During the Great Recession of the late 2000s,
Michael Hyatt was running Thomas Nelson Publishers. As Hyatt, now the founder
and CEO of Michael Hyatt and Co., worked to confront not only a crashing
economy but also a wildly disrupted book industry, he was “viscerally feeling
the fear,” he writes in in his book Entrepreneurs Will
Save the World. “In the midst, I met with
my executive coach, Ilene. She asked me a question that changed everything for
me: What does this crisis make possible?”
If at the end of a crazy 2020—no industry
untouched, more chaos expected in 2021, exhaustion a daily occurence—you are
wondering the same thing, Hyatt suggests finding an answer by digging into a
series of questions, including:
·
How are you uniquely
placed to help customers?
·
How can your products or
services solve problems that customers have right now?
·
What partnerships or
alliances would help you serve your clients?
Answering these questions will inevitably lead
solopreneurs to setting new and big goals in 2021. They will for me, at least.
I’m ready to take a big swing, at what, I’m not sure, and whether I’ll hit it,
I don’t know. But I care much more about swinging now and much less about
hitting, thanks to lessons learned on a comically bad kayaking trip on the
Mississippi River in October.
The island loomed in front of me. My friend John
had taken his kayak to the east side of it and disappeared into the distance. I
let myself drift to the west side, hewing close to the bank. I didn’t have the
energy, or the will, to paddle myself around to his side of the island and
instead just drifted along. On the third and final day of this kayak trip, I
was utterly defeated.
I stopped paddling. The river rolled underneath
me, twisting my kayak this way and that. I was, in a word, angry. I was angry
at the river, angry at whoever invented kayaks, angry at Mark Twain, angry at
myself for putting myself in a position in which I had to give up.
“Never give up” is terrible business advice, but
I still hate giving up. I felt like I let down my friend and made a fool of
myself for thinking I could kayak on the Mississippi River.
One of the reasons I do trips like that is
enduring hardships in the middle of them prepares me to endure hardships in the
rest of my life. I have learned that if I can keep going on a bike ride or a
hike after I want to quit, I can apply that same perseverance to my work. On
hikes, I tell myself, one more step. On bike rides, it’s
one more mile. In work, I turn that into one more phone call, one more draft, one more pitch, whatever.
In the days after the trip, I told my friends how
annoyed I was by my inability to keep a kayak going in the direction I wanted
for any more than a few minutes. I told them I was frustrated that we had to
cut short our destination goals because I couldn’t reach them. I told them it
was a failed trip.
Good friends that they are, they told me I was
full of it. (Pro tip: Find friends like that.)
Once my anger subsided, and with my friends’
straight talk, I saw that I still had a ton of fun on the trip. John and I
camped two nights on the banks of the Mississippi River and talked and laughed
deep into the night. I still filed the stories out of the trip that I intended,
including this one, even if they weren’t what I originally envisioned.
This story was supposed to be about learning new
skills. Only problem: I didn’t learn any. Pro tip: Don’t try to learn how to
kayak on the Mississippi Freaking River.
Now I see that I took a big swing at the
Mississippi River, and while I didn’t hit it the way I intended, that’s beside
the point. And that led me to examine my career. When have I set big goals, the
equivalent of kayaking the Mississippi River, for my business as a whole?
The answer is almost never.
I hope to change that.
I’m perfectly comfortable pitching challenging
stories or tackling adventures that push me out of my comfort zone. But those
always have built-in fail-safes. For example, when I sold a story a few years ago about spending the summer
trying to get my first hole in one, there was no way to screw it up. All I had to do was try, because I
would write the story whether I got the hole in one or not. I would (probably)
not have taken the assignment if I only got paid if I got the hole in one.
I’ve rarely taken equivalent risks in my business
as a whole because there are no fail-safes. I want to know before I set a goal
that I’ll reach it. That has made me timid.
The more I’ve thought about that October kayak
trip, the more I’ve started to wonder… what opportunities have I missed
out on because I have been unwilling to risk failure? “Life is too
short not to pursue your dreams,” wrote Jim Rohn. “At the end of your life, all
you will be able to do is look backward. You can reflect with joy or regret.”
As the New Year approaches, I’m looking at what I
can do in 2021 that applies this lesson. I hope you will, too. I’ve started a
list of dream projects, which amounts to writing down what’s been floating
around in my head for years that I’ve never worked up the nerve to start
working on.
The benefits of striving for big goals go beyond whatever boost actually reaching the goal provides.
“Findings from 30 years of research on life satisfaction show that happiness
requires having clear-cut goals in life that give us a sense of purpose and
direction,” write Caroline Adams Miller and Dr. Michael B. Frisch in Creating Your Best Life, which was recently re-released.
“When we make progress toward satisfying our most
cherished needs, goals, and wishes in the 16 areas of life that contribute to
contentment, we create well-being. Our research also shows that when we make
progress toward attaining goals in one area of life, we raise our overall life
satisfaction in other areas because of the potent ‘spillover’ effect.”
The key words to me are “make progress,” and I’ve
been missing that spillover effect that results. Chasing big goals will allow
me to, in a manner of speaking, camp on the banks of the Mississippi River and
talk and laugh deep into the night. I’ll need to remind myself of that
repeatedly as I’ve identified a couple big swing goals that I’m trying to talk
myself into pursuing even if I whiff.
I’m not ready to say what those are yet. But they
won’t involve kayaks or the Mississippi River.
Source: https://bit.ly/2WzdNS2
About the author
Matt Crossman is a writer based in St. Louis. He writes about sports, travel,
adventure and professional development. Email him at mcrossman98@gmail.com.


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