In Praise of Janitors
When I was in my mid-thirties, I was working with Butch Balaun, a customer who owned several successful restaurants in our area. On one occasion, during a routine sales call, I was told I could find him in the kitchen. What I discovered was a very successful business owner up to his elbows in a grimy mess from cleaning out the kitchen鈥檚 grease trap. In his characteristically gruff delivery, he commented, 鈥淵ou know, Chuck, it doesn鈥檛 matter what our title is鈥攚e鈥檙e all janitors. We鈥檙e always cleaning up messes.鈥 Truer words were never spoken!
It鈥檚 easy to think that being the boss entitles us to a 鈥済et out of jail free鈥 card when it comes to cleaning up messes. Because of our title we may feel we鈥檙e somehow above having to clean them up, whether they鈥檙e our own mess or someone else鈥檚. It doesn鈥檛. In fact, I鈥檓 convinced that when you鈥檙e handed the keys to the executive restroom in one hand, you鈥檙e given the handle to a mop in the other鈥攑ersonalized with your initials. It seems the higher you perch on your company鈥檚 organizational chart, the bigger the messes can be. We become responsible for cleaning up not just our own messes but those of the people who report to us.
This gets complicated, and the messes grow larger, when you consider that entrepreneurs are notoriously conflict avoiders. We try to convince ourselves that if we ignore a mess long enough, it will magically clean itself up. But this rarely happens. Instead, the messes just get messier and take longer to clean up when we eventually do.
When you鈥檙e the boss you can鈥檛 just wash your hands of a mess, and there鈥檚 no sense pointing fingers, blaming others, or looking for scapegoats. When you鈥檙e the boss, you own the mess, and you quickly discover that, contrary to popular belief, messes flow uphill. Sooner or later, they鈥檙e going to end up in your lap.
My old customer Butch wasn鈥檛 the only one who understood the importance of being the janitor. On a more recent level, I don鈥檛 need to look any further than someone I worked with for years鈥擭ick Paolella.
Many of you know of my years-long involvement with Jon-Don, and many of you knew Nick as one of the owners of that very successful company. What you may not know is how seriously Nick took the whole concept of serving others and his role as 鈥渉ead janitor.鈥
Nick attended all the Jon-Don Strategies for Success programs that I instructed with Bill Yeadon and Steve Toburen. On one particular occasion, Nick鈥檚 flight caused him to arrive late, so we weren鈥檛 able to introduce him as the owner of the company. He arrived during the lunch break while everyone else was eating, promptly grabbed a trash can and washcloth, and proceeded to bus the seminar room to ready it for the afternoon session. While some of the people knew who he was, many did not. They just figured he was a retired janitor Jon-Don had brought in to help out for the day. It was only the following day when he was introduced as the owner of the company that everyone realized who Nick was. Looking in their eyes, you knew an important lesson had been learned: Even when you鈥檙e the head of a large successful company, you鈥檙e still a janitor
It鈥檚 easy for us to feel demeaned when we鈥檙e called on to clean up after someone else, but viewed another way, it鈥檚 actually a privilege. Nothing says 鈥渟ervant leader鈥 like cleaning up a mess. What鈥檚 more, cleaning up your own mess sets a good example, making it a whole lot easier to insist that others clean up theirs.
The next time someone asks you what you do for a living or what your title is, tell them with pride that you鈥檙e the janitor and you specialize in cleaning up messes.