After a morning meeting with the senior management team, the CEO and I were sitting together in his office when he asked me an important question: “Given what you saw this morning during the meeting, what do you recommend?”
I paused to pull my thoughts together, and then said: “You need to define your message for the coming six months given what we have discussed during the meeting about the emerging and current strategic trends in your industry.”
He looked at me, nodded, and then responded: “I agree. What should it be?”
I smiled and thought to myself, “Well played. Make the consultant answer the question.” So, I gathered my thoughts and shared. Once I was done speaking, I realized that my answer was not very good, and that I had wandered into consultant-speech rather than down-to-earth practical application.
He smiled and said: “I think it all comes down to two words: constant progress. If we are better today than we were yesterday, and better tomorrow than we were today, then we will do more than reach our goals. We will create a flywheel and a culture that is unstoppable. We just need to be making progress each and every day.”
George Leonard in his book, Mastery: The Keys to Success and Long Term Fulfillment (Plume, 1992), writes that achieving a level of mastery reflects a commitment to the fundamentals and the willingness to take risks to achieve a higher performance. i.e. the willingness to be a beginner and to keep learning.
From my experience and observations, the best leaders and the best performers in their work are always eager to learn, unlearn, and relearn how to do what they do. With a beginner’s mindset to their practice, constant progress is a commitment and a discipline that transcends time and place. They are hardwired to improve and to learn from any one at any time and in any situation. They are willing to be the student no matter who is the teacher.
As the CEO and I wrapped our meeting, we agreed that “constant progress” was the theme for the coming six months. Years later, I realized that his comments about the importance of constant progress had become a keystone to the cultural foundation of the organization. And that their long term success could be traced back to this single insight.
This week, I encourage you to choose constant progress as a commitment and a discipline for the coming six months. Make it the keystone to your long term success.
© Geery Howe 2025