You look back. You look back because that is where the answers lie.
You look back to understand the present. From your vantage point, the present is unstable, a confusing clamor of competing voices.
It is only by casting your mind back to an earlier time, a time when the plans were being drawn up, that the present regains its stability. The earlier time was a simpler time. It was a time of blueprints. As you look back, you begin to see these blueprints emerge. You realize what the initial intentions were. These blueprints or intentions have since become so embellished that they are almost unrecognizable, but now this Context theme reveals them again.
This understanding brings you confidence. No longer disoriented, you make better decisions because you sense the underlying structure. You become a better partner because you understand how your colleagues came to be who they are. And counterintuitively, you become wiser about the future because you saw its seeds being sown in the past. Faced with new people and new situations, it will take you a little time to orient yourself, but you must give yourself this time. You must discipline yourself to ask the questions and allow the blueprints to emerge because no matter what the situation, if you haven’t seen the blueprints, you will have less confidence in your decisions
If you lead with Context you look back. You make better decisions because you sense underlying structure. Context needs the curtain peeled back to see behind the scenes. You become wiser about the future once you can see how those seeds were sown. What is beautiful and powerful about Context is that deep understanding of where you’ve been. You have a certainty that you are not making the same mistakes twice, but also an awareness of which choices are genuinely new, versus which have been tried several times. There is a sequence, and everything has a home within that sequence.
Timelines are a big part of individuals with Context. It is not just understanding the past is the past, but really understanding how events stacked up and created a ripple. It makes you a tour guide of the present by understanding that there are links to what has come before. You are able to understand cause and effect in a different depth than those without Context.
You can add information not just by looking forward, but also by paying attention to the past. This curiosity for the past can create understanding in all directions. Context is not just looking at facts and figures, it can be a way to see all the various twists and turns of the entire plot.
Theme Thursday Podcast brings thought leaders to deep dive on each StrengthsFinder theme.
The time invested is worth it - learn about Context with a leader lens.
BALCONIES
When Context is soaring....
Has a robust historical frame of reference
Learns lessons from the past
Knows how things came to be
Can leverage knowledge of the past
You can create depth, perspective and more comfort in the unknown world that can be the present. Context can be an open mindedness, and a curiosity towards the things you don’t know.
BASEMENTS
When Context is on over-drive...
Slow to move and react to change
Closed-minded
Lives in the past
A leader with Context...
Builds trust by sharpening your recall of events in other’s lives. Think about important milestones in their own stories. Consider how you can bring these up to remind others that you are there and listening.
Builds compassion by fine tuning the way you discover personal histories. What kind of questions can you ask to get someone to open up? Study the questions that help reveal people’s histories, and then think about incorporating them as a habit.
Provides stability by paying attention to when you yourself feel most stable. Think about the times when you felt most calm and present, and then share those with your followers.
Creates hope by thinking about yourself as an orienteer to reality. What facts are going to help you know more about where you are today, where you are going and what you should be anticipating. Context can help ground you in where you are right now, and orient you to where you are going. Context can bring stories of where you’ve been before, and how they can be similar or different to where you are today. This can help you look to the past to set you up for a more powerful future.
As an Individual you think,
"What can I bring from the past to help me here. "