opportunity

The Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity

by Steven Snyder on March 11, 2014

author_book_steven_snyderI first learned about the Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity from my friend, Stan Halle, in 1983. I was contemplating two job offers, and had sought Stan’s advice which to take. One offer came from a well-known consulting company in Boston, where I was living at the time. It was the safer of the two offers—the other was from a virtually unknown company near Seattle. I had just come from a start-up experience that didn’t go well, and was leaning toward the more predictable path.

It was then that Stan told me of the Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity—that ephemeral sliver of an opening that appears in the ether. You need to decide whether to jump through it, or to pass it by. If you miss the window, it just closes up.

Well, I took the Seattle offer. And that unknown company was Microsoft.

Once you learn about the Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity, you keep seeing it again and again. You learn how to notice when it appears, and how to act upon it. You even learn how to increase the odds that opportunities will appear when you want them to. Soon it becomes integrated into your daily practice. Something in your gut tells you to seek out opportunity, and you find yourself unconsciously gravitating toward it. Over time, you learn which ones to go after, and which ones to leave behind.

Today marks the one-year anniversary of the publication of my book, Leadership and the Art of Struggle. Reflecting on this anniversary, I see how the Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity was an organizing principle that led me down this path, filled with joy and fulfillment.

But, today I realize that there is another dimension to the Cubic Centimeter that was not obvious to me thirty years ago. Back then, I saw material success as the criterion variable in judging Cubic Centimeter moments. That is, achievement was the only thing that mattered.

Now I realize that tangible outcomes are only part of a bigger story. The other part is in relationships that emerge as you pursue your aspirations. So often, these relationships are trampled upon to capture the material things we thought we wanted.

My book-writing journey has taught me something different. The relationships and connections were every bit as fulfilling as the more tangible metrics that so often cast a fog over everything else.

I express my gratitude and appreciation to all of my friends—both old and new— who have helped me during this phase of my journey. It is my hope that you too will realize the potential of the Cubic Centimeter, not only to achieve your dreams, but also so you can feel the warmth and glow of creating meaningful connections and community.

One final note on the reference:  Several years ago, I asked Stan how he came up with the idea of the Cubic Centimeter of Opportunity. He told me that he read about it in a book, but didn’t remember which one. I finally tracked down Journey to Ixtlan by Carlos Castaneda, who talked about something called the Cubic Centimeter of Chance. While Castaneda’s alliteration is cute, Stan’s replacing the word “chance” with “opportunity” makes the concept more powerful, which is probably why it stuck with me for all those years.     

Gaining Altitude through Reflection

by Steven Snyder on September 19, 2013

3851732077_081d42d1a0Thousands of times a day, people board airplanes that carry them across the country and around the world. Navy pilots land on aircraft carriers, helicopters are used to help fight wildfires, and men and women are living and working aboard the International Space Station. One-hundred-and-ten years after their 12-second flight, Orville and Wilbur Wright are still making a difference, thanks to their practice of reflection and reinvention.

Although the Wrights were not the first to build an aircraft, they believed that the solution for a safe, manned flight was not to use a more powerful engine, but to find a way for the pilot to control the craft. Studying past failures – both theirs and those of earlier aviators – they reflected on what they could do differently, and started testing their theories using large kites.

Through their kite flying and wind tunnel tests, they discovered three-axis control, which remains the standard in fixed-wing aviation to this day. Before they made history in Kill Devil Hills, the Wright brothers experienced multiple challenges; but instead of giving up, they grew through them and continued to work towards their dream of controlled flight.

Even after their success in December of 1903, they maintained their growth mind-set, reflecting on what worked and what they could do differently. In this, we could all do to emulate Orville and Wilbur: they didn’t stop growing because they had achieved one goal – they simply aimed higher.

How often do you sit down and reflect on what’s going on in your life or business? Once a year, like a New Years resolution list? Once a month, while you’re balancing your budget? Would you be surprised if I said you should do it once a week? 

How will you know what’s working, or what’s not, if you never take the time to reflect on the events of the past? If I have a positive experience, either personal or work-related, I want to know how my efforts contributed to the outcome so I can replicate them in the future. I want to learn from my successes, and my failures, so I can move forward with confidence.

Making time for reflection is part of embracing the art of struggle. While there will always be difficulties and set-backs, we can choose to learn from both the missteps and the wins. In order to thrive in the midst of struggle, it’s important that you take the time to develop a forward thinking, growth oriented mind-set.

In other words, don’t simply focus on what’s not working – learn to reflect on what is; see the opportunities, not just the obstacles.

While the Wright brothers experienced plenty of failures during their early years, they also recognized that each failure and success got them a step closer to their goal. As another famous pioneer (Thomas A. Edison) once said, “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.

Embrace the art of struggle, and the sky’s the limit!

 

Struggle as Art

August 1, 2013

What do Michelangelo, da Vinci, Beethoven, and Steve Jobs have in common? At first glance, perhaps nothing. But what would you think if I said that they are all artists? Michelangelo is known for sculpting David, da Vinci for the secretive Mona Lisa, and Beethoven for his epic Ode to Joy. Steve Jobs? Contrary to […]

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