by Nido R. Qubein
Do you know people who seem to be busy all the time but never seem to get anything done?
I run into them quite frequently as I work with management teams, and I can usually give you the reason in one word: FOCUS.
These people don't have it. For such a short word, focus packs real power.
Steam rising from a boiling pot is unfocused, and fades into the
atmosphere. Steam surging through a turbine is focused: It will generate
electricity and propel locomotives.
Light from an ordinary flame is unfocused and flickers impotently. A laser beam is highly focused light, and it will cut steel.
These two illustrations make a powerful point: If you aren't
focused and if your business isn't focused, your efforts are going to
diffuse into nothing. To make a difference, you have to become focused.
Unfocused executives look at potential customers and say
"Whatever they need, we can do." They don't pick their opportunities,
but follow every road that opens up. They see their companies absorbing
massive amounts of capital and human energy without increasing
productivity or building up appreciable equity.
They may be fairly successful, but they wonder whether they're
living up to their full potential. They frequently wish they were doing
something else, and promise themselves that some day it will be
different.
They stay busy most of the time doing things that seem
urgent, but at the end of the day they feel as though they've
accomplished little. They find it hard to explain to others -- clearly,
concisely and persuasively -- exactly what they and their companies do.
They may have good products or services, but they haven't found
ways to turn them into integrated systems that can bring large contracts
or bigger deals. If you see yourself in two or more of those
descriptions, your lack of focus may be costing you a great deal
personally, professionally and financially.
We all need to achieve focus in a number of areas of our lives. Here are some of those areas:
Personal Identity
Who are you as a person? Take a few moments and write an answer to
that question in 25 words or less. Don't use your name, address,
profession, age, gender, educational credentials, marital or family
status, possessions, religious affiliation or nationality.
These questions can help you focus your personal identity:
1. What do you value most?
2. What one thing do you worry about most?
3. What one thing do you talk about most?
4. Which of your talents have you developed most fully and relied on most often?
5. What kind of challenge do you find most appealing?
6. What one thing have you done in your life that you have been most proud of?
7. What one thing have you done in your life that you would most like to do differently?
8. What are three important ingredients of your personal identity?
Professional Purpose
The most critical ingredient to success in any venture is a clear
picture of what you are trying to achieve. Describe, in 12 words or
less, exactly what you do. These questions can help you focus your
professional purpose:
1. What is the guiding or controlling idea in your life?
2. What is your strategy for implementing that idea?
3. How would your staff describe your professional purpose?
4. What are your three greatest strengths and what are you doing to capitalize on them?
Your Career Vision
Do you see yourself as an entrepreneur,
pursuing success through intelligent risk-taking? Or do you see yourself
as a worker, willing to accept a ceiling on success in return for the
security of a steady income?
These questions can help you focus on your career vision:
1.
How does what you do all day square with the way you see yourself? How
does it square with the way you want to be seen by your staff and
associates?
2. Which roles do you most consistently play in your
company? What is your most vital role? What are your secondary roles?
What percentage of your time is spent on each? Which two of your present
roles would you rather not be playing? Which roles would you rather be
playing instead?
3. What is your career mission and how will you know when you are accomplishing it?
Your Market
My interest in banking has been enhanced over the
last decade as a director of BB&T Financial Corporation, a thriving
bank holding company with assets of $55 billion. I loved the recently
published book, Productive Bankers, Profitable Banks, by my friend, Jan
Myers. She compares banking to baseball. What she said about banking can
also apply to other businesses:
In baseball, the strike zone
differs according to the height of the player. The player with long arms
can go for pitches that are out of reach for smaller players. But the
smaller players can turn their small stature to an advantage. They can
crouch low at the plate, making it hard for the pitcher to hit their
strike zones. Banks (and other businesses) need to define their "strike
zones." They need to focus on the markets they are best suited to serve.
To focus your market, you need to determine your unique niche in the
marketplace. Decide what you do better than anybody else does it.
Then determine who your customers are and what they need. Learn
their perceptions of value -- and of you. Remember, in today's
marketplace, it's the customer, not the seller, who defines quality in a
product or service.
Your Product
Once you really know your customers and their needs,
you can offer products and services that capitalize on your
differential advantage to meet those needs. After you have achieved
focus in these five areas, wonderful things start to happen. For
instance:
* You can constantly redirect your time, energy, talents,
expertise and money from areas of low yield or no yield to areas of high
yield.
* You can systematically develop your most productive strengths and compensate for your most costly weaknesses.
* You can qualify the results you expect and measure your performance hourly, daily, weekly and annually.
* You can identify obstacles and problems and attack them effectively.
* You can identify the most productive ideas and go after the greatest opportunities.
* You can communicate clearly and persuasively with people who can help you achieve your goals.
* You can become competent enough at what you do to approach every opportunity with complete confidence.
* You can have a whole lot more fun at everything you do.
When
you're in focus, your life takes on a new clarity. Just as a camera
lens focuses light to form a photographic image, so your mind focuses
your thoughts, feeling and actions to form a clear picture of who you
are and where you're going.
When you're focused, you'll go far.
Nido
has written numerous books and recorded scores of audio and video
learning programs including a bestseller on effective communication
published by Nightingale-Conant and Berkley. He is an active speaker and
consultant addressing more than 100 business and professional groups
around the world each year. He doesn't just talk business, he lives it.
He is an entrepreneur with active interests in real estate, advertising,
and banking.
Source:madeforsuccess.com
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