5 Keys to Taking New Ground in 2014

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Want to take new ground in 2014?  Don’t we all?  You’re probably not spending a lot of time figuring out how to avoid or slow down the rate of losing ground (although this Dilbert cartoon has a very funny take on the idea).  No, if you wake up in the middle of the night it’s probably to think about what you need to do to take new ground.

Here are five keys to taking new ground in 2014:

  • Sharpen clarity on your preferred future.  One of the most productive things all of us can do is to develop razor sharp clarity on where we want to go as an organization.  If “path, not intent, determines destination” (Andy Stanley), then clarity on destination makes the best path obvious.  See also, Start with the End in Mind and Choosing What Not to Do.  In addition, two excellent resources on this subject are The 7 Practices of Effective Ministry by Andy Stanley and Church Unique by Will Mancini.
  • Be about finding solutions.  There are people on almost every team that seem pre-wired to focus on problem identification.  If you want to take new ground, you must build a team that is about finding solutions.  Since there are no problem-free solutions anyway, wise leaders simply choose the set of problems they’d rather have.  Colin Powell had it right when he said, “Great leaders are almost always great simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate and doubt, to offer a solution everybody can understand.”  See also, The Pursuit of Problem-Free.  An excellent resource on this is Creative Confidence by Tom and David Kelley.
  • Ask great questions.  Learning to ask great questions is very near the center of great leadership.  Whether you develop your own questions or simply develop the skill of collecting and using great questions you hear or read is not important.  Making it your practice to insert great questions into your conversations and meetings is essential.  Albert Einstein was expressing a similar perspective when he said, “If I had an hour to solve a problem I’d spend 55 minutes thinking about the problem and 5 minutes thinking about solutions.”  See also, Supercharge Your Ministry with These 5 Questions.
  • Develop and celebrate an “others focus.”  If you want to take new ground, you will need to become preoccupied with the interests of others.  Forever working to provide more and better services for the usual suspects won’t take new ground.  New ground is taken only when we begin thinking about and prioritizing the needs and interests of the people we haven’t yet reached.  Craig Groeschel has said that “if you want to reach people no one else is reaching, you need to do things no one else is doing.”  See also, Unexamined Expectations about Commitments and Priorities and Preoccupied with the Needs and Interests of the Right People.
  • Refine your menu to offer only the best next steps.  While this is a very challenging step (it means disappointing the owners of the sacred cow), it is an important key to taking new ground.  There are two underlying truths in this key.  First, the more options your menu offers the more difficult the choice becomes.  Second,  Peter Drucker pointed out that “planned, purposeful abandonment of the old and of the unrewarding is a prerequisite to successful pursuit of the new and highly promising.  Above all, abandonment is the key to innovation—both because it frees the necessary resources and because it stimulates the search for the new that will replace the old (p. 143, Managing for Results).”  See also, How to Make Next Steps Easier to Choose and Purposeful Abandonment: Prerequisite to Innovation.

What do you think?  Have a question?  Want to argue? You can click here to jump into the conversation.

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2 Comments

  1. Sam Marutzky on January 20, 2014 at 5:52 am

    Thanks Mark. Those 5 questions get at what needs to change to produce new/different results. I like it. I spend too Mich time thinking about the problem and not finding a solution.



  2. markchowell on January 20, 2014 at 2:46 pm

    Glad you found them helpful! I use them frequently.

    mark