I’m on vacation in Hawaii and my hotel happens to be on the top of a little hill. So I go out for my jog, and I’m so proud that I got the gumption to exercise. But, it’s hot and muggy, and I’m a little out of shape so the jog is kind of painful. But I continue to slog through it. Step step step step step. I finally hit my marker point, and then I turn back. Step step step step step. Finally I get close to my hotel and I remember the little hill. It’s tiny, but remember I’m a little out of shape, so up I go…. Step step step step step. I’m a little annoyed- why put this nice hotel at the top of the hill? Just to punish me, I guess. Step step step. I finally get to the entrance of the hotel and I’m tired and worn, and I finish my last steps. I walk up to the hotel entrance with that ugh/blah feeling. All of a sudden, there is a nice man with a big smile and a bright colored Hawaiian shirt walking towards me. He has an ice cold water bottle and a cool rolled-up washcloth in his hands. I wonder if there is a new guest checking in standing behind me, so I turn around but no one is there, but then I realize… it’s for me!!! You can imagine how good I felt! Wow- Now that’s customer experience!

Welcome to my personal blog.  I’ve had a work blog for a number of years, but this is my first time having a personal blog.  Starting a second blog has some of the same excitement as starting your first blog.  This made me do a quick search on how to blog.

There are many very good posts that give advice on how to blog [1, 2].  I enjoy reading these posts and I value the advice.  If I were really serious about blogging properly, I’d probably follow much of the advice.  But this blog is just for fun and I don’t have a specific purpose in mind.  For example, I don’t intend to get rich, market myself, or influence people through my blog.  I just want to have a place to share my thoughts and hear yours.

Here is some blogging advice I do not plan to take:

  • Post regularly. Chances are that my blogging pattern will be bursty, depending on what’s going on in my life and at work. I’ll post what I can when I can, and I know there will be dry spells. Sorry in advance for those!
  • Choose a topic. I don’t have one particular topic in mind. I find many things interesting, so I just plan to share things that I find interesting and want to share.
  • Choose a target audience. I don’t have one target audience in mind. Along with having many interests is having many types of friends. Chances are that different people will be interested in different posts.
  • Be unique. Seems like a strange a thing to strive for.
  • Be focused. See “Choose a topic”.
  • Be interesting. Also seems like a strange thing to strive for. I will write about things that I find interesting and that I hope someone will find interesting, but interesting is in the eyes of the reader. Please let me know if you find a post to be interesting to you.
  • Be responsive. I’ll try to be responsive, but see the comment about bursty in “Post regularly”.
  • Be proactive. This is just for fun.
  • Be available. See “Be responsive” and “Post regularly”.

Here is some blogging advice I plan to take:

  • Be yourself. I’m just me, and I would have a hard time trying to be someone else.
  • Be honest. I think I’m honest.
  • Be approachable. I think I’m usually approachable.
  • Be authentic. I think I’m authentic.
  • Be thankful. I am very thankful.

A blog is not meant to be a one-way form of communication, but it’s meant to be a dialog.  So please leave your comments and your thoughts, no matter how little or big, as the dialogue is the fun of blogging.  Also, your comments will help guide me through my journey of personal blogging.

Finally, thank you for reading this!

I was reading a colleague’s post on work-life balance, where she was referencing Jack Welch’s statement that there is no such thing.

Those who know me would certainly laugh if they knew I was commenting on work-life balance, but I might have one valuable perspective to offer– the perspective of a manager of people who strive for success at work AND success in life. Let me talk about a model that I’ve seen work.

As a manager, I need a team that can deliver results and handle the demands of a fast-paced work environment.  But, work demands do not understand family demands.  Work demands do not understand 40 hour work weeks (or 60 hour work weeks).  Work demands do not understand children’s needs.  Work demands do not understand unexpected illnesses.  In essence, work demands do not understand life demands.

