I remember attending SHRM a few years back, and I met a gentleman who was diligently taking notes in each session. He had sheaf of paper and was taking so many notes you would have thought that he was a stenographer.
I just had to wait for the right moment before I casually introduced myself. As the session ended, I noticed him sitting next to a wall reviewing his notes. As I looked over at him, I thought back to my days in college before the big exam. Everyone would be scurrying around with notes all over the place taking last minute glances before they went in.
My thought was that he was probably doing research or maybe had a book deal, or something like that. It did not even cross my mind that he was an actual HR practitioner. If he was, why the sense of urgency? Why so many notes? My thought was, “what is up with that?”
I walked over to him, introduced myself, and we started a casual conversation. Yes, he was an actual HR practitioner. Yes, he worked in corporate HR. Yes, he had tons of projects back home that were in various stages of completion.
One of the things he said that resonated with me that day was the reason that he attends so many conferences. “I am just looking for the silver bullet from some of the presenters that will allow me to complete my project successfully,” he said. “That is why I go to so many. I am looking for ideas.”
Astonishingly, I was at a loss for words. As I processed this statement, I thought of all the folks there that day and how many are looking for that same silver bullet.
I too have attended conferences and seminars in the past that were chosen particularly for the project that either I was working on or anticipating. However, I never recall going over and over again looking for that inspiration.
Conferences and seminars are great for inspiration. They get the juices flowing. They also allow you to fall in love with your profession all over again — that is, if you ever were in love with it the first place.
However, the real work begins when the conference is over. What do you do with the burning ideas, the break-through thoughts, and most of all, your projects back at home awaiting your touch or guidance?
There must always be a plan for post-conference activity. How are you to take all those insight and get the needed mileage out of it? How can we take what we learned and put the finishing touches on that project that was languishing from no activity?
Don’t just let conference material become crendenza ware. What that means is don’t allow your conference material to end up in a drawer or shelf, thus becoming crendenza ware.
Create a plan that will give you a road map for your project and that provides the direction for the project. Just as a driver may encounter road construction or new routes as they head to the final destination, you can always correct the course.
If a process is developed for each formal learning event, the success level will increase. Think of each event as an investment in your production, but more importantly, it is an investment in your career. The more successes you have in developing your projects, the more value you bring to your organization as well as yourself
Finding the silver bullet is not hard. The hard part is converting it to success.