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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Thought Tweet #547

by Rick Baker
On Aug 21, 2012

Thought Tweet #547 Plan for the particular and the peculiar...because that's what you are...and so is your perspective.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Particular, peculiar, distinctive, & unique: in the English language the meaning of these words overlap. Of these 4 words, we should give 'peculiar' its fair share of consideration.  While many people will struggle with defining themselves as 'peculiar', others will barely hesitate to do it...I mean, to other people...of course.

Tags:

Beyond Business | Humour | Thought Tweets

How To Develop Better Work Habits

by Rick Baker
On Aug 21, 2012
"A whopping 85 percent of us have had bosses who have tried but failed to get us to change in order to improve our performance."1
 
If you want to develop better work habits then you need to:
 
  1. Plan some baby-step changes...then take them 
  2. Shake it off when you make mistakes or stumble...and count on it - you will stumble...that's OK, in fact it is a necessary part of the learning and improving processes
  3. Spend a bit of time thinking about your mistakes with the view to understanding the lessons embedded in your stumbles...and getting to truly understand yourself: think about how you handle work-pressure/stress & strain; think about how you handle interpersonal differences; think about how you handle surprises; think about how you handle change [both good change and bad change].
  4. Pay attention to situations around you...think about how situations cause you to succeed or stumble...make sure you plan for them, or plan around them if that's the best route: avoid situations that enable/encourage/align with your bad work habits when that's possible; prepare strategies and tactics that help you manage situations that you struggle with but cannot avoid.
Link to a variety of Thought Posts about Changing Habits
 
Footnotes:
  1. Joseph Grenny, David Maxfield, Ron McMillan, & Al Switzler 'Change Any-Thing', (2011)
  2. You have some bad work habits. All of us do. And we all have choices. For work habits, we can:  wait for a rainy day to make change, or tackle them now...like a work leader must do. deny they exist, try to ignore them,hope they go away, 
  3. If you do not want to develop better work habits...think about what that means to you, to your co-workers, to your family...etc.

Thought Tweet #546

by Rick Baker
On Aug 20, 2012

Thought Tweet #546 Remove office and desk clutter - reduce stress & increase clear thinking.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

  1. "Thought Tweet #468 There's no question: unfinished business gnaws away at brain-energy.
  2. A link to articles on this topic
  3. A link to articles on a related/overlapping topic - Seeking Simple
  4. "Look around your environment. If your environment looks cluttered, overloaded, your nervous system probably is too. There seems to be a magic in decluttering, simplifying." Steven Gurgevich, 'Relieve Stress with Medical Hypnosis', (2010)

Tags:

Brain: about the Human Brain | Seeking Simple! | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #545

by Rick Baker
On Aug 17, 2012

Thought Tweet #545 When you criticize others you run the big risk of messing up the way they view the situation.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

  1. link to Constructive Criticism is an Oxymoron articles 
  2. Another way of looking at it: "The stronger the threat to feeling good about yourself, it seems, the greater the tendency to view reality through a distorting lens." Leonard Mlodinow - 'Subliminal', (2012)

Tags:

Criticism: Constructive Criticism is an Oxymoron | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #544

by Rick Baker
On Aug 16, 2012

Thought Tweet #544 About Decisions: as a general rule, avoid making them when you are stressed or pressed

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Only on rare occasions do we need to deliver decisions with urgency. For the vast majority of situations we can take time to de-stress or reduce negative feelings before we make decisions. Given a little time for clear thought we can consider options, we can check our gut, and we can perform common-sense tests. As the saying goes, "If it's worth doing it's worth doing right".

Entrepreneurial Dilemma

by Rick Baker
On Aug 16, 2012

The Entrepreneurial Dilemma: how to delegate [or institutionalize] the entrepreneur's deal-doing insight.

True entrepreneurs have deal-doing insight. They possess the natural strength of insight: a combination of wisdom, curiosity, and imagination that, without effort, identifies problems and their solutions. Deal-doing insight can be converted into fortunes. It can also be the cause of entrepreneurial 'aloneness'...a gap between the entrepreneur and all the other people in the organization.

Put another way, true entrepreneurs are a different breed of cat. They are driven to create, innovate, and deliver new things of value. They are inventors. Also, true entrepreneurs know how to sell the things they create. Otherwise, if they could not sell the things they create, they would be inventors not entrepreneurs.

So, true entrepreneurs - the best of the entrepreneurs:

  1. know how to create things of value and 
  2. know how to sell what they create.

Philip Delves Broughton1 presented an excellent example of this when he described Ron Popeil, the inventor [for example, Popiel Pocket Fisherman], infomercial personality, and master salesman:

"Popeil grew up selling at state and county fairs before making his fortune in infomercials. He wrote about selling not as a stand-alone business activity but as one piece of a process that begins with great ideas, includes patents, design, packaging, pricing, manufacturing, advertising, and publicity. The greatest salesman, by Popeil's definition, understands how all these steps are integrated because he is the inventor, manager, and seller. The moment selling becomes a separate business function you're sunk."

That last line describes a thought-key to sustained entrepreneurial-business success:The moment selling becomes a separate business function you're sunk.

Selling cannot become a stand-alone business function. To sustain business success, the true entrepreneur must be able to transfer deal-doing insight. That means the entrepreneur must be able to teach it or transfer it to someone who has the natural strength of deal-doing insight.

That raises [more than] 4 important questions:

  1. Can true entrepreneurs teach others how to possess deal-doing insight?
  2. If so, who can be taught? 
  3. How would one go about doing the teaching?
  4. How would one identify, attract, and hire a person who possesses deal-doing insight?
The quick answers are:
  1. Yes...but it requires time, focus, and complete dedication [and often true entrepreneurs are inclined to do what it takes]
  2. A rare few...people who are 'driven'
  3. One-on-one training, mentoring, and coaching.
  4. There are several essential steps:
  • First, deal-doing insight must be an ongoing priority at the organization [part of its fabric]. 
  • Second, a process must be designed and proven before people can be recruited. 
  • Third, a customized sales training program must be designed and proven [as alluded to in #3 above]. 
  • Fourth, a multi-prong recruiting program must be designed to fit the specific needs of the organization [again, part of its fabric].


Footnote:

  1. The quote was transcribed from the audio book 'The Art of The Sale', by Philip Delves Broughton (2012)
  2. True entrepreneurs can invent and sell things of value. The dilemma:  most true entrepreneurs are not able to transfer that combination of strength to other people. So, sooner or later, invention and selling become two separate functions...and, sooner or later, the business fails.


Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.