On the Way to
the Courthouse
A Perfect
Halloween Strategy – The Value of a Plan
Friends,
First, I want to thank you for your continued interest in my stories.
Several of you have ordered copies of my book, What I’ve Learned about
Life on the Way to the Courthouse, from my stash at the office.
So much so that I had to order several more copies, which is a good
thing. If you will email to me your mailing address at mikew@wellsjenkins.com,
I will mail one to you, and you may send a check for $15 to me at your
convenience at 155 Sunnynoll Court, Suite 200, Winston-Salem, NC
27106. You can also click on one of the following links to order
directly from the Blurb website:
Here is a story from my youth about Halloween
that tells a larger story about the importance of a sound strategy,
especially in the New Economy. I hope you enjoy it. Mike
A Perfect Halloween Strategy – The Value of a Plan
She was way ahead of me on this one, as older sisters often are
with their little brothers.
Halloween was, and is, a great time for children. The best part for
me was the stash of candy you collected. For a period of time, your
mom indulged you having some candy from your bag that normally you would
never be allowed to eat.
My strategy on Halloween night was to go with my buddies (when kids without
accompanying parents was safe) to the houses in the neighborhood. The
neighbors, of course, saw past our costumes but they never let on they knew
us.
My sister, three and a half years older, had a different strategy.
She and her best friends would get one of the parents to take them to the
richest neighborhood and they would work those houses pretty well.
Being cute little girls dressed up as gypsies didn’t hurt. Who would
not want to give some extra treats to a cute little gypsy girl?
At the end of the evening, my sister and I would dump out our stashes on
the bed to see how we did. The vivid picture in my mind’s eye of the
visible evidence of this more thoughtful strategy has stuck with me all of
these years.
But what really has stuck with me is that my stash ran out sooner than
hers. I had to endure what seemed like weeks of her still enjoying
her candy after my candy had run out. Sometimes even cute little
gypsy girls will rub it in to their younger brothers.
The humorist, Lewis Grizzard, told the story of the little boy who was
accused of getting into his older sister’s Halloween candy. He blamed
it on their dog. When confronted with the reality that the family had
no dog, he replied “That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.”
The failure to have such an innovative long-term Halloween candy strategy
makes for a good story, but it does not impact us as adults. But the
“that’s my story and I’m sticking to it” story line is very much with
us. And its impact can be very damaging to our careers.
The reason most of us do not have a long-term strategy is because we do not
have a short-term strategy either. We do things pretty much as we
have done so for a long time. For many of us, that’s all we know.
But the challenge for every business and profession is dealing with not
only change, but rapid change. We better have a strategy that takes
us beyond the narrowing confines of what we know and what we have always
done.
If we do not build a solid, specific plan to deal with change, it is just a
matter of time before that formless, no-plan shape will be pressed against
the solid and unyielding angularity of the New Economy.
What I’ve learned about life on the way to the courthouse is this:
You better have a strategy and the discipline to see it through. If
you do not, the New Reality will come knocking on your door one day.
And it’s not going to be a cute little gypsy girl.
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