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Strategy: It’s the Thought that Counts

Mountain Guru Tries To Explain That Planningg Is More Important Than The Plan.

I wrote a book on consulting. I am writing another book on leading change. This quote by Dwight D. Eisenhower is in both books.

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

This quote is attributed to Eisenhower in Richard Nixonu2019s book Six Crises. It is also mentioned by General David Sarnoffu2019s published papers. (Sarnoff was a Brigadier General on Eisenhoweru2019s communications staff during World War II and the CEO of RCA before and after the war.)

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

u201cThis makes no sense,u201d my primary editor, my wife, said to me in frustration. u201cFirst, he says plans are useless then he says theyu2019re essential; which is it.u201d

n

This isnu2019t the first time Iu2019ve heard this reaction. When I facilitated leadership teams at strategy off-sites, some leaders said u201cHuh?u201d Then, as now, I tried to explain.

n

u201cWhat Eisenhower is saying is that the plan itself isnu2019t whatu2019s important. No battle ever went according to a plan. Whatu2019s important is the process of planning, the thought that goes into anticipating the enemies movements, and advantages and disadvantages. That thinking allows the general to act and react during the battle not slavishly follow a plan.u201d

n

This explanation didnu2019t work with those leaders either. I put it down to the strange way I think and therefore communicate. I take in information intuitively, filling in blanks, and making connections that arenu2019t apparent to seventy-five percent of the population. So I talk in a shorthand that assumes others make the same connections I do. I get the u201cHuh?u201d reaction a lot.

n

I tried the other similar Eisenhower quote:

n

u201cNo battle was ever won following a plan, but no battle was ever won without one.u201d

n

Worse and more of it. u201cWhich is it?u201d

n

To me, this concept is critical for business strategy. It ainu2019t about the report or the deck from the strategy consultant,. u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Why is it that strategy consultants find that clients fail to implement the pristine strategies they design? Itu2019s because the client didnu2019t do the thinking; the consultant did.

n

To be fair this complaint is old. These days many expert strategy consultants involve the client in data and framework analysis and conclusion formulation. Process consultants facilitate leadership teams in gathering the data, analyzing it, and formulating strategies. However, Iu2019m sure somewhere there is still a client who makes the cringeworthy comment:

n

u201cChange? We donu2019t want to change; we just want a new strategy.u201d

n

Among business majors, MBAs, consultants, and some client managers, the word strategy has a golden aura, delivered in a flash of inspiration from some mystical place – the collective unconscious?- or wherever really smart people get their ideas.

n

A strategy is a plan. Thatu2019s it – just a plan. Sure, itu2019s u201ca plan to achieve an objective in the face of competition.u201d Still just a plan.

n

Iu2019m told that the word strategy comes from the Greek word strategos, meaning generalship. We might ask why pick the language of war? Business leaders often use war words, conquest, slaughter, defeat, decimation. I donu2019t really get that. I mean, we are just talking about whether customers shell out shekels for your product or the other guyu2019s. But what do I know.

n

I know that a strategy is just a plan.

n

Cue the Eisenhower quote:

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

Remember:

n

u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Here is an outline of what I think the thought is:

n

Understand (collect data and analyze)

n

    n

  • Understand the customer,n
      n

    • Who -demographics, psychographics, buying history, share of wallet
    • n

    • What they need, want, wish for
    • n

    • Where – location, preferred channels
    • n

    • When – buying seasons,
    • n

    • Why u2013 purchase criteria
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand the competitionn
      n

    • Who – Major players and minor, alternative products
    • n

    • What u2013 offers, business models, advantages and disadvantages
    • n

    • When u2013 do competitorsu2019 seasons vary?
    • n

    • Why- customers buy from them (and not you)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand other forces (suppliers, community standards, regulation, etc.) that shape consumption and competition
  • n

  • Understand ourselvesn
      n

    • What are we good at, business model (how we get revenue, operate, make profit)
    • n

