Video: Story to Illustrate Sales Technique
A quick story to illustrate an old maxim: Tell them and create doubt, show them and cause belief, but involve them to change behavior.
A quick story to illustrate an old maxim: Tell them and create doubt, show them and cause belief, but involve them to change behavior.
Someone exercising leadership is orchestrating the process of getting factions with competing definitions of the problem to start learning from one another.
— Ron Heifetz
Harvard University
Years ago, an experienced coach and mentor began our meeting by asking about my first child. Just 18 months old, he was eagerly crawling and using a few words.
“It’s a fascinating time,” I replied. “You can almost hear the wheels turning in his head as he experiments to find out what combination of noises and movements is going to get him what he wants.”
I heard myself and paused to absorb the insight.
“Wow!,” I continued. “That is still how I spend most of my day.”
But not every day. How often do you actually examine how well your “noises and movements” are serving you? Don’t we all expend a lot of energy just repeating tired and familiar strategies rather than observing our results and experimenting with new communications?
It is rare to be as eager and innovative as a baby yet how can we fail to be impressed with the child’s rapid progress? Experimenting, responding, growing, moving forward, relentlessly alive–children know how to learn.
How do you stay green and growing? One reliable technique for enhancing our learning, of course, is to work with a supportive and insightful executive coach and surround yourself with people who share your commitment to conscious development.
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