"What do you want your legacy to be?" may be question that has little meaning for you right now. However, it's a relevant question for each project, assignment and position you undertake. What do you want to be remembered in each? [1]
Asking the “legacy” question is also an important leadership exercise. In the end, what do I want my, and my team’s, work to be about?
I remember a story Tom Peter’s told about a recurring nightmare [2]. It was a full moon, and he was walking into a graveyard. The moonlight was shining on a tombstone. It was his. On the tombstone was carved “he made budget”. He woke up startled. He did not want that to be his epitaph; neither did I.
So what would you want carved in each project and job you completed? This becomes more important the older you get, when your agenda tips from success to significance, as Bob Buford says.[3] Then the legacy question becomes more focused in the moonlight. |