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Face Your Deck Chair Forward
By Harvey Mackay
In one of my favorite "Peanuts" comic strips, Lucy tells
Charlie Brown, "Life is a cruise ship!" She goes on to explain
that some people sit in their deck chairs facing the ship's
stern so they can see where they have been. Others sit near
the ship's bow so they can see where they are going.
Then Lucy asks, "Which way does your deck chair face, Charlie
Brown?"
In typical fashion, Charlie replies, "I don't know. I've never
been able to get my deck chair open.
Here's a little advice for when you open your deck chair:
Since you have a good idea of where you have been, set your
chair so that you can see where you are going.
Looking back is useful to assess success or to avoid repeating
mistakes. It is also a good indicator of the direction you are
heading. If you are satisfied with your ability to survive
your future, keep your deck chair firmly planted. If you see
an iceberg, change the course and find a new vantage point for
your chair.
If a comic strip seems too cute for an example, let's go back
to ancient mythology, to Janus, the Roman god of doorways. He
is portrayed as having a face on the front and back of his
head, which is supposed to show that a doorway is both an
entrance and an exit. As Janus stands in the doorway - the
present - he can look forward and backward simultaneously. The
month of January is named for this god, marking the end of the
old year and the beginning of a new one ... the past and the
future.
Hockey great Wayne Gretsky could see the future on the ice. "I
skate where the puck is going to be, not where it has been."
If you don't have that sixth sense - in other words, if you
can't spot trends or predict the next new thing - your future
may be hindered.
Management guru Peter Drucker shares this wisdom: "It is
futile to try to guess what products the future will want. But
it is possible to make up one's mind what idea one wants to
make a reality in the future, and to build a different
business on such an idea."
What does the future look like for business? If I had the
definitive answer to that, I wouldn't have to worry about my
future, or my children's, or even my grandchildren's. One
thing we can see is the trend toward diversity. In 1998, 73
percent of the American population was classified as white,
but by 2050, that demographic will be 53 percent. The
African-American, Asian and Hispanic populations in America
all will increase, which will signal a need for new products,
new approaches in hiring and marketing, and a wider view of
the world. We will be serving ever-growing world markets and
competing with manufacturers from every corner of the globe.
Much of that future is at our doorstep now, begging for our
personal Janus to look ahead for the best ways to compete and
thrive.
If you would have told me 40 years ago that the need for paper
envelopes would be replaced by electronic transmissions in
everyday correspondence, I'm not sure I would have believed
you. Mackay Envelope Company, whose mission is "To be in
business forever," could have been a pleasant memory if we had
just given up then. Instead, we took our working knowledge and
adapted it to fit needs for other kinds of direct mail and
packaging applications.
Knowing where you came from is often a very important link to
where you will - and should - go next. A successful farmer
hired a neighbor's inexperienced son to help with the spring
plowing. The farmer left the boy unsupervised to go work in a
different field. The boy tried as hard as he could to plow
straight furrows, and frequently looked over his shoulder to
check his progress. Despite his best efforts, the rows were
crooked, and nothing seemed to change his results.
The farmer came back to check on the boy, and identified the
problem immediately. In a calm voice, the farmer told him,
"You can't plow a straight row if you continually look back.
You must keep your eyes focused straight ahead. And always
remember where you have been."
Mackay's Moral: If you don't look ahead, you'll always be
behind.
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