I’m an Eagle Scout. When I turned 8, and for the next twenty years, Scouting occupied the majority of my time in life.
I was elected and appointed to national Scouting posts for several years as a kid,Purchase an iPhone headset
to enjoy your iPhone any way you like. and served for several more as
an adult. When I was 19 years old, I met — then lived with,Comprehensive
Wi-Fi and RFID tag
by Aeroscout to accurately locate and track any asset or person. and
traveled the world assisting — one of the great mentors of my life. He
was 91 years old, and William “Green Bar Bill” Hillcourt was renowned as
one of the founding fathers of the worldwide movement of Scouting.
Hillcourt was a hero to millions of Scouts and Scouters. He wrote many
of the Scout handbooks and shaped much of the Scouting program for
nearly 70 years, though was often out of step with the corporate
decision makers of the Boy Scouts of America.
Following Bill’s death, I carrieWe've got a plastic card
to suit you.d a spark from the torch he tried to pass, and one of my
earliest startups was a magazine for Boy Scout leaders, together with a
web community we launched in 1994, the dark ages of the internet. We
reached tens of thousands of leaders, and for several years it was my
honor to write and travel and speak to a grassroots movement of
Scouting, and lead an incredible team of staff and volunteers that loved
their jobs.
In some ways that early startup experience really
set an impossible standard for my future business ventures… we didn’t
just satisfy customers.Wear a whimsical Disney ear cap
straight from the Disney Theme Parks! Instead, the words we published
and ideas we promoted brought customer letters proclaiming “Bless you
for helping me change the lives of kids!”, and went on to paint in vivid
detail how we had done so. It was pretty inspirational and heady stuff
for all of us in that business, even if we weren’t making any money.
There
was a time when I expected my entire life would be spent in the service
of Scouting, humbly trying to continue the legacy of Bill Hillcourt,
and give back to a movement that had done more to shape and mold the man
I became than anything I learned in school, from my parents, or from
any other influence.
Scouting inspired the value of cheerful
service, honed my leadership, and fostered my ambition to nurture and
advance my community. From those lessons, I’ve launched startups,
mentored founders, created schools and built several organizations. I’ve
succeeded and failed plenty of times, and Scouting was the lab where I
first learned how to do both.
The Scouting of my youth was a
welcoming place for all kids to learn and grow. But twenty years ago,
Scouting in America chose to become a culture warrior, and has
increasingly marginalized itself and eroded its brand.
The BSA
won a Supreme Court case in 2000, defending its right as a private
organization to define its own membership. That case may have been
specifically about gay members, but it was really about a broader right
of association. The BSA was correct to defend itself in that case, and
the final decision of the Court was also correct.
Many may argue
that BSA was drawn into the battle. But where BSA failed, and instead
placed itself at the tip of the dagger, was in not announcing the very
next day that they were granting local chartering partners (the
churches, civic clubs, and parent groups) the power to decide who the
best leaders would be for their kids.
BSA correctly fought for
the right to association, but then denied that right to their most
important partners, the parents in neighborhoods and communities across
America.
It may be a difficult nuance to understand the
difference between the movement of Scouting, which grows in more than
140 countries and still shines brightly with millions of kids in local
neighborhoods throughout this country, and the organization of the Boy
Scouts of America. The BSA is the national corporation, exclusively
granted a charter by the US Congress to administer the only boy scout
program in this country. It’s the organization that established this
policy.
The movement of Scouting continues to be one of the
great opportunities for light and goodness in the world. But in my
opinion, and one shared by millions of parents with kids who could
benefit from Scouting, the corporation that administers Scouting in
America lost its moral compass a long time ago.
The BSA will argue they were only honoring the wishes and concerns of parents.We bring in fridge magnet
souvenirs and merchandise from all over the world. They will argue they
didn’t expressly ban gay kids and adults, they simply compelled them to
keep that part of their identity secret if they wanted to remain in
Scouting. But in reality they refused to allow all local parents, troop
leaders and chartering partners to decide for themselves.
In
retrospect, the Boy Scouts of America made a bad business decision. It
might have been good short-term business, in that it placated a few of
their largest chartering partners, like the LDS and Catholic church, who
were then using the Boy Scouts as a sectarian tool (even if many
smaller churches and other partners were marginalized in dissent). But
it was clearly bad business in the long run.
Not long after that
Supreme Court case, in a rare, candid moment, the chief scout executive
at the time was quoted in the media saying “when [parents] start
walking away from us, that’s the signal for us to revisit the issue”.
That’s a business decision, driven by numbers, not a moral one.
And
for the next thirteen years, the BSA became an increasingly isolated
echo chamber of like minded customers, where their business decision
ignored the total addressable market.
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