ACHIEVING
PEAK PERFORMANCE
Whether
you believe you're a great company,
or
you believe you aren't, you're probably right
Is
your company a winner or an also-ran? If this was a
movie, would you be the tall, dark handsome guy who
always gets the girl, or the weedy loser who gets sand
kicked in his face? Is your corporate cup half empty
or half full? Do you expect to find a pot of gold at
the end of every rainbow or just a muddy puddle?
The
extent to which - as an organisation and as individuals
- you are self-assured and expect to succeed is a hugely
important indictor of success, but one which is often
overlooked. Although it's difficult to quantify and
identify, it's nevertheless something of which we're
all aware. Just think of which firms you admire and
why - chances are those you have chosen have won your
admiration because you perceive them as being 'successful
and confident'.
'Success'
is all to do with the fact that attractive people attract,
while those who others sense as being insecure, uncertain
or nervous are given a wide berth. Often professionals
are confident about their intellectual capability and
technical skills as this is what is consistently rewarded
and recognised within the firm.
However,
other aptitudes such as skill in winning new business
or dealing with difficult clients go largely unrewarded.
Those who lack confidence in these areas therefore have
no motivation to improve, and there is no culture of
reinforcing and rewarding improved performance.
People
who are successful, expect to be successful
Peak
performance is self-perpetuating in that people who
are winning expect to win; people who are successful
expect to be successful and people who are liked expect
to be liked and respected. And most important, those
who are successful are usually relaxed, self-confident
and appear to be much more in control of things than
those who are not. They radiate self-assurance, giving
others the confidence that they will succeed at whatever
they do. This is enormously important when you're courting
new clients.
Particularly
in a situation where clients perceive the level of technical
ability to be equal between firms (and usually they
have little on which to base this assessment), they'll
go for the one that 'feels right' i.e. the more relaxed
and self-assured.
(Of
course, it can be overdone - we all know of people and
firms who we consider 'brash', 'pushy' or 'arrogant'
- but actually they also tend to have low personal or
corporate self-esteem.)
The
good news is that if you think you lack corporate confidence,
you can do something about it - both on a group and
individual basis. Success truly is in the eye of the
beholder; 'Act authoritatively and you will be perceived
as authoritative' said Robert Winston. So if you
play the role of being successful and assured long enough,
you eventually will become just that.
Tips for corporate confidence
Corporate
confidence is not easy to change and the specific aspects
requiring attention will vary for each organisation.
However if you try some of the following tips you're
sure to see a noticeable improvement in performance:
- Focus
on improving internal and external communication.
Don't hide your personal or corporate light under
a bushel - make sure everyone knows about your successes,
no matter how small, and develop a culture of congratulating
people and recognising exceptional effort.
- Partners
and leaders in particular should work towards fostering
a culture of enthusiasm and positivity. It's all too
easy to be perennially down-beat and envious of others'
success - focus instead on celebrating your own strengths
and building on the unique advantages you have to
offer.
- Be
creative. Success is never dependent on money, size,
location, skill or any other particular factor. Success
comes from using the talents, skills and creativity
within your firm to generate 'opportunities' and making
your own 'luck'.
- Work
together. Often 'successful' firms have that reputation
simply because every single individual within that
firm works as a team, has enormous belief in the firm
and shares the responsibility (and glory) for what
it achieves.
- Learn
from each other's successes and mistakes. Concentrate
on cooperating rather than competing, and don't -as
an individual - be too proud (or too defensive) to
admit that you may not know it all. Identify those
with marketing and business development strengths,
let them take the lead in setting the pace and make
an effort to actively learn from their example.
- Finally,
don't take your eye off the ball. Remember the golfer,
Jack Nicklaus's approach: 'The harder I practice,
the luckier I get'. It's the same with business development.
If you keep at it, relentlessly and energetically,
you can't help but succeed.
©
Dianne Bown-Wilson, The BIG Question
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