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Culture Code: Creating a Company you Love

December 10, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

A colleague recently forwarded to me the HubSpot Culture Code. It is a voluminous slide deck about a company that is continually and tirelessly working on creating an organization they love. Because HubSpot values transparency as well as inbound marketing, (e.g. appealing to and attracting dream customers), they have shared this with the community at large. Who wouldn’t read this document and say, That’s where I want to work!

Like the company, the culture code is a work in progress.  There are 10 guiding precepts, which can easily be shaped into a set of Simple Rules. With all due respect, I have distilled the following from their list, which are applicable for many organizations, communities and teams.

I’d venture to say that HubSpot is conducting its own ongoing Radical Inquiry and knows exactly who they are, what is important, and how they want to connect with others.

HubSpot Simple Rules:

  • Value metrics AND mission.
  • Radically pursue transparency.
  • Invest in mastery for the individual and the whole; value for the greater whole.
  • Speak the truth and face the facts.
  • Never stop learning, growing, and seeking the possibilities.

What do you think?hubspot

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

If I Had a Hammer – Only

December 5, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

How many times have you heard the old saw,  If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail?

Well, sometimes all you have IS a hammer, as writer/contributor TJ McCue noted in a recent piece in Forbes.  If that is the case, you’d better make the most of it.  And what he suggested seemed to me like a smart and sensible short list of simple rules, applicable in myriad situations.

  • Become a sculptor.  A sculptor is someone who shapes, molds, or fashions, especially with artistry or precision. Shift your current perspective to create something special, new and innovative, conceiving a different pattern around you. Be sure to let your passion in.
  • Break things. Every now and then it is a good idea to be disruptive, intrusive, take part in creative conflict and smash the status quo. Ideas and perspectives will collide; new patterns will emerge. What a great way to get unstuck.
  • Make noise. Speak up – yell if necessary – if you have something important to say. In order to ‘bang some sense’ into someone’s head and get them to listen, you may need to make a racket in order to capture their attention and imagination.
  • Carry it on your belt. Let your intentions and beliefs be not only visible but transparent as well.  In addition, be prepared to be asked, answer, share, tout, explore, discuss and discover with others what it is you see, understand, and are ready to act upon. Isn’t that the point?hammer2

 

Like any tool or rule, you must use it wisely.  And it must fit with who you are, what’s important to you, and how you want to connect with others in the world.

If I had a hammer … well, what do YOU think?

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

Lighthouse Montessori School, Seattle, WA

December 4, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

Here at Lighthouse Montessori School, our global community models compassion and peaceful conflict resolution. We cherish the growth and self-creation of our children. This is the world we want to create and the world that we work for every day.

Our Simple Rules lead to congruence in complex systems, like Schools. These are the rules that guide our decisions.

  • Hear all voices.  This is about listening and really hearing
  • Sit on your hands.  When we are tempted to do something for someone that they can do for themselves, we will stop ourselves, even if it means sitting on our hands!
  • Ask for help, even if you don’t need it.  We believe asking for help creates trust & community whether it’s asking a child to help us wash the dishes, or asking a parent to help us in a bake sale.
  • Aim for growth.  Growth of the child, growth of the school, growth of ourselves…
  • See the child who is and the child who will be.  Montessori believed that the job of guides is to both meet the child where she is but also to see the child not yet there and clear a pathway for her to bloom. We agree!

 

Filed Under: Living Simple Rules

I.P.R., Ohio, US

November 30, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

Learning to deal with and overcoming adversity is what makes us who we are. Every challenge and every difficulty we successfully confront serves to strengthen our will, confidence and ability to conquer future obstacles. One example of how simple rules can help comes from a colleague of mine, I.P.R. She is a coach, consultant, author and advocate.

“I have set some simple rules for myself personally as I continue to recover from cancer and complete my divorce.

