Pablo Picasso is one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century. He has some of the greatest works ever made. He also made this. It’s called The Mackerel.
Yep. One of the greatest artist ever made this. You see, to make great works, you have to make a lot of works. Great artist don’t just make great works. Sometimes they make fish in vaginas. Sometimes what they think is a good idea fails. That’s how they perfect their craft. Every once in a while, greatness is the result.
I write a lot. At least every business day I have a post going up. Many times I have posts going up on other sites, as well. Ideas come to me, such as my frustration with sourcing and talent acquisition, and I write about them.
I feel, far too often, talent acquisition blindly follows the pack without determining what is right for their environment, their culture, and their needs. Does this mean every day I’m frustrated with HR, recruiting and sourcing? No. I’m going to write some stuff that I’ll look back on and wonder, “Why did I write that!?”
That’s part of the process.
We are at a place in our society where you can’t have one idea one day, and have another idea the next, if it contradicts one idea you’ve ever had in your whole entire life. What I believe in now, 20 years into my career, isn’t even close to what I believed in starting out in my career. And we lose our minds and judge people in this industry if someone has a different opinion than ours.
At this point in my career, I don’t read a lot of stuff in the HR and Talent space, primarily because I agree with a lot of it. It’s like the pastor preaching to the choir. It’s not needed because they’ve already bought in! Now I like reading stuff that I totally disagree with because it challenges my assertions and makes me rethink my positions.
It’s not my goal to write about stuff that is controversial. I’m not that guy. I get far more traffic on my positive posts than on my controversial posts. And it’s easier to write about hugs and babies and show videos that make you cry and appreciate your life.
But I will write about stuff that matters. Some of it will be great. Some of it won’t stick. I hope that people in our industry will see the art for what it is and avoid personal attacks. I know some of the most vocal people in our space. I admire them for their skills. I want to give everybody the space to develop new and deeper ideas, even if those ideas contradict earlier blog posts. And I don’t want to start calling them out when they write their fish-in-vaginas sourcing and talent manifestos.
***Shoutout to my friend Laurie Ruettimann for some editing help with this post***
Great post, Tim. I respect people who can change their mind and tell others about it. I always ask why, though. If it’s because the data changed or there was a change in situation, that can make sense. If it’s because of someone caving to whiny demands, I get fussy. Either way, a flexible mind can be an asset.
Hold on, are you suggesting the Mackerel isn’t representative of Picasso’s work?
enjoyed this post.. thanks for sharing. Merry Xmas, happy Hanukkah – Or happy holidays
Good post Tim and I think your comments don’t apply to just our industry. Our entire society has come to a point where open and honest dialogue amongst dissenting opinions is becoming obsolete. No one debates anymore. We just speak (or yell) at one another without really engaging. And most people probably prefer to read articles that align with their beliefs or opinions. That confirmation bias makes them feel correct.
You’re obviously a wordly man to know the depth of Picasso’s work. This was one of the funniest posts I’ve read in a long time – in a weird, interesting, things that make you go hmmm sort of way.