Discover why your biggest “time management” challenge is not time, and find out what you can do to increase your productivity and effectiveness in any area of your life.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Discover why your biggest “time management” challenge is not time, and find out what you can do to increase your productivity and effectiveness in any area of your life.
Part 1:
Part 2:
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Articles, Goal Setting & Achievement, Leadership, Time Management, Video | Tagged: abundance, covey, curtis g. schmitt, effectiveness, efficiency, productivity, Stephen Covey, time, Time Management |
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Posted by Curtis
My cousin, Carleigh, is an actor. Several years ago, after an amazing performance, she told me about her acting technique. In every scene, no matter what the scene was about, she focused on what her character WANTED.
She told me that every character in every scene wants something. It may be obvious or it may be subtle. Actors who remember this fact create characters that feel real to us.
Now in real life we don’t ALWAYS want something from the people we interact with. But much of the time we do. And wanting, especially frustrated wanting, can be a big obstacle to Peaceful Productivity.
So I’m going to outline 3 steps to help you get what you want in a way that serves the highest and best good for all involved.
STEP 1: RESPECT
Understand that people are not a means to an end. They are human beings, just like you. They may or may not choose to give you what you want. And you must respect them enough to let them make that choice without judging them if you don’t like what they choose.
Respect includes listening to them, understanding what THEY want, and respecting that. As Stephen Covey puts it, seek first to understand, then to be understood.
Without respect, you are using that person. And no one likes to be used.
STEP 2: ENROLL
You might know for a fact that what you want is truly in the best interest of the other person. But if they don’t know that, if they don’t FEEL that, then they’re likely to say no.
Enrolling is giving someone an exciting vision of what’s possible. It’s in those feelings of excitement and possibility that people love to say yes.
When a person is enrolled, saying yes to you will feel natural to them. When they are not enrolled, your question will feel like pressure to them. And no one likes to feel pressured.
STEP 3: BRIBE
Bribe is a word with negative associations. What makes a bribe “ethical” are the first two steps. Without respect and without enrollment, your bribe becomes manipulative. Another way to describe the ethical bribe is “sweetening the offer.”
Even when someone knows and feels that a choice is in their best interest, even when they feel respected and excited by the possibility, they still might say no. Why? Habit.
We are so bombarded by people asking us for things, whether it’s personal favors or telemarketing calls, that we build up a resistance. We say no first, regardless of the situation.
The ethical bribe gives a person an excuse to say yes to something that’s good for them.
EXAMPLE
Let me use my Peaceful Productivity Group coaching program as an example:
Respect
First, I show respect by letting my prospects know up front that THEY get to choose if the program is right for them or not. My job is to provide as much information as I can to help them make the best choice for them.
I do this by introducing them to Peaceful Productivity in a free teleseminar called “Productivity & Peace of Mind: You Don’t Have to Sacrifice One for the Other.” I also outline exactly what the program includes so there are no surprises. I also give them my personal phone number to call me if they have questions.
And I even offer a no-hassle guarantee so if they join and find out it was a mistake, they’re not trapped and they don’t lose a penny.
And beyond all that, I offer to help them find a DIFFERENT program or coach that fits them better, if they’re not happy with me and my program.
Enroll
I enroll people in the excitement and possibility of the Peaceful Productivity Group by giving them a powerful EXPERIENCE in the free teleseminar.
It’s not a teaser. It’s a stand-alone interactive teleseminar full of valuable and actionable advice and information.
At the end of it, they can choose to take that experience and go off and never talk to me again. But when I explain that what they are feeling at that moment is something they can feel again and again each week in the Peaceful Productivity Group, my intention is that they will be so excited by that possibility, they will join.
Bribe
Finally, I sweeten the offer by including ALL of my products and services in the group membership. You can see the full list of extras here:
http://www.PeacefulProductivityNow.com
And I’ve just added a few more ethical bribes:
If you complete and submit the group program application, you get a downloadable recording of my “Productive Planning” teleclass, whether or not you join the group. In this teleclass I outline a 6-step planning process that’s perfect for when you have too much to do and not enough time.
If you submit the program application within 24 hours of requesting it, you get an mp3 of a song I recently wrote and recorded called “Where I Want to Be.” Know that I have no aspirations to be a professional musician. This is just something fun that I hope you’ll enjoy. 🙂
And finally, if you join the Peaceful Productivity Group by midnight on Thursday, you get one month of one-on-one coaching from me (a $358 value). My minimum coaching term is normally 6 months, so this is something you cannot get unless you join this group.
ACTION STEPS
I’d love to hear your ideas, comments, and questions.
Always remember the first two steps. Even if you’re not comfortable with the ethical bribe, the more you treat people with respect, and the more you enroll them in your vision, the more they will want to do for you.
As long as they feel empowered to choose what and when, people LOVE to give.
©2008 Curtis G. Schmitt
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Articles, Goal Setting & Achievement, Leadership, Sales & Marketing | Tagged: acting, acting technique, choice, coaching, ethical bribe, group coaching, life coach, life coaching, listening, musician, one-on-one coaching, peace of mind, Peaceful Productivity, planning, planning process, productivity, respect, song-writing, Stephen Covey, Stephen R. Covey, teleclass, teleseminar, vision, wanting |
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Posted by Curtis
Last week I gave two examples illustrating how powerful it is to use the S.M.A.R.T. goal technique to clarify your goals and explode your productivity. [Download a free SMART Goals worksheet here.] But that technique alone does not directly address the daily pursuit of your goals — that is, how do you make sure you do what needs to be done each day to achieve your goals?
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Articles, Goal Setting & Achievement | Tagged: achievement, advertising, be proactive, consistency, exercise, goal-setting, goals, habits, happiness, health, investing, Jim Rohn, mission, mission statement, motivation, organization, passion, peace, peace of mind, Peaceful Productivity, planning, productivity, purpose, rituals, scheduling, SMART goals, SMARTER goals, Stephen Covey, Stephen R. Covey, stress, success, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People |
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Posted by Curtis