I was going to do a different blog post today, but like
yesterday, I need to do more research! But unlike yesterday, I'm going to give you another blog post today.
This post is from
Harvey Mackay, one of my favorites:
Slow and steady wins the day
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A
poor boy named Harlan with only a sixth-grade education wouldn’t have made
anyone’s list of the most likely to succeed. His first major success
came at the age of 39, when he was able to come up with the financing to
open a small-town gas station and restaurant.
He
did pretty well, but with the onset of World War II, Harlan’s once-solid
customer base left the small town to enlist in the military or take factory
jobs in the city. He managed to hold on until a new interstate
highway eliminated his drive-by trade. Then, after nearly 30 years in
business, Harlan was forced to sell his dream to pay off his debts.
Almost
broke and approaching age 70, Harlan could have walked away from his
dreams. Instead, he hit the road, offering to share his pressure-cooking
techniques with other restaurant owners if they’d agree to become his
franchises. He sold only five in the first two years, but he stuck it
out.
Four
years later the self-proclaimed Colonel Sanders had sold more than 600
Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises. And by the time Harlan Sanders
died at age 90 in 1980, KFC was a worldwide brand. Today, KFC is the
world's second largest restaurant chain (measured by sales) after McDonald's, with 18,875 outlets in 118
countries and territories.
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Persistence
is one of the traits I look for in hiring any new employee, especially a
sales rep. There is no substitute.
I
remember when I was first starting out as an envelope salesman and asking
an experienced colleague I respected how many calls he would make on a
prospect before giving up. He said, “It depends on which one of us
dies first.”
When
giving up is not an option, you have to find ways to maintain your
motivation. Give yourself a pep talk, and then roll up your sleeves
and look for the next reasonable steps you need to take. Do you need
more education? Do you need more staff? Do you need to tweak
your idea to make it more attractive to potential clients? Do you
need to channel your efforts in a completely different direction?
Bob
Nelson, author of “1001 Ways to Take Initiative at Work,” says it’s best to
focus on what you can accomplish rather than on what you can’t. This
will help you stay positive. Use your energy to work toward a goal,
rather than against an obstacle, he suggests.
If
you identify a roadblock to your goal, develop a plan to address whatever
is in your way. Be patient; remember Colonel Sanders’ example.
Success may be elusive at first, but give it time.
Some
of his other pointers include finding ways to make it easy, even desirable,
for your colleagues to say yes to your requests. When you give
co-workers options, they should be able to choose how they can best help
you.
Be
assertive, but not aggressive Always be polite, but don’t give up on
your direction in order to be liked. If you believe in what you are
doing, you need to be able to stand firm when nay-sayers try to shoot down
your plans.
A
prime example of shooting down plans actually came when the early space
explorers were trying to shoot rockets up into the great unknown. One
of America’s space pioneers was a physicist named Robert Goddard. His
story is one of unwavering persistence in the face of “learned” skepticism.
Professor
Goddard helped launch the space age by experimenting with a 10-foot rocket
in a New England cabbage field. His belief in rocketry as a viable
technology for flight was met with great cynicism.
Even
the “New York Times” dismissed his plans in a 1920 editorial. The
Times soundly panned Goddard's thesis: “Professor Goddard clearly
lacks the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools.”
Yet
Goddard persevered until he proved his firm belief, that rocket engines can
create thrust in a vacuum. Two of his 214 patented inventions – a
multi-stage rocket and a liquid-fuel rocket (both patented in 1914) – were
important milestones toward spaceflight.
The
theory was proved 40 years later by other space pioneers who did indeed
reach extreme altitudes. Years after his death, at the dawn of the
Space Age, he came to be recognized as the founding father of modern
rocketry.
Unless
you are Robert Goddard, persistence is not rocket science. If you are
willing to stick with it, you can take your ideas to the moon!
Mackay’s Moral: When you feel like
giving up, remember why you held on for so long in the first place.
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Interesting days
Today -
Pumpkin Day, Mincemeat Day and Howl At The Moon Day
Tomorrow - Navy Day, Cranky Co-Workers Day and Black Cat Day
Next Wednesday - Deviled Egg Day and Stress Awareness Day
November 26 - Small Business Saturday and Cake Day
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