Tag Archives: team

Excellence and Facility

If you never improvise, you get stuck in a narrow set of ideas about how to play the pieces you know        Photobucket

So wrote Doug Samuelson in an article titled “The Piano Teacher’s Parable”.  The lessons apply to our lives, especially our business lives – not just to playing the piano!

“Arthur Rubinstein got a big break early in his career when another pianist got sick.  Rubinstein was offered the chance to fill in — but it meant he had to learn the Grieg A-minor piano concerto in less than a week … and he did it.”  It was not the best work he had ever played, but it was important to get fairly good quickly.  Sometimes you need excellence, but sometimes you only need facility.

I find it easy to get stuck in learning to do one thing better and better while missing the opportunities that keep appearing.  If they don’t fit in with my plan, I choose to ignore them.  Taking short cuts can feel uncomfortable, like playing a piece of music that you don’t know well, but often the short cut can be the one thing that transforms your business or your life.

This is not to say that learning skills is unecessary: think how many hours a musician will spend practicing one piece until he or she is satisfied with it.  The problem comes when we are so focused on learning that we don’t see an opportunity that is right in front of us.  We become like a fisherman who is perfecting his cast by practicing over and over while the fish are behind him!

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“It’s a balance, and you need to keep doing both” says Doug Samuelson.  ”If you never take a piece all the way to perfection and play it in public, you lose some of the technical skill that makes your improvisation better.” Wow, what a lesson for network marketers — this is the balance that makes all the difference to our business!

Yes, we need to know our product, know our back office, be able to show people what it is we offer.  This takes time to learn and the learning process never ends.  But we need to be open to the opportunities that present themselves to us even when we don’t know it all.

For me, a huge advantage of my business is being part of a team.  Unlike the solo pianist, I don’t have to go it alone.  There is always someone on my team that I can call on to play the pieces I don’t know.

Now, if I can just keep my balance …
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Is it OK to take a break?

Is it OK to take a break?

If you are a member of my service for runners (http://halftrainingschedule.com) you may recognize this as the title of my last newsletter.

I just spent five weeks in Central America, mostly at my home in Roatan, but also took a few days to visit Nicaragua.  Although it’s true that you can do this business from anywhere, there are some requirements.  You need a phone, an internet connection and a computer.

I took a VOIP phone with me and I have a router and air card for the internet connection.  Both worked well on occasion, but the internet connection was a lot slower than my US one.  My computer was an aging laptop – adequate, but only just.

I soon recognized that I needed to adapt my daily method of operation (or DMO) to take account of these limitations.  Working before 6AM I could generally get a reasonable internet connection.  From then until 5PM it deteriorated, and after 5PM it was worthless.

When we went to Nicaragua for a few days, I left my laptop behind and discovered the freedom of traveling without one!  Billie and I managed with a small backpack each.  Well, I did, but Billie always ends up with more than one item …

Fortunately, I had already handed my hot prospects over to another team member to nurse while I was away, so I took a break from business while we traveled.  When we got back, I cranked up the laptop again to get started once more.

Only it didn’t.

Dead Laptop

When I hit the power switch, nothing happened – not even a whirring sound.

It just sat there with a black screen and looked at me gloomily.  I unplugged it, plugged it in again, shook it, swore at it, spoke soothingly to it, asked if it would like some coffee — nothing worked.

Reluctantly, I took it in to the local laptop laboratory.  They didn’t exactly laugh when I showed them my relic, but they did ask how old it was.  “Younger than me” I replied …  I knew I was in trouble when they told me that the problem was that it would not power up … (I kinda knew that.)

“But why?” I asked.

“Could be a number of things”, they replied.  “We’ll check it out and let you know.  Pedro will look at it.”

The next day I eagerly scuttled in to the shop and asked if they had fixed my laptop yet.  “Pedro hasn’t looked at it yet” they told me.  “Maybe tomorrow … he’ll call you when he knows.”

Remember the H-factor?  Five minutes should be all it takes for a skilled technician to discover the cause of a no-power problem.  OK – let’s say an hour – that translates to two days applying the H-factor.

So on the second day I went back a little more apprehensively than the day before.  “Oh” they said “Pedro looked at it yesterday – we can’t fix it.”

No point in asking why he had not called me, of course.

“It needs a new motherboard.  We can order one for you, but it will take a month or so.”

Back to the question – is it OK to take a break?

As you can tell, I didn’t have a choice, unless I wanted to buy a new laptop in Honduras at twice the US cost and with a Spanish keyboard.

For the next week I went into almost total withdrawal.  I could check my e-mail on Billie’s Mac, but even that was difficult (why did they have to make it so unfriendly to a lifelong Windower? – I have cursed Bill Gates with the rest of them, but I don’t find Steve Jobs an improvement unless I want to take the time to study his MacQuirks.)

The good news is that I’m now back with a great new laptop and a great new attitude.  Refreshed and excited to get back to my DMO with some cool new ideas for improving it.   Yee-haw!

New Laptop

So the answer to the question about taking a break  is “If it feels right, do it”!

Obviously, if you’re in the middle of a major launch it doesn’t make sense to take a break, but otherwise try it.  You will find it helps your attitude (especially if you’re feeling stale) and it may improve your business.

You may not even need a new laptop!

Are You Meeting Your Business Goals This Year?

Are You Meeting Your Business Goals This Year?

You set business goals at the beginning of the year: now it’s time to look at where you are and where you are going. Half the year has gone, so now is a great time to review your goals for the year and see if you are on track.

Do you need to rethink your goals or your strategy?

If you are more than half way to your year’s goals, congratulations! You are among the very few. Most of us, though are lagging seriously behind: this has been a slow year so far.

In my case, the year started out with a bang: it seems that all the New Year’s resolutions were kicking in and people were ready to change their lives. Then it went quiet. Tax time? – who knows?

Now things have started to pick up again. My belief is that many people are reviewing their first half performance and deciding they need to look into ways to improve their success, There are really only two things you can do if you have
slipped behind: accept it or change it!

Accepting where you are is fine, but do you really want to revise your goals downward? When you set those goals at the beginning of the year, it was because they represented what you really wanted to achieve on the path to your dream. If not, why did you set them?

So really you don’t have a choice, do you? You need to review your performance and see how it can be improved. Let me show you how!

For the purposes of this post, I’ll assume that you are a network marketer, but  similar principles apply to any entrepreneurial activity.

Company

First, take a good, hard look at your company. When you joined them you were excited about it: is that excitement still there?

Are you getting the support and encouragement you need and deserve?

Do you still believe in the product or products?

Most importantly, do you still believe in the company?

If the answer to any of these questions is “no