    • What are we traditionally not good at -why- can we innovate-improve or integrate ourselves out of this problem.
    • n

    n

  • n

n

Look for trends rather than point in time conclusions. What is different? What trends that may not be recognized? What new technologies that may change the game? What new groups of customers, new needs, anything that presents opportunities? Is there something in the standard marketplace that you can change, improve, find another way of doing, stop doing because it adds no value?

n

Plan (There is really nothing mystical about a plan)

n

    n

  • What are you going to do and why? (specific actions)n
      n

    • In product or service design ( How can you differentiate hardware or physical stuff, software u2013 or use instruction, service u2013 personalized connection to the customer).
    • n

    • In marketing (Price, place, promotion)
    • n

    • In operations (Make vs. Buy, Quantity, Quality, Timeliness)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • How are you going to do that? (Detailed inputs, activities, outputs and metrics for each and contingency plans for when things get off track.)
  • n

  • Who is going to do what? (Actual people who will be held accountable for each action.)
  • n

  • When? (A lack of specificity or over-optimism in deadlines is one reason for strategy implementation failure.)
  • n

n

Yes, it is complicated and there are many unknowns and unknowables, but still doable.

n

Who plans?

n

Executives formulate strategy and operations managers execute it. Yeah, right. Or worse strategy consultants formulate strategy, present the deck to the C-suite executives and operations managers executes it.

n

Whatu2019s wrong with this picture?

n

People have been separating the planning function from implementation since Frederick Winslow Taylor wrote Scientific Management in 1911, despite numerous social science experiments that prove how inefficient this practice is. Understanding gets lost in the hand-off. Operators donu2019t get the u201cwhyu201d of the new strategy or they fixate on one output metric (quantity) and short circuit another (quality) with disastrous results.

n

But you canu2019t invite the whole company into the strategy offsite. No, but you can invite a cross-section of the firm and arrange for level and functional communications sessions using those who were there.

n

And remember

n

u201cStrategy is a gift: Itu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

But. . .

n

Itu2019s integrated action based upon that thought that gets results.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Now Available

“,”tablet”:”

I wrote a book on consulting. I am writing another book on leading change. This quote by Dwight D. Eisenhower is in both books.

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

This quote is attributed to Eisenhower in Richard Nixonu2019s book Six Crises. It is also mentioned by General David Sarnoffu2019s published papers. (Sarnoff was a Brigadier General on Eisenhoweru2019s communications staff during World War II and the CEO of RCA before and after the war.)

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

u201cThis makes no sense,u201d my primary editor, my wife, said to me in frustration. u201cFirst, he says plans are useless then he says theyu2019re essential; which is it.u201d

n

This isnu2019t the first time Iu2019ve heard this reaction. When I facilitated leadership teams at strategy off-sites, some leaders said u201cHuh?u201d Then, as now, I tried to explain.

n

u201cWhat Eisenhower is saying is that the plan itself isnu2019t whatu2019s important. No battle ever went according to a plan. Whatu2019s important is the process of planning, the thought that goes into anticipating the enemies movements, and advantages and disadvantages. That thinking allows the general to act and react during the battle not slavishly follow a plan.u201d

n

This explanation didnu2019t work with those leaders either. I put it down to the strange way I think and therefore communicate. I take in information intuitively, filling in blanks, and making connections that arenu2019t apparent to seventy-five percent of the population. So I talk in a shorthand that assumes others make the same connections I do. I get the u201cHuh?u201d reaction a lot.

n

I tried the other similar Eisenhower quote:

n

u201cNo battle was ever won following a plan, but no battle was ever won without one.u201d

n

Worse and more of it. u201cWhich is it?u201d

n

To me, this concept is critical for business strategy. It ainu2019t about the report or the deck from the strategy consultant,. u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Why is it that strategy consultants find that clients fail to implement the pristine strategies they design? Itu2019s because the client didnu2019t do the thinking; the consultant did.

n

To be fair this complaint is old. These days many expert strategy consultants involve the client in data and framework analysis and conclusion formulation. Process consultants facilitate leadership teams in gathering the data, analyzing it, and formulating strategies. However, Iu2019m sure somewhere there is still a client who makes the cringeworthy comment:

n

u201cChange? We donu2019t want to change; we just want a new strategy.u201d

n

Among business majors, MBAs, consultants, and some client managers, the word strategy has a golden aura, delivered in a flash of inspiration from some mystical place – the collective unconscious?- or wherever really smart people get their ideas.

