Ruined by Success? Leadership, Motivation, Pollyanna Positive Thinking
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This article is adapted from Barry Maher's book, "Filling the
Glass," honored by Today's Librarian magazine as "[One of]
The Seven Essential Popular Business Books."
Copyright 2005, Barry Maher
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Ruined by Success? Leadership, Motivation, Pollyanna Positive Thinking
By Barry Maher
To me, the strategy Never Settling for Success means that
your ultimate goal has no number attached to it.
Your ultimate goal and your short, medium and long term
goals all become essentially the same: to simply see how well
you can perform if you perform as well as you possibly can; to
utilize every ounce of talent you can muster in every applicable
situation, each day, each week, each month. And after each
significant interaction, each day, each week, and each month,
you evaluate yourself to fine-tune your course.
So you don't slack off when you're surpassing goals, so
you don't give up when you're falling far behind.
"In college, I was a B and C student," a successful senior
manager says, "until one semester I got irritated by a couple of
the professors and busted my butt to become an A and B student.
>From that point on--once I realized what I could do--I was an A
student. Likewise as a manager, I was always just a bit above
average. Then I got passed over for a promotion I should have
received. They gave it to a guy I could out-manage from a coma.
So I busted my butt to give them numbers they couldn't ignore. I
became one of the top managers in the region. But after that--
after I realized I could do it--I became the top manager."
He adds, "I work more intensely now. But surprisingly
enough after the initial learning curve, it doesn't take that
much more time to be the best than it took to be average."
We all know we can do more. We all know we can do better.
But too frequently we settle for less. "There is more in us than
we know," Kurt Hahn, the founder of Outward Bound, said. "If we
can be made to see it, perhaps, for the rest of our lives, we
will be unwilling to settle for less."
Never Settling for Success is about being unwilling to
settle for less.
Great leadership is about showing your people that there
is more in them than they know: so they'll be unwilling to
settle for less.
Great leadership is also about helping your people to
overcome their fear of failure, their fear of giving their best
and proving to themselves, to you their boss, and to those
around them that they do not have the potential they all want to
believe they have.
Of course, you can't help your people overcome their fear
of failure unless you first overcome your own. If you're afraid
of failure your people will be afraid of failure. You’ll see to
that.
Pollyanna positive thinkers will tell you that you can do
whatever you think you can, that you have no limits. That can
work, until you run head first into one of those limits and
crash and burn.
You have limits. I have limits. We are human beings, we
are limited, we are fallible. That's reality. Never mind the pat
little bromides that try to convince us otherwise.
Here's my pat little bromide, “You can do far more than
you think you can.” You have limits but they're expanding
limits: and running up against those limits can be the best
practice for expanding them in the future. In all likelihood
you've never pushed those limits anywhere near as far as they
can be pushed. Most of the time, we're stopped by the limits we
impose on ourselves long before we'd ever be stopped by the
limits imposed by reality.
I don't know what your potential is. If you don’t know
either, maybe it's time you should try to find out. With the
possible exception of daytime TV, potential is about the most
useless thing on the planet--if it remains only potential.
By any standard, one of the most successful people this
country ever produced was Ben Franklin. Every night before
sleeping--and not just on those rare nights when he was sleeping
alone (because he was very successful at that, too)--Franklin
would review his entire day. He'd evaluate everything he'd done
and try to puzzle out how he could have done it better.
Philosopher, scientist, inventor, diplomat, revolutionary,
publisher, cabinet member, Franklin's bad days were probably
more successful than most of our best ones. Because success was
never good enough for Ben Franklin. "Success," he said, "has
ruined many a man."
The truly successful, in any field, never settle for
success.
# # #
Copyright 2006, Barry Maher. Used by Permission
Barry Maher speaks and writes on communications,
motivation, management and sales. His books include “Filling the
Glass,” honored as “[One of] The Seven Essential Popular Business
Books, ” “No Lie: Truth Is the Ultimate Sales Tool” and the cult
classic fantasy novel, Legend. Contact him and/or sign up for his
newsletter at _www.barrymaher.com_ (www.barrymaher.com/) or call him
at 760-962-9872.
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