What classical guitar taught me about real breakthroughs

I have been coaching organizations and leadership teams in generating breakthrough results through total team alignment, ownership and engagement for over 30 years. Most of you know me in that context.

In my personal life I am also an avid classical guitarist. And classical guitar has taught me far more than music. It has enforced my understanding of how breakthroughs actually work. Not in theory. In practice.

The same principles that determine whether I master a demanding piece determine whether an organization or an individual achieves real transformation.

In my work with leadership teams looking for breakthrough performance, I see similar patterns play out every day.

Here are three lessons I have learned the hard way.

Lesson 1: Everything is created twice

Every new creation, innovative idea and future breakthrough reality exists first in someone’s mind. In their intention, thinking and declaration.

When I take on learning a new classical guitar piece, it often feels daunting. The technique, the tempo, the precision required can feel far beyond where I am today. In that moment, the gap between my vision and current reality feels daunting.

The same thing happens in organizations when a bold strategy or breakthrough ambition is declared. People see the distance, the complexity, the challenges. They feel overwhelmed.

What guitar has taught me is that the vision is not the problem. The gap is not the problem. The only real question is whether you are willing to stay present long enough for the unfamiliar to become natural.

What once felt impossible slowly becomes familiar. What felt complex becomes fluid. What felt intimidating becomes part of who you are.

Breakthroughs are not achieved by shrinking the vision. They are achieved by living and growing into it.

Lesson 2: Taking small future-based actions, every day builds accelerated momentum

Mastery does not come from occasional heroic efforts. It comes from daily practice.

When I practice guitar, I do not chase perfection. I chase progress. Small gains. Clean transitions. One phrase at a time. Some days feel strong. Some days feel frustrating. What matters is that I show up and move forward, even slightly, no matter how I feel.

Organizations fail at transformation when they expect dramatic leaps instead of disciplined forward movement. Bold visions are not realized in one stroke. They are realized through consistent, often ‘baby steps’ future-based actions taken every day. The ‘every day’ part is where much of the power and magic exist.

When teams take small, intentional steps toward their vision daily, something powerful happens. They begin closing the gap. The vision feels closer. Confidence builds. Momentum forms.

The future does not arrive all at once. You walk toward it one step at a time.

Lesson 3: Staying the course no matter what reassures success

Some practice sessions are hard. Your fingers feel clumsy. Progress feels slow. You question whether you are improving at all or whether you will succeed in your quest.

Then something unexpected happens.

A passage that was impossible yesterday suddenly flows. A technical barrier dissolves. A leap forward appears that you did not plan or predict.

Those moments only happen because you stayed the course.

The same is true in transformation. Things often get worse before they get better. Performance indicators dip. Processes feel messy. Doubt creeps in. This is the moment where most people retreat. And this is exactly where breakthroughs are born.

If you have the courage and perseverance to stay the course, no matter what, unexpected gains emerge. Capability expands. Confidence strengthens. Results accelerate beyond what you originally imagined or expected.

Breakthroughs do not reward impatience. They reward sustained conviction.

Whether you are mastering a piece of music or leading a bold organizational shift, the principles are the same.

See the future clearly. Move toward it daily. Stay the course when it gets uncomfortable.

That is how transformation works

The hard truth about transformation that most leaders cannot tolerate

If you want real transformation, not cosmetic change, you must accept a truth that most leaders find deeply uncomfortable.

The path to breakthrough rarely feels like progress.

Sales can dip before they rise. Processes can feel messier before they become effective. Engagement can wobble before ownership takes hold. Short-term metrics can soften before long-term performance strengthens.

This is where most transformation efforts die.

Not because the strategy is wrong. Not because the people are incapable. Not because the ambition is unrealistic.

They die because leaders lose their nerve.

I was working with a large manufacturer company that was under intense pressure after COVID. Quality had suffered. Production had fallen behind. Customer confidence was fragile, to put it mildly. The leadership team committed to a two-year transformation focused on three outcomes: restore production performance, rebuild quality, and reignite sales.

The work was serious. Leaders stepped up. The organization leaned in. After one year, the results were clear.

They exceeded their production breakthrough targets. They made meaningful progress on quality, with strong indicators that the trend would continue. And the culture had shifted toward ownership and accountability.

By any rational assessment, the transformation was working.

But the market was brutal. External conditions were unfavorable. Despite the operational improvements, sales numbers lagged behind targets.

The CEO fixated on the sales gap. Instead of seeing the trajectory, he saw only the shortfall. Instead of acknowledging the structural progress, he declared the effort a failure. Against the counsel of his leadership team, he shut down the transformation program.

The response from his leaders and managers was immediate and painful. They disagreed. They were frustrated. Many were demoralized. They had invested deeply, not just in new practices, but in a new way of collaborating and leading. And overnight, the work was deemed irrelevant.

Not because it failed. But because discomfort clouded the vision.

Contrast that with a technology integration company I worked with.

They had been stagnating at around $200M in revenue. Solid business. Good people. No crisis. But the CEO knew that staying flat was a slow form of decline. He committed the organization to a bold goal: $300M in revenue within three years.

It felt ambitious. It felt uncomfortable. It required changes in leadership behavior, operating rhythm, discipline, accountability, and strategic clarity. The transformation journey began.

Then COVID hit. Then global supply chain constraints intensified. Then internal resistance emerged.

At multiple points, executives questioned whether the timing was wrong. Some argued that external conditions made the goal unrealistic. Others suggested slowing down or revising expectations. The pressure was real.

But the CEO did not waver. He listened. He engaged. He adjusted tactics where needed. But he did not abandon the bold commitment. He held the line on direction and standard. Even when his leaders complained. Even when the work felt harder than expected. Even when uncertainty increased.

The result?

They surpassed $300M in year two. They moved toward $400M shortly after. But more importantly, the organization evolved. Leadership depth increased. Ownership strengthened. Execution discipline improved. The company became more capable than it had ever been.

Same type of journey with two very different outcomes. Not because of market conditions. Not because of intelligence. Not because of talent. The difference was resolve.

Transformation requires the courage to stay the course when the data is inconvenient. It requires the conviction to trust the direction when discomfort rises. It requires the maturity to distinguish between short-term volatility and long-term trajectory.

Most leaders cannot tolerate the messy middle. They cannot tolerate things getting worse before they get better.

They expect change to feel clean, progress to feel linear, and confidence to come before evidence. That is not how transformation works.

Real change destabilizes old patterns before new ones stabilize. Performance often dips before capability strengthens. The leaders who succeed are the ones who understand this and refuse to abandon the work when it becomes uncomfortable.

The organizations that achieve breakthroughs beyond expectations are not those with the most impressive strategies. They are the ones with the deepest and strongest commitment and resolve.

If you are serious about optimizing your transformation journey, this is the question you must confront honestly:

“Will you stay the course when the road gets uncertain, when pressure increases, and when it would be easier to retreat?”

Because that moment is not the exception, it’s the rule. That moment is the test.