n

A strategy is a plan. Thatu2019s it – just a plan. Sure, itu2019s u201ca plan to achieve an objective in the face of competition.u201d Still just a plan.

n

Iu2019m told that the word strategy comes from the Greek word strategos, meaning generalship. We might ask why pick the language of war? Business leaders often use war words, conquest, slaughter, defeat, decimation. I donu2019t really get that. I mean, we are just talking about whether customers shell out shekels for your product or the other guyu2019s. But what do I know.

n

I know that a strategy is just a plan.

n

Cue the Eisenhower quote:

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

Remember:

n

u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Here is an outline of what I think the thought is:

n

Understand (collect data and analyze)

n

    n

  • Understand the customer,n
      n

    • Who -demographics, psychographics, buying history, share of wallet
    • n

    • What they need, want, wish for
    • n

    • Where – location, preferred channels
    • n

    • When – buying seasons,
    • n

    • Why u2013 purchase criteria
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand the competitionn
      n

    • Who – Major players and minor, alternative products
    • n

    • What u2013 offers, business models, advantages and disadvantages
    • n

    • When u2013 do competitorsu2019 seasons vary?
    • n

    • Why- customers buy from them (and not you)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand other forces (suppliers, community standards, regulation, etc.) that shape consumption and competition
  • n

  • Understand ourselvesn
      n

    • What are we good at, business model (how we get revenue, operate, make profit)
    • n

    • What are we traditionally not good at -why- can we innovate-improve or integrate ourselves out of this problem.
    • n

    n

  • n

n

Look for trends rather than point in time conclusions. What is different? What trends that may not be recognized? What new technologies that may change the game? What new groups of customers, new needs, anything that presents opportunities? Is there something in the standard marketplace that you can change, improve, find another way of doing, stop doing because it adds no value?

n

Plan (There is really nothing mystical about a plan)

n

    n

  • What are you going to do and why? (specific actions)n
      n

    • In product or service design ( How can you differentiate hardware or physical stuff, software u2013 or use instruction, service u2013 personalized connection to the customer).
    • n

    • In marketing (Price, place, promotion)
    • n

    • In operations (Make vs. Buy, Quantity, Quality, Timeliness)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • How are you going to do that? (Detailed inputs, activities, outputs and metrics for each and contingency plans for when things get off track.)
  • n

  • Who is going to do what? (Actual people who will be held accountable for each action.)
  • n

  • When? (A lack of specificity or over-optimism in deadlines is one reason for strategy implementation failure.)
  • n

n

Yes, it is complicated and there are many unknowns and unknowables, but still doable.

n

Who plans?

n

Executives formulate strategy and operations managers execute it. Yeah, right. Or worse strategy consultants formulate strategy, present the deck to the C-suite executives and operations managers executes it.

n

Whatu2019s wrong with this picture?

n

People have been separating the planning function from implementation since Frederick Winslow Taylor wrote Scientific Management in 1911, despite numerous social science experiments that prove how inefficient this practice is. Understanding gets lost in the hand-off. Operators donu2019t get the u201cwhyu201d of the new strategy or they fixate on one output metric (quantity) and short circuit another (quality) with disastrous results.

n

But you canu2019t invite the whole company into the strategy offsite. No, but you can invite a cross-section of the firm and arrange for level and functional communications sessions using those who were there.

n

And remember

n

u201cStrategy is a gift: Itu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

But. . .

n

Itu2019s integrated action based upon that thought that gets results.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Now Available

“,”hover”:”

I wrote a book on consulting. I am writing another book on leading change. This quote by Dwight D. Eisenhower is in both books.

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

This quote is attributed to Eisenhower in Richard Nixonu2019s book Six Crises. It is also mentioned by General David Sarnoffu2019s published papers. (Sarnoff was a Brigadier General on Eisenhoweru2019s communications staff during World War II and the CEO of RCA before and after the war.)

