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No one is really motivated by a same-ol’, same-ol’,
stuck-in-the-past manager. If you think it’s always a good
thing to be falsely “consistent” as the same person you
always were (stuck in an outdated rut), you are simply
wrong.
Most managers believe they don’t have time to im-
prove themselves by adding a new skill. They think they’d
never have time to take a Dale Carnegie speaking class at
night or fly into a weekend session at the University of
Santa Monica because that’s the time they reserve for
stressing out over e-mails, or studying the sales reports,
or being upset with their families.
But it isn’t a matter of time, it’s a matter of commit-
ment. It’s a bold move to grow yourself in a new direction.
That’s why it’s so motivating for others to watch you do it.
When you pick your next category in which you im-
prove yourself, make sure you really dive into it. Take it
on with a passion. If you have a leadership coach (and we
can recommend some good ones if you contact us at
www.stevechandler.com
), use that coach! Let him or her
hold you accountable for dramatic change so that your
people can see it and think “wow.” Don’t go through your
life in leadership never tapping into that “wow” factor.
It’s always available to you. Not to mention the effect it
will have on you yourself. As the great poet-philosopher
William Butler Yeats said, “Happiness is neither this thing
nor that…it is simply growth. We are happy when we are
growing.”
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