Risking To Win - How To
Improve Performance By Taking Risks By Jim McCormick
From the
GAMA International Journal. In Brief
- Although settling into your comfort zone may be tempting, it will
certainly not put you on the track to success. The only way to grow
your business and yourself is to work at becoming a competent risk-taker.
- Because our industry is changing at such a rapid pace, those who are
unwilling or unable to take risks will soon be obsolete. Part of learning
how to successfully take risks means being adaptable to your surroundings.
- Learning how to take risks successfully may mean you have to unlearn
risk avoidance behaviors you have acquired. It's important to let your
judgment skills override your reflexive responses to the fear of the
unknown.
Salespeople and managers who consistently perform at a higher level have
certain things in common. They are committed to their success, have a
passion for their profession, have clear goals and are uniformly more
comfortable taking risks than most. Their ability to take intelligent
risks is an important ingredient in their success and a huge determinant
in anybody's level of achievement.
Sub-optimal performers settle into their comfort zone, fall into endlessly
recurring patterns and stop challenging themselves in significant ways.
By contrast, top performers are talented and persistent risk-takers. They
are better at taking risks like cold calling, going for the close, taking
on new products and trying new ideas in recruiting and growing their field
offices. It's possible to improve a person's risk-taking ability and hence
their performance.
I'm fairly knowledgeable about risk-taking. As a Professional Exhibition
Skydiver, I've taken some extraordinary risks and prevailed. I'm among
the few who has successfully made the most challenging stadium jump in
the United States into wind-buffeted Candlestick Park. By being willing
to take some significant risks, I have been able to earn a skydiving World
Record and be among the few to ever stand at the North Pole.
But skydiving is not the only setting where I've found risk-taking to
be valuable. It has also been vitally important in my business career.
I had to take risks successfully when I was the Chief Operating Officer
of an international design firm and when I was responsible for a portfolio
of more than $140 million worth of commercial real estate. If I had not
been willing to take some significant risks, I would still be someone
else's employee instead of working for myself and pursuing the career
of my dreams.
The Lure of the Comfort Zone
The comfort zone is seductive. We all desire comfort. It's human nature.
However, too much comfort does not serve us well. An inability to step
out of your comfort zone will profoundly limit your performance.
Adaptability
Adaptability is vital and becoming more so. Change is pervasive and accelerating.
Single-employer careers are history and single-profession careers barely
remain and will soon be gone. If you are going to thrive in a world of
rapid and accelerating change, you must be adept at adapting. The more
comfortable you are with taking risks and dealing with the resulting fear,
the better you will be at adapting.
Change can be frightening. It's the single greatest source of fear we
all face. Change confronts us with one of the most frightening of situations:
the unknown. Although it is perfectly normal to be fearful of change,
such a fear response can immobilize us.
The Critical Step - Responding Effectively to
Fear
Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear.
Mark Twain
Fear is fantastically powerful. It is the primary obstacle to being a
talented risk-taker. It is also a huge limiter of sales success. The fears
of rejection, failure and success are always present in the sales environment.
Learning how to prevail in the face of fear is the single most important
step one can take toward becoming a successful risk-taker and maximizing
sales success.
Our comfort zone is partially shaped by life-preserving fears and partially
by groundless ones. To become more capable risk-takers, we must move away
from the instinctive response to fear and toward the counterintuitive
response. The constructive, though counterintuitive, response to fear
is to acknowledge and accept it.
This approach has been validated by the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration. Early in the space program, NASA observed that a certain
number of its astronauts were completing their missions successfully without
suffering motion and stress sickness. Another group was consistently having
these problems. Based on empirical research, NASA determined there was
one factor that differentiated the two groups. The astronauts who were
completing their mission without these physical manifestations of fear
had acknowledged in advance to themselves or others that they were going
to be afraid. They had a constructive response to fear.
The Rewards of Risk-Taking
Why take risks anyway? Why even consider leaving your comfort zone? Isn't
risk-taking something we are supposed to grow out of? Isn't it just a
remnant of impertinent youthful behavior we should have left behind as
we matured and grew wiser? The partial answer to all these questions has
already been provided. Risk-taking yields vitality and a higher level
of achievement. But there is more!
For every reasonable risk there is at least one possible reward. This
is a direct reward. A reward that can be identified at the time the risk
is being considered. Examples of direct rewards include the qualified
prospects that will result from cold calling, the additional business
that will come from learning how to sell more products and the additional
policies that will be sold by a willingness to go for the close.
But better yet, a consistent and thoughtful pattern of intelligent risk-taking
will yield something even more exciting: compound rewards! Compound rewards
are the surprise rewards - the rewards we cannot anticipate at the time
we are considering the risk. These rewards will never have come our way
if we are not been willing to step out of our comfort zone at some point.
Compound rewards can include knowing your professional persistence resulted
in a widow being financially secure and able to fund the college education
of your deceased client's children. You had no way of anticipating back
when you were selling the policy that this would be the outcome. This
is a compound reward - the kind you will experience if you are willing
to move out of your comfort zone on a consistent basis and take some risks.
It occurred for me. A few years ago when I was 10,000 feet over the North
Pole and moments away from the 120 degree below zero temperature of freefall,
I had no way of knowing what compound rewards that risk would bring. I
had no way of knowing that jump would be the first step in a most extraordinary
career transition, or that I would abandon a fairly conventional corporate
career path and make my avocation of skydiving a major part of my vocation.
We don't know the rewards we will enjoy by our willingness to take thoughtful
risks, but we do know the rewards will not occur unless we are willing
to take those risks. And wouldn't it be a shame to forgo some wonderful,
if unknown, rewards just because we can't seem to find our way out of
our comfort zone!
You're welcome to republish
these articles provided copyright is attributed to Jim McCormick and you
include my Web site URL and phone number--http://www.takerisks.com, +1.650.726.2900--at
the end of the article. |