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

u201cThis makes no sense,u201d my primary editor, my wife, said to me in frustration. u201cFirst, he says plans are useless then he says theyu2019re essential; which is it.u201d

n

This isnu2019t the first time Iu2019ve heard this reaction. When I facilitated leadership teams at strategy off-sites, some leaders said u201cHuh?u201d Then, as now, I tried to explain.

n

u201cWhat Eisenhower is saying is that the plan itself isnu2019t whatu2019s important. No battle ever went according to a plan. Whatu2019s important is the process of planning, the thought that goes into anticipating the enemies movements, and advantages and disadvantages. That thinking allows the general to act and react during the battle not slavishly follow a plan.u201d

n

This explanation didnu2019t work with those leaders either. I put it down to the strange way I think and therefore communicate. I take in information intuitively, filling in blanks, and making connections that arenu2019t apparent to seventy-five percent of the population. So I talk in a shorthand that assumes others make the same connections I do. I get the u201cHuh?u201d reaction a lot.

n

I tried the other similar Eisenhower quote:

n

u201cNo battle was ever won following a plan, but no battle was ever won without one.u201d

n

Worse and more of it. u201cWhich is it?u201d

n

To me, this concept is critical for business strategy. It ainu2019t about the report or the deck from the strategy consultant,. u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Why is it that strategy consultants find that clients fail to implement the pristine strategies they design? Itu2019s because the client didnu2019t do the thinking; the consultant did.

n

To be fair this complaint is old. These days many expert strategy consultants involve the client in data and framework analysis and conclusion formulation. Process consultants facilitate leadership teams in gathering the data, analyzing it, and formulating strategies. However, Iu2019m sure somewhere there is still a client who makes the cringeworthy comment:

n

u201cChange? We donu2019t want to change; we just want a new strategy.u201d

n

Among business majors, MBAs, consultants, and some client managers, the word strategy has a golden aura, delivered in a flash of inspiration from some mystical place – the collective unconscious?- or wherever really smart people get their ideas.

n

A strategy is a plan. Thatu2019s it – just a plan. Sure, itu2019s u201ca plan to achieve an objective in the face of competition.u201d Still just a plan.

n

Iu2019m told that the word strategy comes from the Greek word strategos, meaning generalship. We might ask why pick the language of war? Business leaders often use war words, conquest, slaughter, defeat, decimation. I donu2019t really get that. I mean, we are just talking about whether customers shell out shekels for your product or the other guyu2019s. But what do I know.

n

I know that a strategy is just a plan.

n

Cue the Eisenhower quote:

n

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

n

Remember:

n

u201cItu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

Here is an outline of what I think the thought is:

n

Understand (collect data and analyze)

n

    n

  • Understand the customer,n
      n

    • Who -demographics, psychographics, buying history, share of wallet
    • n

    • What they need, want, wish for
    • n

    • Where – location, preferred channels
    • n

    • When – buying seasons,
    • n

    • Why u2013 purchase criteria
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand the competitionn
      n

    • Who – Major players and minor, alternative products
    • n

    • What u2013 offers, business models, advantages and disadvantages
    • n

    • When u2013 do competitorsu2019 seasons vary?
    • n

    • Why- customers buy from them (and not you)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • Understand other forces (suppliers, community standards, regulation, etc.) that shape consumption and competition
  • n

  • Understand ourselvesn
      n

    • What are we good at, business model (how we get revenue, operate, make profit)
    • n

    • What are we traditionally not good at -why- can we innovate-improve or integrate ourselves out of this problem.
    • n

    n

  • n

n

Look for trends rather than point in time conclusions. What is different? What trends that may not be recognized? What new technologies that may change the game? What new groups of customers, new needs, anything that presents opportunities? Is there something in the standard marketplace that you can change, improve, find another way of doing, stop doing because it adds no value?

n

Plan (There is really nothing mystical about a plan)

n

    n

  • What are you going to do and why? (specific actions)n
      n

    • In product or service design ( How can you differentiate hardware or physical stuff, software u2013 or use instruction, service u2013 personalized connection to the customer).
    • n

