Ten Ways to
Realize Hidden Opportunities
By Jeff
Beals
"Great moments are born
from great opportunities," said the late Herb Brooks, one of the
world's most famous hockey coaches.
Brooks certainly seized
opportunity during his career. He agreed to coach the 1980 U.S.
Olympic team that beat the "unbeatable" Soviet Union in Lake Placid,
New York during the famous "Miracle on Ice" game on the way to
winning the gold medal. It was a modern-day "David vs. Goliath"
matchup. Many coaches would refuse such an overwhelmingly difficult
job. In fact, several did.
But Brooks saw opportunity
in the monumental challenge of leading a bunch of young, amateur,
college all-stars against the essentially professional players of
the Soviet Union and other European hockey powers. That opportunity
paid off, to say the least.
Whether you're talking
about sports, business or any other subject matter, seeking, finding
and capitalizing on opportunity are among the most important things
a professional must do. There's one big problem with opportunity,
however. It is often hard to find and even harder to harness.
"We are all faced with a
series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible
situations," said Charles Swindoll, an American religious author. I
agree wholeheartedly with Swindoll's characterization. The best
opportunities are often hidden. They are often located in places we
least expect to find them and are presented by people we least
expect to provide them.
That reminds me of the old
story that sales managers like to share with their young trainees:
"On his way back from a three-day fishing trip, a multi-millionaire
visits the showroom of an upscale, luxury car dealer. The
salespersons, seeing an unshaven, disheveled, poorly dressed man,
essentially ignore him. Offended, the multi-millionaire buys a
top-of-the-line model the next day from a direct competitor." There
are a lot of ways to tell that classic missed-sales-opportunity
story, but they all sound something like that.
If opportunity is so
important to our success, and so difficult to find and recognize, we
need to focus more of our energy on it. Unless you're naturally
good at it, finding and capitalizing on opportunity needs to be a
deliberate focus:
Open your eyes and ears:
we can no longer afford to be indifferent, or even worse, oblivious
to the world around us. Be on the lookout for ideas that could lead
to new opportunities. Even more important than eyes and ears, keep
your mind open too. Many of us miss opportunities, because they
don't fit into our pre-existing paradigms.
Remember that all people count: sometimes we get so obsessed with the
"right" people, we miss out on valuable opportunities from people,
who on the surface, can do seemingly nothing for us.
Fight through the fear:
one of the biggest reasons we miss out on extraordinary
opportunities is because we are too afraid to leap. Herb Brooks
wasn't too afraid to leap; we shouldn't be either.
Let your creative juices flow:
the Nobel Prize-winning scientist
Albert Szent-Gyorgi once said, "Discovery consists of seeing what
everybody has seen and thinking what nobody has thought." The more
creative you are, the more opportunity you will discover. See the
world in a different way, and doing things like nobody else, and
just watch the opportunities that manifest.
Take risks:
As the old saying goes, "nothing risked, nothing gained." Unless
you take a chance and do something new, you'll keep running into the
same old opportunities.
Work really hard:
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in
overalls and looks like work," said the great inventor Thomas
Edison.
Set meaningful goals:
make those goals specific too. The more you clarify what you really
want, the quicker you will recognize it when it shows up.
Find quiet time:
many people have found great opportunities, because they prayed for
them or spent time meditating about them. Such activity creates
focus in your mind, and a focused mind is a powerful mind.
Believe:
visualize success and tell yourself that good things will come. A
positive mind is more receptive to hidden opportunity.
Prepare:
as the old Boy Scout motto says, "be prepared." You never know when
the perfect opportunity will open up. If you're not prepared, you
might not act on it quickly enough. In his autobiography, former
New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said he believes in "relentless
preparation." He constantly prepares for crisis, so he will perform
properly. Same thing applies to opportunity.
Read other articles and learn more about
Jeff Beals.
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