Every bold idea eventually demands the discipline, stamina, and leadership to push through the hard parts.
In a world where everyone is marketing their brilliance online, you’d think innovation was effortless. What’s easy is the hype. What’s hard is turning a dream into something that actually works.
I learned that on my first day at The Mirage. I saw the renderings, the models, the mocked‑up rooms — the beautiful part. But behind that beauty was the real engine: a project plan that stretched 80 feet across a 10‑foot wall, with nearly 365 days across the top and more than 500 items down the left-hand column. Many of those items had sub‑plans. Somewhere in the Wynn Resorts archives sits a binder with more than 10,000 line items that had to be completed in the final year before opening an integrated resort. Every one tracked. Every one managed. Every one essential.
Keeping a team focused and motivated through that grind was almost as challenging as the work itself. There’s the thrill of building something bigger than yourself — and the very real risk of burnout. Teaching people to pace themselves wasn’t easy. High performers want to sprint. But innovation at scale is a marathon.
So we helped them see the whole jigsaw puzzle, not just their piece. We reminded them to stay connected to family and loved ones. We grounded them in the truth that opening day wasn’t the finish line — it was simply the end of one phase and the beginning of an even more demanding one.
In the middle of all that complexity, the constant was leadership. Thoughtful, caring leaders who kept track of the people, knowing the people would take care of the tasks. That’s how bold ideas stop being dreams and start becoming destinations today.
Guy Kawasaki (born 1954): American marketing specialist (as an Apple Evangelist), author (The Macintosh Way), and venture capitalist in Silicon Valley.






