Embracing Obstacles


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Sometimes, even the best laid plans just go awry.

Call them cliche, but those sayings about finding the silver lining and making lemonade when life hands you lemons, they aren't just hot air.

When I was in the French Navy Marines, the unspoken motto, the underlying mission imperative was always "make it work."

The intelligence is wrong? It doesn't matter. Make it work.

The insertion routes are compromised? It doesn't matter. Make it work.

You got dropped 15 miles off target? It doesn't matter. Make it work.

Nobody ever had to say it. Nobody ever had to bark the order. From day one of training, it was pounded into us:

Make it work.

Make it happen.

Find a way.

If you don't, people will die.

The first officer I served under, 1st Lieutenant Rannou, had a saying: "There are no problems. Only solutions."

He was right.

Sometimes, everything just clicks and works perfectly the first time. You don't have to do a thing. You may as well be on autopilot. From start to finish, your project, your law suit, your surgery, your product launch, your hostage rescue mission, your ad campaign, your theater production, it all goes well. The planets are alligned. The cosmos is on your side. Everything goes so smoothly that you wonder if you aren't dreaming.

Most of the time, things don't go your way. The unexpected happens. Gremlins. Ghosts in the machine. Flies in the soup. Whatever. The cosmos has a way of throwing obstacles your way at the most inopportune times.

That's just a given.

A butterfly beats its wings in Buenos Aires, and a week later, your stamp machines in Taiwan are down for a month.

A health crisis in East Africa forces the cargo ship carrying the first shipment of your brand new product to spend three extra weeks at sea.

Your movie's star tumbles off a truck and breaks his arm filming a stunt half way into production.

Your new boss is an self-serving imbecile.

Your client - the publisher of a pro-family magazine - just got arrested for a D.U.I., and you're handling PR for her company.

Or in the case of teammate Jay Hewitt (photo above), you lay your bike down going 30mph at mile 51 of a Half-Ironman distance triathlon.

What do you do?

No... really. What do you do?

Let me take a quick break from the full list of mishaps and just say that - in case you hadn't guessed - skin + gritty pavement + speed don't feel great.

Imagine getting thrown out of a car moving at 30mph, wearing nothing but your underwear.

Not fun.

Now imagine brushing yourself off, finishing the ride as fast as you can, switching out the cartridge in your insulin pump, and then completing a very, very fast half marathon.

Why? Because no matter what happens, there's still a finish line to cross. A reputation to preserve. A project to complete. A movie to finish shooting. A new product to launch. An essential part to manufacture.

It doesn't matter if you're a military officer, a product manager, a movie director, a chef, a fashion designer, a newspaper editor or a CMO. This is something you can be absolutely certain of: Though sometimes, everything will click and flow smoothly as if by divine intervention, most of the time, obstacle after obstacle will get between you and your goal.

Call it Murphy's Law. Call it whatever you want. It's just life.

And in real life, shit happens.

No matter what you do, something almost always goes wrong.

The more complicated or ambitious your endeavor, the more likely it is that obstacles will find a way to get between you and that finish line. Expect it. Plan for it. Train for it.

Heck, embrace it.

You might as well.

Still, I notice that most people freak out when their plan goes awry. They panic. They lose their cool. They suddenly find themselves feeling lost. They make everything come to a grinding halt while they regroup.

Why?

Poor planning. Lack of training. They didn't take the time to plan for failure. They didn't think to come up with contingency plans.

Most of the time though, it just comes down to one simple thing: Lack of experience.

So for those of you who are just getting started in this wonderful world of paychecks and clients and cool, crazy projects, here's a little bit of advice:

Rule #1: Never expect things to work right the first time. (If they do, great, but judt don't expect them to.)

Rule #2: Expect everything to take at least twice as long as you know they should.

Rule #3: Expect the unexpected.

Rule #4: When everything is going well, worry. (You probably missed something.)

Rule #5: Find out what doesn't work before your customers do. (That's what prototypes are for.)

Rule #6: You learn more from how and why a product fails than how and why it works the way you expect it to. (So push your prototypes to failure as often and in as many different ways as possible.)

Rule #7: "Design By Committee" never works.

Rule #8: Trust your instincts.

Rule #9: Listen to the people who will use your product. Their opinion matters more than anyone else's.

Rule #10: Have fun.

Back to Jay: Jay has crashed in races before. Jay knows how broken bones feel. Jay knows that even with no skin on his shoulder, he can keep racing. He's been there. He's done that. He has already faced and concquered pretty-much every obstacle in the book when it comes to endurance racing. As a result, when problems happen, his resolution time is almost instantaneous.

Experience builds confidence. Experience breeds forethought and insight. Experience takes doubt, uncertainty, and fear out of the equation. Jay knows that if he crashes, he can probably still finish the race. He knows how to fix a flat. He knows how to repair a broken chain. He knows a dozen ways to fix problems on his bike or with his body, and the ones he doesn't know how to fix, he can probably improvise if need be.

There are no problems. Only solutions.

Simple enough.

More often than not, projects that appear to have gone smoothly from the outside didn't go smoothly at all. Every day brought a new hurdle. Hundreds of fires had to be put out. Thousands of split-second decisions had to be made. Course adjustments. Quick fixes. A folder-full of improvised solutions. Personel changes. Vendor replacements. Timeline adjustments. Budget attrition. Whatever. The list never stops growing.

That's how it really works.

Perfect illustration: Below is Jay at the finish. From the right side, he looks fine. His injuries are out of sight. He looks like a guy who just breezed through a Half Ironman the way most of us breeze through a Taco bell drivethrough.

To an outsider, a bystander, he had a flawless, fun race.

To someone with inside knowledge, he finished despite a horrible bike accident that could have cost him a whole lot more than another medal.

He crashed. He got up. He quickly assessed the situation. He got back on his bike. He finished the race. He added the experience to his knowledge bank.

He made it happen.

If that doesn't perfectly illustrate the way a project is driven forward, I don't know what does.


Project manager. Triathlete. Adventure Racer. Creative Director. Platoon Leader. Customer Service Rep. Design Engineer. Toolmaker. Sous-Chef. Football Coach. It's all the same.

Great project managers aren't just natural multi-taskers. They're also natural strategic masterminds. Improvisation kings (and queens). Crisis jugglers. Fearless creative acrobats. Their job (their nature) is to constantly find and implement solutions to problems, foreseen and not. Their job is to embrace hurdles and obstacles, because each one brings them one step closer to their goal. They thrive on making things happen. The more untraveled the road, the better. The more complex the gameboard, the better.

It takes a special kind of person to be able to a) do that kind of work well, and b) love every minute of it.

It isn't for everybody.

Excuses and blame don't exist in this little world. There's only what you did and what you didn't do.

Sometimes, even the best laid plans just go awry.

For most people, that's not a good thing...

...and for some of us, that's when the real fun begins.


Have a great Tuesday, everyone. :)


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