A few years ago we actually had another location at the end of North First Street where I became the Site Executive after the ILOG acquisition. We had a few Running Day celebrations there (2010, 2013), a tradition I was pleased to expose to a much larger population in 2017. That year, we logged 316 miles which exceeded my expectations. Unfortunately, that number went down significantly last year, yet, I set an aggressive target of 400 miles this time, Wednesday June 5, enough miles to get us farther than Los Angeles!
Well, this year, thanks to a few new tricks, we went way down the Pacific Coast, well into Baja California, to El Rosario: 700 miles (699.78 to be exact, according to our volunteer data scientist compiling the results, Jorge).
What worked? A few things made a huge difference this year, best practices to repeat next year:
- First, an internal competition! Our site is composed of 8 4-floor towers so we set up a challenge to log as many miles as possible across each tower. The purpose was two folds: create some emulation --who doesn't want to win?-- but also invite everyone to make new connections and team up with colleagues they don't typically have opportunity to work with.
- As an extra incentive beyond just pride, fund raising: we managed to get the miles of the winning tower matched by one of our local executive, $1 for a mile, in a gift to POST, Peninsula Open Space Trust, a local organization helping to protect our hills against developers projects.
- As a bonus, since this organization is in the environment protection area, IBM will double the gift (IBM matches employee contributions to non-profits in the environment and education sectors).
- We also identified and selected a few executives and managers in each tower to spread the word and invite their team members and co-located colleagues to participate.
- We communicated both by email and Slack (announcement, reminders) and posted posters to make sure to reach everybody.
- Last but not least, we had one volunteer per tower from our local running group who went door to door to make the invite even more personal and making this event a real team work!
Overall the best measure of success for me was the number of participants, 285. Significantly higher number than last year and yet giving great hope we can do much more next time if we get half the site to log 1 mile or 2! Indeed, while many only logged 1 mile this time (the perimeter road around our buildings), it shows the power of a large group! I was going to share more pictures to see how much fun we had but I need to ask permission to every employee before so here is one to show some of the turn-out while not allowing much facial recognition... ;-)
There was actually so much enthusiasm from colleagues that past Wednesday that we are considering a repeat in a few months, when the temperature isn't that hot, not to wait for another year before the next Global Running Day celebration.
Oh, did I run? Well, I wish it would have been a straightforward answer given my passion for running indeed but, with the lasting gluteus injury, I hesitated. I had not run since Ohlone 50K, 2.5 weeks earlier and, unfortunately, that break didn't help at all. Since I ran 1,300 miles on that injury, raced 11 times including 10 marathon or longer distances, breaking 2 American Age Group records (50K Road and 100-mile Road), pain is barely an excuse so... yes, I did run. Albeit only logging 11 miles for our tower which ended up in 2nd place. While every left stride hurt, it felt good to run along on such a special day, I wouldn't have missed the opportunity. The following Thursday I went for a run but turn around after three strides as the pain was unbearable. I finally saw someone that afternoon, the famous Dr. Leahy, chiropractor of the 49ers, who immediately confirmed a major tear deep in my thigh. While realigning my pelvis released some tension in the muscle and provided some relief his diagnostic that it may take a long time to heal. And while he said I could jog, I should not stretch that muscle with a long stride (no sprint, no hills). That advice got me to stop completely again, hoping that a long time doesn't mean 3 months. Or more... I have to say I'm of course very disappointed although so appreciative of what I managed to do in 6 months, what many couldn't do in a year. Also glad that I didn't have any major 100-milers in June or July. Speaking of 100-miles, I'm thinking of those who trained so hard for Hard Rock which just got cancelled because of the amount of snow, that sucks.
Anyway, let's rejoice for all the running and walking which happened on that special 2019 Global Running Day; outstanding job, SVL colleagues! And to all who celebrated around the globe too!
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