LEADERSHIP QUOTE:
"A gathering begins at the moment of invitation. It doesn't begin when people walk in the room." Priya Parker
A LITTLE BIT DEEPER:
This month, I'm going to dive into a few quotes from Priya Parker, the author of the book, The Art of Gathering. I've been talking about this book for the past few months, and I thought I'd choose a couple of her quotes on the importance of gathering together just to encourage you to explore the book more deeply.
To read past quotes & thoughts.... CLICK HERE.
I'm repeating this quote today because last week I ended up chasing the word ENGAGEMENT and ASSUMPTIONS. Today I want to come back to this word ANTICIPATION.
When Parkers says, "A gathering begins at the moment of invitation..." my immediate response has been this:
I want people to have the logistics needed for the gathering: time, place, what to wear, what we'll eat, the schedule and most importantly, what time we'll be done.
I want people to know what will happen during the time: who's speaking, what topics we'll cover, what to expect
I do this because I want to make it really EASY for people to attend my gathering. Again to my comments last week, "I'm assuming they are really busy and are just doing me a favor by attending." (which is a wrong assumption) Read last weeks post HERE.
If a gathering truly begins at the point of invitation, then I need to not focus solely on logistic, but I need to drive PURPOSE. I've talked about this and I can't tell you why I keep forgetting this.
Logistics can be read and scheduled. Purpose has to be felt.
Parker explores this in her book:
Anticipation signals PURPOSE - This isn't "just another meeting"
Anticipation begins shaping CONNECTION & VULNERABILITY before people meet.
Anticipation creates PSYCHOLOGICAL OWNERSHIP - participants start investing their imagination and attention early.
This is powerful!
Can you think of a meeting, a gathering, an event you participated in that used ANTICIPATION beforehand to prepare you for what was to come?
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