Jun01

They Didn’t Pay Me to Think Then — But They Do Now

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When I Got My First Big Job

Thirty some years ago I started working for a Fortune 500 Corporation. I was the first female sales trainee in Chicago and the second in the nation. I was about five years out of college and ready for a real career. I smart, savvy, quick on my feet, great at presentations, and strong on building relationships. I was also the youngest and the quickest to pick up the new computer system. Let me tell you, I was pleased with myself and they were pleased with me too.

Then three or four months into my tenure a reorganization occurred. I was offered a choice I was unprepared for. I could stay in Chicago knowing that my job would probably be phased out by the end of the year or I could take a transfer to a new city where I’d have a territory of my own.
I was 27 years old. My mother had died nine months earlier. The move would put me four hours further from my 72-year-old father who was living alone.

Even in those glory days of great corporate training, a few months learning in a seasonal business of complex relationships is no learning time at all. I’d hardly learned what business we were in or how to talk to a client. I was more trainee than sales rep. I couldn’t spell the word “close,” let alone design a multi-store deal with major client.

Yet, I said yes I would go, though in my heart and every cell of my body I knew the right answer was no.

Part of it was moving to the next step on the success path, part of it was never having failed at anything, part of it was thinking this was what “the company wanted” and that what I thought didn’t count. I hadn’t thought through the risk or the reality. I hadn’t thought through whether I had the skills or the will to do the job. I was simply doing what we learned in school – do what the teacher says and it will work out.

I negotiated a nice deal. I kept my condo in Chicago. They paid for my new apartment in the best neighborhood. I moved down to that city and into a huge showroom with a separate office downtown where I worked alone. I was a business person now. I paid my office rent. I bought my samples that sat on the shelves. I booked my meetings, took my orders, and for six weeks twice a year, I packed my car and drove to hotel rooms that 13 sample cases and I called home.

I came face to face with who I was and who I wasn’t. I didn’t figure out what I’d loved about my job in Chicago until it was gone. I didn’t figure out what I needed to do this new one until I didn’t have it. I longed for someone to teach me and someone to be with me, but the guy who had been there before me had moved on. The information didn’t feed me. The competition depleted me. The lack of people and feedback made me feel small, lost, and alone.

I missed the thinking and connecting of ideas. I missed interactions with people and the relationship building that are so much of who I am. I missed being part of something that wasn’t just me. Everything about me has always been a teacher, a community builder, and a designer of ideas. I did my best to pretend I was happy, but I hated my job and I didn’t like myself for doing it badly.

Soon enough it was obvious that the move was a bad choice all around. I learned a lot about what works and doesn’t work for me at the expense of a territory that went nowhere. Luckily a bad economy covered some of what I’d not done.

And I’m grateful to that Fortune 500 company who saw the situation for what it was and who generously moved me back home.

Stories Like That Happen Every Day

My story was expensive for me and for my company. Every day, I hear stories of how many of us learned to be leaders on someone else’s path. A little too ready to fit ourselves into the job description set out without thought to what we already are or are suited to be.

Thirty years ago, I didn’t have the wisdom, the courage, the leadership to think through that first decision and to answer with what I already knew – that I should have said no.

They didn’t pay me to think then, but they do now.

Now I see what I see and know what I know — and I’ve figured out what I add. The rest is about aligning goals to build something together that we can’t build alone.

Still the start of it all was going down the wrong road to learn that…

our best strengths, talents, and skills often seem easy because they are naturally ours and
we often don’t recognize our best strengths, talents, and skills until we can’t use them.

Inside our successes is the key to our path. Inside each of them is what we naturally do well.
Look at your successes to see what you see and know what you know about yourself.

When you name it and claim it other folks will recognize and value it.

What comes so naturally to you that you’re not yourself if you’re not doing it?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz on your business!!

 

  • http://cmsexpo.net/ CMS Expo

    Leadership training is a longtail investment for all concerned, but clarity doesn’t come cheap.

  • http://www.doitmyselfblog.com GlendaWH

    Great insight, Liz. Sometimes we need to go through the yuck to gain the clarity.

    For me, it is writing, even though I may not be the most eloquent writer on the planet. If I don’t write for a few days, I get irritable – if you can imagine that. Although, thinking about it now, I wonder if its writing or creating that does it.

    Liz, thank sharing you story.

  • http://www.successful-blog.com Liz Strauss

    Hi John,
    I think nothing can prepare us but life itself. :)

  • http://www.successful-blog.com Liz Strauss

    Hi Glenda,
    If learning were easy, everyone would be doing more of it!

    Writing is thinking made visible, but sometimes we have to sit and reflect with our thoughts to understand what we’ve learned before we can write what we think. :)

  • http://www.doitmyselfblog.com GlendaWH

    “Writing is thinking made visible” – I like that, Liz.

    And yes, sometimes the words need to simmer before they are ready. That is why I need to stay in bed late some mornings. I’m not lazy, I’m thinking! And that isn’t possible to do with a 9-to-5 – something I’ve learned about myself.

  • Milena

    Excellent article!Great insight,Liz. I feel the same way most of time.You captured that  process where we make our decisions,I was thinking :o hh how do you know me?I have that mix of natural talents that I cannot put into words:educator/advocate….creativity,flexibility,idea generating,connectedness …In fact I have never  put these skills and talents to the full potential,and I have worked hard most of my life earning prestigious degrees without finding myself completely.
    Thanks for your wonderful insights again.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Сергей-Ермаков/1179133287 Сергей Ермаков

    When I ask God for answers to their questions, he never fails. He sends people. I am glad that I learned about you, Liz!

  • http://www.successful-blog.com/1/get-off-the-bus-and-head-toward-true-north-with-burning-desire/ Get Off the Bus and Head Toward True North With Burning Desire | Liz Strauss at Successful Blog

    [...] Once I even said yes when the right answer was no. [...]

  • Anonymous

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  • Anonymous

    What a great story Liz – heartily enjoyed reading that! Thanks for taking the time to blog, and glad you’re getting the recognition you deserve…… Be lovely to chat some more. 

  • Anonymous

    You had me nodding in agreement, Liz. I am now working from my spare bedroom and often feel  ”small, lost, and alone.” Your post, particularly the last question, has given me something to think about. :)   

  • http://www.successful-blog.com Liz Strauss

    We all have those moments. It’s how we respond to them that counts. :)

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