Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Rules for Them.

You don’t have to sit at the elbow of power for very long to realise:

There are the rules for Them.

And there are the rules for The Rest of Us.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Nothing Personal.

A bad boss always takes it personally.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

16.

Asking our 16 year old daughter if, when she is a parent, she will let her 16 year old daughter go to a party full of strangers.

‘If I’ve raised her like you’ve raised me I would.’

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Of No Importance.

The reasonable person struggles to align Belief, Behaviour, and Consequences.

The performative virtuous person only needs to proclaim Belief - and Behaviour and Consequences are of no importance.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

The Death of the Boss.

The outsourcing of management of the worker by the boss to HR marked the beginning of Management and the death of the Boss.

HR has no experience of the worker or what motivates them, and no skin in the game of how the worker serves the boss.

HR’s work is unaffected while it investigates, disciplines, hires, fires, rates, restructures, trains or ignores the worker.

Meanwhile, the boss, deprived of direct agency over their worker’s career, loses the ability or incentive to know and thus develop them.

Further reinforcing the need for HR.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Beware.

Beware of the failure that gets results.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Constraints.

We gush and we promote and sing the praises of our chosen organisation or endeavour.

We loot the thesaurus for every adjective to out-describe and out hype our competitors and mock the life we left behind to be here.

Then, with our chosen vessel of virtue flying along with sails billowing with our hot air of triumphalism -

CRACK!

We strike the unchartered Inevitable Reef hidden below the Sea of Life.

As we take on water and begin listing to starboard -

It’s too late to decide that perhaps we would have been better off promoting our constraints rather than our grandiose ambition.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

No More Digital.

It’s been 30 years since mass adoption of the internet.

Twenty since the smartphone.

Fifteen since wide use of laptops in schools.

It’s time to stop showing our age by prefacing things with ‘digital’, or ‘e’, or ‘cyber’.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

The Courage of the Expert.

By definition, an expert becomes one by breaking convention.

This exposes the expert to the risk of being held accountable to those conventions by those who are threatened by her.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Mission Statement.

To ease the burden of another - if only for a moment.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

No Substitute.

Urgency is not a substitute for competence.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Always. Never.

It’s always ‘How do we comply?’

And never ‘What’s the right thing to do?

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Close It.

Sometimes the kindest act towards a person approaching a door expecting it to be open -

- is to close and lock it.

To say - ‘You deserve the best and you won’t find it here.’

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Honoured.

There are few more refreshing experiences than a person who honours you by speaking the truth.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Name Reality.

What does it mean for middle powers to live the truth?

First, it means naming reality.
— Mark Carney, PM of Canada

Step 2 of the Five Steps to a Good Decision:

Define the Issue.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

The Same Lie.

Our entire civilisation depends on each person who ever lived telling ourselves the same lie:

‘It won’t happen to me.’

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Bedfellows.

Before raising my fist in the air in virtuous protest.

Best look around and check the virtues of my fellow protesters.

As well as my own.

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Bernard Hill Bernard Hill

Non-Binary.

Your heart can break for more than one person at a time.
— Norm Macdonald

You can feel for the person who is offended.

As well as for the person ostracised for offending.

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