Why We Do It This Way

We’re one week out from the MIBE Summit, and if I’m being honest, we’re tired.

Late nights. Early mornings. Constant changes. Last-minute details layered on top of an already full plan. At this stage of the process, we always find ourselves asking the same questions:

“Why did we decide to do it this way?”
“Do we really need to add this touch?”
“Will this even matter?”

And almost every time, the answer comes back the same: yes.


The MIBE Team feeling inspired and excited for the upcoming Summit!


MIBE MONTHLY TAKE THE WORRY OUT OF YOUR LEADERSHIP TRAINING

Because that’s what makes the MIBE Summit special. We don’t take the easy route. We choose the harder path, the one that requires more thought, more effort, and more care. We add the details most conferences skip because they’re inconvenient, hard, or uncomfortable to pull off.

Not because it’s flashy.
Not because it’s perfect.
But because it’s intentional.

This week is a good reminder for me that the things that matter most often come with a cost. Great experiences. Strong culture. Meaningful leadership. None of them are built by doing what’s easiest.

So if you’re in a season where things feel heavy or tedious or just plain exhausting, maybe that’s a sign you’re working on something that actually matters.

We can’t wait to welcome everyone to the Summit next week.


Keep MIBE-ing!
Anthony Lambatos
Founder, MIBE Hospitality Leadership Development
Owner, Footers Catering

P.S. Want to experience even more intentionality and growth? Sign up to join MIBE Monthly Leadership Training!


Anthony Lambatos

The Coach — This guy is easily the best-dressed due at the office. Anthony is also the only gentleman who wears a suit in the office, so it comes as no surprise. In addition to dressing well, he’s a master of organizational management. And Excel spreadsheets. If there’s anyone who can get you excited about pivot tables, it’s him! Although he studied business and marketing at the University of Oregon, Anthony received his Ph.D. in running a company at the School of Hard Knocks. As early as he can remember, Anthony was involved in the family business. And now, after years of experience in the good, the bad, and the ugly, he knows how to handle any situation. His leadership, patience, and desire to make those around him better is why we call him The Coach.

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Keep It Simple: When Less Is More