Embracing the Bump in the Road

This article can be found in my Fuel for Thought column in the December 2011/January 2012 issue of Event Solutions magazine.

Fueled By: Disruption

By Liese Gardner

Disruption is the client who now has 500 guests instead of 250 or the budget that gets slashed two weeks before the event. Disruption is something not to fear but to thank. It keeps you strong, agile, and creative. It’s why we love to see Tom Colicchio throw a curveball at the Top Chef contestants mid-race.

We know disruption makes “good TV” but it also makes “good life” as it did for Steve Jobs. “I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me,” he said. “The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.”

Granted, for Jobs, his hand was forced. It’s hard to embrace the bump in the road when the highway is smooth. But even if it is, the excitement of reinventing one’s self and beliefs is powerful. It shakes off complacency and allows us to see and feel the world anew.

Starting from the Beginning

Take for instance, the case of the head master of Riverdale Country School in New York. Domenic Randolph is often called a disruptor for ideas he’s introduced to the curriculum having to do with issues deeper than the ABCs. Like Jobs’ rethinking, Randolph’s takes place at a beginner level ““ students. Tests, he contends, miss a serious part of what it means to be a successful human — character. He asks questions relevant not just for educators, but anyone trying to lead a thoughtful life. Can character ““ grit, curiosity, determination, zest, ethics — be taught?

Character is something that you, as people not just as event professionals, are judged on every day by your clients, your team, your peers and yourself. Every generation of event professionals (today millenials, Xers and Boomers are hashing it out in the workplace) has its own idea of character and that means new and ongoing discussions about work ethics, passion, economic needs, success, and yes, sometimes failure.

And I say “event professionals” but perhaps we can take the Jobsian approach and use the term “event beginners.” The lightness of beginning again disrupts old habits and allows us to relearn who we are, revive curiosity, rethink failure, and most important, reinvent it all into success.

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Photo by Stephen Wilkes. Tape Installation by Stephen Doyle

Fueled By: Brilliance

By Liese Gardner

Note: This was written for the October/November edition of Event Solutions and my new column there, Fuel for Thought. Continue to the end to see what I’m doing in the pages of Event Solutions!


Brilliance is … A great marketing campaign, a beautifully designed event, a well placed move on the chess board of business.

Brilliance is … Expression through design. The upcoming holiday season promises a respite from a difficult year. It’s the time we celebrate our resiliency, hope and humanity with light and love. It’s the time that we wrap our arms around uncertainty, excited for a New Year, while at the same time paying homage to tradition and those who came before. Holiday design reflects these emotions. As you weave the sparkle of hope and promise from table to tree, make it brilliant.

 

And as far as design durng the rest of the year, it’s a lot like life. It’s not about taking the first answer but always digging for deeper meaning. It’s about seeing things from a new perspective. For instance, does floral design have to be in the center of the table, or even on the table? At the Emmys Governor’s Ball in Los Angeles this year, produced by Sequoia Productions, Kevin Lee from LA Premier took the simple calla lily, framed it and hung it from above. It’s a great reminder that the only thing we can control in life is our perception and when we shift it, brilliance happens, personally and professionally.

Brilliance is … Ideas. Some people use coffee to wake up. Others get their morning jolt from the daily blog of marketing guru Seth Godin who was interviewed by Event Solutions editor Ann Turner in Getting Personal this month. At about 10 lines each, Godin’s posts are always a fast, intriguing read. To him we, as businesspeople, are at the end of a very long day; there is no time for messing around with sentiment. If it has to be said, he says it. He literally rips the Band-Aid off of preconceived notions. It’s a hurt that feels so good and millions look forward to it each day.

Brilliance is … Bold Moves. When such inspirational people as Steve Jobs and Bill Gates say they believe in hiring brilliance, it’s not to be taken lightly. Certainly the management of Event Solutions is a good example of how to take this philosophy to heart. They have assembled their brilliant team of tomorrow and I’m happy to be part of their strategy of bold moves.

I am thrilled to be working with Event Solutions as Editorial Director and general consultant, influencing both the magazine and the show. My goal is to make a positive change that will elevate the events industry!

While change is brilliant and exciting, we all know it takes a lot of work to make a difference. Certainly hard work is nothing any of us in this industry fear. You have faced tough times and survived, yet this is not the time to nurse the wounds of yesterday, to make excuses or look the other way hoping someone else will bail us out. It’s time to get down to work, to inspire one another and, quite simply to be brilliant.

There is not a moment to waste.

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Photos:

By Nadine Froger Photography

Sequoia Productions, LA Premier, Patina Catering, Images By Lighting, AirDD,