Leadership and Manure
Just as a successful garden requires preparation and the right conditions to thrive, true leadership is about cultivating an environment where innovation and growth can flourish.
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Just as a successful garden requires preparation and the right conditions to thrive, true leadership is about cultivating an environment where innovation and growth can flourish.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Cascading communication is like a flawed game of telephone: everybody hears a message, but did they hear the right message?
Posted by Will Sansbury
Great leaders don’t just react to exceptions—they redesign systems to prevent them. Progress comes from refining workflows, not just playing whack-a-mole with disruptions.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Authentic leadership isn’t just about being genuine—it’s about being humane. Leaders must balance their authority with empathy, bridging the gap between their humanity and the power they hold.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Save those encouraging notes and emails in a 'For Bad Days' folder. When imposter syndrome hits, pull it out and let those kind words remind you that you are great at what you do.
Posted by Will Sansbury
How I've learned to protect time for deep thinking and doing
Posted by Will Sansbury
Many leaders view their job as creating thrust behind the organization (read: "sense of urgency"). I don't see it that way.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Every leader should prioritize the power of language in their interactions. Using phrases that convey vulnerability, openness, and empathy can transform a team's culture.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Even in the face of disheartening transformations, the connections forged and the values instilled continue to ripple through time, reminding us that our legacies are built in the space between human beings.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Great leaders know when to embrace uncertainty outside their teams but prioritize creating clear paths and shared goals within, ensuring everyone moves forward together.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Leadership is built on beliefs, lessons, and experiences—big and small—that shape how we guide others. Here’s a collection of truths I hold about leading people, from embracing imperfection to cultivating clarity, empathy, and courage.
Posted by Will Sansbury
People's names matter, and it's worth taking the time to get them right.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Declaring calendar bankruptcy every now and then is a good thing.
Posted by Will Sansbury
Buying our first house was a dream come true, but it quickly turned into a costly lesson about ignoring problems. What we thought was an insurmountable expense turned out to be a simple solution, teaching me the importance of recognizing and challenging limiting beliefs.
Posted by Will Sansbury
When my son gamed our potty-training system to maximize cartoons, I realized something: measuring the wrong thing drives the wrong behavior. The same is true in software development—if we focus solely on output, we risk missing the outcomes that truly matter.
Posted by Will Sansbury
While most people settle for the first workable solution, designers dig deeper, exploring a multitude of ideas and embracing risk. This is their superpower.
Posted by Will Sansbury
The tension between designers, developers, and product managers often feels like a struggle for dominance—but what if that tension is the key to building great products?
Posted by Will Sansbury
Just as a successful garden requires preparation and the right conditions to thrive, true leadership is about cultivating an environment where innovation and growth can flourish.
Here’s a random story and thought from my drive into the office today, likely sparked from my current audio book, Humanocracy: Creating Organizations as Amazing as the People Inside Them by Gary Hammel and Michele Zanini.
My wife and I have long desired to cultivate fresh vegetables for our family. We’ve tried numerous times. One year, we put a few small pots out with tomato seedlings, which promptly withered and died in the Georgia summer sun.
The next year, we cleared a plot of our yard, lightly tilled it, and planted seeds. Some of those seeds sprouted, and we got a handful of undersized bell peppers, but nothing like the cornucopia of garden-fresh vegetables that we dreamed about.
Several more years went by with no attempt until my wife finally decided she was going to make it happen. She did a ton of research and learned about “square foot gardening.” She learned how to amend our soil, the benefits of a raised bed, and how cultivating some plants next to others would help both thrive. That year, every dinner featured fresh vegetables from our garden. Once we learned that the success of a garden laid in preparations, not in the act of planting seeds, we were successful.
Many leaders fail to understand this at times. We chase things like innovation, team member morale, or growth without ever realizing that those things are emergent properties. You can’t achieve those results without first creating the conditions for them to thrive.
True leadership is in the back-breaking work of tilling the earth and slinging manure—doing the work that creates the conditions for good things to grow.
In the spirit of the famous Edward R. Murrow radio series featuring ordinary Americans sharing the things they believe to be absolutely true, I want to capture some of the ideas...
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