Celebrate along the way

Don’t wait until the finish line. Celebrate along the way.

Here’s what others have to say on the all-important subject of celebrating well:

Celebrate what you want to see more of.
Tom Peters

Life has meaning only in the struggle. Triumph or defeat is in the hands of the Gods. So let us celebrate the struggle.
Swami Sivananda

Celebrate the little things in life, appreciate tomorrow, love your neighbor or don’t, but never condemn yourself to a life without cause to celebrate and be thankful for what you have. Never forget the people you love and love them when you have an occasion to do so. Celebrate their life and celebrate yours.
Unknown

Stop worrying about the potholes in the road and celebrate the journey!
Barbara Hoffman

Pursuing excellence? Persistence is key to success

Inspiration is guaranteed each and every Olympics.

Watching the best in the world compete in so many sports is a powerful reminder of what it takes to excel.

It reminds us, as well, that if you're pursuing excellence of any type, being able to push over, around, or through the barriers you inevitably find somewhere on the road to your goal is an important part of success.

Here are a few pursuit of excellence thoughts from others who knew the path, too:

I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.
Thomas Edison

Nothing at all will be attempted if all possible objections must first be overcome.
Samuel Johnson

A man who suffers before it is necessary, suffers more than is necessary.
Seneca

We will either find a way, or make one.
Hannibal

Grow new opportunities

Watching the Olympics drives the lesson home:

You make many of your own opportunities, and for others, adapting well to whatever happens is the best course.

Here's what a few others have to say about opportunities and growth:

You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do.
Henry Ford

Life is not advancement. It is growth. It does not move upward, but expands outward, in all directions.
Russell G. Alexander

A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds.
Sir Francis Bacon

Customer feedback is a good thing (really)

How is your customer support staff viewed in your company?

As the clean-up crew?

Hopefully not.

They are, in fact, stewards of gold.

The information they have from customers – if you choose to use it in this way – can provide you invaluable information about current products and services and how they really work (or not).

The information they can collect – if you seek it – can also provide great ideas for future products and sources of revenue.

Here’s how others see customers’ perspective and the information they can provide:

In the end, the customer doesn’t know, or care, if you are small or large as an organization…she or he only focuses on the garment hanging on the rail in the store.
Giorgio Armani

Our business is about technology, yes. But it’s also about operations and customer relationships.
Michael Dell

Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.
Bill Gates

I think we’re having fun. I think our customers really like our products. And we’re always trying to do better.
Steve Jobs

Statistics suggest that when customers complain, business owners and managers ought to get excited about it. The complaining customer represents a huge opportunity for more business.
Zig Ziglar

Fresh start, new year


Clouds, originally uploaded by Camera Is On.

A new year, a new decade dawns.

It's full of promise and potential.

And, if we let them, positive new habits can form, step by step, day by day.

Attention to even a few simple changes, fresh perspectives and repeated actions on the path to our goals can lead us to bigger, brighter, better results.

A fresh year unfolds.

Reviewing the year? A few things to consider

You may be like many people at this time of year, reviewing how you did in 2009, and planning for 2010.

Consider these thoughts as you look back, and then look forward again:

I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.
Thomas Edison

Nothing at all will be attempted if all possible objections must first be overcome.
Samuel Johnson

We will either find a way, or make one.
Hannibal

The fear is not that we set our goals too high and we do not reach them, but that we set them too low and we do.
Michelangelo

If we all did the things we were capable of doing, we would literally astound ourselves.
Thomas Edison

Remarkability is within your grasp

We live in a world of great opportunity as well as constant change and challenge.

And within each of us is the possibility of being remarkable in one or more ways. Here's what others have to say about "remarkability":

The reason so many people never get anywhere in life is because when opportunity knocks, they are out in the backyard looking for four-leaf clovers.
Walter Percy Chrysler

People become really quite remarkable when they start thinking that they can do things. When they believe in themselves they have the first secret of success.
Norman Vincent Peale

Be so remarkable they can't ignore you.
Steve Martin

There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself.
Johann Sebastian Bach

The world of books is the most remarkable creation of man nothing else that he builds ever lasts monuments fall; nations perish; civilization grow old and die out; new races build others. But in the world of books are volumes that have seen this happen again and again and yet live on. Still young, still as fresh as the day they were written, still telling men's hearts, of the hearts of men centuries dead.
Clarence Day

And then there's the challenge of living in a world of low expectations, and not letting that hold you back from discovering and expressing the "remarkable" you possess, and can express, if you find the right way, the right venue for it. Here's how one playwright expressed that challenge:

Don't live down to expectations. Go out there and do something remarkable.
Wendy Wasserstein

The power and dance of resilience


Jellyfish, originally uploaded by jcgr.

If we've learned nothing else in the last few years, it is this lesson:

Resilience, ultimately, wins the day.

Here are others' thoughts about resilience, persistence, and vision:

Those who admire the massive, rigid bone structures of dinosaurs should remember that jellyfish still enjoy their very secure ecological niche.
Beau Sheil

You cannot discover new oceans unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore.
Unknown

You must look into people as well as at them.
Lord Chesterfield

Man's mind stretched to a new idea never goes back to its original dimensions.
Oliver Wendall Holmes

Nothing splendid has ever been achieved except by those who dared believe that something inside of them was superior to circumstance.
Bruce Barton

Sell your cleverness, and purchase bewilderment.
Francesco

I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.
Thomas Edison

Where’s the fine line between “hovering” and “supporting”?

Our son had his last cross country meet the other day. It wasn't just the last cross country meet of the year, but the last one of his 8-year cross country career, after his sister had completed her long cross country career, as well.

So it was a different day on this rigorous Bay Area course for our son and for us, too.

My husband started to head down to the team tent. It was more for him than for our son…that much I knew.

Seeing no signs of other parents traipsing about the area, I advised him, vigorously, to leave our son and his team alone. Give them some pre-race space, was my overwhelming thought.

"There's a very fine line between 'hovering' and 'being supportive'!" I teased my husband.

As a parent, it's sometimes hard to know where that fine line is.

You try your best.

Sometimes you get it right, like your own parents did. Other times, you get it wrong – like your parents did, too.

I teasingly asked our son's coach and homeroom teacher the question, "What's the difference between 'hovering' and 'being supportive'?"

He laughed. I'm sure he's had that thought before, himself.

Managers, as well, have to find the fine balance between hovering, or micro-managing, and being supportive.

There's another element you learn to manage well, too.

That's being able to understand if you're delegating too much, or expecting too much, too soon. When you get it wrong, you usually find that the foundation of appropriate understanding and skills was not well-established or reinforced.

It's all part of trying to get oversight right, and it takes planning, experimentation and experience.

Coming in to shore


Coming in to shore, originally uploaded by jcgr.

Finishing a challenging ride, literally or metaphorically speaking?

And now, you're coming in to shore?

You might be surprised when you look back how much you enjoyed the challenge, and finding out what you could actually do when put to a rigorous test.

And when you're there, enjoy the victory and rest of shore time, as well.

For soon, it's back into the water to test yourself again…