Spend Second

I’ve been on a “blogs about decision making” roll lately, so I thought it might be good to offer a word of balance. Depending on your circumstances, spending money can be the right way to go as I mentioned in my last post, but I had a valuable revelation recently. 

I was walking into the office one morning and thinking about a situation I was navigating with one of our team members. It was a fairly simple thing but was potentially going to cost about $500 depending on how we went forward. $500 may or may not be a lot of money depending on your total budget, but it was a “Spend or Don’t Spend” decision that I thought merited consideration.

As I weighed the questions, I determined that the spend option would be investing in a tangible asset that would have long-term value for the team, and it would help multiple team members be more efficient. And then I had an idea; there was a chance, albeit remote, that we might have an alternate solution in storage that didn’t cost money. I asked my team member to check it out before we made the final decision. Turns out there were no alternatives so we will be investing, but I still contend there was value in taking a few minutes to consider and check things out. 

Just so you know, I’m not talking about a long deliberation (google the words “analysis paralysis” to keep you on track here); I’m talking about an intentional few minutes to consider alternatives. When I’m rushing along in the flow of business, I don’t always take time to explore options, and some decisions don’t require it. When needed though, it can be a valuable thing to do. In any situation, we may need to spend money but there is often something we can or should do first. Check with someone, pray over the situation, think about it differently, ask for a volunteer or a donor to help with the need, etc. 

I am committed to making the spend decision when it’s needed but I’m convinced it shouldn’t be my first go-to.

Labor Day Quotes

Labor Day was originally about celebrating the work done by the working classes that made our nation prosperous. It has now become more about taking a break from your “labor” (unless you work in retail) and signifies the end of summer. I thought it might be fun to pull a few of my favorite work and labor quotes out. Here you go!

The end of labor is to gain leisure. – Aristotle


Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life. – Confucius

Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. – Thomas Edison

 

All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance and should be undertaken with painstaking excellence. – Martin Luther King, Jr.

 

Plans are only good intentions unless they immediately degenerate into hard work. – Peter Drucker


One who is slack in his work is brother to one who destroys. – Proverbs 18:9


If something is worth doing, it’s worth doing well. – I don’t know, but it’s one of my favorites