I don’t often try to proactively steer my life with deliberate intent. I’ve done it maybe 3 times in 44y. I generally keep doing things out of momentum for ~2y too long before unsustainability forces a steer, like arriving at a T-junction or running off a cliff, Bugs Bunny style
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Anyhow, reason I tried this steering at all was partly curiosity to see if I could self-disrupt, and partly because climate action is one of those rare cases where if you’re going to steer at all, you should try to make it proactive. Crash-only climate action is a bit too risky.
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We’ll see if it sticks. I’d like to do more energy/climate/sustainability work (hint hint!). It’s interesting work. Though I mostly do management/org consulting around this stuff, the tech domain is quite challenging to master even at that level. I’m learning a lot.
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It’s also become clear to me that software eating the world is central to effective climate action. It’s the only metalever that can act fast enough, broadly enough across all the levers. It is also how everything else gets operationalized. But that’s a story for another day.
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Anyhoo... Moral of story: don’t even think about steering until music slows and the groove starts to feel like a rut. If steering feels easy, check momentum. I’ll bet it isn’t there. Steer by forced-hand, crash/crisis, or run-off-cliff if you can. Momentum is THAT valuable.
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But in the rare cases real steering is called for: science it to death, bring all the momentum into play, and treat it like an aircraft carrier turn, not a juvenile “pivot” fueled by the the latest pot-smoking session. It’s a bet the momentum-farm self-disruption. Not a joke.
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It’s resolutions season. Fun exercise and it’s always good to send out reflections to people affected by your potential steering, whether it’s just your wife and cat like me, or a 100,000 person org. But the best resolution might be NO resolution. No steering. Unless you must
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End of conversation
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