How "Grow"? Became a Four-Letter Word

How "Grow" Became a Four-Letter Word

“Grow just means more work for me and more rewards for you.”

That’s an increasing lament from practitioners to principals across our industry.

What went wrong and, more importantly, how can we fix this?

There are many great reasons to grow as an organization, and here are four reasons I think most people can get behind on our teams and in our firms:

1.      To stay in business. On a very basic level, projects don’t last forever. No matter how great a project is, it eventually comes to an end.  We need to grow in terms of projects and clients just to replace the ones we have.

2.      To create advancement opportunities.  If we want to attract and retain great talent, we need to provide career growth and development opportunities. To do so, we need to grow beyond just the “replacement projects” that keep everyone busy. We need sufficient additional new growth to allow talent to “stretch” and take on new roles.

3.      To make a difference.  Whether through a well-defined mission, vision, or set of core values, we want to make an impact. We want to solve problems and create new opportunities through our work and success and, if we’re really good, feel compelled – and even a moral obligation – to help as many clients, people, and communities as possible.

4.      To create jobs and leave a legacy.  We want to employ and develop as many great people as possible who, through our work, have an opportunity to support themselves and their families and to contribute to our greater good and society overall.

Where does this begin to breakdown?

First, most leaders and leadership teams haven’t taken the time to reflect on their reasons to grow and, once understood, articulate them to others.

“There are many great reasons to grow as an organization and I think, as leaders and leadership teams, we need to periodically reflect on them ourselves and then do a better job articulating them to others.” –Peter C. Atherton, PE


Question: What are your reasons to grow? How have they changed or evolved, and what does that growth mean to you and others both inside and beyond your organization?

Creating the conditions for more welcomed and sustainable growth will require greater investment and better results in the following key areas:

Unity

Do you have an attractive, engaging, inspiring and widely embraced mission, vision, and set of core values? Do you have a diverse enough group of stakeholders? Have you defined “winning” on individual, team, and organizational levels that results from growth? If not, how can we make the adjustments needed to get us all on the same page and excited about “more”.

Capacity Building

Burnout, overwhelm, and related disengagement continues to limit our growth. Continuously putting more “on the plates” of others without specific processes and systems to increase production while maintaining and enhancing the quality of our work – and increasing our opportunities for success – adds stress, inefficiency, and ineffectiveness.

There’s a major cost to inaction. “Hoping” that things will just work out and providing “lip-service” about change erodes our ability to succeed. Taking action to build individual, team, and organizational capacity is the only way to stop the erosion, better attract and engage talent, and increase firm value.

Building our capacity requires the development of better processes and systems and more strategic training, development, and onboarding. Both “hard” and “soft” skills are needed to manage and succeed through growth and our changing times. These investments can also help us to scale and even move us into the development of “products”, as well as better position us to take advantage of the emerging professional freelancer and independent contractor gig-economy. Investing in such capacity allows us to flex our business model to better leverage our knowledge and add more specialized skills and well-qualified production capacity on-demand with little to no cost.

Strategic Focus

How does our current and future growth fit into our organization’s near and long-term success and impact strategy? Where specifically is our growth leading us?

A well-designed, communicated, and embraced strategic plan is key to connecting our growth and business strategies to other critical new era success elements related to culture, diversity, innovation, and sustainability. Together, they establish and maintain the framework for success.

Certainly, one or a handful of people can help initiate and maintain growth for a while, but in order to truly sustain and scale it, we need others: other leaders, managers, and virtually all other employees in our organization supporting our growth initiatives.

“Certainly, one or a handful of people can help initiate and maintain growth for a while, but in order to truly sustain and scale growth, you’ll need others.” –Peter C. Atherton, PE


It is up to leaders and leadership teams to create the conditions for growth. One way to do so is to purposefully and proactively “A.C.T.” in terms of:

1.      Having “Authenticity” in a desire for strategic and sustainable growth benefiting as many stakeholders as possible.  

2.      Truly investing in “Capacity” development at individual, team, and organizational levels.

3.      Being committed to “Triggering” new action to meet current needs while continuously positioning ourselves for the better future of our choosing in line with our greatest capabilities.

Here are some additional links and more in-depth resources to help you grow:

Why Your Mission, Vision, and Values Matter (in less than 20 minutes)

Employee Engagement

Increasing and Maximizing the Value of Your Firm

Designing Better Processes and Systems

Ideal Learning and Development Strategies

Scaling Your Business

Productization and Flexible Business Models

Effective Strategic Planning

Please reach out to me too if you’d like to discuss more about new era growth and outline strategies that can work best for you and your organization.

To your winning, Pete

PS – Do you want to learn how to excel and prevent burnout in you and your organization? Check out relevant and important chapters of my book “Reversing Burnout” for FREE by clicking HERE

PSS – Are you a leader who wants to stay relevant and effective and help your firm grow and prosper? Check out the AEC Leadership Today Podcast designed exclusively for you HERE!  

Bryon McCartney

Architects, I Help Your Firm Attract & Win Dream Projects | Architect Business Coach | Branding & Marketing Strategist | Founder/CEO of Archmark | Empowering 3,000+ Architects to Build Their Marketing Success

4 年

Great stuff Peter, thanks for calling this out. In our work, if a potential client says they do not want to grow, then we probably don’t want them as a client, it’s a red flag for us. Growth provides opportunities for you and your team. Think about that software upgrade you need, or that training you promised for your team, or that re-branding you wanted to do to reflect changes in your firm. Growth is necessary, it’s a simple act of survival and sustainability.

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