Slow Fail, Quick Fix, Overnight Success

All organizations are prone to fail slowly, although it may not seem like it at times.

Just like the overnight success of Amanda Palmer, which is anything but an overnight success (it was a consistency of getting the little things right over a long period of time), failures appear to happen fast. One day the restaurant is there, the next day it’s not. One day the business manager is in charge of 20 employees, the next day it’s just him. But, truly, you and I know failure and success don’t happen that fast.

All agencies, organizations, businesses are bound to be cut and bruised just as we are. Are you treating the wounds of your business as you would a wound on your body? Or are you waiting (like so many now-failed businesses) until it’s time to patch the wound with a giant band-aid, a redesigned website, a new PR campaign, a new motto or “about us” page? It may seem logical to care for all wounds at once, but it’s not.

A drop in office productivity, a minor employee-client clash, one regretful tweet are cuts that need mending immediately. Even more importantly, we must view the boring things of business just as wounds that need our immediate attention.

When we begin ignoring the little things, we set ourselves up for a fail: a slow fail until the day it hits you.

You can certainly jump ahead success-wise with a broad stroke, a bold move, but to stop a slow and painful death that every organization, every person in business is susceptible to, we must make the little things a little more remarkable, we must apply, not just quick-fixes, but improvements to the banal, to the cumbersome, to the “not my problem” problems of our business.

Don’t just think “how can we fix this?” think “how can we fix this in a way that leaves a positive impression?” If we ask and answer this enough, we may just find ourselves getting referred to as an overnight success.

 

Stay Positive & Turn The Little Things Into Big Things

Hated Truth Of Creating Something Remarkable

Hated Truth Of Creating Something Remarkable

Railroad Workers Long Haul

It’s going to take more than a day to create something remarkable. Whatever you can do in one day, someone else has already done in one day. No one is impressed anymore. Expectations can’t be exceeded in one day. Maybe they can in one week, but even that gap is closing.

It takes time to develop your own process, to walk a distance long enough that you’ve left the main path.

I want to create something remarkable in one day as much as you. I want a single blog post I write in the morning to go viral. I want to come up with an idea, call a friend, build it in the afternoon, push it out in the evening and find out it was a true overnight success.

Sure, there are outliers and a .0005 chance the one-day thing can happen, but are you willing to spend all of your energy and creative scope on that?

It’s likely the one-day work you’re doing now isn’t making you feel uncomfortable.

Instead of writing another blog post, start writing an article to be published on 99U or PRdaily or some other niche platform that coincides with your focus.

Instead of recording another five-minute talk about the industry you’re in, plan out a 30 minute segment that digs deep, makes you uncomfortable, and goes where few have been (or no one).

We can hate the truth that it’s unlikely we won’t create something remarkable in a short time period, but it doesn’t make it any less true.

 

Stay Positive & You’ve Got To Leverage The Long Haul

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