麻豆入口

Risk Forward to Become a Better Leader

Keynote speaker teaches performance arts tools contractors can use to improve communication. 

Carol Duncan and Mike Coleman welcoming the Partners in Progress attendees. 

How do you move forward in times when your goals aren鈥檛 clear, your plan is still unfolding or you can鈥檛 quite see the path ahead? 

It can become a time of uncertainty. 

When you stop and look around and see other people are busy and you see what they鈥檙e doing, you start to panic and think if you don鈥檛 keep up, you鈥檙e going to lose out,鈥 according to Partners in Progress Keynote Speaker Victoria Labalme during her session, 鈥淩isk Forward.鈥

鈥淲e fall into this trap of compare and despair or a period of self-doubt,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e start to pack our days with to-dos, and it can feel like a conveyor belt of activity. You get sucked into a hypnosis of hyperactivity.鈥 

What you need to do is 鈥渞isk forward,鈥 Labalme encourages. 

Risk forward is a term Labalme learned from legendary mime Marcel Marceau. This is a movement he taught Labalme and other actors where one鈥檚 weight is forward onto one foot and the body is a little off balance but the heart is open. 鈥淚鈥檝e come to think of this as a philosophy for life and work and how we can move forward into the unknown,鈥 she says. 

   Victoria Labalme

Labalme had this experience herself after moving to New York to pursue her acting career. She was on her own conveyor belt trying to keep up and get noticed. Then, one morning she woke up and looked outside of her bedroom window to see smoke coming out of the World Trade Center. It was Sept. 11, 2001, and she lived so close to Ground Zero that she couldn鈥檛 get into her apartment for weeks without showing identification. Two days later, her mother was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. 

Fame suddenly didn鈥檛 seem so important. Her life focus shifted from recognition to contribution. She kept looking for ways she could help others. She had to trust that inner current and risk forward to pursue a new path. The result was her becoming a speaker to offer communication tips she learned while studying acting.

She shared the following tools she developed through her performing arts training to bring out the best in oneself by risking forward: 

  • Lead with a throughline. A throughline is a driving force of a character鈥檚 behavior 鈥 something that propels their actions. 鈥淭hink of yourself like the lead character in an action movie,鈥 Labalme says. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the throughline propelling you through the action of the play of your life? What drives you at work when you鈥檙e at your best? When I work with a tech company, I help them realize they aren鈥檛 about tech; they are about human connection. When I work with a diet and nutrition company, I tell them they aren鈥檛 in health; they are helping people live their best lives. Ask yourself, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 the nobility behind the sheet metal and HVAC industry?鈥欌
  • Use the right tool for the job. To be an effective communicator as a leader, you have multiple tools you can use: talk in person, video conference, phone call, email or message. Often, Labalme says, 鈥渨e use the wrong tool for the job. Many times, we use a Sharpie to communicate when we really should鈥檝e used a pencil.鈥 When other people鈥檚 input is important, 鈥渄on鈥檛 be a Sharpie leader; be a pencil leader,鈥 she encourages. 
  • Clarify your K-D-F. In communicating, always ask yourself: What is the knowledge I need to share? What do I need others to do as a result? How do I want others to feel when they walk away from that interaction? 
  • Craft your first and final moments. No play or movie begins or ends randomly. 鈥淪o often in business communications, we blow these moments,鈥 Labalme says. 鈥溾橳his meeting isn鈥檛 going to take much time鈥 is a terrible beginning. Also, you never want to end on a Q&A. You can make time for Q&A, but make sure you have a chance to make a final impression afterward with a story or image.鈥
  • Lead through possibility. To foster a work environment of collaboration, you want to always look for what is possible versus what isn't. This means encouraging people to share by not squashing ideas. Even what starts out as the wrong idea can lead to the right idea when it is listened to with an open mind and nurtured with collaboration, Labalme says. 
  • Take micro risks. Don鈥檛 go too big by expecting your employees to step outside of their comfort zones in a big way, or they won鈥檛. Micro risks are easier to adopt and embrace and they help you move forward in a stable and positive way. 

Published: May 10, 2024

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