EO Melbourne Navigating Now and Preparing for Post-COVID-19
"We've aged a generation in the past three weeks. What matters has sharply come into focus. Family matters. Love matters. Kindness matters. Health matters. Generosity matters. People matter. Community matters. The rest is just noise.
Aside from physical distancing, the biggest thing you can do right now is to choose to see the best in each other. Be kind. Be patient. Be tolerant.
Be quick to help out in any way that you can. Be forgiving when you would otherwise be upset. See things through the eyes of others and try to understand where they are coming from.
Seek out opportunities for generosity. Reconnect with your community. Reconnect with yourself. Reconnect with your priorities. Live them."
- Anonymous
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic has brought governments, businesses, and communities to a standstill, affecting lives all over the world and across all levels of society. Entrepreneurs are not spared from the adverse effects of this pandemic. EO Melbourne’s President Kym Huynh shares how the crisis has impacted the lives of entrepreneurs in Melbourne and how he, and his Board, tackled the situation head-on to both help those affected navigate through the challenges and prepare for a world post-crisis.
“What differentiates COVID-19 from other world crisis such as the Global Financial Crisis of 2007-2008 and September 11 of 2001 is that no one knows what the end date of this pandemic is. Consequently, we cannot accurately plan for the future when we do not know when the endpoint for the current crisis is,” Kym states.
“During uncertainty, people seek answers, people seek leadership, and people seek direction. And when you throw a global pandemic on top, you have an environment where emotional states are heightened, and people become prone to acting emotionally rather than rationally. When I consider this in the context of leadership, it is important to augment how we typically lead with such speed in decision-making and an increase in our communications cadence,” he continues.
When faced with a challenge or difficulty, Kym’s normal process is to:
1. Step back
2. Choose not to immediately react
3. Assess the environment and situation
4. Gather multiple credible data points
5. Stategize
6. React from a place of stillness
Leading the team
Entrepreneurs, by definition, are leaders. The people employed, the family members and the communities that entrepreneurs touch all look to them for cues on how to react and respond. “If you’re going to be in a position where you are seen by others as that of being a leader, you might as well be a good one,” Kym reflects. “One thing I have learned from leadership during COVID-19 is that I don't always need to have the answers,” Kym quips, “but rather that I need to be present, constant and visible so that I create that environment and space of safety and stability”. In that, he makes sure he is a constant so that he can provide stability to his Board, EO, his family and his community.
He enumerated the immediate things he did to mitigate the complexities of the situation:
1. Make sure everyone is calm and collected
“The topmost priority for me was to manage the emotional state of the collective, and dive deeper 1-on-1 with individuals where needed,” Kym states. He believes that making sure everyone, particularly the Board and the team, is in a still, calm and collected state-of-mind is very important. For the Board and the team to lead, they need to be able to make good decisions. To make good decisions, they need to be in a good emotional state. Therefore, he made it a priority to make sure that every single person around him was good with themselves so that they could effectively look after the Chapter.
2. Create an atmosphere of safety and stability
He made sure he was highly visible, and accessible by opening his normal lines of communication more so that people can come to him for that feeling of safety and stability. “In my experience, sometimes the little things you do can mean the world to others, and COVID-19 amplifies this experience. Whether it be a phone message, an email, a phone call or a video call, I have found that these simple actions reassure people that I—and my Board--are present and that we are thinking about the situation. These simple actions are important because people are looking for stability in a time where there's so much instability,” says Kym.
3. Create concise, focused and impactful messages
Once everyone is calm and feels safe, he and his Board were quick to communicate to the Chapter that they’re there for the members, doing everything they can to support the members with messaging that can be comprehended easily, leaving no room for ambiguity. “It is important that any messaging is easy-to-understand, and leaves no gaps because if we communicate with gaps, others will fill in the gaps for us, and they will fill it in incorrectly. Even more during a crisis, it is imperative that the messaging is concise, focused and impactful,” Kym states. “It was important for myself and my Board that we communicate a message of unity, solidarity, and that together we are stronger,” he adds.
