Once upon a time, there lived a man
named Clarence who had a pet frog named
Felix. Clarence lived a modestly
comfortable existence on what he earned
working at the Wal-Mart, but he always
dreamed of being rich.
"Felix!" he exclaimed one day, "We're
going to be rich! I'm going to teach you
how to fly!"
Felix, of course, was terrified at the
prospect: "I can't fly, you idiot......
I'm a frog, not a canary!"
Clarence, disappointed at the initial
reaction, told Felix: "That negative
attitude of yours could be a real
problem. I'm sending you to class."
So Felix went to a three day class and
learned about problem solving, time
management, and effective
communication.... but nothing about
flying.
On the first day of "flying lessons",
Clarence could barely control his
excitement (and Felix could barely
control his bladder). Clarence explained
that their apartment had 15 floors, and
each day Felix would jump out of a
window starting with the first floor
eventually getting to the top floor.
After each jump, Felix would analyze how
well he flew, isolate on the most
effective flying techniques, and
implement the improved process for the
next flight. By the time they reached
the top floor, Felix would surely be
able to fly.
Felix pleaded for his life, but it fell
on deaf ears. "He just doesn't
understand how important this is..."
thought Clarence, "but I won't let
nay-sayers get in my way."
So, with that, Clarence opened the
window and threw Felix out (who landed
with a thud).
Next day (poised for his second flying
lesson) Felix again begged not to be
thrown out of the window. With that,
Clarence opened his pocket guide to
Managing More Effectively and showed
Felix the part about how one must always
expect resistance when implementing new
programs.
And with that, he threw Felix out the
window. (THUD)
On the third day (at the third floor)
Felix tried a different ploy: stalling,
he asked for a delay in the "project"
until better weather would make flying
conditions more favorable.
But Clarence was ready for him: he
produced a timeline and pointed to the
third milestone and asked, "You don't
want to slip the schedule do you?"
From his training, Felix knew that not
jumping today would mean that he would
have to jump TWICE tomorrow.... so he
just said: "OK. Let's go." And out the
window he went.
Now this is not to say that Felix wasn't
trying his best. On the fifth day he
flapped his feet madly in a vain attempt
to fly. On the sixth day he tied a small
red cape around his neck and tried to
think "Superman" thoughts.
But try as he might, he couldn't fly.
By the seventh day, Felix (accepting his
fate) no longer begged for mercy.... he
simply looked at Clarence and said: "You
know you're killing me, don't you?"
Clarence pointed out that Felix's
performance so far had been less than
exemplary, failing to meet any of the
milestone goals he had set for him.
With that, Felix said quietly: "Shut up
and open the window," and he leaped out,
taking careful aim on the large jagged
rock by the corner of the building.
And Felix went to that great lily pad in
the sky.
Clarence was extremely upset, as his
project had failed to meet a single goal
that he set out to accomplish. Felix had
not only failed to fly, he didn't even
learn how to steer his flight as he fell
like a sack of cement.... nor did he
improve his productivity when Clarence
had told him to "Fall smarter, not
harder."
The only thing left for Clarence to do
was to analyze the process and try to
determine where it had gone wrong.
After much thought, Clarence smiled and
said:
"Next time...... I'm getting a smarter
frog!" |