Hi, I'm Ian McLean, founder of Flow Group and GreenLine Conversations. This podcast has grown out of the chaos that's been thrust upon us. And in it, I share the best of 25 years of helping leaders in business organizations deal and cope with change. So, as you're out there, busy making sense of it all, trying to cope, and repurposing your organisations, I'm hoping that some of this will provide some help, some of the time. I'll keep it deliberately short because I know you're busy. Let's dive in. Against the backdrop of Trump's inauguration speech. Depending on which commentator you read, in anticipation and on the lead-up, there's an expectation, or a trepidation, probably more accurately, about what is likely to ensue. Anything from irregularity and uncertainty to chaos to, as the Russell Crowe character announced in the film Gladiator: Unleash Hell. As leaders, we have to lead in spite of the circumstances and in spite of the uncertainty that might surround us in any situation, particularly one as acute as this. I thought this might be a good episode to dedicate or devote to the ability of leaders to stay and remain calm under pressure. You see, the ability to remain calm in the teeth of the gale of uncertainty is one of those silent characteristics that rarely gets really applauded in leadership journals. But in my experience is the thing that is most critical when it comes to establishing and building a leader's reputation. In the first instance, I'm reminded of, an episode which took place when I was growing up in my childhood, I can remember the whole idea of a refugee crisis, which was a relatively novel thing at the time, even though it isn't today. And it was about a displaced population in Vietnam at the time, after the Vietnamese war. Whilst it's not unusual today, it was very unusual back then. And there was a story of the people who were fleeing a war torn country in Vietnam to try to get away and they were taking any means or method that they could, often in very unseaworthy vessels to, sail away and find themselves some new land somewhere in an effort to build a new life. The collective grouping was called or became known as the Vietnamese Boat People. And, over a period of time, the boats that left the country would sail and begin to turn up in various states in other countries outside of Vietnam. What the rescuers discovered is entirely predictable. They found a lot of disease, death, mortality, distress, inevitably, but they began to realize that not all boats were equal. They turned up on the shores, and they discovered that there were a very small minority of boats that seemed to have a disproportionately higher level of wellness, not in the modern-day sense, of course. Amongst some of the boats, and they were mystified by this because on the surface it all seemed equal, but they…
FlowIrelandAdmin21st January 2025