What I have learned about people and organizations...so far.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Seven Lessons Learned from George Donner:

The shortest path between two points is rarely a straight line:  While this may not be true in geometry and track, it is true for everything else in life.  If you have lived long enough to look back on your progress from one point to another, you will quickly see that it is never a straight line.  The path to the next important thing isn’t completely under our control.  It is like the sailor who charts his course and waits and observes the telltales (little strips of cloth tied to the sale that give him an indication of where the next wind will come from).  Just like a sailboat tact’s, we too turn left, then right, on the way to our goal.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Seven Lessons Learned from George Donner:

Don’t do anything important in a hurry:  Since my earliest years I have tried to do everything fast.  I remember my father praising me for how quickly I could get things done.  I have learned, however, that there can be a cost to being lightning fast.  That cost comes in overlooking something important and in diminished quality.  For Donner and his companions, those 400 miles saved actually prolonged the trip for the few that made it to California.  In their case, being in a hurry - in the end - delayed them.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Seven Lessons Learned from George Donner:

  1. Beware of easy gain:  What I remember best about my Junior High School Social Science teacher, Mr. Sokol, was the phrase he uttered over and over again; “Something for nothing, you never get something for nothing.”  Daily he hammered that into our developing brains.  He taught us that nothing great comes easy and that a good result follows a good investment.  For the Donnor Party what looked easy ended up killing most of them.  Easy gain, no matter how temping, is best avoided.  The “tried and true” things in life are “true” because they have been “tried.”