Another one of life's dreams had to get euthanized over the holiday weekend, that of closing my career by writing a terrific management book.
The realization that there wouldn't be enough genuine insights came to me while driving back to the office from a very pleasant catch-up lunch with a former client, Matt Timm. He's now the principal of the Eden Prairie digital marketing firm Magnetic North.
I had started thinking of what was still in a file from a project we worked on together more than a half-dozen years ago, when I was a strategy consultant. The keepers, I knew, included a detailed memo on how to sell an innovative and really complex product when the whole cycle, from first introduction to signed contract, could easily take more than a year.
This memo was so good, it's a shame I hadn't written it. Matt Timm had.
It's typical of materials I've kept. There are Medtronic marketing plans, a Johnson & Johnson strategy presentation, a Boston Consulting Group acquisition screening process, along with lots of other articles and documents written by others. So imagine a publisher biting on a book pitched with this working title: "Read More Than Your Clients Have Time For."
I can't see it, either.
There's no reason to apologize for being a lifelong student of business, and what credit I can give myself is putting a lot of what I've read into simpler words. And the job of consultant turns out be mostly helping clients do sooner what they already knew was best.
Here's advice I've given more than once to clients: "Don't hire others to do your thinking for you." This was jarring to hear but it sure got a client's attention, although sometimes it was misinterpreted as a knock against consultants. The trick was to deliver the line with the tone of a joke.