4
May

Ready, Fire, Aim, Fire, Aim….

   Posted by: JohntheMentor   in Encouragement, Running the Business

Want to be more productive? Want to have more success in your business… and in your life? Then learn the principle of “Ready, Fire, Aim, Fire, Aim….”
I know. Most of us have learned, “ready… aim… aim… aim… double-check readiness, aim… aim… aw, doggone, it moved behind that tree. Stand down and figure out what the next target should be.”
Whether the target is a new business opportunity, trying to get a date with that girl or guy, trying to get an appointment with that business prospect, asking for a raise, or just about any other thing requiring a decision and action, we prefer to hesitate. Just to make sure we get it right.
For some of us, life has trained us to hesitate, to hold back. Maybe it was the result of parents, teachers, or peers, who always derided our decisions. Maybe it was the consequences of rash and foolish decisions. Or maybe it is just the way our brains are wired.
Whatever the cause, it became a survival skill. And now, when we are trying to get ahead, it holds us back. It is no longer as useful.
Now, I’m not saying that, even today, there aren’t times when it continues to be useful. I am saying that most of the situations we encounter are not life-threatening… and therefore, don’t warrant the hesitation we bring to the process.
A better strategy for us… in most situations… is to make a quick decision based on the information we currently have then take action based on that decision. Next, quickly evaluate the feedback (the results of the action), make adjustments accordingly, take action again, evaluate… adjust… act.
This is “ready, fire, aim, fire, aim, fire.”
Does the idea of this frighten you? Perhaps ideas leapt to your mind about why that is crazy. And dangerous. The idea is threatening.
If this describes you, don’t worry. You are normal. Normal, but not terribly successful.
Now, if you would like to become more successful, acknowledge the fear, but do it, anyway. Start training yourself to make quick decisions, followed by acting on them.
Start with small decisions — ones where the consequences of a mis-step are low. For instance, does it warrant spending 5 minutes deciding between a chocolate, a vanilla, or a strawberry ice cream cone? The consequences of a less-than-perfect decision is pretty easy to live through. And if it isn’t the most satisfactory choice when you look back on it, you have easily and cheaply increased your education. (Congratulations, feedback works!)
As you get used to making decisions with incomplete information (and remember… you never really have complete information… even when you think you do), you start expanding the impact of the ones you make.
Note: decisions that carry life or death implications (or similar serious consequences) should be done with appropriate deliberation. Even so, as you get better at quicker decisions and then taking action you will find that you make better decisions at all levels.

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20
Apr

Is it Time to Re-examine Your Concept of Success?

   Posted by: JohntheMentor   in Encouragement, Ideas, Strategy

Today’s post comes courtesy of a guest blogger, Susan Henderson (www.susanhenderson.com).  I have been following Susan’s newsletter “The Successful Dilettante” for a couple of years.    If you like this post, I would encourage you to check out Susan’s website and sign up for her newsletter.

Is it Time to Re-examine Your Concept of Success?

In writing or speaking about success so many self help experts and gurus will tell you that if you just do exactly what successful people are doing then you will also have success.

As if it is a given that borrowing someone else’s concept of success is the best way for you to attain success.

In fact, I am a long time subscriber to an e-newsletter from a success coach I greatly admire and as I was preparing my notes and thoughts to write this article his latest issue dropped into my inbox and, lo and behold, his main article was based on this premise of success: “Success is the predictable result of doing the things that others have done to create or achieve the results we want in our lives.” It’s his belief that success is based on learnable skills and tasks. And he goes on to say that “as long as we live in a predictable, orderly universe, success is basically an engineering problem.” I mean no disrespect to this gentleman and although there were many points in this article that I agree with, this wasn’t one of them. Holy Moly – What a left-brained concept!

While I agree that practice makes perfect, I don’t agree that one size fits all when it comes to defining or even achieving success. Many people think success is a goal to be achieved somewhere out there in the future and is usually attached to fame and/or fortune. I believe success is an ongoing process and is congruent with doing what you love. Dare I say it – success could actually be considered an emotion we would all like to feel. It is personal and only you can define what success means to you.

So how do you define success for yourself? The best method I’ve learned came from my beloved mentor coach (from afar), the late, great Thomas Leonard. Several years ago, I attended a teleseminar where he shared a process in defining what is most important to you.

The first step is to choose an area of your life where you most want to define success and complete this sentence:
I know how successful I am by how [fill in the blank here].

