The Innovation Forge Podcast
A driver sets a box on a porch as I pass, then steps back, looks at the house number, and nudges the package a few inches away from the wet patch near the door. The air smells like damp mulch and coffee. My pace is even this morning. I can hear the fabric of my sleeve brush against my side with each step. A lawn sprinkler ticks in short bursts from a yard across the street. 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. Hand off with context. A handoff is not just task transfer. It is a transfer of meaning. If you give someone a list of steps and walk away, you did not hand off the work. You handed off the motion. Those are not the same thing. Motion can be copied. Meaning has to be understood. This is where a lot of teams create quiet resentment. One person builds something fast, drops it in someone else’s lap, and then gets annoyed when it is not maintained correctly. The new owner never got the full picture. They got the sequence, not the intent. Then the original builder starts muttering about quality. But you cannot withhold context and then act offended when judgment does not show up on schedule. I have done exactly that. I handed off work that made complete sense to me because I was still carrying all the reasons in my head. I assumed the next person would absorb the logic by proximity. They did not. Why would they? I left out the things that actually mattered. What this process protects. What tradeoff it makes. What failure looks like. What result should raise concern even if all the steps were followed. That is not a clean handoff. That is a delayed problem. Context does not need to be long. It does need to be honest though. Why does this exist? Who does it serve? What matters most if there is pressure to cut corners? What should the next person notice first if something feels off? What should they preserve even if they later improve the process? That is how ownership forms. People do not own what they merely inherit. They own what they understand. This is the real bridge between control and continuity. If you want the work to survive your attention, you have to stop treating explanation like an optional courtesy. It is part of the craft. Same as naming, same as guardrails, same as documentation. So here is the sharper question today. What have you recently handed off with steps but not purpose. Where is someone else trying to keep your work alive without knowing what it is supposed to protect? What context are you still assuming instead of saying plainly. 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? Think about that package on the porch. It got placed, checked, and adjusted before the driver left. A good handoff does the same. It does not just arrive. It lands. 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]
195 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Innovation Forge Podcast!