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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Putting a finger on your entrepreneurial pulse

by Rick Baker
On Apr 20, 2015

A few years ago, I wrote a little piece titled “Driven to Construction”. It considered the 3 forces that drive entrepreneurs:

  1. A burning desire to achieve,
  2. A burning desire to create and build things of value, &
  3. A need to be recognized as a different type of contributor.

Some key thoughts:

Entrepreneurs are driven to innovate and construct products and services; entrepreneurs are absorbed in creating new products and services, which must contain value for others. Invention on its own is not enough. Inventors are a different breed of cat. Innovators make adjustments to existing ‘methods & ways’ in order to deliver new forms of value to other people, especially clients.

Entrepreneurial drive may contain an inventor flavour; entrepreneurial drive must contain an innovation flavour.

Entrepreneurial drive is a most-important source of economic growth. Entrepreneurial drive is a key to re-energizing economic growth and to sustaining economic growth. Entrepreneurial drive is fundamental to individual businesses’ health and wealth.

The entrepreneurial dilemma...it is difficult to institutionalize the entrepreneurial way of doing business. In other words, the entrepreneur has it but has trouble passing it on to others. In fact, it seems impossible to generate an entrepreneurial spirit in someone who doesn't possess the 3 forces outlined above.

So, if you are an Entrepreneur and you are having difficulty spreading it to others then consider their internal drivers:

  1. Are they Achievers?
  2. Are they Builders?
  3. Do they stand out as Different?

Achievers: the existence of the drive is more important than its specific direction...it is much easier to focus or re-focus a strong drive to achieve than it is to create a strong drive to achieve.

Builders: the existence of the drive is more important than its object...it is much easier to focus or re-focus a strong drive to build than it is to create a strong drive to build.

Different: many entrepreneurs are odd characters, who are very comfortable with the fact they are not viewed as standard/normal/average people. They notice how others perceive them. They are motivated if not delighted by the fact they are viewed as a different type of contributor.

More about the entrepreneurial dilemma…many entrepreneurs and many organizations struggle to build a culture of entrepreneurship. Some people, including some entrepreneurs and leaders, argue it is not even possible to build such a culture because entrepreneurs are born, not made. Regardless, few deny the pace of business-change is fast and innovation is an essential ingredient of business success. So, whether or not your business culture becomes truly entrepreneurial or falls short of that mark, it is essential to focus on building a culture that promotes innovation:

  • Innovation that allows your business to attract and impress ideal clients
  • Innovation that breeds confidence greater than that possessed by your competition
  • Innovation that maximizes your people’s ability to be self-motivated

To do this, take a close look at yourself and take a close look at your key people. Never lose track of the fact that small adjustments within the leadership team can generate positive change throughout an organization.

As you take a close look at yourself and the people on your leadership team consider:

These 3 attributes are the vital ingredients. Seek them out. Build on them. 

My fiascotic day

by Rick Baker
On Apr 8, 2015

I’ve had many good days.

I’ve had some bad days too.

Such is the nature of life.

Until recently, I had never experienced a fiascotic day.

This fiascotic day was so bad I had to create a new word to describe it.

I’m talking about a day that hit a new pinnacle of 24-hour utter failure.

Yes – I recognize the word I made up violates the Greek suffix rules. I don’t care…this day violated every rule of mathematics and most of the fundamental rules of the social sciences so why not violate the rules around suffixes. Violation of our fine English language is a minimum violation in the overall scheme of the fiascotic day I’m talking about here.

I’d like to share the details of my fiascotic day with you, however - there’s no point. You would end up witnessing a suffix-violating fellow ranting on about his day of escalating and exploding failures and you would find it all far too fantastic to be believed.

And - I wouldn’t blame you.

Throughout my fiascotic day, I had to pinch myself several times in hopes my perceptions would turn out to be nothing more than a fully unpleasant dream-nightmare. Several times, just before pinching myself, I thought, “This must be some sort of crazy nightmare. What else could explain why everyone else is numbed or oblivious to these relentless waves of carnage?”

Alas, it was not a dream-nightmare.

It was my fiascotic day.

