Where do we leave footprints for others to follow or witness our passing? How long do they last? Do they serve as inspiration or frustration to those that follow? Are we more likely to continue our work when we know others are ahead, or do we consider a new route if a path has already been traveled?
Inspire
Fanfare
How would your work change if it was accompanied by a personalized fanfare? A friend remarked that their day would be improved if the soundtrack from the Mission Impossible movie franchise played in the background.
What fanfare would you select to inspire your work?
Way Too Early
A favored way sports leagues retain attention immediately after a championship event is to post a pre-season ranking for the coming season. Often titled ‘A Way Too Early Ranking,’ it attempts to retain engagement with fans. By giving hope to all those fans seeking a reset after disappointment or delighting those building on their success, the poll encourages people to start dreaming and planning for next season.
How might we find a balance between engagement and a reset? When do we allow our fans to recalibrate? When do we need to amplify their connection with our cause?
Footprints
What message do our footprints represent? Are we setting a path for others to follow? Do we intend to seek sanctuary and obscure our tracks? Might we follow the crowd and tread on historically worn trails? Is it possible to inspire those who follow?
It is easy to think of our footprints as follow-through. The activity has been completed, and we do not witness our tracks unless we commit to pivoting to observe our path. It is usually in difficult terrain that we might commit to a review of the terrain we have previously traveled. The propensity of time, our focus is only forward?
When do you consider the topography already covered? What is the lasting impact of your completed work?
No Mail
What if you travel to the mailbox every day and find it empty? What if you sent out a request for funding as a year-end appeal and have not received a response? What if you asked people to provide their insights in a brief poll on an easy-to-return postcard and none returned? What if you announced you were going out of business, and nobody responded with good wishes or an inquiry about what happened?
It is convenient to think that our efforts do not inspire them just because we have yet to hear from our fans. I spoke with a thru-hiker who completed the Appalachian Trail. He remarked on how almost everyone adopted a trail name. Some were memorable, and one, in particular, stood out. A hiker who was roughly ten days ahead of him would sign in at various huts, peaks, and significant trail junctions. An individual that my friend had never met was an enduring source of inspiration. Each time he read this forerunner’s trail name in a trail log, he was inspired to keep going. He never caught or met this backpacker, but it influenced him to reach Mt. Katahdin in Maine and to share the story years later.
Your work might be creating the draft pulling along a whole peloton of invisible followers, and your endurance keeps them active in the adventure. Even if we cannot track every view, like, ride on, and accolade, we may be the linchpin for an unofficial team.




