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Four Season Planning

If you are in an executive leadership position, leading a team of employees, or running a business, regular thinking, planning, and contemplating is essential. Ideally, every day should include time for reflection, in solitude if possible. It may be the most important and most significant task that you do each day.

Similarly, big picture thinking needs to occur a lot more frequently than the annual planning retreat or strategic planning session at the beginning of your fiscal year. These annual rituals that may have worked years ago don’t work today – our world is simply changing too quickly.

The start of my business involved spending an entire day alone. With no computer or phone, I laid out the plan for where I wanted my business to go. I did this annually for many years. Annual planning may have been adequate years ago, but it’s not enough now. I needed more time to contemplate, and I think you probably do too.

Think Weeks – Many years ago, I read about Bill Gates and his think weeks. When he was CEO of Microsoft, Gates would retreat to a very secluded location twice a year for A “think week”. You may or may not like him, but there’s little doubt that your life has been impacted because of a Bill Gates Think Week. One of which led to the creation of Windows 95.

So how often should big picture “get-aways” happen?

Gates left his full-time position at Microsoft in 2008. That was 14 years ago. Twice a year for planning may not be enough today. So up the ante and gather your team (or do you own version of a think week, think weekend, or even a think day) Four times a year. Maybe two of these are individual and two are organizational.

I started thinking about this concept on one of my recent think walks. While walking at dusk, I was mesmerized by the beautiful colors in the sky. That lead me to think about daylight savings time and how that would be making evenings longer.   Why not use daylight savings time as an annual reminder to schedule a time to think about springing forward? Spend time pondering how to move your organization, business, or career forward. Consider making a ground rule that only forward-thinking (positive) ideas are allowed.

Roughly three months later is the longest day of the year – June 21st. Again, schedule time to think, plan, and create around this time. Questions you might consider include:

  • If I am in this organization, position, career, etc. for the long haul, what tools do I need? What learning, training, mentoring, or coaching do I need to lengthen my relevance or effectiveness?   

The first day of fall begins on September 21st and soon after another time change – this time falling back.  For purposes of this 3rd planning time, think back to what your organization has done well.

  • What needs to be repeated?
  • What needs to be retired?
  • What needs to be retooled?
  • What needs to be re-thought? If your organization has lost market share, customers, or profits, have the focus of your planning be how to get those things back.
  • If you have lost passion for what you do, think back to the beginning when your passion was high. What were you doing back then? What do you need to do to bring back that passion?

On December 21st, the winter solstice occurs when either of the Earth’s poles reaches its maximum tilt away from the sun resulting in the shortest day of the year for those in the northern hemisphere.  It’s the beginning of the 4th season of the year and an ideal time to consider a 4th planning event sometime around December 21st (ideally a week or two before or after for obvious reasons!). Consider using both the words maximum and minimum as discussion prompts.

 “Four Seasons Planning” could also involve benchmarking highly successful organizations like the Four Seasons Hotel and Resorts. You could even examine the Four Seasons Hotel and Resort mission statement and culture to compare and contrast it with your organization’s mission statement. You could even gather with your organization or team to do your planning at a Four Seasons resort, and yes, I’d be happy to come and speak.

Tim Richardson
Tim Richardsonhttps://TimRichardson.com
Keynote presentation: The Power of the Pause: How a Reset Brings Sanity Back to the Workplace Our workload and schedules are fast-paced and ever-changing. With work demands, project deadlines, and frequent meetings, leaders are hard pressed to find time for productivity and personal pauses in their work and personal life. Strategic pauses build momentum and help prevent poor self care, burnout, and even emotional health related issues. All have an effect on productivity and employee turnover. This presentation is about rebuilding workplace morale, teamwork, and a highly engaged staff. Tim will help you discover how pausing leads to profits. He'll share research to support his presentation points and show you  ideas to help you lead well. This presentation will provide tools and strategies to bring your workplace back - back to do what you do best serving your customers, supporting each other, and operating at peak levels. I also lead workshops, training programs, planning sessions, and conduct surveys related to my speaking focus. Tim Richardson is President of Total Development Resources, Inc. and is a full-time presenter, trainer, and facilitator. He also served as Director of Training for the Ponte Vedra Inn and Club, where he was responsible for customer service excellence training, leadership training, and team development for over 700 employees. He designed and delivered a Five Star Customer Service training program and then recruited a team of five trainers to help train the entire organization. Previous to his career as a professional speaker and trainer, Tim worked for IBM Corporation in the Marketing Division. He was recognized for his outstanding contributions at IBM with the President's Circle Award for team service, given only to 1% of IBM employees. Early in his training career, Tim delivered CareerTrack’s “How to Give Exceptional Customer Service” seminar all across North America. He also worked as a consultant with the Bob Pike Group where he conducted two-day public seminars and in-house train-the-trainer seminars as a Sr. Training Consultant. Tim received a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from Florida Southern College and a Master of Science degree in Marketing Communication from Florida State University where he taught courses in Public Speaking, Fundamentals of Speech, and Professional Interviewing. He also is a graduate of the Dale Carnegie public speaking course and served as a graduate assistant as well. In addition to his business responsibilities, Tim is a member of the National Speakers Association (NSA) and the founder of the North Florida Professional Speakers Association where he served two terms as president. He has also served NSA as a volunteer committee chair, as winter workshop co-chair and chair and has frequently presented at NSA conventions, conferences, and chapters. Tim was awarded the Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) designation, the highest earned designation in professional speaking, in 1997. He has also been nominated for the prestigious CPAE - Speaker Hall of Fame. Tim is author of Jump Starts: Wit and Wisdom to Super Charge Your Day, co-author of Transformation Thinking: Tools and Techniques That Open the Door to Powerful New Thinking, and contributor author to Meditations for the Road Warrior, and Grand Stories. He was founder and president of the Bill Walter Melanoma Foundation and co-founder and board member for the Jeff Roth Cycling Foundation. Tim regularly coaches youth sports, has been a scouting volunteer, and lead organizer of an annual Christmas party for disadvantaged children.  
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