"If you spend your time waiting to see when something might happen, you probably won't be ready for it when it actually happens!"
Futurist Jim Carroll
Global Futurist. Artificial Intelligence & Disruptive Trends Keynote Speaker. Specializes in CEO/CxO leadership meetings & events. Booked by clients like Disney, World Bank, Mercedes Benz, NASA, Pfizer
The blog post?How much time of an average life is spent waiting? features some pretty depressing statistics:
"According to a Timex survey, Americans wait:
In other words, we spent about 6 months of our entire lives waiting for things!
But a lot of that involves uncontrollable, involuntary waiting - it's not our fault when we are stuck on hold with a customer service representative waiting for some help. (By the way, that's estimated to take up about 43 days of our life!)
It's the?controllable waiting?for which we are at fault: the indecision that drives us, the decisions we defer, the actions we don't take, the initiative we forgo - all because we are waiting to see what might happen before taking action. The impact of that inaction is that we develop a mindset of not moving forward because we want to wait to see what happens. We start suffering from?aggressive indecision. But in a fast-moving world, that usually means we aren't busy preparing for what might happen - and so we aren't ready when it happens!
Unnecessary waiting usually doesn't end well - there are many examples of what happens when companies wait for the future to unfold. I asked Microsoft's new Bing AI to provide me with a few:
Can you give me actual corporate examples of bad waiting decisions with company names and details?
(By the way, send me feedback - I'm waiting to see if using an AI for some of the research and preparation of my Daily Inspiration post is a good idea or bad idea. I'll wait.)
Those all seem rather tech-oriented, so I probed a bit further. Bing gave me a few more answers.
What is the most significant example of 'bad waiting' in corporate history?
There is no definitive answer to this question, as different sources may have different criteria and opinions on what constitutes a bad waiting decision in corporate history. However, based on some of the web search results, here are some possible candidates:
(Also, another question. How should I cite A.I. answers and content in my posts? Does anyone have any definitive guidance? I'll wait to find out what you have to say!)
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Here's the problem with waiting - you can't just 'wait and see'?your way into the future. Think about what we might do day to day if we let a culture of 'active indecision' seep into our culture:
We wait.
No doubt sometimes waiting makes sense - we might need to get more information to assess the real risks and benefits of moving forward. Once again, I asked Bing for a few examples:
"Here are some actual corporate examples of good waiting decisions with company names and details:
Ok, so sometimes there is 'good waiting!'
But that's not always the case - I've seen many innovation and leadership failures as a result of waiting, particularly with the events I did with?Motorola. Waiting can lead to costly mistakes because we miss out on significant opportunities. Not only that, it means that we aren't investing in gaining the necessary experience - what I call?experiential capital?- so that we are ready when the trend actually begins to crystallize and become significant.
The art of waiting always involved a tradeoff, a pause between acting and not acting. But we need to be aware of an overreliance on waiting. We can't wait around to take on this potential leadership miscalculation.
I couldn't wait to ask Bing about the art of waiting.
Oh.
Ok, stop waiting.
Futurist Jim Carroll isn't very good at waiting. His wife will tell you that he drives her crazy when they are on the road and he is waiting to go on stage and is displaying remarkable impatience.
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1 年Well Said.