“Choose to decide that you want to change the game.”
Seth Godin is an entrepreneur, bestselling author, and speaker. He writes one of the most popular blogs in the world, and has published 19 best-selling books, including This is Marketing, and in 2018, he was inducted into the Marketing Hall of Fame. Seth's teaching focuses on everything from effective marketing to leadership to the spread of ideas, and his speaking has motivated and inspired leaders around the world.
At the Online Bootcamp, Seth challenged participants to choose their future and lead their teams to become game-changers.
A Chance to Change the Game
The way we live, work, and engage in the world today has been turned upside down. Seth Godin believes we're in the midst of a revolution, one that has destroyed the perfect and enabled the impossible.
A year or two ago, we lived in a perfect world, one we considered "normal." It was not unlike the "normal" embraced by Western Union when messages were sent via telegram. Alexander Graham Bell disrupted Western Union's notion of normal when he invented the telephone, and that disruption presented Western Union with a chance to change the game.
Today, Seth highlighted, we also have a chance to change the game. "Normal," as we knew it, no longer exists. Disruption is all around us, and everywhere we look, organizations are doing what we once thought was impossible. They're choosing their future and changing the game.
As leaders, we must ask ourselves: Are we interested in being game-changers, or are we going to allow someone else to do it and then struggle to keep up?
Are You Ready to Change the Game?
As leaders, we all want to change the game… or at least that's what we say. Sometimes, an aversion to risk or fear of failure holds us back from being game-changers and enabling our teams to do the same.
The first step in changing the game is adjusting our attitudes and accepting or rejecting our responsibility to make a change. Seth recommended an exercise to help leaders identify their readiness: the problem-solution card.
On one side of the card, write down a problem you've been wrestling with. Then hand your card to a stranger and ask them to write a solution on the other side. When they give it back to you, look at what they've written and ask yourself, "Am I willing to do this?"
If your answer is "no," then you might not have a problem at all. Instead, you might just have acceptance that things aren't quite right. If your answer is "yes," then you're ready to change the game. You've accepted responsibility and enrolled in the journey.
“Leadership is this idea of finding problems and solving them. And one of the definitions of a problem is that it’s solvable. If it’s not solvable, it’s not a problem—it’s a reality.”
Enroll Your Team in the Journey
The idea of enrollment is critical for leaders. When you choose to enroll, you're making a choice between management and leadership.
We live in a world that has been built on management. Seth contended that management is using authority to tell people what to do. Management is making everything a little bit better, a little bit faster, and a little bit cheaper in a predictable, reliable way. The world needs managers—but it needs more leaders.
And, “management is not the same as leadership”. Leaders sign up to change the game. They explore the edges, find problems, and uncover solutions. Leaders make change happen, and they invite others to enroll with them on the journey.
The truth is, it is a leader's job to make a change. This is a responsibility you can either accept or reject. Accept it, and your team and your organization will be better prepared to thrive in the future. Reject it and risk being left behind.
How to Change the Game
For those leaders who enroll in the journey and are ready to help their teams change the game, Seth offered several lessons.
Choose Your Future
In our organizations, many of us are already planning for the future, and it probably looks a lot like our past. But it doesn't have to.
Seth reminds us that, as leaders, we are in a unique and privileged position to choose our future by choosing to change the game. Decide to accept responsibility, take risks, and make small steps. Decide to play the game and remember that if you fail, you can play again tomorrow. “This moment is a time to do work that matters for people who care.”
Key Points
Questions to Consider