Principles of Work – By Hand

In March 2014 I published my Principles of Work, a simple series of things you can expect from me when we work together. This version of Principles of Work was compiled using Haiku Deck, and the simple mixture of brief text and photos struck a chord. To date, the Haiku Deck version of Principles of Work has had over 7,500 views, and is in its second iteration.

As part of developing this idea, Neil Usher recently suggested to me that I could apply a more personal artistic filter to the principles. I love Neil’s suggestion, so I decided to do some tracing and sketching of my own, blending Art for Work’s Sake with the Principles of Work.

Many hours, much sketcher’s cramp, and lots of ink, pencil and marker paper later, I ended up with a series of images I’m happy to publish.

As I developed the images I chose to share them on various social networks and I benefitted from lots of great feedback and suggestions as I went along. The network I am a part of is a lovely, supportive group of people – thanks to each and everyone of you who helped me get this piece of work completed. Although it took a lot of time and concentration, this wasn’t that hard to do, so if you fancy trying something similar with your work, I encourage you to give it a go and I’m happy to help in any way I can.

I’m a big fan of showing your work as it develops, and the next step is to experiment with a video to tell the story behind the images in a little more detail. I’ll keep you posted, and in the meantime, if you’ve got any ideas about what I could do with the original sketches – I’d love to hear from you.

Working out loud, learning all the time.

Martin and Mark

A post about being in a hole, and finding a way out.

Suddenly I stop
But I know it’s too late
I’m lost in a forest
All alone – Robert Smith

The impulse is pure
Sometimes our circuits get shorted
By external interference
Signals get crossed
And the balance distorted
By internal incoherence – Neil Peart

Change is the only constant – A. Smartarse

Sometimes, work sucks. Don’t get me wrong, I’m fortunate compared to many people, but sometimes, work sucks. Projects get deferred, postponed, parked and abandoned. Plans made carefully over time, can drift apart in seconds. We all now how that feels. It’s quite common for things to shift, and it’s thankfully less common for so many things to slip at once. Right now, I find myself in the middle of a lot of this stuff. A few short  weeks ago I felt like I was on solid ground, currently it feels more like quicksand. I’m not complaining – just noting this is how it is some times, and it gets me down. I’m only human.

Martin

I caught up with Martin Couzins earlier in the week. Martin is a great guy and we had a lovely, lively conversation. We spoke about all things good and bad, challenging and frustrating, uplifting and depressing. We spoke frankly and honestly. Martin is a great listener, generous in spirit and also with his time. We parted company after a little over 90 minutes, with me in a very different place to when I arrived. Thank you Martin, you are a good friend and I needed to see you more than I realised. My work doesn’t suck so bad.

Mark

As I walked to the tube station to start my journey back to the office, I passed by a guy and his dog, sitting on the pavement near Gloucester Road tube. I saw some sketches at his feet. I stopped to admire the artwork, sat on the pavement with the guy, and we started to talk. Mark is homeless, he’s been on the streets for three years. When he found himself homeless, he couldn’t bring himself to beg, and he didn’t want to start drinking, so he decided to make art instead.

Family Tree

As you can see, he’s quite the artist, though he assured me that when he started drawing three years ago, ‘it was all stick men’. I showed him some of my pictures, and he showed me more of his. Two artists (and a dog) sitting together on the pavement outside Gloucester Road tube. I gave Mark a few water colour pencils – treasured possessions of mine, time to pass them on. He offered me the picture of his which I had been admiring, I took it and insisted on paying for it. I tucked £10 under his pencil tin, and he put it away. ‘There are a lot of people on the streets who will have that away if I leave it in sight’. We talked a while longer about our art as our work, and parted company. Thank you Mark, for helping me reconnect to my work and realising, it doesn’t suck so bad.

So what?

Things go wrong all the time. When this happens, I have a tendency to keep things bottled up. This is partly because I’m an optimist first and foremost, and partly because I feel a sense of pressure to comply with a culture of ‘Everything is Awesome’, which often pervades my social networks.

