
Why lasting impact requires the patience to plant seeds you might not see bloom immediately.
The most important principle for any young leader to internalize is that change is a marathon, not a sprint.
We live in a world that prizes the overnight success and the disruptive innovation, but for those of us working on the ground in our local communities, the most meaningful shifts are often the slowest ones. No change worth making ever comes easy, but that shouldn’t discourage you. In fact, the difficulty is often a sign that you are doing the work that actually matters.
In the context of a grassroots arts organization, change usually involves moving people. You are moving hearts, minds, and habits. You might be trying to introduce a more equitable pay structure for performers, or perhaps you are attempting to make your events more accessible to people who have historically felt excluded from the arts. These are not technical problems that can be solved with a new piece of software or a one-time workshop. They are cultural shifts. They require unlearning old ways of being and building new ones from scratch. This takes time because trust takes time. If you try to force a transformation before the foundation of trust is laid, the structure will eventually crack. For a small organization with limited resources, your greatest asset isn’t your budget; it’s the depth of your relationships. And relationships cannot be rushed.
So, how do we manage this kind of slow-motion revolution? We start by redefining commitment. Commitment isn’t just about working long hours or sacrificing your well-being. It is the steady, patient application of your values to the boring, everyday tasks. It means showing up for the third meeting in a row where you discuss the same problem, and instead of giving up, finding a slightly different way to explain the vision. It means being willing to iterate. If a new initiative doesn’t work the first time, you don’t scrap it; you look at the friction, learn from it, and try again. This iterative approach is what turns a scrappy project into a resilient institution. You aren’t looking for a perfect launch; you are looking for a sustainable path.
It also requires a shift in how we view difficulty. We often interpret friction as a sign that we’re doing something wrong. But in change management, friction is often just the sound of the status quo resisting a new idea. When things get hard, it is usually because you’ve finally reached the core of the issue. This is where the real work begins. Stay focused on the long-term horizon. Ask yourself: will this change matter in three years? If the answer is yes, then it is worth the six months of uncomfortable conversations it might take to get there.
Remember that small is an advantage here. Because your organization is nimble, you have the ability to stick with a change until it takes root. You aren’t a massive ocean liner that takes miles to turn; you are a group of dedicated people who can decide to change course and stay the course together.
Be patient with yourself, be patient with your team, and be patient with the process.
The most beautiful forests are the ones that were allowed the time to grow deep roots before they reached for the sky. You are building something that lasts, and that is a journey worth taking.

Northern Arts and Regional Innovation
This is a collaborative initiative by The Arts Incubator Winnipeg and the Art Borups Corners art collective, supporting artists and creative projects in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario. Our groups champion rural arts development, community programming, Indigenous arts partnerships, and cultural innovation—strengthening the local and regional arts sector through mentorship, exhibitions, digital media, and sustainable creative entrepreneurship. Our events and activities include artists from Melgund Township, Winnipeg, Ignace, Sioux Lookout, Dryden, and beyond. You read more innovation-focused posts here.