Success Stories--Reliving The Past Helps You Build The Future
One of the exercises that I have many clients do is list out all
the successes they've had in life. I ask them to start with
early childhood and list everything they can remember being
successful at. One of my clients recently gave the assignment to
his girlfriend. She asked me afterwards what the point was. She
hadn't found it very useful.
What I told her is that that I've found that this exercise
serves two important services. First, it's a self esteem
booster. Most people don't realize how many successes they've
had in their lives until they write them down. Some express
surprise and sometimes some modesty when sharing their
successes. I'd recommend this exercise just for this boost
alone, but the second reason for doing this is even more
valuable. Success leaves clues behind.
When I ask a client to list their successes, it's usually
because they are stuck in some area of their business. They've
tried several strategies to get unstuck and nothing has worked.
When we take some of their major successes and analyze them, we
find patterns. I ask them how they accomplished major tasks.
What methodology did they use?
What we typically find is that they have a natural success
style. For some people this is setting a goal and creating a
detailed plan to meet that goal. For others it's just jumping in
and doing whatever it takes to make it work. Others might just
go with the flow and do what appears easy or exciting. One
client set a small goal and met it. Then he set higher and
higher goals meeting each one before he moved on to the next. It
ended with four consecutive world championships.
So if you are finding yourself stuck in trying to accomplish a
task in your business, stop right now and list out your
successes. Start from being born--it's not easy to get out and
start breathing. Move through your entire life and write down
every success you can remember. You might have things like
starring in a school play, completing a century on your bicycle,
getting an A in a difficult subject. Make sure you cover
graduations, college degrees, advanced trainings. Don't limit it
to just work related or school related successes. Make sure you
include the things you most enjoyed succeeding at.
Once you have the list, go through and pick two or three major
ones and analyze them. What did you do to succeed? How did you
feel? Were you afraid beforehand? If you were, how did you cope
with or minimize the fear? Did you do a lot of planning? Did you
jump right in? Were you alone or did you have help? Find the
reasons you succeeded.
Now look for a pattern. I did this recently because I was really
struggling to get my business going strongly. The exercise
revealed that many of my successes came when I had a structured
environment with a lot of creative activities. I realized that I
needed more structure in my business. I had plenty of creative
time. So I found a friend that I can do weekly check-ins with
that holds me accountable for my actions. Each week I share with
him my goals or homework for the next week. Then when we meet I
share how well I met the goal. This is making a huge difference
in the success of my business. Try mapping your past successes
and watch as it makes a huge difference in your current success.