Don't
Shut Out the People From Your Past
Social media has made it way too easy for former employees, partners, and bosses to contact you. Including folks you only half remember, or worse, want to forget. But don't be too quick to trash that message.
After 50 years of starting successful businesses in various
industries, and having thousands of employees, not a month goes by --
especially in challenging times like these -- without multiple emails, calls,
referrals, business plans, requests, solicitations, and other inquiries from
people I've once worked with through myriad media channels. If you think that
LinkedIn is a helpful tool, think again. It's a time sink, and a shameless,
standing invitation for introductions.
Some of these individuals I distinctly remember; some I could
never forget; some I tell myself I should or may remember; and others I
politely pretend to recall. But I do try to respond to every one of them. Even
if, truth be told, they might not have been such a bargain the first time around.
Nothing is as responsible for the way we fondly remember the good old days (and
the folks who were there) than a fading memory. Others ask me why I'd go out of
my way for Bob or Jane, pointing out some insult or shortcoming of theirs in
the distant past. "Loyalty" is often a big part of these
conversations. To be honest, some people are more offended on my behalf than I
would ever be -- even if I remembered the incidents in question. The motives of
memory are rarely entirely pure. Some of these people remain forever bitter
about slights and imagined injuries. The best and most successful entrepreneurs
I know aren't anchored to the past ups-and-downs -- they're always looking
ahead. And they're really big on second chances.
Once you open the door, though, you have to be very careful in
these conversations with people from the dim past. They might be ancient
history to you, but they may be holding on to a particular moment or memory
that's very special to them which involved you. You don't want to accidentally
drain the joy from their recollection by admitting that you have no idea of
what they're talking about. Honesty and too much candor aren't always virtues.
You have to wield the truth with care.
I often say, in talks, classes and columns, that no one becomes
successful in the past. That doesn't mean that it's a bad bet or foolish
investment to spend the modest amount of time it takes to reconnect and try to
help people from the old days. Just as long as you don't end up spending too
much time sitting around, as Bruce Springsteen would caution, thinking about
those old glory days. Some people spend all their time looking forward to the
past. Don't waste too much time looking backwards unless that's the direction
you're headed.
There are plenty of good reasons to reach out and respond to
these inquiries as long as you're careful not to make a hash of the whole
thing. There's a definite risk that your "good deed" won't go
unpunished. But consider it a worthy and worthwhile effort for these reasons
among others:
-- First, and selfishly, because you never know who's going to
bring you your future. They may be pitching you on your next great opportunity,
or opening doors to new markets, key prospective employees, or future
investors. No one's too busy to spend a few minutes listening.
-- Second, because only arrogant morons think that they're
"self-made" successes and forget all the people who helped get them
there. No one is a success all by themselves and you may find that these past
team members were the very ones who helped complete the package, get the
critical work done, and made you and your business the raging success that it
turned out to be. You'll never know if you don't ask. And you may owe them a
lot more than you'd think or like to admit.
-- And finally, because it's the right thing to do -- to extend
a helping hand if you can -- whatever the ancient history may have been.
Remember that we remember not what we choose, but what our memory permits and,
as often as not, the times, things, and people we recall are more likely to be
"the way things weren't" rather than the way things were. But
whatever they were, they're gone.
Memory revises itself constantly in part to warm and sweeten
past events in order to shield us from prior hurts and disappointments. And
because, while we all think we have pure and photographic recall, some of us no
longer have the necessary capacity. There's the past and then there's the story
we choose to tell about it. Nothing is ever as rosy or rotten as we tend to
recall. It's the way we never were.
One of the risks you run in reaching back is that the memories
of your early friends and employees may hinder you from being the person you've
become or are trying to become. It's hard to return home and seek work as the
latest "golden boy" at the fanciest firm in the city when your old
buddies remember you as the clown from the wrong part of town. You never know
when you're making a memory that may come back to bite you.
Another risk is that there are just some people that you can
never do enough for. And often, they won't take "No" for an answer.
It's a very slippery slope and you need to set the boundaries right from the
start. "Here's how I can help, if at all, and here's what I can't or won't
be able to do." In these cases, once it becomes clear that the
"ask" is just too much, you need to remember that an honest refusal
is much better than an insincere promise or an unnecessary delay. And, of
course, ghosting someone is the worst of all. Tell the truth and duck. Don't
just disappear.
And finally, you will inevitably run into situations where the
person pitching you is a failed founder. I know, I know -- some people insist
that it's a sacred badge of honor and something to be proud of, but I'm not one of them. This can be the hardest
of all situations to handle because these men and women may look great on paper
and certainly have the right attitude, but they bring a whole lot of pain and
baggage with them. You have to be very careful before you bring them on
board, or tout them to others, or sic them on someone else.
But the bottom line is that, as long as you are smart and
careful about the way you go about this whole inevitable process, it's almost
always worth the time to take a look. What comes around goes around and someday
you may need the same kind of lift.