My journey into entrepreneurship from day-to-day educational leadership has been an interesting one. So often in the independent school world, we are in a reactive state of being, despite our desire to be proactive, to be building and growing. This is especially true for small schools that are always fighting for resources. It is easy in our jobs and in our lives to be captive to the moment, caught up in whatever problem is presenting itself, focused only on what is right in front of us – or worse yet, reliving and litigating something that is past.
I have been engaging with Dr. Frederik G. Pferdt‘s new book, “What’s Next is Now: How to Live Future-Ready.” A former member of the Google leadership team, Pferdt examines this tension, arguing that we are too often fearful of what’s next, and that fear paralyzes us into not fully understanding and leveraging the fact that our actions today in fact create our tomorrow. As an educator, I was always imploring my students to prepare to be the person they wanted to be, and that what I was teaching them would help them do that. But while I had become the person I wanted to be, in no small part thanks to teachers who helped me along the way, I have realized that applying this thinking to more immediate work and life choices sometimes eluded me, because the immediate seems so important at the time.
I like to think of myself as a pretty good problem solver. The challenge for me is to apply that thinking to longer term “problems,” or to be more positive, to longer term aspirations. Spending some time today building our tomorrows, actively and thoughtfully, is incredibly important to leaders in all types of industries, but in particular to small businesses, non-profits, and schools. This requires a lot of faith, it requires confidence and a sense of calm, and it requires our willingness to be self-aware and use that awareness for growth. In our business at TRQ Solutions LLC, we call this “flourishing,” but flourishing requires preparing the soil for rain.
I also listen to the Consulting Success podcast and read the blog posts by Michael Zipursky. In a recent post, Zipursky argues that we can build a schedule that helps us get into the “flow state” every day, and from that flow state we can be more productive and generally happier. While he is talking about building a consulting business, I think his steps of thinking through a typical day, then an ideal day, and then working to merge those into a more optimized schedule, is a practical way to think about what Pferdt is suggesting, creating a “future-ready” existence where we have better curated our tomorrows. No matter what your business or your status in life, one can craft a future of opportunity, joy, and success. #futureready #consulting #entrepreneurship #independentschools #nonprofits #leadership #success #opportunity #flourishing #toprightquadrant