Seeing the forest through the trees

Seeing the forest through the trees

I am so wrapped up in the day-to-day activities of my business that I don’t get around to working on the big picture. We’re not seeing the forest through the trees. How much of a problem is this, really? After all, I love the work we do and I’m really good at it.

Thoughts of the day: A business needs more than the work it does. An owner has an obligation to the business, to ensure that it stays around to continue doing what it does to serve the needs of its customers and employees. By organizing and overseeing the business you can also ensure you get to do the work you want to do long into the future.

Trapped in a linear thinking mode?

A business needs a mission, a direction, and someone evaluating and guiding its progress. An owner who is head-down in the business cannot do a good job steering the business.

Setting up a business, getting the first customers, and hiring the first employee can be game-changing for anyone. To ensure the business thrives, its owner has to be heads-up, looking at and evaluating the challenges and opportunities, deliberately steering around problems, and charting a modified or altogether new course when and where needed.

Operating a business is a contact sport, with outside influences coming at the business all the time. To thrive, an owner has to organize the players, consider different moves, and anticipate what comes next. It’s hard to do that when wrapped up in the day-to-day, focused only on how to perform the next task.

Seeing through the forest

Defining where you’re taking the business doesn’t have to be complicated. The following examples might get you started on your own set of goals.

  • Each year we challenge the company to grow at 10 to 15 percent, becoming 1 to 2 points more profitable than the previous year.
  • Strive to increase the number of customers, the value of products/services, our efficiency, and accuracy.
  • Look for great customers who challenge us to grow and provide us with the highest profit. Customers who respect and value what we do.
  • Work with all customers to help them become great ones. Weed out the ones who cannot or will not understand and value the contribution we can make to their world.
  • As coworkers, we respect each other. Different viewpoints and approaches lead to better solutions.
  • Boost each other up, encourage education and personal development. As each individual learns and grows, so does the company.
  • Work as teams to solve problems. Identify opportunities. Implement best practices in all that we do.
  • We value productivity and seek to eliminate waste throughout the business.
  • Anticipate and prepare for a future that can be significantly different from the present.
  • The fruits of our labor result in a business that provides for the well-being of our employees, their families, shareholders. Now and into the future.

See the big picture

It’s the owner’s job to know if the business is on track and to make adjustments if it’s not. Failure rates in small businesses suggest that owners who avoid this obligation doom their businesses to an early death — in which case they, the owners, no longer get to do what they love best.

Sketch out your long-term goals. Include growth, profit, and stability. Then form a team to chart the course that leads to those long—term goals. Share the load and your job gets even easier, providing more time for you to do more of what you love doing.

Looking for a good book? Try “Productivity Unleashed: How to Achieve Any Goal in 7 Minutes A Day — Goal Setting Reinvented,” by Mark Messick.