While I don’t know much about work-life balance, I did make one realization about some of my top performers.  Basically, there is the mythical 40 hour work week where you work 8 hours a day 5 days a week forever. While this might work for an average or good performer, but I haven’t seen this work for a top performer.  I find it more realistic to think of a "bursty" work schedule.  There are times when work demands bursts.  There are times when life demands bursts.  As a manager, I have found that my top performers are able to accommodate “work bursts”.  They can spend the extra hours when we’re in a clutch.  They go the extra mile to deliver the work that is needed when it needs to be done.  I see them do acrobatics in their lives to get the job done when the demands are there.  On the other hand, since I know they are doing acrobatics in their lives to accommodate the bursty demands of work, as their manager I feel compelled to do acrobatics to accommodate the bursty demands of their lives. In essence, they have done acrobatics for me, so I do acrobatics for them. Together, we try to achieve success and find balance.  So, work gets taken care of when work demands come flying in, and life gets taken care of when life demands come flying in.  Win-Win!

Now, the problem comes in when work demands and life demands collide. Let’s face it, this happens all the time.  When this collision happens, I find the saving grace to come from the team, in work or in life.  I love it when I have teams that work together to deliver their results, and work together to accommodate each other’s life’s demands.  From my perspective as a manager, the team has hit their deliverables and deadlines on time with high quality work. But, under the covers the team has done acrobatics to cover for each other so that one person could care for a sick child or an ailing parent.  When I see a work team operate this way, I have a big smile inside because I know that this team has bonded in a way that will get them through the toughest demands of work and life.

One thing I should note is that having a team like this at work or in life is not automatic. It takes sustained effort to build the relationships needed for this type of teamwork. It means being helpful, even when it’s not convenient. It means being thoughtful to find out when someone needs help, because people in need seldom come out and say it. I find that people who are helpful and thoughtful even when it’s not convenient in turn get unbounded help from their teammates when they are in their time of need.

In summary, I don’t have an answer on whether work-life balance is achievable, but here’s one approach to try:

Life demands and work demands are bursty… and they don’t know about each other. In order to succeed at work, you must be able to work in bursts. In order to succeed in life, you must be able to live in bursts. In order to succeed in work AND life, you need to build teams around you, in life and in work, that allow you to handle those bursts. In order to build those teams, you must be thoughtful and helpful to those around you.

Work-life balance may be one of those mythical dreams, but it’s still a dream worth trying for. Good luck!

So, do you think this approach can work? Have you seen or experienced situations where this approach has succeeded or failed?

I’ve been an avid facebok user for years. I started using Facebook very soon after they first opened it up to people outside of the .edu domain. I recruited lots of old people into Facebook… long before it was acceptable for old people like me. And, I’ve been thrilled to watch it go more mainstream. I wrote a post about how my home town in Western New York has even joined in.And now you hear stories about how people’s grandmother’s are joining. This has allowed me to end up with a pretty entertaining set of Facebook friends. I think I passed some invisible threshold where my Facebook social network became large enough and active enough that I can be almost constantly entertained with interesting status updates, posts, and pictures. Pretty fun!

I have a few friends left who are still holding back from joining. They are concerned with privacy, and the thought of blasting their little life events is not at all appealing. Many of my recruits felt that way at the beginning and joined just to be polite to me (and perhaps because I begged a little), but many of them are now actively posting away and having fun. But I still have real-world friends who have not joined.

I was having dinner with old college friends last week and I made an interesting discovery- I discovered a secret set of Facebook users! These Facebook users don’t feel comfortable with getting an account (and some even dis the idea), BUT they lurk by using their significant other’s account! My one friend makes her husband friend her friends. And when she gets home from work, she asks him “What’s going on with my friends?” Another one of my friends just had a shocking event where her friend said “Oh, I saw that you were at so-and-so’s party”, and she thought “how the heck did you know that?”. The reason was because someone posted a picture on Facebook. She doesn’t feel comfortable with joining, but when I suggested she just look at her husband’s account, and she said “Yeah- that would be okay”.

Anyways, I thought it was interesting that there might be this hidden set of Facebook users who are not Facebook account holders. Any idea on how big this group is?Do you know any secret Facebook users?

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