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High Ten. Martin RooneyЧитать онлайн книгу.

High Ten - Martin Rooney


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      “What do you mean?”

      “When we met,” replied Brian, “you said you ‘own' Stamina. As CEO, your job isn't to own Stamina, it's to lead it. You're the leader, so the culture is your responsibility. And getting your culture right will produce your most valuable asset – ownership by your people! Your job isn't creating software. It's creating your culture first. Problems have happened because it's the last thing on your mind.”

      “You're right,” said Sam. “I haven't been a leader. And I definitely haven't designed the culture I'd like to have. Thanks. This really helped.”

      “You bet!”

      “Good. Meet me at Arthur's this Friday at 9 a.m. You know the place?”

      “Who doesn't?” replied Sam.

      “Exactly,” said Brian, “and I won't waste your time. Investing in culture will be your best investment.”

      “I wanna be up front,” said Sam. “As for investing, we don't have a budget for consulting.”

      “Don't worry about money … you can afford my coffee and bagel, right?”

      “Yeah, I can cover that,” laughed Sam.

      “Then you got yourself a culture coach, kid.”

       Head Football Coach

      “Knock, knock,” called Brian. “Is the new head coach around?”

      “Hey, Coach!” exclaimed Marcus seated at his desk. “He's around, but he should be out recruiting.”

      As Brian removed his coat, he examined the new look of his old office.

      Marcus said, “Glad you're here, Coach. You're the first to see. What do you think?”

      Brian silently looked at photos, trophies, and rings from Marcus's career as a player and coach. The walls were filled with an impressive collection of his football history.

      “Looks like you wanna be somewhere else.”

      “What?” Marcus answered in surprise. “I put a lot of time into this.”

      “I'm sure – and more time into attaining these accomplishments. But how you've set up this room won't set up your team to win. Lemme sit down before you get worked up. I've got a present that'll help.”

      “Merry Christmas, kid,” Brian said as he placed a gold-painted brick on Marcus's desk.

      “What's with the brick?”

      “It's not what's with it,” answered Brian. “It's what's on it. A brick's a brick. But this one's special. It was given to me when I got my first head coaching job. Now I'm giving it to you.”

      “Is it a doorstop?”

      “It's not a stop, it's a start. This brick's the cornerstone of what you'll build here. I brought this brick to remind you of two important questions, but after seeing your office, you'll have three questions to answer to turn this team around. Pick up the brick and I'll give you those questions.”

      “Do I have to hold it?” smiled Marcus.

      “Indulge me.”

      Marcus reluctantly picked up the golden brick and Brian continued, “Now you're ready. The first question is, ‘Am I knocking down the brick walls my players and coaches have built around themselves?' And the second is, ‘Am I the coach my people would run through a brick wall for?'”

      Marcus realized the challenges ahead.

      Brian continued, “This brick's to remind you before you build a strong offense here that it's more important to build strong relationships. Without them, your team'll be challenged to win, even with great players. To build those relationships, you'll need a special kind of glue. And that glue's what the third question's about.”

      “I only used those two questions when I coached. But after touring the ‘Marcus Chase Memorial,' there's one more question you must ask before the other two. If you don't get that answer right, the other answers don't matter.”

      “The Marcus Chase Memorial? Ha! What's the question?”

      “Okay,” replied Brian. “The third question is, ‘Am I the best representative of our culture?'”

      “What's that mean?”

      “Look at the walls,” Brian began. “It's obvious you were a great football player. And this stuff proves you're a football coach too. But it's time to be a great culture coach. Like coaching requires you to be more excited about someone else than yourself, this job requires you to be more excited about your culture than yourself. Look around. I see you and your history, but one thing's sure…. I don't see much about the culture you want. Especially the colors. If that brick's gonna be the cornerstone of your culture, everything in this room should be built upon it and match. I'm not saying this stuff isn't cool, but it should be in your home.”

      “Does everything have to go?”

      “No,” Brian replied. “Some things like the team photos and bowl ring when you played here are great. They're part of your connection to this school. But most of this stuff doesn't connect. That's not why kids'll want to come here. A head coach can't look confused where he is … or where he wants to be.”

      “Correct,” beamed Brian. “And don't forget one more thing about culture….”

      “What's that?”

      “It isn't just the culture you create for them. Yes, your culture has to be deliberate, but for it to be something they want to belong to, you'll have to create parts of it with them too.”

      Marcus scanned the room. “Thanks, Coach. Looks like I've gotta change the color scheme, huh?”

      “It's not just the colors you see. Culture begins with the way you see yourself. Until you see yourself as a culture coach more than a former player, you won't coach for culture. Remember, the culture must flow through your veins before it will flow through your team. If you cut your wrist, it should bleed gold and blue.”

      Marcus stared at the brick.

      “Yeah,” said Brian, “people will measure your program according to the ‘buy-in' of your team. That's a culture paradox, because buy-in never happens without the leader taking ownership first. Ownership's demonstrated by everything you do. Down to the colors of these walls.”

      “Geez,” said Marcus. “Would've been easier to stay defensive coordinator.”

      “Yes,


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