It's the invisible force
holding us back from the more and better we want to be and achieve in our
business and our lives
August 4, 2020 By Stephanie Bogan
I want to
talk to you about the lollipop of mediocrity. Everyone has one. We carry
it around with us in our pockets, tempted by its easy sweetness. There’s only
one problem with the lollipop — take one lick and you will suck forever.
It’s not
my most elegant statement, but its stickiness lies in its inherent truth.
If we’re
not careful, our fear can have us choosing what’s comfortable over what we’re
committed to, keeping us stuck in the status quo.
One of
our Limitless Adviser coaches, Adam, wasn’t feeling very limitless when he
called me. Adam was just under $300,000 in revenue, his growth had stalled and
he was frustrated. He was ready for a breakthrough.
Adam had
two young daughters and a wife who hated her job and desperately wanted to stay
home with their girls. The night before they had just tucked the girls in for
the night when his wife paused on the stairs, defeated after a difficult day,
and told him how much she hated that a job she despised got the best of her
while the people she loved got the worst of her.
As Adam
tells it, he was instantly confronted with the true cost of his business
choices. When his wife shared her sadness, he realized just how many licks
he’d taken and what it had really cost him.
Adam,
like many, was stopped by the invisible forces of resistance we meet each day.
These forces aren’t out to get us; rather they are the sum of the seemingly
harmless but comfortable choices we make and the revenue and time each silently
steals away from our success.
Adam is
by no means alone. Brian had an $800,000 practice that kept him tied to it. A
fee analysis showed Brian’s occasional discounts totaled $80,000 a year in
revenue. Over 20 years, that’s $1.6 million in lost revenue. With nominal
interest and lost equity value, those seemingly innocuous decisions cost Brian
millions of dollars.
Adam and
Brian are not exceptions. Like many others, both did too much for too
many, for too little, for too long.
If you’ve
ever accepted a client below your minimum, let an employee or partner situation
linger too long, felt overwhelmed by the constant churn of client work, wished
you could deliver deeper value more consistently, said yes when a prospect
asked for a discount, or taken a referral that wasn’t really a fit, you too
have taken licks off the lollipop.
Adam,
Brian and others were suffering the weight of their subconscious choices, which
in turn kept them struggling through this painful learning: You cannot shove 10
pounds of shiznet into a five-pound bag and expect satisfaction, much less
excellence or even a life.
If we’re
being really honest, then we have to talk about the fact that most practices
run this way. It’s not a function of intention, it’s a function of fear.
The
invisible force holding us back from the more and better we want to be, have,
achieve and experience in our business and lives is that ugly four-letter F
word: fear.
Fear is
our elaborate response when the perception of threat or danger is
triggered. Under stress, the sympathetic nervous system activates the
fight or flight response, activating a complex set of biological and
neurological responses. This primitive but complex survival mechanism is
designed to do one thing: not die. The problem is that not dying is not
the same as really living.
This
survival response is extremely useful if you are a caveman living in a
primitive world, one in which hesitation would surely get you eaten.
But in
the modern world, the threats that trigger that same automatic survival
response aren’t quite so life-threatening. Your saying no to a prospect
asking for a discount and losing the client does not have the same
life-altering consequences as facing a hungry tiger. Yet our brains tell
us otherwise.
The
biggest discovery in behavior science in the last 100 years is that events do
not create our stress, fear or negative emotions — the meaning we give those
events does.
The next
time a prospect meets with you, says they like what they hear and see value in
working with you — just not as much as you do and could they have a discount
please — I invite you to reframe your relationship with fear.
Here’s
the common response when a prospect asks for a discount: “Yes” is the right
answer. If we say no, we will lose the prospect and the referral source,
they’ll never send another client, all clients will realize what imposters we
are and leave, and we’ll get eaten by the hungry tiger and …die!
Except
it’s almost never true.
Once Adam
saw how his stories had compromised his choices, he decided it was time to tame
his tigers. I helped Adam learn to own his mind and make more conscious
choices, ones aligned with his goals.
Adam
raised his fees, significantly. He implemented time management strategies
that focused him on the energy-creating, revenue-producing activities he loved,
including people, process and platform upgrades. He mastered his brand
story and doubled down on his niche, fueling his growth. He developed over 60
Redtail workflows that
systematized the delivery of specialized services. And he implemented client
meeting surges to focus his client meetings into a few months of the year,
freeing up massive chunks of time for him to make changes that elevated his
success, while giving him the time and freedom to enjoy it.
Adam set
down the lollipop of mediocrity and learned to own his mind. He learned that
fear is neither friend or foe. It’s how we frame it and use it that determines
whether it becomes our fertilizer, or fuel for growth.
Stephanie
Bogan is a business strategist and high-performance practice coach, and founder
of Limitless Adviser
Coaching. You can reach Stephanie at learnmore@educeinc.com.
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