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The Passion Solution by Alan Cohen One
of my clients is a manager for a large corporation. During a recent
reorganization of her company, she was assigned to manage a department
of engineers. When she interviewed the staff to prepare for their first
meeting, they informed her they had never had a successful meeting in
their lives. (Does this sound familiar to you?) The
manager realized she had her work cut out for her, so she decided to
take an unusual tack. When the time came during the meeting for her to
assign jobs for a new project, rather than assigning them according to
the staff’s skill or history, she assigned them according to passion.
She asked each engineer which job he or she would most enjoy doing, and
those were the jobs they received. The engineers were dazed and
grateful. They walked out of the meeting smiling and shaking hands, and
thanked the manager for their first successful meeting. Desire
is a key element of success. If you don’t want to be doing what you
are doing, you will likely sabotage your efforts before you begin. If
you enjoy what you are doing, your success is pretty well assured.
Skills can be learned; enthusiasm is far harder to manufacture. If it is
there, you can fan it; if it is not, I wouldn’t spend a lot of time
trying. If I had two employment applicants, one of whom was highly
skilled but not motivated, and another with lesser skills but who was
highly motivated, I would choose the latter in a heartbeat. I
have learned a great deal observing the people and organizations who
sponsor my seminars. I am amazed at how effective someone with little
means but a lot of enthusiasm can be, and how ineffective groups with
rich resources but little passion can be. I have shown up at large
churches where the person assigned to organize my event does not know me
well or understand or appreciate what I do, and a tiny crowd shows up.
Then I go to another city to present a seminar sponsored by someone who
has attended one of my programs and had a life-changing experience, and
that person has single-handedly attracted hundreds of people. True
passion is absolutely magnetic, and enrolls consumers by virtue of
energy more than behavior. An
artist asked a business consultant how much she should charge for her
paintings. “That’s easy,” the consultant answered. “Charge the
most for the paintings you felt most passionate while creating. Charge
the least for the paintings you didn’t feel a lot while creating.” The
consultant understood one of the key elements of sales: People are not
so much buying a commodity; they are buying a feeling. Most people are
hungry for life force, sometimes starving, so when they see a painting,
hear a song, try on a garment, or peruse a house for sale, they are
seeking to fill their soul. When you imbue your soul in your work,
potential customers sense that and are drawn to it. They are paying you
not so much for your product, but for the energy in your product, and
that you radiate in your interaction with them. A
group of psychologists did an experiment to determine what kind of music
has the most profound effect on listeners. They invited different
musicians to play different kinds of music before a live audience, and
interviewed the audience about which music stirred them the most. The
experimenters found that no kind of music affected the audience more
profoundly than another. The crucial factor, they discovered, was the
passion with which the musician performed. The musicians who were really
into their music turned the audience on more than the music itself. The
audience wanted to feel spirit, and the musicians who were most alive
delivered. If
you are working somewhere you would rather not be, or someone is working
for you who would rather not be there, don’t settle for a passionless
workplace. My friend Sally hired an office assistant, Brad, who was
lackluster. Brad showed up late on his first day of work, maintained
that pattern, found reasons to get out of the office, and didn’t give
his job a moment’s thought the instant he left the office. Sally
wanted to give Brad a chance and tried in many ways to motivate him,
with little effect. Then Brad got involved in community theatre and
enjoyed it so much that he began to coordinate a play during his work
time in Sally’s office. Finally Sally told Brad, “You have shown
more passion for this play than you have shown for this job in all the
time you have been here. I want you to be in your right place to let
your passion flow, which is obviously not this position. I want someone
in this job who really wants to be here. Let’s free each other to both
have what we want.” Soon Sally attracted an office assistant who
really worked, and Brad developed his acting career. A happy ending
ensued when everyone was true to their passion. While you may have explored many reasonable logistical answers to your business, relationships, and health issues, you may have overlooked one key question that might lead you where you want to go more quickly than all the others: “Where does your passion live?” Tell the truth about where your life force flows, and you may find yourself there rather quickly. Alan Cohen is author of many popular inspirational books, including best-selling, The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore and Mr. Everit’s Secret: What I Learned from the World’s Richest Man. Alan will be offering a six-month personal mentorship program beginning January 1. For information on this program or to receive Alan’s daily inspirational quote and monthly newsletter,
visit www.alancohen.com,
email admin@alancohen.com , or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708. |
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