The Innovation Forge Podcast
The street is quieter than usual. No buses yet. No lawn crews. Just my footsteps and the sound of a sprinkler ticking from a yard half a block away. My breathing is louder in the still air. I pass a coffee shop with the chairs still flipped upside down on the tables inside. The front lights are on. No one is in there yet. I feel that odd mix of calm and restlessness that shows up when a place is ready before the people arrive. You’re joining me on The Ember Walk, where curiosity meets motion. I’m David Dysart. Together we’ll take a few minutes to step through one idea that shapes the craft of enrollment. Your absence is a test. Not a test of your worth though. It’s a test of your design. If the work starts wobbling the second you step away, that tells you something. If decisions stall, quality drops, and people wait for you to return before they move, you are not looking at proof of importance. You are looking at proof of dependence. That is harder to admit than most people want. A lot of us tell ourselves a flattering story here. We say we are being responsible. We say we are protecting quality. We say we are just trying to help the team. That is true to some extent. A lot of the time we are feeding a system that still cannot breathe without our attention. I know that because I have done it. I have taken time away and checked email like the building might collapse without me. I told myself I was staying ahead. What I was actually doing was refusing to let the test happen. I did not want to see what would break. I did not want to feel replaceable. I did not want to face the fact that some of what I called leadership was really just proximity to every problem. That is not a clean thing to admit. It is a useful one though. When you’re ready to accept it. You won’t be absent all the time. Until you are, I suppose. But the goal is to build work that does not panic when you are absent. That means people know enough to decide. It means the process contains enough context to guide them. It means you have stopped positioning yourself as the final interpreter of everything that matters. It means the team can act in your absence and the system does not punish them for trying. If your absence creates chaos, the answer is not to stay closer forever. The answer is to study the chaos and rebuild the weak spot. What stalled? What required your memory? What required your permission? Use these things as your map to building more sustainable systems The uncomfortable truth is simple. You can only find out what work holds by letting go long enough to see what still stands. So ask the harder version today. What do you still rush in to handle because you do not trust the work without you. What would your team try, learn, or own if you stopped rescuing that part long enough to let the structure show its strength or its weakness? Let your spark speak, and let us know in the comments or DM me. What was that one thing? And how does it feel to tend to that flame? Keep that empty coffee shop in mind today. The lights were on before anyone stepped inside. That is the standard. The place should be ready even when you are not the first one through the door. And that’s The Ember Walk. The forge is yours now. Go make something worth the heat. Get full access to DysArtisanal Innovations at dysartisanalinnovations.substack.com/subscribe [https://dysartisanalinnovations.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
192 episoder
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