The
phone rang. Focused on the words on my computer screen, I absentmindedly picked
up the phone.
“He
wants to see you.”
“Now?”
I asked.
“Now.”
I
grabbed my suit coat (that’s what we wore in those days), made a mad dash down
my building’s back stairs of my building to the tunnel that connected all of
the buildings on our campus. I surfaced in the executive building next store –
granite, art work and polished wood bathed in silence.
In
corporate communication circles , I occupied one of the high positions – the CEO’s
speechwriter. I had written for CEOs before him, and I would write for CEOs
after him. But no one had the reputation this CEO did.
He
had run through three speechwriters in four months before the dreaded call had
come. I had expected it. I had written a speech that had received outsized
attention inside and outside the company.
The CEO wants you to write his speeches.
In
normal circumstances, I would have been thrilled. These were not normal
circumstances. This CEO could be awful to work for. He relished being awful to
work for. His supervisory style was known as management by intimidation.
After
18 months of my career being over once a week, we both had had one of those
business epiphanies. He realized that I wasn’t trying to run the company
through his speeches. I realized that there was a human being inside of his
business suit.
I
reached the outer office where his secretary sat. She nodded toward his door,
and arched a eyebrow slightly.
The
eyebrow was code. The CEO was not in a good mood. I didn’t know how I was going
to handle going back to square one in our working relationship.
I
took a step toward his office and he started yelling at me. Literally yelling.
And waving the pages of a speech draft I had written.
You don’t know how to write. This is
trash. It’s the worst thing you’ve written. You think you’re a writer but you’re
not. I don’t have flacks write for me. This went on for some time.
I
sat in the chair in front of his desk, and let him finish his rant. I knew it
wasn’t the speech draft. I knew I had written a really fine draft. But I knew
it must be something, so I listened for clues.
He
finally muttered something about me not knowing how to write for certain
audiences, and then it clicked.
“It’s
the audience, isn’t it?” I asked.
He
exploded again.
“You’ve
never spoken to a minority audience before, have you?” I asked, surprising
myself at how abrupt I was being.
He
sat there, glowering at me.
“What
if we do this,” I said. “I will send the draft to” – I named two company
executives who happened to be minorities – “and have them read it. And see if
they think it’s OK for this audience.”
Grumbling,
he agreed.
The
CEO never allowed anyone to read his speeches beforehand. So this was a rather
unique move for him. The two executives read the draft. One suggested a single
word change (in a 2,000-word text). The other said he wouldn’t change anything,
and that he would give the speech if the CEO wouldn’t.
The
CEO gave the speech, to a group of 250 African-American business students.
A
couple of days later, I received another phone call.
“He
wants to see you.”
“Now?”
I asked, knowing the answer.
“Now.”
When
I arrived, the secretary nodded me toward the door and winked.
That
was a good sign.
I
walked in his office.
“I
gave a great speech,” he said. “I knew it would go over well. They gave me a
standing ovation.”
I
nodded. “I don’t think I would have expected anything less.”
He
nodded. “So let’s talk about the Boston speech next month.”
The
High Calling is hosting a
community linkup on the power of storytelling at work. To see what others
have written, please visit The
High Calling. Better still, consider writing and linking your own story
about work. the deadline is this weekend.
Illustration by Karen Arnold via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
6 comments:
Your ability to endure such workplace harshness (all while getting to the middle of the muddle) shows great strength of character… and as apparent from audience reaction(s), both your calm, and your words, wrangle hearts.
Wow. I have such mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I'm amazed at your patience and focus and ability not to take his words personally.
And I'm challenged that you were able to make this work for you for so long. 18 months? I'm a wimp by comparison. Maybe I need a little more composure.
I am so impressed by your ability to stay calm in the wake of the storm and listen for clues instead of taking it all personally. Wow, now that's professional!
Thanks, as always, for the inspiration in this great story.
Blessings!
One of the best work stories EVER. Kudos to you - for living it and for telling it. Thank you.
Great story! Kudos to you for seeing a person and not an enemy!
What a great story, Glynn. I'm featuring/publishing it at The High Calling on Wednesday. Thanks for all you do. (And you do it all so well!)
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