Read Always Eat Left Handed: 15 Surprisingly Simple Secrets of Success Online
Authors: Rohit Bhargava
Tags: #Business & Money, #Job Hunting & Careers, #Guides, #Self-Help, #90 Minutes (44-64 Pages), #Career Guides, #Health; Fitness & Dieting
Coaches talk about that in terms of controlling your own destiny. Winning teams earn that control. If they win, they get in. The importance of controlling your own destiny is hard to overstate. Yet whether or not you have the chance to do it has less to do with your performance in that final game. Instead it has everything to do with your performance and choices leading up to that final moment.
In other words, you have usually
earned
your situation before you ever move into that last competition.
How To Control Your Own Destiny
Chances are that you probably aren’t a professional athlete. Still, the importance of controlling your own destiny can make a huge difference in moments far more important than selecting a good seat for a flight. Here are a few tips for ways that you can get better at controlling your own destiny.
Chapter 7 - Use A Sharpie
Lesson - Simplify Everything
In 1713, the King of Sweden figured out something it would take the people of the United States nearly 300 years longer to discover.
At a time when the world’s dominant superpower was little more than a group of colonies squatting on Native American lands, King Charles XII made a declaration that would change the way the Swedish government would operate for hundreds of years afterwards.
His Majesty the King requires that the Royal Chancellery in all written documents endeavor to write in clear, plain Swedish and not to use, as far as possible, foreign words.
Today more than half of all Swedish government authorities are involved in plain language projects. In contrast, the United States finally in 2010 managed to pass the Plain Writing Act which required all federal government agencies to use plain language in every document and train workers on how to use plain language.
But why is speaking plainly so hard? And now that we’re on the topic, why is simplicity so hard too?
Sharpies And Post-Its
One of the most prominent people trying to answer this question is a fellow named Dan Roam. While he may not be a household name outside the business world, his best selling book
Back of the Napkin
is required reading for all my students at Georgetown University. In it, he proposes that the toughest challenges you will face can be simplified and overcome if you just learn how to draw them onto paper (or a white board!).
He travels around the world teaching workshops on the topic of how to solve problems with pictures and has trained thousands of professionals on how to go from an “I can’t draw” mentality, to picking up a Sharpie and starting to sketch.
One of his biggest lessons, though, is one that I uncovered quite by accident years before reading his book while I was working on the storyboard for a big pitch.
I was trying desperately to simplify our argument and decided to write a sequence of arguments on some small Post-it notes. The only pen I had close by was a Sharpie – so I started to write. I quickly realized that the combination of a thick Sharpie and limited space on a Post-it meant I could only fit a few words on each page.
All of a sudden, the way I described vague ideas mattered. I had to pick the right words, because I had no room for rambling. It forced me to simplify and suddenly I realized the truth …
Using a Sharpie changes everything.
The Simplicity Advantage
The power of simplicity, it turns out, isn’t just limited to how you might describe words or ideas. Some of the most successful products and companies of our modern era owe at least a part of their success to an unwavering focus on simplicity.
Apple. The Flip Camera. Twitter. Each are brands or products that have simplicity in some way built into their experiences. They stand out for being simpler than their competitors. And in an increasingly complex world – that may turn out to be the ultimate competitive advantage.
How To Simplify Everything
If you have ever tried to explain a complex topic to someone completely unfamiliar with it, you’ll already know the unfortunate truth about simplicity … it can be a surprisingly tough skill to master. While there is an element of natural ability that helps, anyone can learn some techniques to help in any situation you may encounter. Here are three:
Author’s Note:
Parts of this section were excerpted (and edited) from my second book
Likeonomics
, which focused on the principle of Simplicity in Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 - Keep It Emotional
Lesson - Tell Better Stories
There is a reason we remember movies.
For thousands of years, history was told and recorded through stories. And for all that time, we learned to respond to stories. We learned to remember them. It is only a modern belief that bullet points and logical descriptions will be enough to compel people to buy or believe in something.
A host of best selling books over the past several years, from
Sway
to
Predictably Irrational
all point to the fundamental truth about people – that we all make decisions based on emotions far more than logic. In his groundbreaking book
The Political Brain
, noted psychologist Drew Westen proved the same conclusion powers who we choose to vote for as well.
Stories are emotional.
Some of the most admired leaders in the world, from Nelson Mandela to Bill Clinton are gifted storytellers. They use stories to create emotional connections. When Pixar tells a story in a film, they create moments for the audience to connect with each character. They show the vulnerabilities that cause you to empathize with the main characters, so when the character fails or succeeds - you
care
about their outcome.
Beyond films or books, stories have the ability to bring any kind of ideas to life. They create understanding. And when used in the right moment, they can even help you to make a lot of money too.
The $580 Million Dollar Story
In what may go down in financial history as one of the worst deals of the dying dotcom era, a company named Intermix (which owned social networking site MySpace) sold in 2005 to media magnate Rupert Murdoch. Years later Myspace founder Richard Rosenblatt recalled that meeting with Murdoch when he pitched the company.
Rather than focus on financials or assets, he told a story to Murdoch of why he needed to add Intermix to his already vast portfolio of media brands that was, at the time, missing an online element. To sum up his pitch, he predicted that if Murdoch did the deal, he would be on the cover of
Wired
magazine. He bought the vision, and signed a deal for $580 Million.
And a year later, almost to the day, Murdoch was indeed on the cover of
Wired
.*
Why People Follow Stories
Can you really tell a million dollar story and expect it to sell? One of the most interesting truths about leaders is that the higher up you go, the more likely the person sitting across the table from you will trust something other than what you put on paper in order to inform their decision. Despite our world of virtual connections, your pitch delivered in person for whatever you believe in still matters a lot.
Of course, you won’t always have a meeting with the CEO of a large global empire. Maybe you never will. But to understand the power of storytelling, you don’t need to grace the inside of a boardroom. Just look at one of the most common behaviours in social media and you’ll see this principle in action every day.
What is the #1 item shared on Facebook consistently? Stories – from the news media or elsewhere. It highlights one of the most important things the social psychologists who study the transmission of ideas find over and over again. People share stories, not facts.
Telling better stories changes everything.
How To Tell Better Stories
When it comes to being a better storyteller, the best thing you can really do is pay closer attention to the great stories all around you. They may be in the media told through a piece of investigative journalism. Or a new film that comes out. Learning from professional storytellers of all types is always a great thing to do. Aside from that, here are three other suggestions that will help you hone your storytelling skills: