Posts Tagged ‘success’

A successful man?

Friday, December 25th, 2009

I was listening to Michael Caine talk on Desert Island Island Disks this morning.  I am a big fan of his acting, especially in his latter years.  Although he is 19 years older than me, I was a teenager when I saw him burst onto the movie scene as Alfie.   So my years of my growing up and growing older have paced his incredible career via Harry Palmer, the anti-Bond and Charlie Croker in the Italian Job through to a horrible trough of The Swarm.  By the mid-eighties he found his mojo again and made films like Sweet Liberty, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.  In his later years, when others’ careers might have faded, he has just got better and better in films like Cider House Rules and Secondhand Lions, and he was a perfect Alfred in Batman.  Not bad for a lad from Rotherhithe, the son of a charlady…

So as I was listening to him talking, I wondered why he had been so incredibly successful and wondering what that might be like.  Which took me to the question “Well, are you a success?”   Now that is one heck of a question for 9.0 am on Xmas morning!  By comparison with Sir Michael, it is hard to put oneself in the same category; but then few are.  So… do I feel successful?

Well, on the basis that I have achieved most of the key goals I set myself as younger man, then I guess so.  I may not be a national treasure  but I have three fabulous, healthy children, a wife who (despite it all) sees and loves me, a home I love, and job that fulfils me.  I’m not sure what I’d change, other than perhaps just ‘dialling up the volume a bit’, and that seems a reasonable test of success.

It is a pretty big question.  We all want and need to feel like a success; to be the hero in our own movie.  I’m interested to hear how you would measure success.  It has serious implications for Change in business too, as people will avoid experiencing failure and if your program is not design or managed well enough to give them a reasonable belief that they can succeed they won’t ‘play’, and you will fail.

“Would you like me to give you a formula for success? It’s quite simple, really. Double your rate of failure. You are thinking of failure as the enemy of success. But it isn’t at all. You can be discouraged by failure or you can learn from it, So go ahead and make mistakes. Make all you can. Because remember that’s where you will find success.”   Thomas J. Watson

“The successful always has a number of projects planned, to which he looks forward. Anyone of them could change the course of his life overnight.”   Mark Caine

Measuring progress beyond goals

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

When your life is about making the next promotion, selling the next big contract, buying a nicer home or whatever, then it is relatively easy to measure your progress.  Life is like a race and you can see those you are competing against falling behind you in your rear-view mirror.  Your progress up the corporate ladder is marked by bigger offices, grade rises, nicer cars, better parking spaces etc.

However, what happens if you see Life as a journey?  How do you measure progress then?  By the time on the road?  By the number places visited?  By  the nature and type of experiences you have encountered?  The thing is sometimes, as many of us know, apparent reversals in fortune can often be doors that you walk through into new and better places.  I know many people who are made redundant (apparently a bad thing) only to discover  something far better on the other side of this experience.

This lack of an easy way to measure progress is a real issue in times when you are feeling tired or dispirited.  All that hard work is easy to feel good about when can look over your shoulder and see all that you have achieved; much tougher when you aren’t able to label it.

I’d be really interested to know how you cope with this dilemma and whether there are good strategies to help with this or if it is just a feature of the journey…

 

“The ideals which have lighted me on my way and time after time given me new courage to face life cheerfully, have been Truth, Goodness, and Beauty. . . . The ordinary objects of human endeavour — property, outward success, luxury — have always seemed to me contemptible.”   Albert Einstein

 

If you don’t like the way the game is going, change the rules!

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Yesterday the chancellor announce a suite of new measures to change the way the economy is heading, reducing VAT rates, talking about new Income Tax bands, deferring car tax increases.  Things which were unthinkable a little while ago are now happening!  Political parties are having to quickly revisit long-held beliefs and search for the real underpinning values and separate them from mere policies.

Today maybe a good day for you to consider what is really important and what is just a way to get it.  If you aren’t enjoying the results you are getting, it is time for you to change the rules too!

“My doctrine is not a doctrine but just a vision. I have not given you any set rules, I have not given you a system.”   Buddha

“Three Rules of Work: Out of clutter find simplicity; From discord find harmony; In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.”   Albert Einstein

Resources:

Article: Who sets the rules