Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Performance. Show all posts

PERFORMANCE ENHANCING ATTITUDES: Lessons from Elite Athletes

If you?re a sports enthusiast, you may have noticed commentators occasionally describe a player who, in their opinion, is less physically gifted than others but is nevertheless a vital part of a team?s success.  This raises an intriguing question.  Given the stratospheric level of competition in elite sports, what can possibly be as highly valued as talent?  What do these athletes possess that secures a place in these upper echelons?

Daniel Goleman?s work on emotional intelligence gives us some clues.  He tells us that the skill of effective self-management under stress can strongly influence the level of success we achieve.   So whatever the natural physical endowment of these athletes, they can leverage their value to their team by means of the attitudes they maintain in the heat of competition.  Some clich?s that circulate in the sports media provide insights into these attitudes.  Each one has provocative implications for us in the business world.

?Mental Toughness?

Mental toughness is about focus and having an absolute lock-hold on the present moment.  In sports-talk, ?He?s got a short memory? is a high compliment.  A top-ranked NFL cornerback has just missed a defensive stop, allowing a touchdown.  The fans are booing.   But in the TV close-up of his face, there is no scowl of self-attack, no muttering to himself or pumping himself up for the next play; in fact, there is no change of expression.  The eyes are steady and intensely focused.   His teammates know to leave him alone.  He is utterly absorbed in the present moment, and the mistake is gone from his mind. 

The mistake is gone, but the learning isn?t.  You watch his coverage on the next play and see him make that slight adjustment, instinctively recalculating when his receiver is going to break off his route to try for a catch.  Mistakes, failure, stardom all dissipate in the singular focus of the moment.  He can let his talent flow unhindered. 

Question:  Where could you benefit from mental toughness?  How will you cultivate it?  Suggestion: Think of mental toughness as a muscle to develop.  Very few people are born with it, or get it without exercise.

?He/She is a role player?

There are some players who may not ?have game? or be the best all-around athletes but  have a particular skill or value to a team ? a sharp-shooting hand, or come-from-behind leadership.  Even with all the egotism that accompanies being an elite athlete, these role players have clearly perceived their ?right size? and have perfected the necessary skills or qualities.  Far from being content with being ?just? a role player, the good ones continue to develop their excellence with harder conditioning, sharper skills, and constant alertness to enhancing their impact.
These players have to be exquisitely objective about themselves, able to see their abilities and their limitations as well as how they fit within the gestalt of the team.  They don?t succumb to a  ?less than? attitude or envy the marquee player.  They seem to live in the paradox of accepting their place and maintaining relentless ambition to play their role even better.

Question:  What is your role at work?  How can you increase the positive impact of your contributions?

Suggestion:  Ask for feedback.  Like the athlete, the skills involved are carefully honed, but playing your role may be largely instinctive.  Others may be able to describe positive contributions of your role that are invisible to you.

?He/She makes other players better?

This mind-set has an almost mystical quality.  An athlete, let?s say a WNBA point guard, seems absorbed in her own game, and yet the level of play of her teammates elevates No one can precisely explain why.  If a teammate is asked about it, she might say the point guard has confidence in her, and she simply rises to meet the level of expectation. Or she might say the player?s certainty about winning is contagious.  But it remains mysterious.  One observation from this couch potato is that when those players are interviewed, whether it?s Tim Duncan or Donovan McNabb or Kate Starbird, there are many more ?we? pronouns used than ?I?. 

As mysterious as this quality is, it?s worth musing on.  In business terms, it leverages the performance level of everyone involved.

Question:  Whom do you know who raises others? level of ?play??  How does it happen?

Suggestion:  This quality probably draws on intrinsic, intuitive abilities rather than on a technique.

Whether we manage a team or are sole proprietors of our business, there is a broader dimension of teamwork about everything we do, at work and personally.  These lessons from athletes can inspire us to be as rigorously intentional about our impact as they are.

