You’re faced with a challenge – a problem to be solved or a
course of action to be taken. You feel
overwhelmed and don’t know where or how to start. Have you ever been there?
If you have big goals, there probably isn’t a week that goes
by where you don’t face some sort of overwhelm.
The result? You stay stuck, or run
around in circles, or spend valuable time and resources on the little, easy to
accomplish things that don’t produce the results you want. Been there, done that – more than once.
Through the school of hard knocks I’ve learned to apply some
of the laws of physics and economics to help. Here is my Success
1 2 3 formula for creating results whether at work or in your personal life.
Step 1: use the law
of Leverage. Leverage is defined as the action of applying
the force of a rigid bar around a pivot at one point while applying force. You don’t actually use a crowbar - OK you might want to use one on a coworker,
but don’t go there. The point is to find
the common element, root cause or recurring theme that keeps getting in your
way. Then move everything else to the
back burner and put all of your force and focus on that point.
Step 2: use the law
of Momentum. Momentum is defined as the force of
movement. Newton’s first law of motion
says a body at rest will stay at rest; a body in motion will stay in motion. I love the old adage: when you want something to get done, ask a
busy person to do it. That’s because
busy people have momentum. The work isn’t
done after the Leverage step. Once the
ball starts rolling, you need to make smart decisions to create additional
momentum.
Step 3: use the law
of Compounding. Compounding is defined as growth through
accumulation. Think of your savings
account. You earn interest on your
savings, and then you earn interest on the interest you’ve already earned. Ka-ching!
Of course the laws of momentum and compounding work in both
positive ways and negative ways. Harness
the positive.
Here’s a simple example of Success 123 that’s easy to relate to:
Many of my clients feel frustrated, burned out, don’t know
where to turn or how to start because they often don’t know where they want to
go. When we talk about what’s going on,
the recurring theme is the lack of energy or negative energy – physical energy,
emotional energy, mental energy, spiritual energy. Their tanks are empty.
The answer: get more
energy. Where to start? One option is to find the path that quickly makes
other things happen (creating momentum), and that’s usually physical
energy. Start some form of exercise and get
those feel-good hormones flowing. After
only a few days of consistent effort (using that crowbar), they feel and sleep
better and don’t need to get energy from sugary food. This ignites mental energy. Do you feel the momentum starting? Once their minds are able to focus better,
they feel more positive, and they begin making better decisions and seeing what
needs to be done. All the while, the
more progress they make towards their goal, the better they feel, and the
better they feel the more they take care of themselves, which continues to feed
their energy tanks. Compounding!
It’s a simple and common sense example, yes, but don’t let
pride get in your way. Sometimes the
best answers are the simplest answers. I
heard a great quote recently: common
sense isn’t always common practice.
I’ve applied Success 1
2 3 in business situations as well, and I’ll share a great example next
week.
A personal note from
Pam: A big thank you and hug to my
clients and friends who supported me through the past 6 months as I dealt with
the loss of my beautiful mother. My
energy tanks are full again, and I’m thrilled to re-launch this blog.
Great points Pam! Love the laws of momentum and compounding!
ReplyDeleteLeverage, Momentum, Compounding. Love it!
ReplyDeleteInteresting, will share.
ReplyDeleteThanks for breaking it down!! Love your work!
ReplyDeleteLovely post and great analogy! Makes it a LOT easier to think of it that way:-)
ReplyDeleteAh, the exercise answer. I resisted that for so long (I don't have TIME to exercise for a half hour every day!), but once I finally did, I realized I got MORE time out of it - I don't need as much sleep, my energy lasts longer, etc.
ReplyDelete