Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! Evan Signature
Evan Carmichael Top Header
Share for a Cause









Would Your Business Pass The Passion Test?

Written by: Arupa Tesolin

Article Overview: Innovation Leader Arupa Tesolin interviews Chris Atwood co-author of The Passion Test and discovers the missing link bwteen business and happiness.

Free Download - Would Your Business Pass The Passion Test? By Arupa Tesolin
Name: Email:

Would Your Business Pass The Passion Test?

Copyright Sept. 28, 2008

Not enough passion in your organization? It’s costing you. Gallup estimated that the 22 million workers who consider themselves either actively disengaged or extremely negative in their workplace costs North American organizations $300 billion dollars a year in lost productivity. This excludes related absences, illness and other factors which would make the number far higher.

Think most of your people would stay in your organization? Think again. Monster.com estimates that 70%, or nearly three out of every four workers, would leave their job if something better came up, and that includes people who aren’t actively looking for new employment. On the loyalty front, there’s more disconcerting news. That one employee out of four who is content to stay is not likely to be the most talented or productive.

There may be a more enlightened way to go forward. Enter Chris Atwood, MBA, a former software training and consulting executive, whose alma mater includes top companies like HFI, Dell and Ford, and Janet Atwood, his business partner, a former corporate executive, are co-authors of an exciting new best-selling book, The Passion Test.

Having both read and taken The Passion Test myself, it resonated with me in my work to help others better apply their intuition Ting! and creative power in life and business. So I caught up with Chris to find out more about how The Passion Test might be useful in organizations.

Both Chris and his former spouse Janet, who are still best friends, left good jobs to begin mentoring a group of enlightened entrepreneurs looking to create wealth and contribute to a better world. They began teaching The Passion Test, a long-time interest of Janet’s, and saw how people were able to create remarkable results after taking and applying The Passion Test. Inspired by this they created a best-selling e-book in 2006. In 2007 the book was published by Penguin and become a New York Times Best Seller.

Chris sees The Passion Test as an opportunity to bring attention to the fact that 80% of the population is not passionate about the work that they do. Recognizing this has great implications for personal development, talent development and performance management in all kinds of organizations and businesses, as well as the prospect of having more fulfilled lives.

Success Built to Last is a follow up to Built to Last by Jerry Porra, Mark Thompson and Stuart Emery, who interviewed over 300 enduringly successful people, both known publicly and unknown, who had been successful for 20 years or more, including Michael Dell, Bill Gates, Maya Angelou, Lance Armstrong. He found that the common denominator was that they all had developed the habit to decide based on what had the most meaning for them.

For CEO’s, managers and human resources leaders the message is also part of a new competitive reality. As Larry Bossidey, CEO of Honeywell starkly states in the above book “It’s a competitive imperative. Only by loving what you do will you actually do more and do it better than the person sitting next to you. If you don’t, well then, we’ll find someone who does.”

Chris says that most people think they can’t follow their passions for two main reasons. They think they can’t afford to or that they won’t be able to support themselves. Or they think they need to be “realistic”, as they were taught, or put off dreams until they have the money to follow them. These thoughts prevent people from following their passions and being able to express their own unique contribution in their life, work and world.

Chris also points out how our beliefs impact our behavior. “What stops people from living their dreams is the belief that they think they can’t. So they create a lot of self-evidence to support it.”

The truth is, as articulated by Born to Believe authors and neuroscientists Dr. Andrew Newberg and Mark Waldman, that we create a belief when a new neural pathway is formed. Through repeated use of that pathway we affirm it. We also have the possibility to live the dream and create new neural pathways that enrich our experience and move us forward.

I have also articulated some of this in my recent personal innovation book Spark. Most people are aware that we live in a mainly intellect-centered mental world in organizations. The next order of change is to become both more heart-centered and more action oriented. With the pace of the global market, we can’t afford continue to over-think things as we have been. We need to do more. This is another thing that I find attractive about The Passion Test. It’s action-oriented and takes us further with more alluring, invigorating and inspiring approach to decisions.