    • In marketing (Price, place, promotion)
    • n

    • In operations (Make vs. Buy, Quantity, Quality, Timeliness)
    • n

    n

  • n

  • How are you going to do that? (Detailed inputs, activities, outputs and metrics for each and contingency plans for when things get off track.)
  • n

  • Who is going to do what? (Actual people who will be held accountable for each action.)
  • n

  • When? (A lack of specificity or over-optimism in deadlines is one reason for strategy implementation failure.)
  • n

n

Yes, it is complicated and there are many unknowns and unknowables, but still doable.

n

Who plans?

n

Executives formulate strategy and operations managers execute it. Yeah, right. Or worse strategy consultants formulate strategy, present the deck to the C-suite executives and operations managers executes it.

n

Whatu2019s wrong with this picture?

n

People have been separating the planning function from implementation since Frederick Winslow Taylor wrote Scientific Management in 1911, despite numerous social science experiments that prove how inefficient this practice is. Understanding gets lost in the hand-off. Operators donu2019t get the u201cwhyu201d of the new strategy or they fixate on one output metric (quantity) and short circuit another (quality) with disastrous results.

n

But you canu2019t invite the whole company into the strategy offsite. No, but you can invite a cross-section of the firm and arrange for level and functional communications sessions using those who were there.

n

And remember

n

u201cStrategy is a gift: Itu2019s the thought that counts.u201d

n

But. . .

n

Itu2019s integrated action based upon that thought that gets results.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Now Available

“}},”slug”:”et_pb_text”}” data-et-multi-view-load-tablet-hidden=”true”>

I wrote a book on consulting. I am writing another book on leading change. This quote by Dwight D. Eisenhower is in both books.

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

This quote is attributed to Eisenhower in Richard Nixon’s book Six Crises. It is also mentioned by General David Sarnoff’s published papers. (Sarnoff was a Brigadier General on Eisenhower’s communications staff during World War II and the CEO of RCA before and after the war.)

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

“This makes no sense,” my primary editor, my wife, said to me in frustration. “First, he says plans are useless then he says they’re essential; which is it.”

This isn’t the first time I’ve heard this reaction. When I facilitated leadership teams at strategy off-sites, some leaders said “Huh?” Then, as now, I tried to explain.

“What Eisenhower is saying is that the plan itself isn’t what’s important. No battle ever went according to a plan. What’s important is the process of planning, the thought that goes into anticipating the enemies movements, and advantages and disadvantages. That thinking allows the general to act and react during the battle not slavishly follow a plan.”

This explanation didn’t work with those leaders either. I put it down to the strange way I think and therefore communicate. I take in information intuitively, filling in blanks, and making connections that aren’t apparent to seventy-five percent of the population. So I talk in a shorthand that assumes others make the same connections I do. I get the “Huh?” reaction a lot.

I tried the other similar Eisenhower quote:

“No battle was ever won following a plan, but no battle was ever won without one.”

Worse and more of it. “Which is it?”

To me, this concept is critical for business strategy. It ain’t about the report or the deck from the strategy consultant,. “It’s the thought that counts.”

Why is it that strategy consultants find that clients fail to implement the pristine strategies they design? It’s because the client didn’t do the thinking; the consultant did.

To be fair this complaint is old. These days many expert strategy consultants involve the client in data and framework analysis and conclusion formulation. Process consultants facilitate leadership teams in gathering the data, analyzing it, and formulating strategies. However, I’m sure somewhere there is still a client who makes the cringeworthy comment:

“Change? We don’t want to change; we just want a new strategy.”

Among business majors, MBAs, consultants, and some client managers, the word strategy has a golden aura, delivered in a flash of inspiration from some mystical place – the collective unconscious?- or wherever really smart people get their ideas.

A strategy is a plan. That’s it – just a plan. Sure, it’s “a plan to achieve an objective in the face of competition.” Still just a plan.

