Creative
Tension…
They call the
strain that manifests itself when you’re trying to reconcile your “Current
Reality” – where you find yourself in life at any given moment – with your Vision
for the future, “Creative Tension.”
Tension, because of the pressures
leaving your comfort zone to do new and different things brings with it: creative, because of the new and
different things you generally have to do in order to transcend your current
reality.
Most of us have
experienced “Creative Tension” at one time or another in our lives; we just
didn’t know it had a name. It’s that uneasy, uncomfortable feeling that washes
over us every time we challenge ourselves with something new, something
different, something more.
My entire
professional life has been filled with creative tension. It’s an integral part
of the changing technology that is the automotive service
aftermarket and the many different hats I’ve learned to wear moving from ‘pump
jockey’ to ‘driveway salesman;’ ‘mechanic’ to ‘technician’ and, then, ‘shop
owner;' ‘trade journalist’ to ‘seminar facilitator’ to ‘author.’ It’s become a
natural element of remaining successful in an infinitely changing environment,
a survival skill in an ever-changing world.
A natural
element of my creative tension is leaving the shop. I say that as if leaving is
a ‘bad thing.’ It’s not… Not if you’re leaving for training, education or to
expose yourself to new and different ideas all focused on creating a better
experience for everyone involved in your business: clients, associates,
vendors… everyone.
OK… Leaving for vacation every once in a while isn’t
such a “bad thing” either! But, either way, leaving still involves not being there and not being there is still stressful.
Being
someplace else, doing something else – regardless of what that ‘something else’
might be. Even in a digital world, your physical absence still involves some
loss of connection, which is generally accompanied by a fair amount of
discomfort.
The stress I
feel isn’t due to lack of confidence in our people… Nothing could be further
from the truth. We have a great crew and as different as our backgrounds and
experience might be we all have one thing in common. We all have a profound and
very personal sense of what it is to serve. We’re all proud of the profession
we’ve chosen as well, and approach what we do deliberately with enthusiasm and
a real understanding of the responsibility we’ve accepted when it comes to the
service, maintenance and repair of our customer’s vehicles. We also understand
how important it is for our clients to have the freedom to go wherever it is
they want to go with the security and confidence of knowing they will be able
to return home safely.
This is what
you think about at 35,000 feet on the way home from two meetings focused almost
exclusively on “Best In Class” automotive service delivery. It’s what you think
about after almost a full week spent discovering new and different ways to
improve and enhance the relationship you share with your client base – improve
and enhance it from the client's perspective
as the purchaser of automotive service: the client's perspective as a customer.
Something else
you think about is how you are going to balance the creative tension you know
will accompany integrating these new concepts into your service mix without
compromising the same high quality customer care our client’s have come to
expect from us.
The good news
is the kind of creative tension I’m feeling as I consider everything I’ve
experienced over the past ten days: everything I’ve listened to and learned, is
every bit as exciting as it may be stressful. Things like
moving toward a more Customer-Centric service delivery model: looking at the
whole process and every conceivable interaction through the customer’s eyes,
managing diversity in the workplace, engaging Generation “X” and Generation “Y”
clients, coping in a web-enabled world and much, much more.
As far as I can
see it’s all good and more than exciting enough to drive us into a shared and mutually
beneficial future: a future much more consistent with the Vision I have for all
of us. A Vision worthy of the Creative Tension that is certain to accompany its
achievement…
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