Have you ever met a Problem Finder? You know – the Picasso with a knack for always finding problems and elegantly describing them as exquisite works of art. Like a canvas, they frame the issue with the best hardwoods and protect the textures of the “unsolvables” with museum-grade glass so they can place their masterpiece on display for us to admire, opine and critique – just like the Guernica.
My silliness aside, most of us have encountered or promoted some version of these behaviors – but how do we overcome them? Welcome to ProblemFinders Anonymous (silliness, not yet done).
As leaders we are expected to be positive agents of change, inspiration, and influence. Said differently, good leaders create organizational movement towards their goals and objectives, and the great ones deliver on those objectives most of the time. We recognize that 1. This is rarely a solo endeavor and 2. Multiplying your effectiveness is a key determinant to creating sustained results.
Aside from the usual entry criteria (personal mastery, intellectual curiosity, consistent execution, etc.), you must lead with Hard Won Optimism. It is a term I use often, and one which I credit my old boss – Paul Dabbar, the former Undersecretary of Science at the Department of Energy – for sharing with me. While the most recent ‘Artificial Intelligence (AI) Winter’ of the late 1990’s began to thaw shortly after the turn of the century, under Mr. Dabbar’s leadership, the Department achieved Bicameral and Bipartisan support for year-over-year increased investment in AI and Quantum technologies prior to the behemoth of commercial investments in the 2020’s. In real terms, from FY2017 – FY2020 the Office of Science’s budget increased nearly 30%. With that consequential funding, our National Labs have led the investigation in basic and applied research to power industrial innovations that have contributed to our nation’s leadership in the development of frontier technologies. These kinds of results just don’t happen in a vacuum. It takes willpower, effort, and support from others to enable a leader’s success. Importantly, it starts with your responsible decision to commit to a cause and create sustained advocacy for the results.
From these examples I submit to you that for leaders, Hard Won Optimism is a critical element in breaking the Status Quo and converting your ‘Finders’ into ‘Solvers’. Your successful execution of this principle begins with passionately leading from the front and continuously reinforcing the agreed-upon objectives in terms that everyone understands. Building upon that momentum, create the environment that forces individuals to focus 20% of the discussion on the problem and the other 80% on alternatives that get the team to ‘yes’. Recognizing that to achieve hard objectives can come at a cost, leaders own the responsibility for evaluating at what point the costs outweigh the goals of the objective(s) and should adjust accordingly. Drive these behaviors all the way down to the lowest level. Reinforce. Repeat.
This is an important part of building your organizational culture. Encountering challenges will create a necessary anxiety derived from our Autonomic Nervous System, which at their best, bring caution… at their worst, bring paralysis or fear. Even though as leaders we think differently, doing “Nothing’ or saying ‘No’ in these situations is the natural response. So, as you evolve the expectations of your team, remember “Hard Won” does not equal “Hopeless” – but it does remind us of the Energy (pun intended, and silliness now done) it takes to unlock a new level of thoughtfulness and empower the next generation of Problem Solvers.