I’m told that the word strategy comes from the Greek word strategos, meaning generalship. We might ask why pick the language of war? Business leaders often use war words, conquest, slaughter, defeat, decimation. I don’t really get that. I mean, we are just talking about whether customers shell out shekels for your product or the other guy’s. But what do I know.

I know that a strategy is just a plan.

Cue the Eisenhower quote:

“In planning for battle, I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable”

Remember:

“It’s the thought that counts.”

Here is an outline of what I think the thought is:

Understand (collect data and analyze)

  • Understand the customer,
    • Who -demographics, psychographics, buying history, share of wallet
    • What they need, want, wish for
    • Where – location, preferred channels
    • When – buying seasons,
    • Why – purchase criteria
  • Understand the competition
    • Who – Major players and minor, alternative products
    • What – offers, business models, advantages and disadvantages
    • When – do competitors’ seasons vary?
    • Why- customers buy from them (and not you)
  • Understand other forces (suppliers, community standards, regulation, etc.) that shape consumption and competition
  • Understand ourselves
    • What are we good at, business model (how we get revenue, operate, make profit)
    • What are we traditionally not good at -why- can we innovate-improve or integrate ourselves out of this problem.

Look for trends rather than point in time conclusions. What is different? What trends that may not be recognized? What new technologies that may change the game? What new groups of customers, new needs, anything that presents opportunities? Is there something in the standard marketplace that you can change, improve, find another way of doing, stop doing because it adds no value?

Plan (There is really nothing mystical about a plan)

  • What are you going to do and why? (specific actions)
    • In product or service design ( How can you differentiate hardware or physical stuff, software – or use instruction, service – personalized connection to the customer).
    • In marketing (Price, place, promotion)
    • In operations (Make vs. Buy, Quantity, Quality, Timeliness)
  • How are you going to do that? (Detailed inputs, activities, outputs and metrics for each and contingency plans for when things get off track.)
  • Who is going to do what? (Actual people who will be held accountable for each action.)
  • When? (A lack of specificity or over-optimism in deadlines is one reason for strategy implementation failure.)

Yes, it is complicated and there are many unknowns and unknowables, but still doable.

Who plans?

Executives formulate strategy and operations managers execute it. Yeah, right. Or worse strategy consultants formulate strategy, present the deck to the C-suite executives and operations managers executes it.

What’s wrong with this picture?

People have been separating the planning function from implementation since Frederick Winslow Taylor wrote Scientific Management in 1911, despite numerous social science experiments that prove how inefficient this practice is. Understanding gets lost in the hand-off. Operators don’t get the “why” of the new strategy or they fixate on one output metric (quantity) and short circuit another (quality) with disastrous results.

But you can’t invite the whole company into the strategy offsite. No, but you can invite a cross-section of the firm and arrange for level and functional communications sessions using those who were there.

And remember

“Strategy is a gift: It’s the thought that counts.”

But. . .

It’s integrated action based upon that thought that gets results.

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Now Available

The post Strategy: It’s the Thought that Counts appeared first on Wisdom from Unusual Places.

Originally Published on https://wisdomfromunusualplaces.com/blog/

Alan Cay Culler Writer of Stories and Songs

I'm a writer.

Writing is my fourth career -actor, celebrity speakers booking agent, change consultant - and now writer.
I write stories about my experiences and what I've learned- in consulting for consultants, about change for leaders, and just working, loving and living wisely.

To be clear, I'm more wiseacre than wise man, but I'm at the front end of the Baby Boom so I've had a lot of opportunity to make mistakes. I made more than my share and even learned from some of them, so now I write them down in hopes that someone else might not have to make the same mistakes.

I have also made a habit of talking with ordinary people who have on occasion shared extraordinary wisdom.

Much of what I write about has to do with business because I was a strategic change consultant for thirty-seven years. My bias is that business is about people - called customers, staff, suppliers, shareholders or the community, but all human beings with hopes, and dreams, thoughts and emotions.. They didn't teach me that at the London Business School, nor even at Columbia University's Principles of Organization Development. I learned that first in my theater undergraduate degree, while observing people in order to portray a character.

Now I'm writing these observations in stories, shared here for other Baby Boomers and those who want to read about us.

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