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Random Acts of Success
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| Guest post by: Keith Hanna |
Article Overview: Nylon is one of the more useful human inventions and its discovery was an accident.
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Free Download - Lag Time By Keith Hanna |
Random Acts of Success
Nylon is one of the more useful human inventions and its discovery was
an accident. Someone forgot to turn a bunsen burner off in the lab and
in the morning there was a stringy mess in the beaker of chemicals that
was there the previous night. It took quite an effort to reproduce the
process and eventually a very viable commercial product resulted.
Every
year I get a cool book from my father-in-law, who seems to always find
an author to send a skud missile directly into the heart of my most
cherished beliefs and ways of thinking.
Last December's effort
was a book called the "Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules our
Lives." Like the Black Swan, this book argued convincingly that a vast
amount of what goes on in business and life is random and has little to
do with talent and ability. These of course play a role on success but
not as great as we like to think in North America.
As a
designer, I grew up believing that anything that does not happen by
accident, happens by design. I believe in choice rather than fluke. But
as a coach who has a very successful coaching practice, I am now
looking back on my success with a great deal more humility.
Although
I have become a very skilled coach out of sheer practice (I've logged
over 10,000 hours coaching professionally), much of my success has
nothing to do with my coaching skills and more to do with the fact I
started thirteen years ago. There was very little competition back then
and I have always been a good sales person. I started getting clients
when I actually had very little coaching skill. Most of the skills I
have developed have been a direct result of the clients I have worked
with. I coach very sophisticated, very successful, very high networth
entrepreneurs. These people demand a lot from me and they have forced
me to grow. The first one I coached led to everyone else and that first
one was a random act. He came out of the blue at a chance meeting. I
don't think I'd want to be starting out now. No offense to me (none
taken).
Luck, as the saying goes, is when opportunity meets
preparation. Chance does favour the prepared mind. Bill Gates was
prepared. Steve Jobs too. And it helps to be born in a particular 5
year period if you want to be a tech billionaire. Are they talented and
skilled. Obviously. But that's just entry into the arena. They made the
best of what came along and what came along was largely outside of
their control.
Skill is not necessarily a cause of success.
Success and skill are highly correlated for sure but the most skilled
are not always the winners. Take Steven Bradbury who won the Gold medal
in 2002 in the 1000m speed skate after everyone in front of him
crashed.
And let's don't even get started on mutual fund
managers where it takes decades to determine if there results are truly
due to their abilities. Most of the time they aren't.
The
conclusion of this book: if you're really successful, don't get too
cocky; if you are struggling, don't get too depressed. It seems that
one of the biggest factors in success is simply to be in the game. Pick
a game, learn to play it well and watch for the scoring chances when
they pop out.
Article Tags: discovery, human inventions, nylon, random acts, success
Referred by: http://www.infinity-pr.com
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About the Author: Keith Hanna RSS for Keith's articles - Visit Keith's website Keith Hanna’s experience as a coach spans over 15 years and includes helping entrepreneurs and growing companies identify and implement the changes needed to take their success to the next level. With a commitment to creating tangible value for his clients, Keith has worked with leaders in a wide variety of industries and at every stage of their careers and personal lives. His career as a coach began as a natural extension of his work as a product designer helping entrepreneurs turn their vision into innovative products. Through that work, Keith realized the most important innovations entrepreneurs had to make were inward focused. Those who were able to deal with the stresses caused by personal and business changes around them were able to make those changes work for them, and were able to live greater lives and build greater businesses. Keith holds a Master’s Degree in Environmental Design from the University of Calgary, with a specialization in industrial design and new venture development. He is author of two books, StepUp and Higher Purpose, Higher Profit, as well as an accomplished speaker and facilitator. Keith lives with his wife and two children at the foot of the Rocky Mountains in Bragg Creek, Alberta, from which he makes mountain climbing excursions in the summer and dog sledding trips in the winter. Click here to visit Keith's website Brevity and Clarity What High Level Enrepreneurs Think Great Coaching is About Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing Value is What Value Does Considerations For Valuing a Service Business |
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