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Getting
Over Today's Success
by John Maxwell |
In my office, I have a sign that says, "Yesterday
ended last night." It's a great sign because it helps me keep
our company's success in perspective. When I want to celebrate
because the previous day was a good day, I look at the sign
and say, "Okay John, that was yesterday. The party's over.
Go home, go to bed and get ready for another day."
Life is not a snapshot. It would be wonderful
if, at the pinnacle of your success, you could take a picture
of it and assume nothing will ever change. But it will change,
and if you don't change with it, what got you there yesterday
won't keep you there in the future. Yesterday ended last night,
remember? And--even more importantly--today's success won't
sustain you tomorrow.
This can be tough to digest because when
your business or job is going really well, the tendency is
to sit back and say, "This is it. We've found the recipe for
success--this is how it's going to be from here on out." Unfortunately,
that kind of attitude doesn't lead to growth; it only fosters
stagnation.
As tempting as it is to rest on your laurels,
you have to keep reinventing yourself and you have to keep
reinventing your organization. Ninety percent of INJOY's profit
margin today comes from work we were not doing six years ago.
And when we look at our game plan for the next five years
and the growth that we're planning to have in our company,
nothing in the next five years is determined on what we're
doing right now.
Let me put it this way: If what you did five
years ago still satisfies you, you're not doing anything worthwhile
today. I look at material I produced five years ago and I
want to apologize for it. You see, a sign of growth in your
life is when what you did yesterday no longer thrills you;
not because you're bored, but because you're growing.
In light of that, here are five ways to make
sure today's success doesn't impede future accomplishment
in your life.
Keep growing personally.
Growth equals change. When you grow, you change. Notice
that Idid not say change equals growth. You can change without
growing, but you cannot grow without changing.
Continually ask, "Is there
a better way?"
When someone asks this question, the answer is always yes.
There's always a better way, a more efficient method, a
more effective approach. You're in deep trouble if you think
you have the best way because there's no such thing. There's
always a better way; and your search to be a little bit
better or a little bit different will keep you in a continual
growth spurt.
Pay for outside consulting.
I learned a long time ago that if you really want to grow,
you need to have a fresh set of eyes examining your business
from time to time. So hire an outside consultant who knows
your business well to check out your organization and see
what you're too close to see.
Don't protect the past.
We all have a tendency to protect our past--the decisions
we've made and the people we've hired. It's easy to look
at an employee who's not performing well and think, "I really
believe they're about to get on track," when in reality,
they haven't improved in seven years. The real effort comes
when you have to say, "I made a bad decision in hiring them,
and it's time for them to go."
Build on your success--don't sit
on it.
When your company applauds you, take a tape recorder and
record it. Every now and then when you're alone, turn it
on and say, There was a time..." Then turn the tape
off and start growing. Start improving. Start disciplining
yourself to get better. And keep people around you who are
not impressed with you. The worst thing that happens with
leaders is that they surround themselves with fans instead
of building productive teams. You don't need people to admire
you. You need people to say, "I don't think that was
a good idea; we should have done this." Those are the
kind of people who will push you to grow. They won't just
let you sit there basking in the warmth of today's success."
Once you've gotten into the habit of doing
these five things go ahead and celebrate the success you had
today. Feel good about it. Enjoy it. But when tomorrow comes,
get over it. Let it go. Don't let today's achievements stand
in the way of future growth.
Dr. John C. Maxwell has a loyal following
in business, industry, professional sports and public service.
Through his on-site speaking engagements and corporate training
program, John personally trains and equips more than 25,000
leaders in the business world each year. This article is used
by permission from Dr. John C. Maxwell's free monthly e-newsletter
Leadership Wired available at www.INJOY.com.
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