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Have you ever been hungry for lunch and not able to focus on anything,
let alone accomplish anything, until you get some food? Your focus
is on one thing: getting food -- now. That becomes your foremost
goal and the direction of your actions. Everything else is put
aside or is addressed only half-heartedly until you stuff something
in your mouth. Until you get some food, you have no interest in
discussing, starting, or working on any other project.
As you read that paragraph, could you relate to the urgency of
needing food -- now? How many of you started to get hungry and forgot
whatever else you had been working on? As humans we have
a limited ability to effectively focus on more than one thing
at a time. However, whenever we focus intently on something, we
direct our energies towards it - and often achieve it.
As managers, many of us need to develop or strengthen our abilities
to maintain a single-mindedness of focus so we can more effectively
achieve our business goals. We can't become tunnel-focused and work-
obsessed, but we need to develop a consistency of focus to ensure that
what we're focusing our minds and energies on, are issues that will keep
propelling us and our organizations forward. If the things we're
currently focusing on won't move us forward, why are we wasting our
energies on them?
Therefore, if what you need are more and better trained employees, how
much time today have you spent actively recruiting? If you need
to increase sales, what have you been doing today to generate sales?
If you need to re-align services to better meet customer needs, how
much time have you spent today making the necessary changes? These examples
sound rather basic, but you'd be amazed at the number of organizations
that grumble about these or similar issues daily, yet only address
them half-heartedly. The issue that seems to be the main problem
area is addressed as a third, fourth, or fifth-level issue. With
that level of focus (and energy), how can one hope to resolve it
effectively and quickly?
To gauge your single-mindedness, ask yourself and your management
team these two questions:
1. What is the most pressing issue facing my company (my department)?
2. What specifically have I done to address that today?
If you're not feeling the same sense of urgency for your most pressing
issue as you did with the food example I started with, that should
be a pretty clear indication to you that you're not as focused on your
pressing issue as you should be; therefore, you're not putting as much
energy towards it as you could be.
Become more single-focused. Become as hungry to achieve your
business goals as you are to get your lunch.
Copyright 2004 - Liz Weber of Weber Business Services, LLC.
Liz speaks, consults, and trains on Leadership Development, Strategic Planning, and Organizational Change. Additional
articles can be found at http://www.wbsllc.com/leadership.shtml
Liz can be reached at liz@wbsllc.com or(717)597-8890
Permission to reprint this article is granted as long as you use the complete attribution above - including live website link and e-mail address - and you send me an email at liz@wbsllc.com to let me know where the article will be published.
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