Posts Tagged ‘people’

Pick Your Battles

Posted in Leadership on March 30th, 2010 by Scott Wagner – Be the first to comment

If you’ve spent any time on this earth, you know that life contains conflict. And there are times in the life of every leader when he or she needs to fight. But if you fight all the time, you can wear yourself out. That’s why it’s important to pick your battles. I am still on the road to learning and applying these. I’ve had victory and failure when it comes to picking my battles.

To gain a better perspective on when to fight back and when to “let it go,” practice the following disciplines:

1. Spend time with people who are different from you. This helps you appreciate and understand how others think and work. You will be less inclined to judge or battle them.

2. In matters of personal preference or taste, give in. Keep the main thing the main thing. If you don’t save your energy for what really matters, you’ll wear yourself out and wear out your welcome with others.

3. Don’t take things too personally. In general, hurting people hurt people. And they’re also easily hurt by others. Keep that in mind when you’re on the receiving end of someone’s anger.

4. Practice the 101% Principle. Whenever possible in a difficult situation, find the 1% that you do agree on and give it 100% of your effort.

5. Be a servant leader. If your mindset is to serve rather than be served, you will be less likely to encounter resistance.

The best team doesn’t always win;

it’s usually the team that gets along best.

Adapted from Teamwork Makes the Dreamwork – John C. Maxwell

What gets in the way of change?

Posted in Uncategorized on August 18th, 2009 by Scott Wagner – Be the first to comment

What gets in the way of change?

Monday, August 17th, 2009 | Transformational Change | 0 Comments

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Greetings, great ones. Have you every wondered what really gets in the way of people changing and improving their own lives? Most New Years resolutions end in failure; close to 90% of the goals we set fail by the end of the year. What gets in the way our good intentions? Well an understanding of why most people resist change can help us all change.

Over the years I have discovered 5 key barriers that keep us from making the progress we want to make.

1.   Fear of the unknown and general uncertainty:

At times we allow ourselves to lock-up with fear and become paralyzed with uncertainty. Because change is happening so rapidly we fear the potential negative effects of what is going on around us.

Fear and worrying about things we cannot control, will waste much of our energy. We will never regret putting our energy where our biggest leverage points are in our life, and focusing on the things that we can control instead of those we cannot.

2.   No compelling reason to change:

Simply put without a clear compelling reason to change, improve, and grow most people will not change. We tend to live within our comfort zones. In an ever-changing world, living in the comfort zone can be a very dangerous place.

Creatively thinking or actively approaching new situations with fresh ideas and behaviors can help us build a core around learning, growing and changing. Creating a clear inspiring reason to change makes all the difference.

3.   Lack of vision for a better future:

Without vision we fail. Clear, long-term goals can make a huge difference in our lives. Over our lives we will create what we believe, and believe what we achieve, first in our minds then in our actions. You have been given unique talents and abilities that will allow you to contribute to the world in a marvelous manner and leave a great legacy, regardless of your color, culture, and economic status in life.

Your vision or long-term goals should inspire you to do things differently every day, every week, every month and every year.

4 .   We don’t know how to change:

The concept of making needed changes in our lives can be overwhelming. Change is not easy. It requires effort and focus. Having a proven process can really help move things along. Weight Watchers has a great process to help people lose weight and improve their health. It is built around counting calories through a points system, making choices, and changing your thinking and behavior about food. It breaks everything down for you and has proven to work for millions.

Friends, mentors, coaches and teachers are great sources of information to help you pick a clear process to change, no matter what change you want to make…their successful personal experiences, how they changed, can help you change and in turn when you change, you can help others change.

5.   No accountability to change:

With out someone you love and trust to hold you accountable to a new and better future, the likelihood of change springing up all on its own is low. Once we have laid bad habit tracks they are so easy to return to, unless we have some sort of intervention.

The key here is that “its all about the love”. The accountability that is needed is one of encouragement and support. Connect with people in your life that lift you and love you. We all need more friends that believe in us.

Never underestimate the power we have to change ourselves as we get rid of fear, create meaning, establish a clear vision, work with a proven process, and surround ourselves with people who love us and support our desire to learn, grow and change for the good.

How have you enabled change in your life? How did you remove the mental roadblocks that stood in the way of change? What has helped you?

I would love to hear from you.

Next Post: 7 key rules for change.

Author: Sam Bracken, Global Director of Product Management Marketing, FranklinCovey

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