About the Author
:
Nina Ham is a certified women?s success coach and a licensed psychotherapist.  Her company, Success from the Inside Out, offers programs for developing the skills, attitudes and habits for sustainable success.  Visit her website at www.SuccessfromtheInsideOut.com or subscribe to her E-Letter at Nina@womenssuccesscoach.com


Nina Ham is an internationally certified womens business coach and a licensed psychotherapist. Her company Success from the Inside Out provides programs and services essential for anyone making the salaried-to-solo transition including niche identification marketing fundamentals and self management for solo professionals. Go to her site http://www.successfromtheinsideout.com/ and take her free quiz Is Going Solo for You 

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Top Performance Can Be A Snap

Do you ever find yourself saying but, I cant, I dont believe, this is a struggle, I dont deserve or Im not a top performer? Continually using negative language is self-destructive. But is a very bad habit that needs to be removed.

A very simple mechanism will eliminate the negativity from your language. Abolishing the but from your vocabulary is a giant step towards success. You can reprogram yourself with a form of neural associative conditioning a rubber band.

To transform the ordinary rubber band into a life changing tool you need to wear it on your wrist and every time you catch yourself saying but or other disparaging words, you are going to give it a ping. It will hurt and it is suppose to!

Anthony Robbins refers to this technique as, scratching the record.  Using your drive towards pleasure and away from pain, you will modify your behavior. The word but will soon be associated with pain, and you will develop a natural tendency to stay clear of it.

This technique is incredibly effective and inexpensive.  Try it. You have nothing to lose except some disparaging language, and everything to gain. After a relatively short time, sometimes a matter of days or weeks, your tendency to use damaging language will drop off and you can begin moving away from the destructive associated behavior.

It is critical that you recognize the incredible power that language possesses and its connection to your behavior. If you continually describe yourself in negative terms, then ultimately you create a harmful vision of yourself, one that you believe. You will not be a top achiever if you carry around negative pictures of yourself.

When you do start to gain awareness of your environment and gain traction on your personal and business development an interesting event occurs in the form of self-destructive behavior.  You are challenging the paradigms that exist in your life. These paradigms are the beliefs you hold to be true - the ideas programmed into you as a young child. One of the most common views being, money doesnt grow on trees. This phrase predisposes many to the belief that money is a scarce resource, when in reality, our ability to acquire money may be a limiting factor, but actual money is an abundant commodity.

When you modify your performance, even though you are experiencing success, you introduce conflict and stress into your life.  Your behavior has changed, causing it to be misaligned with what you believe and creating conflict with your core beliefs. Often this creates a self-destructive period where you will relapse.  This switch back to old behavior is a natural response.

The beliefs that you have accepted as true are very deep-seated. They will take some time to change. The behavior that is keeping you from sustaining achievement is habitual. For instance, many people try to go on a diet or change their eating habits.  They are usually able to accomplish it for only a short time. After a brief interval, they revert to their old habits because they dont believe they can be or deserve to be, thin or healthy.

Just as dieting or overcoming any habit is difficult, the change to high performance behavior is inherently challenging. To achieve high performance and results, you need to modify behavior by changing the habit.

Until continuance of top performance behavior becomes habitual, you may run into trouble.  Although habits are difficult to change, allowing your self the necessary time will make it possible. It is natural to regress and revert to type. If you are aware, you will be able to limit this reversion.

When introducing a habit, you need to be sensitive to your behavior. During a period of change or adjustment, the rubber band technique can be an integral aid in limiting negative behavior.

Destructive behavior or reversion to type comes from the fact that when you create high performance behavior you are in direct conflict with what you believe to be true. Modifying your behavior and beliefs is necessary so you can move on with transformational changes in your life.

Ritchie Hale is founder and owner of ELAH Group Pty Ltd. As a consultant he has shown large, global corporations how to gain leverage in the areas of Marketing and IT. As a personal coach he has turned small business owners and individuals in to goal getters. Ritchie is dedicated to helping small business owners grow their business. Visit http://www.elahgroup.com


Ritchie Hale is founder and owner of ELAH Group Pty Ltd. As a consultant he has shown large global corporations how to gain leverage in the areas of Marketing and IT. As a personal coach he has turned small business owners and individuals in to goal getters. Ritchie is dedicated to helping small business owners grow their business.  

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