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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. 

Rules are made to be broken. Master Rules are not!

by Rick Baker
On Feb 24, 2015

When we lay enough layers of rules on people we can grind them to a halt. That's not a good thing in business. In business, we want people to be able to make decisions and learn from their successes and their mistakes. And, in general, success is not defined in terms of a person's ability to follow rules. Similarly, mistakes should not be defined as a person's inability to follow rules.

Rules do not exist to determine success and failure. Rather, rules are there to confine and control actions. Rules guide HOW we go about doing our work. In that way, rules guide Actions.

Sometimes, when business rules are broken it leads to problems or even failure…that’s the raison d'être behind rules. However, on other occasions broken rules lead to success. This happens more frequently when rules are overly confining and rules throttle creativity, innovation, or change in general.

When rules are overly confining they can be broken from time to time. Perhaps, overly-confining rules must be broken from time to time if positive change is to occur.

We need to keep that in mind as we establish and administer rules in business.

On the other hand, the breaking of “Master Rules”, as Spirited Leaders define them, never brings about positive change. When Master Rules are broken Values are violated, relationships are soured, and trust is shattered.

So, rules are made to be broken.

And, Master Rules are not!

Tags:

Master Rules | Values: Personal Values

In The Zone of Life-long Learning

by Rick Baker
On Feb 11, 2015

About "Early Education"

Remember...

      kids tend to catch up

            ...unless you kill their spirit before they get there.

            ***

About "Adult Education"

Remember...

      adults tend to catch up

            ...if you rekindle their spirit and inspire them to try.

Tags:

Thinking as in Think and Grow Rich | Values: Personal Values

To change the world spend 20 minutes a day working on self-understanding.

by Rick Baker
On Nov 9, 2014

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

The question was asked at the HBR LinkedIn group..."How can we change society? Just give one step which you feel will change society.

Change requires Courage.

Change requires knowledge of self and knowledge of others.

Change cascades like dominos:

Courage

Self-Knowledge

Self-Education

Self-Discipline

Self-Change

Self-Confidence

Confidence in Others

Teaching Others: Courage, Self-Knowledge, Self-Education, Self-Discipline, Self-Confidence

Working With Others: Creating Change For The Better 

This is the stuff of leadership

 

 

Tags:

Leaders' Thoughts | Thought Tweets | Values: Personal Values

Developing your positive mental attitude

by Rick Baker
On Sep 22, 2014

Above and beyond everything else, Courage is the mind state that promotes positive mental attitude.

Like every other mind state, with focused and persistent effort, Courage can be developed.

Courage is about facing fears and acting against them. So, courage is a mind state laced with emotion. It is a mind state where fear is converted into something more positive and constructive. Often, courage is developed accidentally. For example, this happens when a person acts impulsively in reaction to a dangerous or fearful situation.

Of importance, with forethought, deeply rooted courage can be developed intentionally over time through planned action steps.

People know what causes them fear. People can anticipate most of the situations that cause them fear. People can anticipate the actions of other people that trigger experiences of fear. For example, in business, people can anticipate the actions of bosses and know whether or not those actions cause feelings of fear.

Because we have this ability to anticipate we also have the ability to plan ways to counteract these fearful situations before they visit us.

In essence, we can role-play fearful situations in our minds long before those fearful situations happen in reality. While we role-play these fearful situations in our minds we can role-play various reactions to those fearful situations and, in effect, we can train ourselves in advance on the best ways to react to fearful situations. Then, after fearful situations arise and we face them and take pre-planned actions, we can perform self-analyses to assess, rate, adjust, and improve our performance. We can perform iterative processes of planning and testing actions designed to combat fears and build courage. We can repeat these processes until we attain the level of courage we desire.

The more fearful situations we anticipate and plan for the more opportunities we will have to test different actions and observe results…the goal being fear management and its counterpart, development of courage. This process helps us master our fears, build courage, and build self-confidence. This process itself is a process of courage. It is the best way to build self-confidence, that state of mind where we know we have the ability to address and handle situations when they arise.

Courage and self-confidence are the states of mind most conducive to allowing us to build positive mental attitudes toward other people and situations and indeed toward ourselves.

Courage leads to many other valuable states of mind including self-confidence, conviction, and creativity..

by Rick Baker
On Sep 14, 2014

[No text]

Tags:

Thought Tweets | Values: Personal Values

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