with the results.
As a fractional COO, I always start with the Purpose/Mission, Vision, and Values...and I’m amazed at how often I receive pushback.
Your PVV is your company’s identity. It is the blueprint that conveys who you are, what you care about, how you show up, and how you make decisions. To get the most from it, it must be well communicated and adopted.
Years ago, I was at a company facing a critical juncture in it's journey. Like many others, we were a small local business with large growth aspirations. We were also facing a critical point in our growth journey...the graduation from leasing our datacenter space from another business to building, running, and maintaining our own. Aside from the projects and complexities that come with building and running a datacenter, we would also need to migrate our entire customer base to our new facility.
Running a datacenter is one thing, but migrating one comprised of 100s of customers running business-critical applications is an entirely different proposition. It’s risky. Elongated downtime is not an option, especially for a business running 24x7.
We did some research and hired the best firm in the industry. We partnered with them to carefully craft an approach that minimized customer downtime to 4 hours. We learned that we should expect to attrition ~ 15-20% of our customer base if things went well, more if they don’t. We carefully defined the criteria for each move. We carefully planned the migration of each group of servers. We carefully planned the timelines to ensure servers were back up and running within acceptable limits.
But, as we conducted multiple test migrations in preparation for our first customer migration, it became apparent the company couldn’t deliver on what they had promised. The problem was in the execution. The time it was taking to physically move the servers was just too long. The time it was taking to get the servers racked and wired was too long. The time it was taking to get the servers back online was too long. Downtime averaged 5-6 hours, some of which included breaks for the movers while the migration was supposed to be taking place. It was evident that what was important to them did not align with what was important to us. Our business and reputation were on the line... theirs was not.
It’s in moments like these where the importance of your PVV shines through. We had a plan, we were following that plan, but that plan wasn’t working. We returned to our PVV.
Without a PVV, we probably would have done what many other companies do; shrug our shoulders, say something along the lines of, “It is what it is.”, and continue, accepting what we were given as if we didn’t have a choice. But with a deeply embedded PVV that defined how we approached and made decisions, we could choose a different path. It was time to reevaluate...and we knew it.
After careful evaluation, it was obvious that the hired firm's approach didn’t align with our core values, in particular, our value to WOW the customer. So, we fired them and hired ourselves.
It was a big decision, but it wasn’t hard to make. We knew what was important to us. WE defined the criteria for who we were, where we were going, and how we made decisions. WE understood the importance of WOWing our customers. WE understood what WOWing our customers looked like. WE understood the impact interruption had on our customers' businesses. WE understood because we’d been walking that journey with them for years. So, despite the enormity of the task ahead, we fired the firm and placed our bet on us. As our CEO shared, “When you came to me and said these people did not honor our core value, especially WOW, it was clear that we needed to do something different. If we had these standards and meant them, we needed to uphold them. That meant that we bet on you…you bet on your team…and they bet on their teams.”
Turns out, it was EXACTLY the right move to make. We proceeded to migrate our entire customer base over 6 months with less than 2 hours of downtime per customer. (Not just per server) Oh, and we only attrition'd 1 customer with 1 server, and it was only because they needed to keep their IP address. That’s a greater than 99% success rate!
If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there. If you don’t know what’s important, any approach will work. If you don’t know who you want to be, you’re unlikely to become it. Your identity as a business drives what you care about, where you’re going, how you show up along the way, and how you make decisions. Take the time to define it and embed it within your culture.
And, if you need help, reach out! ;)
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