Creating a Legacy
Image by Joel Moysuh

Creating a Legacy

Creating a Legacy???

It’s Friday, June 16th – for anyone with an interest in sport, an auspicious day. The start of the Ashes. Will we see a repeat of England’s famous win in 2005? Or will it be another drubbing? Australia looks ominously strong…

This week though, I’m deserting the forward defensive (showing my age there…) and the ramp in favour of the ruck and maul and making the short hop of 11,337 miles from Edgbaston to Eden Park in Auckland.

Why? Because Eden Park is one of the grounds where the?All Blacks?play their home games – and this week, I’ve been reading?Legacy: 15 Lessons in Leadership.?Simply put, what the All Blacks ‘can teach us about the business of life.’

And being successful…

Throughout this blog, I’ve often drawn parallels between sports and business. In my experience, no sport is better for that than rugby. In cricket,?one inspired spell?can change a game: in football,?a wonder goal

One or two outstanding players can dominate school and junior rugby matches: but by the time you reach the international level, they’re?all?outstanding. It’s a team game – and no team has been more successful than the All Blacks.

So – like the?elusive scrum-half I was?– I’ve weaved in and out of the book, picking out the highlights and hopefully drawing parallels with the business world.??

Let’s start with a fundamental truth.?No one is bigger than the team?– a collection of talented individuals without personal discipline will ultimately and inevitably fail.’ The same is true in business – substitute ‘leadership and vision’ for ‘personal discipline’, and the sentence makes perfect sense. However talented your team is, if there is no one to bring them together to give direction and goals, the business will ultimately not succeed.

But the job of a real leader is bigger than that. It’s also about?character. Yes, a leader’s job is to lead. It’s to set out the vision and say, ‘Follow me.’ But it also shows you’re not too big to do the?small?things. In the All Blacks’ philosophy ‘to sweep the sheds:’ leave the changing rooms as they found them, even after the biggest wins. The arithmetic is simple: performance = capability + behaviour. In sports, in business, and in life.

Possibly my favourite section of the book might have the definitive word on building a team – and I know at least one TAB franchisee who’ll be vigorously nodding his head.?Whanau: it translates simply as ‘no dickheads.’ They don’t want prima-donnas, however talented. It’s a team game with one simple goal. How many times have we seen it in other sports? ‘He’s tough to manage, but he’s indispensable.’ Then suddenly, he’s injured – and the team is better and more successful. That’s the measure of leadership: is the whole greater than the sum of its parts? In every successful business I’ve seen, the answer is a resounding ‘yes.’

Marginal gains. If I had a pound for every time I’ve mentioned marginal gains… I could probably buy a new driver. Sadly an area of my golf game where marginal rough is more appropriate than marginal gains…

But whether it is Dave Brailsford – mentioned so often that I won’t even post a link – the Japanese philosophy of?Kaizen?or the All Blacks’ relentless drive to improve (Kiwi Kaizen?), the underlying message is the same. The aggregate result of many small changes can be staggering: it can transform your life, business, and bottom line.

Pressure. We’ve all faced pressure, and we’ve all made mistakes under pressure. ‘Embrace it, control it’, say the All Blacks – above all, switch from your result-orientated, aggressive, anxious ‘red head’ to your calm, clear, accurate ‘blue head.’ Alternatively, don’t deal with problems on your own (redhead): bring them to a TAB board meeting, where you’ll benefit from not one but half a dozen blueheads. And not a whanau amongst them…

The book has one simple, overarching message.?Do the right thing: it’s been a recurrent theme throughout this blog and in the book. It’s not what the All Blacks do; it’s who they are and what they stand for. I believe that if your core values are right – in business and life – then the results will inevitably follow. It sounds too simple – almost a cliché – but in my experience, it is always true.

No blog post or article about the All Blacks is complete without a mention of Colin Meads, the legendary sheep farmer, lock forward and skipper of the team who – so the story has it – trained by putting a sheep under each arm and?running up a mountain. Fifty quid a month for a gym membership? I can be in the Dales by this afternoon…



Michelle Mook

Building happy and productive workplaces ?? Developing high performing leaders, teams and individuals ?? Supporting business across Yorkshire and the Humber ?? Inspirational speaker

1 年

I love this book so much Ed, I remember when I first read it thinking how it describes everything that we think is important when building a great culture in business - I’ve always thought the “No dickheads” policy was spot on! Thanks for sharing ??

Richard Few F.ISP

Founder & Chief Geek at Sales Geek │ Changing The Way The World Perceives Sales | One Lung Ultra Marathoner | Insider 42 under 42 | Rugby Geek | Below Average Dad Dancer

1 年

It is my favourite book Ed, great read! ??

回复
Steve Cook

Business Coaching & Mentoring | SME Business Consultant | Tab Peer Board Facilitator

1 年

Great post Ed, need to add that book to my list I think

Ryan Armitage QFP

Creating and Supporting the Tezlom ???? Healthcare Recruitment Franchise Network ?? Podcast host ???

1 年

Oliver Beaumont

回复
Ryan Armitage QFP

Creating and Supporting the Tezlom ???? Healthcare Recruitment Franchise Network ?? Podcast host ???

1 年

I’ve not read this book but I’m definitely ordering it. Love this blog Ed. It’s definitely about a legacy for me.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Ed Reid QFP的更多文章

  • TAB Internationally – looking ahead to 2024

    TAB Internationally – looking ahead to 2024

    Thank you! A strange way to open a blog, but that was the resounding feeling I had when our annual conference closed…

    3 条评论
  • VAR in Business: The weight of decision-making

    VAR in Business: The weight of decision-making

    Well. It’s official.

    1 条评论
  • Autumn Statement 2023: The plan is working (apparently)

    Autumn Statement 2023: The plan is working (apparently)

    Jeremy Hunt opened the Autumn Statement in a jovial mood. “It’s my wife’s birthday today,” he cheerfully claimed.

    2 条评论
  • India the Superpower

    India the Superpower

    Has there ever been a more dominant performance on the world stage? New Zealand in the 2011 Rugby World Cup? Brazil at…

    9 条评论
  • Optimism – with a Dash of Scrutiny

    Optimism – with a Dash of Scrutiny

    Where do we start this week? Sadly, with the Lionesses’ heroic failure on Sunday morning. If you’d told me a few years…

    1 条评论
  • Why the Boss Should get his Hands Dirty

    Why the Boss Should get his Hands Dirty

    A small miracle occurred last week. I walked off a golf course satisfied – nay, pleased – with my round.

    2 条评论
  • Big Companies are Too Big

    Big Companies are Too Big

    First of all, thank you. As many of you will know, it was my birthday on Sunday.

    6 条评论
  • The Men in the Arena

    The Men in the Arena

    Let’s stop celebrating England’s win at Headingley for a moment, and cast our minds back to Lords and the 2nd Test…

    1 条评论
  • Ben Stokes’ Wager – and what it means for Entrepreneurs

    Ben Stokes’ Wager – and what it means for Entrepreneurs

    Let me start this week by introducing you to two rather different characters. Benjamin Andrew Stokes, current captain…

    5 条评论
  • Deep Work: Laser Focus

    Deep Work: Laser Focus

    I was chatting to a friend over the Bank Holiday weekend. A previous news junkie, he confessed that he no longer…

    14 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了