Chris elaborates further on current global realities; “We’re living in a time where we are competing for our jobs or for our business with people throughout the world. In the past, I might have had some skill or ability that would outperform the capabilities of others in my area. Even though I wasn’t passionate about it, I was able to do it well enough to get by.”

“Today companies can find accountants or marketers or sales people or designers with particular skills anywhere in the world, through technology. What that means is, if I’m not passionate about something and not excited about it, then I’m not going to do the same quality of work as someone who has the skill and is more passionate about it and they’re going to outshine me. When I’m passionate the quality of my work and my ability to have a competitive presence has increased.

So passion has now become a differentiator that works both ways, for individuals and for organizations and businesses.

The Passion Test itself really is a test. It’s a tool that allows people to clarify what their top five passions are. The process is so simple and so powerful at the same time, but it pales in comparison to how people can use it as a decision tool.

Chris shares that: “Our passions are the clues to our destiny, the keys that unlock the door to our lives purpose. Your passions are the things that you care most deeply about, the things that matter most to you.”

“Here’s, the secret that will guarantee you a passionate life. “Whenever you are faced with a choice, decision or opportunity, choose in favour of your passion.”

Chris and Janet have found that when people use their Passions as a barometer to assessing opportunity, it moves them closer to the things they care most about, and unlocks the key to success for them.

The Passion Test On-Line, developed by one of their students, takes people through the process with a Decision-Meter that helps them rate whether their decisions will take them closer or further away.

So, it seems that the new gold standard for human capital might be “passion capital”.
If a business or organization is staffed with people who are passionate about their work, it will have a greater competitive advantage. Passionate people working together create a synergistic effect that collectively yields a great deal more that the sum of its parts. United by a common vision, and their particular contribution, outcomes can be created that wouldn’t have been possible before.

As Chris puts it “People today can’t afford to not follow their passions. Companies today can’t afford to have people who don’t.”

Companies at the cutting edge, like Google, do whatever they can to support the passion of their employees.”

This is the kind of radical thinking that flips goal setting and competency planning on its head. And where the opportunities for success and innovation far outweigh the risks. The greatest risks are those that result from maintaining the status quo or doing nothing.

A company will be most successful to the extent that it can place people in the position where they can share the most gifts. Chris shows how this might work from a basis of passion.

“Each of us have unique, skills, talents and contributions that only we can make. The ways to be most effective is to do something that enables each of us to share these contributions.”

“The company stills sets their vision….the task of placement is to find the people that have the passions and unique gifts to make them ideally suited to do that work.”

“After defining your Core Passions, a passion for gardening, for example, might lead to the question: What is it about gardening that I love? Is it being able to work with my hands, or working with the environment or growing beautiful things? From there the employer would identify positions for career development paths.”

The result – a happier more enthusiastic employee doing something that is aligned with the business vision and purpose, which is also aligned with that person’s sense of fulfillment and purpose.

So, go ahead and take The Passion Test for yourself and encourage your employees to do the same. You’ll learn a lot and you might set the stage to achieve the next generation of optimal performance.

With all the economic turmoil North American companies and workers have experienced
this might be the beginning of a return to sanity.

Related Articles
  What we choose!
  How to pass psychometric tests
  Build Your Brand
  What is Passion
  THE BEST WAY TO LEAD : PURSUE YOUR PASSION

Home > Human-Resources > Arupa Tesolin > Would Your Business Pass The Passion Test
Article Tags: absences, alma mater, american organizations, atwood, best friends, best selling book, billion dollars, business partner, corporate executive, creative power, e book, gallup, hfi, intuition, new york times, new york times best seller, penguin, remarkable results, software training, time interest