The truth is, you cannot know joy without despair, happy without sad. Life is a wonderfully mixed bag, and to deny this, is unhelpful, even dangerous.

Conversations with good people are a great way to put things in perspective and move on. My day concluded with me finishing a key part of an important project. Thank you Martin and Mark.

 

Principles of Work

Defining what you do and how you do it.

A post about the challenge of defining what you do and how you do it.

What Do You Do?

Working in a large organisation, what you do is frequently defined by function and hierarchy. ‘What do you do?’ I’m an HR Business Partner/Head of Finance/Director of Legal Services/Vice President of Sales. We often accept these answers, and yet they don’t really tell us much, if anything about what you actually do. My last role in BT saw me land in a box marked General Manager. This box came with a pay band and a bunch of other stuff, and for once, a helpfully vague title. Most people quickly dumped the title in favour of something more grand and important sounding, I’ve never before or since worked in a place with so many so called directors. For my part, having spent some great years in sales before moving into what was then termed Corporate Social Responsibility, I’d come to a realisation that good work is all about good people. I wanted to work more intentionally on the simple belief that we can make work better, together. Nice idea – not a great fit into a corporate machine though, so in my case I ran with General Manager, at least the title gave me room to roam, to generally manage.

Fast forward to now, and of course I still get asked the question, ‘What do you do?’ As a freelance consultant that is sometimes a tricky question to respond to. I know from experience there are days when a purposeful, concise response simply flows from me, and equally there are many days when I stumble through the answer like a boy scout lost in a dark wood, flailing and failing his orienteering badge.

Useful Advice

Many moons ago I was fortunate to listen to Ross Sargent, a founder of Cambridge Kung Fu, give a TEDx talk on Mindful Movement. I’m grateful to Ross for suggesting a helpful way to avoid getting stuck in the ‘What do you do?’ trap – begin your reply to the question with these three words: ‘Currently I am…’ Three years on and I still enjoy playing with this idea – I don’t always get it right and it definitely brings a sense of ‘nowness’ to my thinking.

Principles of Work

‘It ain’t what you do, it’s the way that you do it’, or words to that effect. As well as gaining an understanding of what we can do for each other, people often ask me how the work feels, and how does it manifest itself? In order to help clarify my thinking – I sat down around the beginning of 2014 and came up with a set of principles of work. These are things you can expect of me when we work together, and ideally, you may feel encouraged to reciprocate some of these too. These principles are not set in stone, I make small adjustments as time goes by. Here is where I currently am on this journey.


What Goes Around – Principles of Work – Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that inspires

Beyond Principles

I enjoy keeping an eye on my principles of work – and sometimes you might want to go deeper too. In these cases – maybe what you need is a manifesto? I’ve often thought about, and not yet written one for myself. And for as long as there are examples like this one by Bruce Mau I may never need to write one.

Company Values

Despite the difficulties I sometimes have with ‘What do you do?’, I can at least be certain that my response to the question is real, it is me. I don’t have the challenge of trying to rally squadrons of people behind a set of values. Company values, those much maligned, and often over simplified statements of nothingness. Why shouldn’t we all have some of those too? When I worked for BT, our company values were: Straightforward, Helpful, Heart, Inspiring, Trustworthy. An odd bunch of words perhaps, even odder when read as an acronym (in fairness these values were rearranged in a different order by the spin doctors at the time, – I just found this particular arrangement easier to recall). I wonder how much BT paid for that?

The biggest challenge at this level of ‘What do you do?’ surely has to be two fold. Percolating and formulating a statement which has a sufficient sense of meaning and purpose about it is the first thing, and the second is simply that the larger the group of people you try and fit under the umbrella of your values, the more likely you are to fail. You risk ending up with mindless drones trying to deliver against something totally vanilla (with apologies to vanilla which I happen to think is quite a tasty flavour), or people not responding in a way which helps your values stay alive – experiencing someone telling lies when one of your values is trustworthy, for example. I realise it’s easy to knock this stuff, so by way of balance I’d like to ask you – do you have any examples of businesses where this values thing is done well? If you do – I’d be grateful if you could share them with me – thanks.