On Tooth Decay

As kids, our well-intentioned dentist forcefully instructed us to “Brush and floss twice each day.”  Sound advice that we largely ignored.  After we blew off that first evening chore and realized the world didn’t end, we became more ambivalent on following the regimen with precision.

We’d blow off a brush here and a floss there.  Wow… no consequences.  Until that fateful visit back to Dr. Scary when we learn about the four cavities that have invaded our scared mouths.  “How did this just appear out of nowhere?” we’d ask with indignant outrage.

Twenty years later, you understand that each small hygiene infraction created just a tad of unnoticeable decay.  While undetected until much later, each negative behavior contributed to what eventually became a most unpleasant outcome.

Funny how that same thing applies to a lot more in life than just dental hygiene.

As we cut corners in so many aspects of life, little pieces of our full potential chip away without detection.  With no clear and immediate repercussions, we continue the deviant behavior as if no one’s looking.  The problem with decay – in business, relationships, communities, and organizations – is that we often don’t visibly see the problem until it’s too late.

At some point in the 1980s, Kmart was heralded as the far superior retailer to Wal-Mart. More stores, more merchandise, bigger company, more profits.  Yet under the surface, erosion was having a field day.  One little innovation the planners missed.  That extra bureaucratic act that further poisoned the corporate culture.  Small, undetected acts that ultimately led to the company’s undoing.

What’s going on behind the scenes in your own company that could be systematically unraveling your competitive advantage?  What small details did you stop caring about in your relationship that could be leading to a painful crash?  The more you examine the underlying daily habits in your life, the more opportunity you’ll have to course-correct before it’s too late.

Aristotle said it best: “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”

The more discipline you can invoke to consistently do the right thing, the better your long-term results will be.  By far.  And most importantly, you can avoid the worst human emotion of all: regret.  That burning feeling of desire that you can’t do a damn thing about.

It’s time to turn off the Kardashians and recommit to those small daily habits that will add up to your biggest gains.  Read.  Exercise.  Dream.  Laugh.  And of course… don’t forget to brush.

Read More

Open Collaboration: The Key to a Strong Culture of Innovation

Here’s a thought experiment. Imagine your company’s most valuable asset isn’t your product, your patents, your trademarks, or even your people. It's the connections between ...

How AI Will Shape the Physical World

Introduction Last year, I watched a video of Alex Conley, a man with a cervical spinal cord injury, controlling a robotic arm mounted to his ...

What Jazz Musicians and AI Researchers Have In Common

Introduction We have always built things in our own image. The ancient Greeks carved gods that looked like idealized humans. Renaissance architects designed buildings proportioned ...

How AI Will Make Corporate Conferences More Exciting

Introduction I have delivered keynote speeches at over 1,000 events. And I can tell you the single biggest factor that separates a forgettable conference from ...

Force vs. Flow

The tighter you grip, the less you control. We've been conditioned to believe that forcing outcomes is the path to success. Clench your jaw. White-knuckle ...

The Innovator’s AI Dilemma

Here's a question that should keep every leader up at night: What is generative AI actually doing to our ability to think critically? Not "could ...

Are Your Meetings Killing Innovation? A Simple Reset That Gets Ideas Flowing Again

 If you’re a leader who’s ever led a brainstorm of any kind, you’ve probably had this experience. You open up the floor for ideas, and ...

New Thinking for the New Era of Business

Albert Einstein famously noted, “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking that we used when we created them.” In our post-COVID world of ...

When an Astronaut Needs a Pen

Ever get stuck on a problem, only to realize you're solving for the wrong thing? That's exactly what happened when the rocket scientists at NASA ...