California Must Continue to Learn From John Wooden
June 8, 2010
by Webmaster
California Must Continue to Learn From John Wooden
California lost one of its greatest leaders and role models
last Friday with the passing of legendary UCLA basketball Coach John
Wooden. I am dedicating today's The Business
Perspective to Coach Wooden because his leadership principles — on which he based
his life and coaching career — are what business, government, labor and
environmental groups need to learn if we are to re-energize the California Dream
and win as a team for our State.
In the midst of a week of news stories about continued
unemployment, a crashing stock market, terrorism and conflict around the globe, and the largest oil disaster in the history of the planet, a giant of a man
died quietly surrounded by family after being visited by so many friends and those he mentored at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, a short walk from
where he made sports history.
Coach Wooden was an icon in college sports, but he could very well have
been a great businessman, college president, mayor or legislative leader because
he understood that all great organizations are the result of exceptional team
efforts by those who share a common goal.
Coach Wooden understood the importance of putting aside individual egos and personal ambitions for the good of the team. He knew that camaraderie, shared values and
hard work could enable individuals to achieve collectively what no one else had
ever done. Everything he stood for is
what the collective body of leaders in California and Los Angeles need to
embrace today if our State is to benefit from divergent opinions rather than
being paralyzed by them.
For Coach Wooden, principles were more important than
publicity, building character was more important than accumulating power, persistence was more important than skill, family
was more important than fame and faith was more important than anything else.
It is an understatement to say that Los Angeles and California face major challenges ahead. All of us
in business, labor, the environmental movement and government would be well-served to envision ourselves on Coach Wooden's team and put his principles of
leadership to work as we rebuild our economy and create a long-term and sustainable
future for our State.
John Wooden understood the power of teamwork and the beauty
of success in which everyone feels a share of the credit. That is what California needs. If Coach Wooden gathered us together in the
same room at the start of this journey, he would probably begin with a team
exercise and teach us all how to tie our shoestrings. For California and Los Angeles
to come out winners, all of us in leadership must begin seeing ourselves on the same team.
And that's The Business Perspective.

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