  • Get healthy
  • Get business
  • Stay connected

The last one is somewhat important for me because I have a tendency to isolate myself in difficult times.  This prompts me to put effort into staying connected with others in a larger sense, and in a more focused sense it helps me to overlook little irritants with my daughter to maintain our relationship while we both go through this life change.  AND, I still need to make a living.”

 

Filed Under: Living Simple Rules

Simple Rules for Solopreneurs

November 10, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

I recently read an online post on the joys and challenges of being a solopreneur, e.g. an individual who works alone running their own business. As someone who has managed their own company for over 10 years, I recognize there are pros and cons to every work situation. No matter your work environment, there are days you love it and days you loathe it.  The good news is that whether your workplace is a small business (your own or someone else’s), a large corporation, a public agency, or more specifically, just you in your home office at your computer or on your iPhone, there is an endless supply of resources available with the best tips, advice, dos and don’ts, etc. on how to handle everything from abundant success to zero success.

Based on my own experiences and those of solopreneurs I have coached and mentored, I offer this short list of simple rules for achieving satisfaction in working alone. Maybe they will work for you.

  • Know where you are heading.  Call it a business plan, mission statement, or manifesto; understand what, why and how you are doing what you are doing.
  • Manage yourself, your time and your tasks.  First, if you don’t do it, no one else will. Understand and appreciate what that means. Second, there are myriad opportunities for distraction, procrastination, and dysfunction. Pay attention to how and where you are spending your time. Finally, recognize the end of the work day. Stop and take time to rest, relax and renew.
  • See, reflect and act to support the whole, the individual, and the greater whole. Are the patterns around you the ones that you want for yourself, your business, your family and community? If so, what are you doing to strengthen them. If not, what are you doing to shift them?
  • Connect meaningfully with others. Find opportunities to engage with and take pleasure in relationships with colleagues, peers, customers, family, friends and others, both personally and professionally. Create a balance between working alone and being part of your community.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

Keep Going

November 6, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

Recently, NY Times columnist Bill Keller wrote a piece on John Borling.  Keller talked about the secret poems Borling wrote during his six and a half years as a prisoner of war in Viet Nam; his distinguished military service following his release in 1973; his brief political career; and his later efforts to create change through contributing for the good of all Americans.

This piece has stayed with me for a variety of reasons and includes a range of thoughts and ideas that give me pause.  I can make a number of assumptions about a number of things: strength, tenacity, focus, hope, public service, connection, resilience, community. Beyond that I can – at best – inadequately imagine glimpses of Borling’s experiences.  One thing does come out loud and clear and may be a lesson worth learning for each of us.  Keep Going.  It’s so simple it sounds like a cliché. Still, to keep on keeping on is not an altogether bad idea.  It is actually a lot easier to give up.

I know what Keep Going means for me; it sounds like a great Simple Rule.  What does it mean for you?

Filed Under: Blog

Karin, Baltimore, MD

November 5, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

Karin Hurt is an experienced executive and leadership zealot, challenging leaders to question, experience, grow and succeed.  This short list of simple rules emerged from her work on collaboration and community.

  • Do the best that everyone of us can
  • Have each other’s backs
  • Share the bad, the good and the best
  • Be there
  • Learn, grow and celebrate together

To find out more about Karin check out her blog, Let’s Grow Leaders.

 

Filed Under: Living Simple Rules

Kirk, Atlanta, GA

November 1, 2022 by Simple Rules Foundation

Kirk Weisler is an Entrepreneur, Speaker, Motivator, and Chief Morale Officer.  His passion is to be a catalyst for positive change.  A recent post on his Thought for the Day site, T4D, about simple rules caught my eye and Kirk graciously allowed us to share these with you. Be sure to check out all of Kirk’s posts.

Three Simple Rules for Life:

  • If you don’t GO after what you want, you’ll never have it.
  • If you don’t ASK, the answer will always be NO.
  • If you don’t step forward, you’ll always be in the same place.

Thanks, Kirk!

 

Filed Under: Living Simple Rules

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