Completion not Perfection
Five Keys To Doubling Your Productivity and Boosting Your Effectiveness
I frequently meet with business owners and executives who feel overworked and undervalued. Many of them are highly gifted and are in fact contributing a huge amount of work, energy and brilliance to the companies they own or work for. The problem is that many business owners and executives are contributing the wrong effort, energy and brilliance to their companies. These professionals are working hard, but their clients and employers are just not getting the value they truly want and need.
They are:
>>> The business owners who spend hours designing the perfect logo for their yellow pages ad, but do not write a simple, clear headline that lets their prospective clients know why they are different and better than the competition.
>>> The dedicated administrative assistants who spend hours making spreadsheets to track the number of calls a new ad generates and where they are coming from when it turns out that the department that placed the ad is interested in the amount of revenue the ad generated, not the volume of calls.
>>> They are also countless other gifted individuals who are working hard to offer value, before they are clear about what value they should be offering, how they can most easily offer that value and when they should be saying to themselves "job well done" and moving on.
You cannot get completely around work-effort is simply part of the price of success. However, hard work is not always a sign of professional success. Sometimes hard work is just hard, and unnecessary. In fact for many business owners and upwardly mobile executives too much hard work can be a sign of starting to veer off track. In short, too much hard work is suspicious. It tells us we have lost sight of the true value we are offering.
Ask yourself, though, if all your hard work is really paying off. Can you see clear evidence that the effort you are expending is getting you where you want to be?
For many professionals, the answer is no. We work all the time, but often find we're spinning our wheels. Crafting a personal vision and making sure it's aligned with the goals of the company you work for can help, but often the answer is much simpler than that.
Stop Moving the Goalpost
Too often, the nearer we get to meeting our goals, the larger we make them. When you are about to achieve your aim, try to accept and celebrate it instead of asking yourself what else you can or should add on to the original goal. Instead of trying to do everything there is to do, and do it perfectly, take the time to discover what it is that gives your co-worker, boss or customer ultimate value. Then focus on that to the exclusion of all else. The point is not to eliminate all the items on your to-do list. It will never happen. The point is to provide exceptional value. When you have delivered the value, you are complete.
This idea goes against the grain for many of us. After all, we want to be the best at what we do.
Stop for a minute to consider what that means from your internal customer's point of view. Are you writing detailed reports nobody reads, or spending money and time developing systems and procedures that are never used? Are you busy trying to save your employees or coworkers from hassles or responsibilities it would be in their best professional interest to learn to deal with effectively on their own?
To be the best, you need to focus your talent and energy on the things your internal customers value. You also need to trust yourself enough to move on to your next customer or project when the value is delivered. Continual communication is attractive. Continual customer placating or "fussing" about your work is not.
Use The Five Keys to Greater Productivity and Profits:
1) Get clear about why the company pays you. What is the ultimate benefit of what you do and how does that help your company make a profit and deliver its ultimate benefit to its customer?
Don't focus on everything you can do for your company, focus on where you can have the biggest impact on company goals and bottom line. When you look at your business from your internal customer's perspective, you may find that some details matter very much, while others do not. Why spend hours tracking the number of calls in response to an ad when the Marketing Department really cares about the dollar amount of sales generated by the ad?
The key to "completion, not perfection" is knowing that you cannot be all things to all people, and then consciously deciding what you can and will be and to whom. How do you know when you have done exactly the job you have set out to do? How do you know that the company received what it paid you to provide? When you know those answers, you'll find you don't need to be a perfectionist. You simply need to deliver on the promises you make.
2) Stop trying to impress people and serve them instead. Businesswomen often expend energy and money to do things like "look professional" and "improve credibility." While these strategies may help your employer understand you can deliver what you promise, they are irrelevant if the benefit of what you do is unclear or unattractive, or if you are not delivering what others expect from you. Learn the difference between benefits, features and your "image" then keep 90% of your focus on the benefits you deliver.
If you are a web designer, the graphics on your web page should be impressive. If you are an accountant, a clearly communicated specialty in a certain type of accounting and a fast return phone call when people inquire about your services might be more impressive (and less costly) than a fabulous web design.
3) Write out your top ten personal values. Ask yourself, "Where am I acting in ways contradictory to my values?" We often engage in unproductive work when we are covering for the fact that we have taken on the wrong work in the first place. Make sure your work truly reflects your talents and your values, and you will find that the quality speaks for itself.
4) Remind yourself why you chose this business or career. Write out a single sentence that describes the emotional, financial, lifestyle or intellectual rewards you want from your work. Read this every day. You cannot serve others and provide them with ultimate value unless you first serve and value yourself.