About the Author: Arupa Tesolin
RSS for Arupa's articles - Visit Arupa's website

Arupa is a leading Intuition Speaker, Trainer and Grassroots Innovation Coach who has authored two breakthrough books on business intuition and innovation. "Ting! A Surprising Way to Listen to Intuition & Do Business Better," was rated 4-Stars, the highest, by Training Magazine US and "Spark - Raise Your Mind to the Power of Infinity & Create Anything." With an enlightened perspective that balances learning and scientific elegance, Arupa brings her audiences invaluable know-how on how to efectively tap new sources of innovation capital and maximize the return on imagination. She lectures internationally and delivers Innovation Workshops through her company Intuita. Arupa has published over 100 articles in top international publications in Innovation, Management & Training and has been a guest on both radio and television. Arupa is the Canadian Partner for Learning Paths International, a performance improvement consulting company that specializes in getting employees up-to-speed 30-50% faster. http://www.learningpathsinternational.com

Click here to visit Arupa's website
Dashed Line

More from Arupa Tesolin
Building a More Intuitive Organization
12 Principles to Spark Innovation
ELearning Whats Working Whats not
Finally Meaningful Training Measures
Building a Skilled Workforce in Canada


Related Forum Posts
My entry My entry - 1. The Best Business Books Ever: The 100 Most Influential Business Books You'll Never Have Time to Read - this is a fascinating book about the history of Business theory, and I'd recommend it to anybody. 2. The Big Book of Small Business: You Don't Have to Run Your Business by the Seat of Your Pants, by Tom Gegax. Ditto. 3. PADI: The Business of Diving Book Okay, so this book won't be of use to anyone who doesn't want to start a scuba store, but I did, and this book was of course invaluable to me in reaching that goal.
Exclusive: Interview with Results Exclusive: Interview with Results - Hi Forum Members, I'm helping start up a Business Coaching and Consulting company here in Toronto, Ontario, Canada (a Subsidiary of RSC Business in Los Angeles). As a Research and Development Intern I am required to practice my listening and interview skills by surveying Small and Medium Businesses on thier Business. This Survey is designed by RSC Business to also assist the Business being interviewed more insight into their own business. I am looking to interview about 30 businesses across North America over the span of 3 months. At the end of these interviews I will be publishing a report of the results and they will be made available for free to the Interviewees. The Report data will include responses from a minimum of 100 interviews. I would like to extend this opportunity to members of the Forum. If you would like to have this short 20-30 minute interview conducted on your Business and you reside in North America please send me an email or PM. Please contact me at andy[at]jvprosperity[dot]com to arrange our interview and to get free access to the results when they are published.
test, test, test test, test, test - Hi Sandy, The great thing about online marketing is that everything can be tested and you can quickly gauge if something is working or not. Run two tests, see if people respond better to the one option or the multiple options. Your customers will tell you which method they prefer and will vote with their wallets. Test your headlines, test your messaging, test your pricing, test your # of options - test everything! Good luck!
Re: HOw to market a B2B consulting company Re: HOw to market a B2B consulting company - [quote="zohahunt77":428owzbi]Hi, I was wondering if anyone can tell me the difference between B2B and B2C. I don’t know about b2b marketing but I have done marketing so know things about it. I will suggest you to take online services which will spread your business all over web network. Online marketing is the best way to market any business.[/quote:428owzbi] B2B = Business to Business - You are marketing to other businesses. B2C = Business to Consumer - You are marketing to consumers.
English teachers learn Japanese as Interns English teachers learn Japanese as Interns - Yasunori, what about the many students that leave N. America to teach English in Japan. They may want to learn Japanese (maybe Business Japanese is a bit different) and the Japanese Business Culture.


Recommended Article for You close

  What we choose!

Share this article with your friends. Fund someone's dream.

Leave a comment below or share on the left and you'll help support entrepreneurs in Africa through our partnership with Kiva. Over $50,000 raised and counting - Please keep sharing! Learn more.



Featured Article


Bottom Footer
Share for a Cause












Newsletter

Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Popular Articles

Environment and productivity at the office

BUILDING A HIGH PERFORMING TEAM

How To Improve Your CTA (Call To Action)

Suggestions

Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.