Grow Your Business With Wire Cutters
March 11th, 2010
Everyone talks about growing a business. The question is, how to do it effectively, consistently, and expeditiously.
The “slow and steady wins the race” crowd will tell you that if you can pump up sales by ten percent a year, your company will double in size in slightly more than seven years.
That certainly is one road to take, but it’s not the one I’d choose. I’d identify an opportunity and go after it with all guns blazing. That’s because the slow but steady cliché often places you in an armchair, passively watching the winners race by.
I learned about the importance of going a different way growing up in Queens, New York. I loved basketball, and everyday after school my friends and I would gather on the blacktop behind the junior high and play until the janitor locked the gates at 6 PM. The problem was that even though we had played for hours, we didn’t’ want to quit at six.
One day as the janitor came out at 5:55 to begin shooing us away; I went up to him and said, “Look, lock us in. Don’t worry. We’ll get out when we’re done.”
He looked skeptical but agreed and put the padlock on the outside of the fence, locking us in on the playground. We thought that was the greatest thing ever and played until dusk.
When we finally couldn’t see anymore, it was time to go home, and my first thought was maybe telling the janitor to lock us in wasn’t the best idea. The fences surrounding the court were twenty feet high. The only way out was to climb the fence.
My friends and I learned an important lesson that night. Climbing up twenty feet is easy; it is getting down in the near dark that’s hard. Everyone ended up with ripped pants and bruised ribs, and there were a couple of sprained ankles.
I went home and realized we needed to do something differently. We could either leave by six, as everyone else did, or find a better alternative to risking our necks getting out of the place every night.
The next day, I came to school with wire cutters and a small can of green paint. With my friends shielding me from view. I cut a large-enough section out of the fence to make it easy for us to get out, and then we put it back in place and painted it over, so no one could tell what I had done.
From then on, we could come and go as we pleased. Safely. Much later, I realized that the way we went about ensuring more playing time could serve as a model for business success:
• Be imaginative
• Accept risk
• Assume challenges
• Find a new way to win
Mark Stevens
CEO





In business, we are always peering through a mirror of optimism. The next big thing. The game changer deal. The trophy client.
In the lust of the prize, in the flirtation with Beyonce, Japan took its eye off of the people who were once at the center of its universe: its customers.
At one point in my life, I found myself locked in a form of living hell. I don’t really know how I wound up there, or why, but there I was, listening to music, drinking beer and trying to cope with the darkness of it all.
In conversations over lunch, in media interviews, in discussions with so many with whom I come in contact over the course of a business day, I find myself–for the first time in my life– having to defend America.
When I was a young man, I was asked to fight in Viet Nam. I wasn’t afraid and I didn’t have any life plans that would get in the way. But I didn’t believe in the war and so I was at a crossroads.
Last week, I read a New York Times story quoting a politician ranting about “the corporatists” in her party. That is code for “capitalists.”
Amazingly, this threatens the parasites who live off of us. In an act of blindness that has no equal, they want to bring every dollar into the public sector, the ”do nothing” sector, the handout sector, the entitlement sector. Then we can all sit around and sing Kumbaya while shaking 100’s from the money trees.
What he said was no surprise to business people, but it provides a continuing lesson and a reminder of the rules of the jungle.
And yet we put so much of our lives into the hands of tenured slackers who use the power of their protective armor to shield them against the natural forces of life that would toss them aside in an instant.
It is interesting how love moves in a crazy arc: we meet a special person who suddenly appears before us from somewhere in the galaxy of exuberance.
When it lives on, when it grows in the realm of full disclosure and knowledge of the other person–when the more we know of the person whose hand we hold, the more we adore them – well, that is rare and wonderful and a force that defies the natural arc that begins with joy and ends with the pain of what might have been.