Plan of action
Words of assurance and encouragement must be accompanied with a specific, timely and measurable plan of action. Kym convened his Board to exchange experiences and insights and review the collective feedback and sentiment from the community. These are the action points they came up with during their fruitful Board meeting and in the succeeding discussions:
1. Appointment of a Resident Psychologist
Knowing that people are hurting and many businesses have been severely impacted, the Board made it a priority to support those who were in need. To show that they’re there for the members, the Board decided on the appointment of a resident psychologist that is entirely funded and supported by the Chapter. That is, any Member of the Chapter, if they need to, can call and directly reach the resident psychologist for a confidential conversation.
2. Member-to-Member support
Members of the Chapter are paired up with one another, wherein they can reach out and stay connected. It provides members with an avenue to pick up the phone, call another member, check on that person and let the conversation flow. “It is crucial that we lean into, and invest in, our relationships with one another during times of crises,” Kym shares.
3. Board-to-Member reach-out
The Board recognises that there are a handful of members who have contracted and remained quiet while fighting their fires. These members were identified and assigned to Board Members. Kym speaks from experience, “When I'm in a crisis, I tend to feel like I don't want to burden and bother others with my issues. It is a difficult compulsion to fight, despite cognitively knowing how much better off I will be if I share openly with others and being vulnerable. The lesson here is to not wait for people to ask for help, but to be proactive, pick up the phone, and reach out. Our small acts of kindness and compassion can mean the world to another.”
4. Supporting members through the current crisis, and preparing members for the world post-crisis via condensed learning events
The Chapter launched a 12-week webinar series consisting of members sharing stories, learnings, experiences and expertise with other members. According to Kym, “These learning events create solidarity, reinforce the community, and create safety. Knowing this, we moved fast to create these events, source our speakers and add resources to promote them to our members.”
From the board meeting, webinar topics were discussed, wherein the first half of the series is focused on navigating the current crisis while the other half is to help prepare members for what happens post-crisis. Topics were determined based on the issues that the Board Members were experiencing themselves and those that they heard from other entrepreneurs and business owners.
5. “No member will be left behind”
EO Melbourne adopted the motto, “No member will be left behind.” The message was communicated quickly and repetitively. It was short, concise, focused, and left no room for misinterpretation. The Board also ensured that the substance of the message could be supported by ensuring that the Global Support Package and Local Support Package combined to create a substantial assistance package.
“We are mindful that there are members whose entire businesses and livelihoods have been severely impacted, and that they're in a very stressful and overwhelming situation. We accounted for this type of scenario. So, we wanted to make sure that if any member wishes to continue to engage with EO next year, we will find a way to make it happen,” asserts Kym.
Moving forward
Although the future seems uncertain, Kym accentuates that the EO Melbourne Chapter must move forward stronger, better and wiser, highlighting that we are stronger together. He illustrates this by sharing the idea of a stick, wherein if it remains alone, can easily break. But if bundled together with other sticks, it becomes significantly more difficult to break.
For Kym, “We must move forward stronger. We must be more connected with one another, and with that connection will come solidarity. We will move forward better, wherein we will be kinder to ourselves, each other, our families, our friends, our teams, and our communities. We will move forward wiser when we can carry the lessons we've learned during this crisis into the future. After all, like it or not, the crisis has happened, so it is incumbent on ourselves that we do what we can, to make the best out of the crisis.”
“Times of crisis creates opportunities for great leaders to emerge. It is leadership not only in our businesses but also in leadership with ourselves, our families and our communities. I hope that every single person reading this finds it within themselves to stand tall and proud, and to step up to becoming a great leader, one that serves others, leads with compassion and lifts those around them. We started the year with the theme, ‘our best year yet,’ and with our leadership, not only can this be the best year yet for ourselves, our businesses, families and communities, but also the EO Melbourne Chapter,” Kym imparts.