These Old Shoes - Time for a new pair?
Marshall Goldsmith famously said, “What got you here won’t get you there.”
Simple, memorable, and true, yet easy to forget even when you consistently put it into practice.
The start of the whitetail hunting season is here. With early morning temps beginning to dip into the upper 30s, it’s time to start pulling out warmer hunting gear. So, on a recent weekend trip, I packed my base layer, coverall, hat, light gloves, wool socks, and warm boots. I’ve had these boots for 12 years and have often put them to work while I galavant through the woods in search of venison. They’ve been great boots and have enabled my adventures, especially as the temps drop below 0. They’ve definitely earned the wear and tear they’ve accumulated.
2 years ago the front half of the soles began to detach. Since the remainder of the boot was in relatively good shape, I researched glues, thoroughly prepped the surfaces and re-glued them. A bit of time to set and they were ready for their return to action.
For the next 2 years, they worked great, that is until the end of the 2nd year when they developed a few small holes near the bottom side and the glue holding the front soles began to give. When it rained or I stepped in a puddle, well, I knew it. But still, these were mostly good boots and, with another application of glue, I could still use them in warmish dry weather. So, I packed them away until this year.
Life got a little busy. With the start of the season and my first trip around the corner, I grabbed some black duct tape to hold them together until the end of the trip when I could reglue them. A temporary fix. Upon return from my 1st-morning hunt, I began to remove them when the back soles detached. No problem, nothing a little more duct tape can’t fix. (Ok, it was a lot more duct tape.) Patched up I was ready to head back out.
These boots must’ve been quite the sight; 2 colors of duct tape, flopping soles, and a few cracks. Still, I continued to think, “They’re fine. I can probably get another year or two out of them.” Then my wife saw them and said, “I think it’s time to get a new pair. You need to throw these away”
This is often the position leaders find themselves in within their businesses. You’ve been on the journey. You’ve achieved success. You are comfortable with the skills, tools, approaches, and processes that got you here. And, you continue to approach and execute your business the same way, even though the skills, tools, approaches, and processes may no longer be adequate for today. No longer adequate for the challenges, market, or opportunities you’re presently faced with. Like an old worn pair of well-loved boots, you continue to patch them up and redeploy them to tackle your next challenge.
But, if what got you here won’t get you there, what can you do to recognize and acknowledge the changes that are needed?
- Question everything...often - Why are we approaching xxx like this? Why are we structured this way? Why are we using this tool? Why is this process designed like this? What are we trying to achieve? Is this step really necessary? Is this activity adding value? How does this impact our customers? What would make us more useful to our customers?
- Keep counsel with someone outside your business - Even when we excel at questioning, you may be too close. Our emotional ties can cause the stories we tell ourselves and the perspectives we maintain to become skewed. Maintaining counsel from a trusted and detached source provides an excellent perspective that draws you into deeper reflection and understanding of the situation. This can be a coach, mentor, or peer group, and it provides you with an unbiased view useful in evaluating the pros and cons. It allows for distinguishing the emotional from the logical. It allows for clear thinking. It allows for seeing an old, worn pair of boots in their current state, detached from the emotion of the value they’ve provided for the last 12 years.
- Let go, but don’t discount - We can hinder our own progress by continuing to hold onto what worked, even when it no longer works for the present. Just because a skill, tool, approach, or process is no longer what you need doesn’t mean it’s not important to your story. I can’t stress this point enough. While it may no longer be appropriate for delivering what the business needs, it wasn’t wrong or bad. In fact, it may have even been instrumental. ‘It’ may have been exactly what the business needed to get here and it’s OK to acknowledge and celebrate that within your story. The same holds true for people. We each have different strengths and weaknesses. It’s ok to acknowledge and celebrate the people and skills that got us here, even if they aren’t the people and skills needed to continue to grow.
Is it time for a new pair of shoes?






