I would like to provide a fresh perspective on one of my past posts, Purple is Good.
As a recap, an executive presented at an all-hands employee meeting. His PowerPoint presentation showed a dashboard of KPIs (Key Performance Indicators). It was a grid of colored squares with the obvious green for "good", yellow for "needs help" and red for "in trouble". There were also some purple squares. The employees looked confused since they weren't familiar with what this chart meant. Thinking he would help with their confusion, he said:
"Purple is good!"
I think of this and laugh anytime I hear someone trying to influence others with a point that the intended audience doesn't understand.
A Fresh Perspective
I consider myself more of a bottom feeder in my organization, so from this perspective, I intend this to be helpful and constructive.
A Thought Experiment
You are given the opportunity to present your ideas or solutions to someone you consider powerful. An executive, the mayor, governor, president. You have two weeks to prepare. How much of your time and energy will be used to prepare? How much of your free time will you think about this? The day of the presentation comes and you walk in. How much will this problem be of concern to the person in charge?
Anecdotal Evidence
My friend was in a meeting with an executive who said the following:
"For you, this is the most important topic. After this meeting, I have another meeting with the most important topic. And I have fifty meetings a week like this."
My Thoughts on Presenting to Executives
My Recent Experience
Conclusion
I've heard the phrase "Sounds like a problem with management" in a lot of contexts recently. If there is a problem with management, then maybe we can be the solution. Executives don't need help with the purple squares. They need help with the red and yellow squares. I had the unique opportunity to interview with an executive years ago. I asked him: "What keeps you up at night?" I still remember his three answers. My project is a reaction to one of his issues. I don't think he even remembers the conversation. Still, it's one of the reasons I feel passionate about my project.
Maybe you don't work in a large organization. Still, there's plenty of opportunity for each of us to make a difference.