Things which matter
most must never be at the mercy of things which matter least. – Johann Wolfgang
von Goethe
The story is told of a new bank president who met with his
predecessor and said, "I would like to know what have been the keys to
your success." The older gentleman looked at him and replied, "Young
man, I can sum it up in two words: Good decisions." To that the young man
responded, "I thank you immensely for that advice, sir, but how does one come
to know which are the good decisions?" "One word, young man,"
replied the sage. "Experience." "That's all well and good,"
said the younger, "but how does one get experience?" "Two
words," said the elder. "Bad decisions."
Years ago, like many I suppose, I was programmed to equate
success in terms of what I was able to cross off of my “to-do” list at any
given time. As each item that was transcribed onto the list was successfully
completed it somehow gave me a sense of accomplishment. But the euphoric
feeling didn’t last long as a new list soon replaced it and the process started
all over again.
As time went by I began to see and understand the
frustration associated with this hamster wheel approach of measuring success. I
was running myself ragged checking off “to-do’s” which ultimately culminated
with an empty feeling on the inside and little to show for it outside. Can you
relate?
Allow me to introduce you to a few key takeaways from the
book The One Thing, by Gary Keller (Order
on Amazon at http://amzn.to/2c6nqje) that
I believe will empower you as a leader. Keller devotes a powerful chapter to
the myth that everything matters equally. Here are three key thoughts worth
consideration.
You need a success
list not a to-do list
The key thought here is that your to-do list tends to be
long whereas your success list tends to be short. “If your to-do list contains
everything,” says Keller, “then it’s probably taking you everywhere but where
you really want to go.” Focus more on
what you should do and less on what
you could do. Keller adds, “Instead
of a to-do list, you need a success list- a list that is purposefully created
around extraordinary results.” Your success begins with the way you frame it
and define it. Success is not measured by checking off the to-do list, it is
measured by what you check off of your success list.
Not everything is
equal
Being busy does not necessarily translate into being
successful. We succumb to the tyranny of the urgent and we end up chasing
rabbits all over the place. In the end, the rabbit wins and you are worn out,
frustrated, and empty-handed. Keller observes, “When everything feels urgent
and important, everything seems equal. We become active and busy, but this
doesn’t actually move us any closer to success. Activity is often unrelated to
productivity, and busyness rarely takes care of business.” When you remember
that not everything is equal many things can come off your to-do list.
Work from your
priorities
Successful people have a clear set of priorities. They think
and act different. They have an “eye for the essential.” The crux of the
matter, as Keller points out is that “the majority of what you want will come
from the minority of what you do. Extraordinary results are disproportionally
created by fewer actions than most
realize.” Success comes not from a long to-do list you check off one by one, it
come from focusing your time, energy, and creativity around a short list that
you have prioritized (Pareto’s 80/20 principle). Success is not doing many
things half-heartedly, it is achieved by making the list smaller and smaller
and pouring yourself into it.
Making the transition from busy to productive to successful
comes about as you make your list smaller not larger. It comes from clear
priorities and understanding that not everything is equal. Do yourself a favor
as a leader and get off the hamster wheel of being busy and start being
successful. It will make all the difference in the world.
What’s on your success list?
© 2016 Doug Dickerson
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