Transition Aches

Transition Aches

It makes sense to stay in your same lane while driving, there’s less of a chance of you making a mistake by switching.

Same goes for the work that you do, the exercise you perform, the type of books you read.

Transitions bring only aches and pains… at first.

Then you begin to adapt, get better, and all the sudden you’re rocking and rolling again.

It ought to go without saying that the best way to shorten the aches of transition is to go all in, to welcome transition with resilience and determination to be better at this than you were at that.

And it all starts with understanding that 1. You’re going to be forced to transition, anyway. Such is life. And 2. Aches are often your muscles growing faster than normal.

 

Stay Positive & Worth It?

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Quadrant Analysis

Quadrant Analysis

Quadrant analysis is a method to classify tasks and whether they are low effort/high effort and low importance/high importance.

The method is often used to prioritize addressing the low effort high importance tasks, but too often one gets curtailed into addressing the low effort and low importance because they are easier; because all those things add up don’t they?

Pro tip: Easy to do? Let someone else do it. Pay a friend,  intern or personal assistant to do it.

Then you can put your attention to where it matters most, where it’s exhausting work but ultimately worth it.

Don’t make the same mistake with your work projects as you do with your personal to-do lists.

We’re all attracted to what’s easy, but it’s not where the real value is.

 

Stay Positive & It Won’t Get Easier, But It’ll Always Be Worth It

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Listening And Responding

Listening And Responding

The most important (and sadly the most unnoticed) action you can take for your business is to tell your customers, “We listened and now we’re doing X.”

Curiously, though, the reason your improvements based on target insights go unappreciated is because it took too long to get there; it took too long for them to feel they were listened to.

It begs the question, how long are you willing to wait before you act on what you’ve heard from your customer?

When they say the process is too slow or the mobile experience doesn’t get them where they need to go or when they say something tastes funky about the beverage on the back-end? How responsive are you?

If you’re quick to respond, then I ask this? Are you listening enough?

 

Stay Positive & There’s Always A Way To Improve (By Listening)

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Discovering Your Passion

Passion

It’s not so much about finding your passion; it’s more like fostering it.

Through tinkering, testing and trying everything you have the slightest interest in.

Over time, passion is developed and shaped based on the experiences you had with those interests.

In shorter words: Passion isn’t just there; It’s created by taking an interest and wanting to practice it consistently.

 

Stay Positive & It’s Less Of An Ah Ha Moment And More Of An Oh, Duh

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You’re Asked To Help Make It Work

Giving Your Help

Being asked your opinion (in my opinion) is one of the greatest privileges we have in this economy, in our tribes and in our relationships.

So many, however, fail to elevate an idea, to inspire the one who asked for their help and to…well, help.

The one asking for help doesn’t want to know who you think they should be switching their target to. They don’t want to know why they should open up on the other side of town instead of where they have in mind. They don’t want to know what you would do if you were in their shoes (even if that’s how they ask).

What they want to know is how they can make their idea work.

There’s an ol’ improv practice called “yes, and.” The premise is you listen and agree with whatever the person before you said and you build from it.

You don’t say they were wrong, you don’t change the subject and you definitely don’t kill the idea.

You run with it, you can elevate it, you share a perception of how the idea can improve without changing anything that has already been decided.

Sure, you’re asked for your help, but you’re not asked to share a right and wrong way of doing something; you’re asked to share how this way could be better or how it could work.

 

Stay Positive & Making A U-Turn Is Dangerous, Anyway

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How Do You Help Me

How Do You Help

Not what do you do.

Not what do you sell.

Not how larger your distribution network is.

How do you help me.

Not everyone.

Not the person before me.

Not the people four months from now.

Me.

When you look at your work through the lens of helping one person at a time, your return on investment is infinite (or at least exponential to the number of those you serve).

The moment you start to calculate who is worth your time, act as if it’s a game, set aside your values for the sale, lie, cheat and look at the work you do through the lens of how every person can help you–that’s when you find yourself in a downward spiral to oblivion.

So I’ll ask once more, how do you help me?

 

Stay Positive & One. Person. At. A. Time.

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