Sometimes process keeps you on the hook to see something through. There’s a step system that makes it directionally easy for you to comply and deliver.
Other times, however, process let’s you off the hook because you can avoid doing what you think is right and – when it all goes to shit – you can say “Well, I followed the process and this is what happened. Not my fault.”
But, in a way, it is and we know it because we have the agency to change a process, to adapt around it and to elevate it to newer, better heights.
If we’re on the hook for anything … it’s that; to find a way to improve a process once we begin it and not just to see it to the end
Imagine you have a speaking engagement set to talk in front of 10,000 people in a completely packed auditorium.
The idea probably packs you with fear, as most big things do.
But if you want to do something big like this, you can take a hundred little steps to get there.
You can write your speech out and have someone you trust review it. You can say it in the mirror. You can say it to your pet. And then your friends. And then smaller venues. And then maybe on YouTube. And then you can have experts review it and edit it. You can have your boss give you candor on it. And then, maybe then, you can finally give the speech.
It doesn’t seem as big of a thing after all of that does it? Not as filled with fear about it?
That’s because to do something big, we just have to task ourselves with something even bigger (or a 100 little things that come out to feel like one big thing).
When push comes to shove, we’ll take the easier route.
Stay Positive & Use That Knowledge To Your Advantage
There’s no doubt you need a plan that will ensure your muse is a success.
You need to have thought through the marketing and the quality of build and the people involved.
Equally important is planning for when it doesn’t work. When someone disappoints, spec isn’t met and the cost is greater than you … planned.
Of course, you hope to spend more time reading the plan for success, but might as well know what chapter to flip to in the plan for failure to help you get back on track.