One afternoon over ten years ago, I was talking on the phone to my boss, former GE Chairman and CEO Jack Welch, when the line went dead. I called his assistant Rosanne Badowski to say we had been disconnected.
“No you weren’t,” she said. “Jack hung up on you.”
"Huh?"
"He wants you to know that's what it's like to be in a meeting with you, " Rosanne said. "You're too abrupt."
We both got a good chuckle out of that. Point well made, and with humor as the tutor. Jack himself had been pretty abrupt a few months previously, when he called me into his office.
“You have to wallow in it.”
That’s
 what he said. I had just left a decade-long run in media to hop to the 
corporate side of things at GE, working with Welch on communications 
strategy.
My life in 
media—especially network news—had been an adrenaline rush, racing from 
deadline to deadline. If you don't make it to air, there is nothingness.
 You're dead. And making it to air first brings an added sense of 
accomplishment. Not to mention bragging rights. For me, it was a 
constant whirl: making sense of the constant stream of information 
coming in, calling reporters covering us to tell them what was happening
 and why we were doing it best. I’d think sometimes, if only I could 
field phone calls with both hands and both feet, all would be good (we 
didn’t have email yet, but the newsroom did have an archaic forerunner 
of instant messaging that satisfied my need to multitask).
Moving
 fast and being organized were my strong suits. The more there was to 
do, the more I felt alive. Productive. Efficient. Every to-do list item 
was checked, with urgency as my soundtrack. I loved the thrill, and I 
was good at keeping up with it.
Who better than me, then, to land a plum assignment working for Jack Welch, Mr. Speed and Simplicity.
Imagine my surprise when he called me into his office that day and admonished me for being too efficient.
 My zeal to do everything on my to-do list—along with my reserved, even 
shy nature—made me come across as abrupt and cold. I started every 
meeting by jumping right in and left with every action under control.
"You have to wallow in it," he said. "Take time to get to know people. Understand where they are coming from, what is important to them. Make sure they are with you."
At best, my colleagues didn't know what to make of me—and I certainly didn't give them time to find out.
I
 heard Jack loud and clear. But honestly, it took a long time for the 
impact of his words to sink in, and even longer to change my behavior. 
After all, those same attributes had led to my being in the role in the 
first place.
I cringe sometimes 
when I think of how I must have come across at times, and how long it 
took me to change my ways. And even now there are times when I forget 
Jack’s advice (it is a decade old). But yes, I’ve learned to not only 
wallow in it, but to enjoy it. Time to think and time to connect with 
people are as important as getting everything done. Sometimes you have 
to go slow before you go fast.
I 
will be forever grateful for the time and humor Jack invested to teach 
me these important work and life lessons. Many happy returns.
 
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