Get Lynne's new brochure

 

 

 

 

 

Read the Whitepaper on "10 Challenges of Leading Today's Workforce and what to do about them"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Listen to Lynne Cazaly's interviews on Spotify

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Book coming soon

Clever Skills

How to use your greatest human capabilities for the unfolding future 

 

 

 

AS PUBLISHED IN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Award winning & Best selling

10 x author

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What people say...

 

 

I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which I live - the Yalukit-Willam - and pay my respects to their elders past, present and emerging. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Entries in meaning (6)

Thursday
Sep052024

Facilitate better/Leverage downtime/Meaning over achievement/Work funk/Take notes/Executive Overload/From do to help/Free Masterclass/My Exhibition!

 

Why downtime helps you carry the load

Read this one that explains why and how we need downtime a little more than we're taking it.

 


 

Obsessed with achievement / no time for meaning

That’s it. That’s a big problem in the world today. We’re hyper-focused on do, get, have and achieve and don’t really play enough.

We’ve been sold the drive to be productive at the cost of burnout, and don’t know how to let loose, truly relax and have that lighter space of play.

Take a moment and read this one about what we might do to remedy the burnt out lives we are leading. What could we do — simply for the sake of doing it and not because it will achieve us something.

 

 


It was a pure pleasure to join with Corrinne Armour CSP and Travis Bell at Professional Speakers Australia event in South Melbourne - dinner prior at Bells Hotel - and then into the program!
Hosted by Lindsey Leigh Hobson the program included Dr Amy Silver interviewing Michael Licenblat CSP and then Kate Dillon MC-ed Trav, Corrinne & I with our 20 mins on Facilitating for more impact - followed by a panel discussion.
Great venue at Central House and a fine example of a fresh, professional and vibrant event.

 


If you know me, you know I like to take notes

And across multiple devices and surfaces. I don’t use just one tool.

Digital notes, audio notes, analogue notes, journal notes, sticky notes … they all form part of my thinking and working process.

It’s all part of generating and capturing ideas, exploring information, writing, creating and sketching, communicating, sharing, influencing.

What about you? How do you capture, make and create? What’s your process and what’s in your toolkit? Which apps and which tools?

This is an interesting write up in WIRED of writing and digital notebooks.

Whether you use them or not, keep up with how digital note taking is evolving and the uses and applications, features, pros and cons.

Also, I want them all! Shout out to the Remarkable users I know 👋 who love their devices

 


 

Funk off work!

Mondayitis and the Sunday Scaries are familiar feelings for those who are in a funk about work.

Whether it’s related to your current role (or no role), the dread of work comes for us all at some time in our career.

It could be the tasks, the location, the commute, the people, the leader or a combination — with a dash of ‘I don’t really know; it’s just funked’.

Working for yourself - while forcefully motivating at times (‘if I don’t work, I won’t be able to support myself’) can bring some mid-week funk or a sense of doubt or confusion at times.

Perhaps it’s envy at those ‘employed people’ who have security (!) and a constant stream of salary. And still employees can watch an independent worker thinking they’re at the beach all day or driving their convertible around joyfully with the top down!

Whatever the funk you feel and whether you’re employed or contracting or looking or consulting, three things to do are:

1. Admit the funk

2. Audit the funk

3. Review the funk data… a bonus tip of

4. Break the funk.

If this is you, read more in this piece from Tim Duggan - ok he uses different terminology and much better examples but I can’t be funked right now. 😁

 

 


Lynne Cazaly - The Executive Load Masterclass

Executives get overloaded too

It's easy to assume 'they're doing ok', 'they don't have to deal with what I'm dealing with' or 'they're on the big bucks', but the reality is we are all dealing with the overload of too much information.

'TMI' need not just refer to the dumping of too much personal information! It's the weight of the load of everyday information that becomes too much:

emails

meetings

thinking

listening

reading

reviewing

absorbing

deciding -

and on it goes. It is a stress creator for sure. Add to that some long, complex conversations and the brain does feel fried, no matter your job role or level in the business.

Cognitive overload is a problem the Institute for the Future rated as one of the top 10 we’d be experiencing in these times… and they weren’t wrong! It's like we're trying to survive this new weight of information with our old ways of coping -- and we're not coping.

It can be tackled though. This week I'm working with a senior leadership/exec/C-suite team on how to:

😩 understand old ways that cause overload;

☺️ update information processing methods;

😇 handle information better; and

😍 cope with the executive load.

Instead of information getting us down or making us think 'OMG not another piece, please!', cognitive load coping helps us understand what's happening in overload and how to mitigate it before it gets to the 'DING, your brain is cooked' stage.

That means understanding information, connecting the dots and making sense becomes easier and better - and that's a key part of leadership, of self leadership too.

Notice your day and week; where are you getting overloaded? When does it feel like too much? What have you been doing that might be contributing to overload?

➡️ Read more in my Harvard Business Review article 'How to save yourself from information overload' and start saving yourself...

or invite me to come and run a masterclass on it and I'll help you save yourself; no one is going to do it for you 🤩

 


From this is what I do … to this is where I help

Image by Lynne Cazaly

As job roles and businesses change, vanish and shape-shift, we need to ask ourselves how we too have to change.

That thing we did then — as easy as it was to sell or do, comparatively — needs to change too.

Not so big as a pivot. Not so small as a tweak. It’s a relabeling and repositioning.

Whatever you used to be known as, it likely needs to be renamed and revalued and possibly re-explained.

Too often we can hold our ground or remain static in what we do and what we call it. We might think ‘I just need more people to know about this’, or ‘once people understand this, they’ll know they need it.’

