Professional Is Spelled with 5 Ps!
By Jim Bain
The
difference between successful business people, entrepreneurs,
athletes, authors – anyone, and those who are not successful is
not talent. The difference is the guts to move forward, to take
intelligent risks, to try, to work harder than anyone else to become
a true professional.
It is
a fact that every industry has its share of immensely successful
people, its share of abject failures, and a whole lot of people in
between. The individual success of the people in most industries can
be plotted on a classic bell curve, where the great percentages fall
directly in the middle. Exactly how, then, does someone move from
the majority in the middle of the pack to that select group who have
reached the top of their profession?
Professional athletes will tell you that the difference between
first place and second place or success and “failure” is incredibly
small. At the Daytona 500, the premier NASCAR stock car race,
between 1995 and 2004, the average margin of victory was only 0.241
seconds! The difference between first place money and second place
money – a whopping $452,116. That means the additional prize money
for finishing first was an astounding 68%. In the Winter Olympics in
2002, the difference between a gold medal and NO medal in the men’s
downhill skiing event was 0.65 seconds. Small improvements can make
a huge difference.
So,
how can you become a successful professional in your job and your
life? It starts with small improvements. You simply need to focus on
the five fundamental P’s.
1)
Purpose: Seeking, and recognizing, opportunities to serve
others is your starting point. Start by figuring out who you work
for. It is your company? No. Is it your manager? No. Is it your
boss? No. It’s your spouse, your family, your customer, or your
co-workers. Human beings are social animals and have a fundamental
need to contribute to something greater than themselves. Your job,
whatever it is, is about providing a product or service to other
people for their benefit. Your joy and success will come when
you know that you have helped someone else out. Sit down and
write out your goals. Are they about you or are they the results of
serving others?
2)
Preparation: Be the best you can be! Read everything you can.
Learn from others. Learn something new every day. Listen, you might
learn something. Keep an open mind. The time to prepare is before
your opportunity comes. Once that opportunity has presented itself,
it’s too late to prepare.
3)
People: Surround yourself with good people. Your performance
and your reputation are, most often, determined by the people with
whom you have aligned your life. Your bosses, co-workers,
subordinates, mentors, coaches, teammates, and friends all have a
huge impact on your ultimate success. Choose those people wisely and
be fiercely loyal to them. They will be the foundation to your
ultimate success. Show them you care about them by asking them about
them! Then shut up and listen to the answers. Care about them and
they will care about you.
4)
Priorities: Focus on the fundamentals and the results will
take care of themselves. Start each day with a simple written list
of what you plan to accomplish - today. Make time to do the things
that contribute to your purpose and your goals. Remember that if you
don’t have time to do it right, what makes you think that you have
time to do it over? Learn to adapt to your changing environment.
Maintain a controlled sense of urgency. Being prompt, being
reliable, and contributing to your team will go a long way to ensure
your success.
5)
Persistence: Maintain a positive mental attitude. Your
attitude is a choice you make each and every day. Choose to be
positive. Don’t get bogged down in negative thinking. The past is
just that – passed. The future is always a question mark. What,
specifically, can you do today to continue toward your
Purpose?
How
many people do you know that wake up in the morning and ask
themselves, “how can I fail today?” Probably none. People fail
because they haven’t focused on their Purpose. Or they haven’t
prepared themselves to take advantage of the opportunities. Or they
have made poor choices in the People with whom they associate. They
may have lost sight of their Priorities. Or, they’ve given up and
failed to be Persistent.
So,
“professional,” in any endeavor, is spelled with 5 p’s – Purpose,
Preparation, People, Priorities, and Persistence. Focus on those 5
p’s and you will find the success you seek.
Read other articles and learn more about
Jim
Bain.
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