The wording is important because it not only clarifies how you define success but, more importantly, how you know you are being successful at any given time. It’s a place to check in. You will want to tinker with your success definitions until they evoke a strong feeling response; and, possibly a tingle or shiver through your body.

Come up with at least three definitions, but ideally you will create a success statement for each of the areas of your life that matter to you. Here are some examples from my own life from what I value most:

Creativity: I know how successful I am by how delighted I feel when I am using my creativity.

Independence: I know how successful I am when I wake up and know that the pace and place of my day are totally determined by me.

Nature: I know how successful I am by how my connection with nature nurtures me.

I think you will be surprised by how quickly success begets success when you are armed with your own clear concepts of what it looks like and feels like for you.

With loving kindness,

Susan

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15
Apr

A Simple Way to Grow Your Busines

   Posted by: JohntheMentor   in Encouragement, Growing the Business, Strategy

Want a simple way to grow your business? You do? Are you sure? You are?

Okay. If you want to grow your business, then grow personally.

I know. You were hoping for a gimmick. A quick fix that would skyrocket your business and put you on top with no pain, little effort, and no thinking required on your part.

Me too. The trouble is, those things don’t really work –sustainably– in the real world. They are great for scams and for ponzi schemes. (And haven’t we had enough of those already?)

This idea of growing personally in order to grow your business is deceptively simple. Like an iceberg, there is a lot more here than meets the eye. In fact, there is so much here, we couldn’t begin to cover it all in one newsletter article. (But, no, that isn’t a threat that we will devote endless issues to it, either. :-) )

One of my mentors (Adam Urbansky) says, “You can only grow your business as fast as you can grow personally.”

And I can attest that this is true. My own business is completely intertwined with my personal growth. I have never grown so much as since I went into business for myself. And it hasn’t stopped. Also, I see it all the time in other people’s businesses. I have watched businesses fail because the owners refused to grow in their personal lives. My own brother’s forays into business are case studies in it.

I suspect that this is a significant component behind the oft-quoted statistics of the high failure rate of small businesses.

Business and the economic climate is changing around us all the time… ever faster and faster. As a result, what used to work in business, isn’t as effective as it once was. In order just to stay in place, we have to change and grow… and then grow some more.

I can state with certainty that your business volume, your customer mix, and your profit margins are not the same as they were only a year or two ago. Maybe they went up. Maybe they went down (the predominant experience for most businesses.) Either way, have you kept doing the same things you did two or three years ago or have you changed them? How’s that working for you?

And what if we want to get ahead… if we want to grow our business? Then we need to grow even more.

For most of us, this is not something we want to hear. We are wired to be comfortable and to stay in that comfort zone. Growth, especially personal growth, is uncomfortable. It is challenging.

The trouble is, change is not optional. Our business is going to grow or decline whether we want it to or not. And both of those directions create challenges. And neither is in our comfort zone.

Sure, there are a few adrenaline junkies who seek out challenge… they are noteworthy because they are the exception. The rest of us are couch potatoes who want to simply watch our favorite shows and not be bothered. And please keep things just the same.

When I was a project manager, I would remind team members and customers of a saying that I borrowed from my fiction-writing days –one of the formulas for plot. That saying? “Every solution carries the seeds of new problems.”

And it is true in life just as it is for good fiction (because fiction is a mirror of life.) I don’t know about you, but whenever I hear that saying I always get a picture of weeds shooting up in the lawn of life. That’s how many of us think of problems… weeds to be dealt with.

How are you going to address those problems? Albert Einstein said, “We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”

Now, you may not have created the problem, but it exists in your business. Further, your business didn’t have a process and thinking in place to handle it. (How did I know? If you had, you wouldn’t have the problem in your business. It would have been dealt with when the problem first sprouted.)

So, how do we solve these problems? By growing.

Since I started the lawn and weed metaphor, allow me to continue it. Did you know that a healthy lawn that is being tended (mowed, proper water, good soil) will overcome weeds on it’s own? That’s right, no need for weedkiller, pulling weeds, or other drastic measures. It does this because the grass grows… and as it grows, it crowds out the weeds.

Just like the grass, as you tend yourself and your own personal growth, you will find that you naturally overcome the weeds (problems). And you know what? Just like we are discovering about organic gardens, this ongoing personal growth is the BEST thing you can do for your business, because it is sustainable… year after year.

The gains you achieve from your personal growth continue to be applied to your business, even as the economy changes. And, unlike the gimmicks, they continue to work, even if you change your business, even if the economy goes up or down, even if your competitor moves in next door to you (either physically or virtually.)

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