After forty years, Mr Henderson retired.
The office felt different that day.
Quieter.
Slower.
People stopped by his desk.
Some with handshakes.
Some with stories.
Some just stood there, unsure what to say.
His successor arrived early.
Sharp suit.
Prepared questions.
He expected notes.
Strategies.
Frameworks.
“What should I focus on?” he asked.
Mr Henderson didn’t open a laptop.
Didn’t pull out reports.
Instead, he reached into his drawer.
And placed an old address book on the table.
Worn edges.
Pages filled with names.
“Call them,” he said.
He pointed to entries.
Employees’ families.
Important dates.
Moments that mattered.
Birthdays.
Losses.
Difficult seasons.
“They don’t work for the company,” he added.
“They work for people.”
The successor flipped through the pages.
This wasn’t what he expected.
But it was what he needed.
“The strategy is people,” Mr Henderson said.
No charts.
No metrics.
Just truth.
Legacy isn’t numbers.
Legacy is impact.
Discover more from Just Doing Life
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