5) Delegate as often as possible and choose the projects that are most closely related to the core benefit you provide your employer. Your job is not to do every project or task in the organization. Your job is to be part of a team that gets it all done. Talk to your supervisor to find out how you can align your job so the company benefits the most from your unique talents. Reorganize workloads or reassess tasks when the company isn't getting the powerful results it needs.
After leaving you with these five tips to ponder, I am tempted to come up with a zingy one-liner, or great client example to top off this article, but that might be moving the goalpost. I've said what I need to say. Now I challenge you to see if you can put it to use in your life. May you and your company profit from it!
Mari Geasair is a speaker, writer, and business coach. She has owned several profitable businesses of her own, in addition to helping hundreds of individuals succeed professionally. Visit her web site at http://www.mycreativeprosperity.com/ for more resources for making your professional success easy. Also check out her small business training by telephone for the home business builder who wants to avoid the most common traps most enetreprenuers fall into. Small Business Smarts: http://www.mycreativeprosperity.com/D ream-Builders.html
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
There are many factors to be considered when you are... Read More
E-mail and Internet use are integral parts of the typical... Read More
Opportunities for home show businesses have never been more abundant.... Read More
Every home business has the same problem of how to... Read More
Disclosure laws in franchising are suppose to help the consumer.... Read More
Does your company have a community relation strategy? Have you... Read More
You can make your trade show experience much easier by... Read More
Would you rather have one good client paying you five... Read More
Many years ago, I had warned the carwash industry of... Read More
Since you own a business you probably have liability insurance... Read More
What makes a business relationship?What really makes a business relationship?... Read More
SBIR vs. STTR: If you are participating in the SBIR... Read More
Under the Securities Act of 1933, any offer to sell... Read More
How much is your time really worth? Is it worth... Read More
This year, some 700,000 American businesses will be sold. Most... Read More
Discover How Specialized Cost Containment Creates A New Win-Win Position... Read More
Why does a good business relationship rely on having some... Read More
It has been discussed allowing Franchising companies to electronically disclose... Read More
Today required franchise disclosure documents are over 200 pages generally.... Read More
Too often in business we get trapped into reviewing our... Read More
Shipping materials can be expensive! Even the styrofoam "peanuts" can... Read More
How often has someone thought of starting a business based... Read More
1. There Are No "gimmes" ? They count two-foot putts... Read More
Financial Consultants are one of the fastest growing industries today.... Read More
The Federal Trade Commission which governs the franchise industry thru... Read More
If you don't know what a Virtual Assistant (or VA)... Read More
If you have a busy private practice, chances are you... Read More
BioTechs even with the latest news had shed over 1000... Read More
Most small businesses simply go about their daily business and... Read More
When is the Chamber ideal for your business?Joining a Chamber... Read More
Should your business have a toll free number for customers... Read More
Some things in business are relatively easy to measure ?... Read More
How do you make sure you have the business solutions... Read More
In today's marketplace the words 'job security' have become an... Read More
As long as you eat and breathe you will stay... Read More
There are almost as many opinions and views on marketing... Read More
CONSIDERATIONS FOR YOUR INTERN: Specify the number of hours the... Read More
If you are the boss and you think your job... Read More
To wash an airplane there are many items you will... Read More
Company mottos can easily be printed on a business card.Sometimes... Read More
Opportunities for home show businesses have never been more abundant.... Read More
Self-cleaning glass has been talked about a lot, with such... Read More
As you may know, there are many ways to incorporate... Read More
You're pretty proud of yourself! After all, only four months... Read More
In my 18 years of consulting I have heard it... Read More
Every company has a value proposition. That is a statement... Read More
Remember those drawings from science class of how a lever... Read More
While there are few career paths that some would call... Read More
While driving through Pennsylvania farmland, you have probably noticed an... Read More
Tammy, a skilled and gifted horticulturist, called me to discuss... Read More
SBIR vs. STTR: If you are participating in the SBIR... Read More
A solopreneur I know disappears from my radar screen for... Read More
"Inch by inch, row by row...that's the way my garden... Read More
Some marine biologists feel that the concentration of dead marine... Read More
How often has someone thought of starting a business based... Read More
Why give freebies?We have all seen freebies at trade shows... Read More
The start of a new year is a time for... Read More
There are several well-known truck washes in the Great State... Read More
Has this ever happened to you... 'John, you have a... Read More
It's Monday morning and Connie the Consultant sits in her... Read More
How do you find the best business partners?Finding a good... Read More
What kinds of things effect mobile service businesses P and... Read More
Franchising is the fastest way to build small businesses, provide... Read More
When pressure washing heavy equipment each piece of equipment has... Read More
There are no "rules of thumb" in the pursuit of... Read More
If you want to start a business in 2005, and... Read More
Small Business |