Tags:

Attitude: Creating Positive Attitude | Humour | Personalities @ Work

There’s something about “The Details”

by Rick Baker
On Mar 27, 2015

We’ve all heard that idiom/saying, “the devil is in the detail”. And, we know it means important-troublesome things lurk in the details.

Wikipedia tells us that idiom/saying derives from a predecessor idiom/saying, “God is in the detail”, which [according to Wikipedia] means - whatever one does should be done thoroughly; i.e. details are important.

I believe that fascinating fellow James Allen would agree, “God is in the detail”. That would be consistent with his views about work mastery and bliss.

On the other hand, for some reason the saying - “God is in the detail” - was replaced with the current saying, “the devil is in the detail”.

Perhaps, when it comes to sticky idioms, sooner or later the pessimists out-muscle the optimists and positive messages are submerged in negative messages.

Regardless, it seems to me most people have a love-hate relationship with “the details”.

Some related points…

  • Most people love certain details and hate other details.
  • Many people feel work-details should be delegated down the hierarchy.
  • Many people believe positions of power & authority provide excuses for detail avoidance.
  • Many people who side-step the details expect others to delve into those same details.
  • Perfectionists have a troubled & tangled relationship with “the details”.
  • 24 centuries ago an ancient Greek fellow named Euripides said, "Leave no stone unturned." Evidently, he was all for digging into the details. And, that saying has survived the test of time.
  • A century ago, in his classic 'Pushing To The Front', Orison Swett Marden wrote, "Go to the bottom of your business if you would climb to the top. Nothing is small which concerns your business. Master every detail."
  • More recently Steve Jobs said, "This is what customers pay us for - to sweat all these details so it's easy and pleasant for them to use our computers.
Considering all these centuries of talk about the details...

There must be something in 'the details'.
 
 

Perhaps, we should check out the details from time to time.

A Little Argument Against Being Negative

by Rick Baker
On Mar 2, 2015

When you focus on the negatives, you snuff out other peoples candles. What's worse, you smother your own candle...giving it no chance to burn brightly. And, while you are under the power of negative thinking, even when you believe you are going the extra mile and burning your candles at both ends you will never have the chance to shine brightly.

***

Many, if not most, if not all, people have this tendency to skip over the positives and dwell on the negatives. This is part of the human condition.

For some, if not many, people 'the negatives' become the cornerstones of their character. These people are harsh on themselves and more-harsh on other people. These people concentrate on and agonize over everything from petty mistakes to style differences to weather to...etc.

Embedded in each of us there is a spark. We use our sparks to keep our motivation candles lit. We use our sparks to keep our attitudes bright. We use our sparks to generate value for ourselves and for other people.

Unfortunately, some people out there are oblivious to these sparks. Unfortunately, some people carelessly snuff out their own candles and use up their sparks trying to relight their candles, which become increasingly immune to flame. Then, under increased negativity, their candles burn ever and ever dimmer and they are compelled to go after other people's candles. 

Our energy is limited and our sparks are precious. 

Negativity is wasted energy and spark-endangering.


Improving Focus...i.e., Focus on Work

by Rick Baker
On Feb 23, 2015

Some thoughts about focusing on our work... 

It is important that we continue to remind people of the importance of concentrating on their areas of work: Sales [Agreeing to Exchange Value], Fulfilling Work Orders [Delivering Value], and Invoicing & Collection [Receiving Value].

Apparently, it is equally important that we help [some if not many] people of our people not dwell on 'automatic negative thoughts'. Rather, everyone needs to learn how to stop destructive thoughts and replace them with constructive thoughts. 

These things can be done. Replacing ‘automatic negative thoughts’ with constructive thoughts is the essence of the process Napoleon Hill called AUTOSUGGESTION in his 1937 classic 'Think And Grow Rich'. 

And, it is the essence of Spirited Leaders’ Good Habits, Bad Habits, & New Things philosophy. 

Success in roles and in business depends on ability to choose to focus on positives & successes rather than back into focusing on negatives & failures. 

If we want our people to grow strengths then we must allow them to make decisions and fail...so they can learn from the failures. To learn from failures people must learn to get over failures…not to dwell on failures… not to agonize over failures. 

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