But the noise is plenty and the cutting through is harder when people are drowning in too much information. Look at what you do and how else you can position it, label it and name it. It has to tie in to something already sitting in people’s pain centres, you know, “Urgh this is a problem and we’ve got to fix it now.”

That signals they’re feeling it and have funds for it.

Adjust and refine what you’re doing so you meet people with what they’re battling with now — not what was the hot topic a year or three or 23 ago. We different now.

 


 

The future will depend on how you think — and learn

Yup, read this one for an insight to how your thinking and learning might need to switch up a gear.

 


Lynne Cazaly's Exhibition 

Being in the moment

Thrilled to announce a solo exhibition of something I’ve been working on quietly. And it does happen quietly. I collect fallen, gifted and pruned vines, sticks, leaves, creepers, branches and other ‘detritus’ and I’ve been making them into sculptural artworks.

It’s expanding my creativity as I’m exploring topics and experiences like uncertainty, the unknown, ingenuity, resourcefulness and improvisation.

The exhibit is happening in Albert Park, Melbourne October 8-27 at Gasworks Arts Park

Details are here

Join me on October 20, 1-3pm in person for a celebration (just show up!) or stop by and spend some time in the exhibit called Being in the Moment, October 8-27.

 

Thursday
Feb082024

Meaning of work/Not know and be ok/Art, Creativity & Science/Leaping this year

What does your work mean to you

It's always a good time to think about what you want from your work and what you work gives you.

Work, workplaces and the world of work is changing -- and continues to change. And you might need to adapt or change what you do for work or how you work.

Read more in this piece from Psychology Today and take another look at the meaning of work and how things might, possibly, be able to shift for you.

 

Not know and be ok with that

It sounds unusual but we can be bored and frustrated... and it can be ok.

We can be caught up with wanting to feel wonderful and put-together all the time, but there are benefits to these other states.

This is a reminder for me frequently; to not keep pushing and busy-ing but to let the uncertainty or unknown of boredom, irritation and frustration be a place of great things.

Read more in this article

 

The art, creativity and science of …

It’s summer here in Australia and for those who get annoyed by it … there can be ‘sand everywhere!!’

No matter your season, take a moment to feel the sand between your toes in this lovely read of the art and science - and creative uncertainty - of sandcastle making.

There are themes here of

▫️Philosophy

▫️Impermanence

▫️Uncertainty and that which is outside of our control

▫️Resources and sustainability

▫️Ingenuity

▫️Friction and

▫️Tension.

 

 

Thinking of making a leap this year

Career changes, pursuing that which you’ve always had an interest in, or just thinking it’s time for a change.

Making a leap into a new way of working can mean a career or job shift — and that can mean working for yourself, registering a business or taking a whole new work direction.

What are you thinking about work … and how might things be new for you this year?

This article in The Age shared some inspiring examples of what's possible and practical and implementable, not just what is a faraway dream.

 

Saturday
Jul042020

Making sense and meaning

There is sensemaking and there is meaning making. 

When things happen we have the opportunity to look at them, talk about them and make sense of them. 

As we do that, we thread our own meaning into those events. Our own lens or perspective. 

Through sensemaking we may well understand what’s going on. But it’s not until we make meaning of it that it really ... you know ... means something to us. 

It’s possibly why businesses the world over may struggle with change. Some things just don’t make any sense ... so what could that possibly mean? 

> Sensemaking is great for insight, strategy and decision making. 
> Meaning making is wonderful for connection, engagement and trust. 

Film makers and story tellers do both so well, building up complex layers of sense and meaning, building tension and intrigue, teasing the mind and then ... touching the heart. 

It makes sense AND it means something. 

Help people make sense, sure. 

Then leave it with them to settle or ‘marinate’ allowing them time to make meaning. 

And then ... listen to their meaning. 

Friday
Dec202019

Everyone’s got note pads but no one is making sense 

A meeting room I was in recently had a table with 8 people seated at it. Each person had arrived at the meeting with a collection of props and belongings:

- a water bottle

- their ID/security card

- their mobile device

- notepad and pen.

The notepad and pen - yes, an analogue tool, but powerful nonetheless.

Everyone in the meeting was writing their own notes down. Their own insights, their own wording, their own triggers for ideas, their own recollection.

It was very singular, individual even though it was a group meeting. Great! They’re making sense of things, but oh no ...they're doing it alone. Someone says something, then everyone’s head drops down and they all write it down in their own notepad, their own 'map' of the world they're talking about.

We’re individuals trying to work this stuff out as a group.

Sensemaking - it can be done alone or better... together.

Rather than everyone looking at their own 'map', make a group map, a central map on a whiteboard or flipchart.

More progress is made in uncertainty when we have a common point of visual context. 

Friday
Dec202019

How we confuse ourselves 

In a meeting recently I saw a colleague write up more than 5 pages of notes. The next day they said how confused they felt about it all.

What were all the notes about then?

Sometimes we can capture content others are delivering, thinking we’re doing well, getting all of that information down. But it can end up meaning nothing to us later. We don’t seem to be able to find what the key points were or what the essence of it was.

As I chatted with my colleague later and we reviewed their notes, they were words, phrases, things underlined. These were the key things they heard. But later, none of it really made much sense. There was no synthesis, distilling, connections or conclusions. The notes were parts of sentences.

In sensemaking, it helps to pause, listen, make sense of what’s going on, and write that down. It is habit (and fear) that drives us to write it all down like a court reporter! But we don’t need to write it all.

So make sense as you go, capture information as it makes sense to you.

Go for distilling information rather than transcribing it!