Self-knowledge
has always been the key to preparing for competition.
Knowledge of your attributes, abilities, interests,
strengths, weaknesses, and traits is essential to riding
the front end of the wave of change into the new century.
To fully assess your own talents, realize that studies
confirm that what we love and do well as children continues
as our latent or manifest talent as adults.
Examination
of your weekend or evening interests might reveal a
gem of potential you can apply to your vocation. I strongly
suggest you don't unthinkingly relegate what you love
to do for yourself solely to hobbies. You might make
it, or at least integrate it into your life's work.
The
acquisition of knowledge, which is the new global power,
is a life-long experience, not a collection of facts
or skills. Not long ago, what you learned in school
was largely all you needed to learn to secure a career.
With knowledge expanding exponentially, this is no longer
true. Hundreds of scientific papers are published daily.
Every
thirty seconds, some new technological company produces
yet another innovation. Your formal education has a
very short shelf life. Life-long learning, once a luxury
for the few, has become absolutely vital to continued
success. Continue gaining expertise and avoid thinking
like an expert.
Action
Idea: An excellent benchmarking exercise is to spend
a weekend with key associates or family members and
dust off your childhood memories. Remember what
you really enjoyed and wanted to do most as a child.
The next activity in assessing your interests is considering
your current ones. What do you most enjoy after work?
What do you most want to do on weekends and vacations?
What are your hobbies? Can you bring more of what
you enjoy into your business life?
Action
Step - Increase Your Reading, Writing and Vocabulary
Proficiency. One of the most important qualities
of successful leaders is an ability to express thoughts
and knowledge. Research by management and human resource
experts confirms that no matter what the field of employment,
people with large vocabularies - those able to
speak clearly and concisely, using simple as well as
descriptive words - are best at accomplishing
their goals. Well chosen, carefully considered words
can close the sale, negotiate the raise, enhance relationships,
and change destinies.
In
a world of e-mail, fax dispersal, voice mail, sound
bites, concise reports, business plans, and meeting
briefs, the individuals who can articulate their goals,
substantiate their claims, and support their visions,
will own the future. In the 21st Century, literacy will
be the major difference between the haves and have-nots.
Why
do fewer than 10 percent of the public buy and read
nonfiction books? One reason is that many would rather
get home than get ahead. They are motivated to get by
and get pulled along by the company, the economy, or
the government.
Another
reason is that many individuals believe that information
found in books, computer programs, and training sessions
has no value in the business world. How self-deluding!
As
the new tools of productivity become the Internet, the
Digital Versatile Disc, direct digital download of text,
audio and video, and the combination of the interactive
computer with telecommunications, the people who know
how to control the new technologies will acquire power,
while those who thought that education ends with the
diploma are destined for low-paying, low-satisfaction
jobs. In almost the blink of an eye, our society has
passed from the industrial age to the knowledge era.
Increase
your reading by 100 percent. Decrease your television
watching, and that of any children in your family by
50 percent. Surf the Internet and subscribe to book
summaries, or download free chapters from different
sources. By reading book summaries, you can gain
the essence of all the top business books in a very
brief period of time.
Action
Idea: Read at least one book each month, and listen
to at least one additional audio book during commute
or down time. One of the best sources for business audio
books online is MP3audiobooks.com.
All
kinds of reading and listening to fiction and non-fiction
will increase your vocabulary, writing and presentation
skills. Incredibly, a mere 3,500 words separate the
average person from those with superior vocabularies.
Keep
a dictionary beside you when you read and look up every
word you don't fully understand. Doing that on the spot
helps make the word part of your vocabulary forever.
And don't depend on your computer's spellchecker for
your spelling. Not all e-mail service includes spell
check. Also, you may be called upon to write longhand
notes, memos, or information on white boards or blackboards
at meetings. You not only want to use the right words.
You also will want to spell them correctly.
A
great way to increase your literacy is to engage in
Internet conferences and to read summaries on the web
from services like Amazon.com,
Barnes and Noble and
other booksellers. The more interactive you become in
communications and the less you indulge in prime-time
television, the more successful you'll become in all
areas of your life. Knowledge is the new power. And
literacy is the door to knowledge.
Denis
Waitley is one of America's most respected authors,
keynote lecturers and productivity consultants on high
performance human achievement. To learn more about him, his products and services, visit http://www.waitley.com. |