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Remember that good really does get in the way of best
By John Carroll
In the first column on the topic of how the best get better, we covered five key elements of how the best get better. Lets further consider the topic of continuous improvement with four additional strategies and some tips on how to implement them immediately.
How the best continue to take their results and performance to the next level:
1. They create margin. Theres simply too much to do to add anything more without creating the space to do it. This process involves knowing where you generate the greatest value and where you provide the least value in terms of outcomes.
Author Laurie Beth Jones calls such decisions planned abandonment. The best systematically remove, drop or assign activities and responsibilities of lesser value, freeing up space and time to address key opportunities.
Good is the enemy of best, as has been said. If youre serious about becoming and being the best, some of the good must go.
2. They concentrate on their strengths. Your strengths are where you get your power. The best know their strengths and find ways to work within those strengths and hand off, stop or adjust the activities outside those strengths.
Theyve bypassed the Superman syndrome or the Marlboro Man syndrome that says, I can do all this myself and I can go it alone. By now, you probably know at least some of your strengths and can recite them. How often do you really get to use them and in what applications? When you do get to use them and for what duration?
3. They focus on outcomes. The best arent checking the clock to see whether its 5 p.m., nor are they working simply for a paycheck. They are focused on the outcomes of the work they do, knowing that outcomes are what people pay for. The big idea here is that they tend not to fall in love with their processes. By focusing on the outcomes, they can more easily move, improve and adjust their processes to accomplish even greater outcomes.
4. They increase value to their customers and clients. The best know that money follows value just as metal shavings flow to and cling to a nearby magnet. They also know that they must increase their value to the marketplace and to their customers and clients, so that they may realize their own increase in compensation, whether thats personal income, benefits and perks, the lifestyle of their choice or all of the above.
As promised, here are four more things you can take action on immediately to improve your performance and your results:
1. Create space. If youre serious about adding new things without working still harder and longer hours, start looking at what you can toss, eliminate, delegate or procrastinate on.
Yes, procrastinate on. Much trivia comes asking for your attention. If you simply put it aside for now, when you come back to it, its time has passed and you didnt have to do it.
Remember, its not always about working harder; its about working smarter.
2. Put your best foot forward. Fill in the blank: I feel strong when Im _________. Do this three times. Think of the activities that always draw your interest and passion. Consider the activities during which, while youre involved in them, you lose all track of time and space.
This is when youre in the zone and experiencing the feeling of what author Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi calls flow.
Look at the activities for which people compliment you. For the activities where you have all three of these present, you have likely found one of your strengths. Find ways to work more within your strengths.
3. Focus on results. Look always at the objectives first and move from there into how you can accomplish or help to accomplish those desired outcomes for customers and clients, internal or external.
Provided that youre doing things in legally, ethically and morally acceptable ways and respecting other people in all matters, the process should come second, only after the objectives are clear and get top priority.
4. Increase the value you deliver. Since money follows value, find ways to increase your value to those you meet, those with whom you work and those whom you want to meet and work with. When you ooze value to clients and non-clients alike, your compensation increases and people want to pay you more money to increase value for them, their teams and their organizations.
Remember that good really does get in the way of the best. Remove rationalizing from your repertoire, make continuous improvement the norm in your life both personally and professionally and youll be among the best that find ways to get even better.
John Carroll is an entrepreneur, consultant, columnist and president of Unlimited Performance Inc. in Mount Pleasant. Reach him at jcarroll@uperform.com.
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