Most of the entrepreneurs I know realize they have some bad habits, like maybe procrastination or not listening well, so they focus on dropping these. New studies indicate that a more productive approach would be adopting new good habits and behaviors that clearly move your business forward, like good time management and implementing customer recommendations.
These two approaches may sound similar, but actually require different skill sets. For example, learning to stop smoking may leave you with a gap to fill, but finding activities that remove your urge to smoke really gets you where you want to be. I recommend the following six techniques for solidifying good habits from The Compound Effect, by successful entrepreneur and writer Darren Hardy:
Change is hard. That's why so many people don't either give up their bad habits, or adopt new good ones. Successful entrepreneurs are the extra-ordinary ones that make the changes anyway. They just do it, and keep doing it, and the magic of compounding rewards them handsomely.
Another challenge is that your brain is not designed to make you happy. It is programmed to seek out the negative and optimize survival, and is always watching for signs of "lack and attack." That's why every entrepreneur spends so much time worrying about failures, lack of customers, and competition. We have to teach our minds to look beyond these, through discipline and being proactive about what we allow in.
But learning and discipline without execution is worthless. In the big picture, the habits you develop and nurture shape your destiny. Little everyday habits will take you either to the life you desire or to disaster by default. Spend more time instilling good ones, and the bad ones will disappear for lack of attention, making you a more savvy and successful entrepreneur.
Follow Marty Zwilling on Twitter: www.twitter.com/StartupPro
Annika Sorenstam: Making Physical Activity a Part of Our Kids' Lives
Ruth Zukerman: Stressed Out? Work Out!
Aviva seeks to change City's unsustainable habits | Guardian ...
I've been at this bad habit, entrepreneurship, for 30+ years in a very obscure line of work and I've learned plenty of lessons from the bad which helped me develop the good ones. I'm still learning how to use the good ones because my bad habits keep coming back.
When asked how to survive the struggles, I just tell 'em to learn what NOT to do so you CAN do.
Another great read, thanks for sharing. I sometimes wonder what it would be like, not to be an entrepreneur. Sometimes I wonder if I am even an Entrepreneur, or just like to think I am. It's been a rough 2 months, but when I read these types of articles, I know who I am, and where I am going.
We all like to read inspiring articles, but today I just needed one to keep me going! Thank you.