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Team Leader As Artist: Let Your Team Crop Your Problem

with 3 comments

What does your team see?

Photographers routinely crop and display just the section of the photo they want their audience to attend to. Cropping—possibly the easiest, most straightforward thing a photographer can do—changes the information the photo provides. Cropping also changes the feeling the viewer gets.

CarArtist-Crop1-06232014_edited-1

The right crop can stir emotion.

Most photographers work at getting composition right and so avoid cropping. Henri Cartier-Bresson famously accomplished that. Alec Soth gets this done too—though his process seems mysterious. The success of their composition looks like an invitation into another world, something frozen in time. Something clearly different from our own daily life.

That is the memorable artistry of the photographer.

CarArtist-Crop2-06232014_edited-1

Teams can be very gifted at cropping. Since we all naturally see a problem from a different perspective, collecting those perspectives in an open discussion can do a lot to reframe a problem into a most excellent opportunity. For a team to function this way, there needs to be a premium on open discussion. It helps if team-mates learn to value each other’s opinions. Listening and assigning value to each other’s contributions can be learned. I would argue it starts from the team leader (or manager/VP/CEO) and work its way down. Valuing each other’s perspectives (or not) is very much a part of corporate culture. But value can also move from the other direction: I’ve had teammates who valued different perspectives and taught the rest of us to find great joy in listening and considering.

Seth Godin routinely reframes art to include “making connections between people or ideas.” Some reading this will create art today by running a meeting that will make it possible for all around a conference table to hear a new thing. Their process for creating this art will be an examination of a problem that gets cropped from five or seven different perspectives. The result will be a well composed opportunity that has emotive power for each of the people at that table.

What art will you create today?

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Image credit: Kirk Livingston

3 Responses

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  1. […] maintain there is a fair amount of artistry involved in helping a group begin to move forward. Those who help others catch a vision for a […]

    • This is a nice piece. I plan to share with a few leaders…

      Suzanne

      June 30, 2014 at 10:28 am


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