Daily Attitude Email

Daily Attitude Email 8 16 12

Yesterday’s email about Jim Collins’ speech reminded me of one of the core elements from his books.

Good is the enemy of great.

One of the most difficult challenges of life (especially for those of us that are lucky enough to live in America) is that “good” is everywhere. It is easy to fall into the trap of settling for good instead of going for great.

Good is the enemy of great because good is so comfortable. Good lulls us into complacency. Good makes it easy not to go for our best.

And that is where the problem lies. Good means we miss out on great. They can’t coexist. it is one or the other.

Is there an area of your life where you are settling for good instead of great?

Are you avoiding facing the reality that you can be great?

In “Good to Great” Jim ends with a great conclusion.

Over time it is no more difficult (in fact he believes it is easier) to be great than it is to just achieve good results.

Up front it might seem a lot more difficult, but that is a false sense of security.

At Mavidea we are beginning the process of moving our organization from good to great and I am excited.

I can’t wait to see what the future holds as we become a great company.

I can’t wait to see what the future holds for each of you as you become the great version of yourself.

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 15 12

One of the better speakers at the Willow Creek Global Leadership Summit last week was Jim Collins.

In speaking about companies that exhibited superior performance over a long period of time he discussed the concept of return on luck.

In his research he found that most companies had about the same experience with luck (both good and bad). That is to say that the companies experienced relatively similar amounts of luck.

The difference between the great companies and the good ones was their “return on luck”. Were they able to take a good break or some good fortune and multiply it to get better results for the company.

What an awesome concept for our personal lives as well.

What is your return on luck?

What are you doing to make sure that the next time something good comes your way you multiply it?

We all face both bad and good luck every day. The key is what you do about it.

Make it a lucky day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 14 12

The walls we build around us to keep out the sadness also keep out the joy. Jim Rohn

Been a while since I shared a good Jim Rohn quote so I know you were anxiously awaiting another one.

This one is another of those hard truths of life.

In order to let the good of life come in and effect us positively we must put ourselves at risk of experiencing the bad.

In order to experience love, we must risk rejection.

In order to experience the joys of parenthood we must risk the hurt our children will face.

In order to experience the potential for a gold medal you have to risk all that training and going over there and getting injured at the last minute.

We all have walls we have put up to protect ourselves. Let’s examine them to make sure we aren’t missing out on some of the good stuff.

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 13 12

A fool and his money are soon departed.

Saw this saying the other day and realized it applies to more than just money.

A fool and his weight loss are soon back together.

A fool and his wife are soon separated.

A fool and his kids are soon estranged.

A fool and his friends are soon strangers.

Whatever we wish to accumulate or gather for ourselves in our lives, we must build wisdom in that area and not act foolishly.

We can’t act foolishly and expect things to turn out well, the system isn’t set up that way.

Take a look in the mirror. Are you acting foolishly in an area of your life? If so, begin the process of seeking wisdom in that area.

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 9 12

When opportunity comes it is too late to prepare. John Wooden

John Wooden was known for his ability to prepare his teams to win. He coached and taught his players every little detail of how to win on the basketball and in life.

My favorite example is from Bill Walton who once told the story of “coach” going so far as telling and showing the players the proper way to put on their socks.

Coach Wooden took preparation seriously, and it showed. Before UCLA’s breakout onto the national stage and their break through into becoming the best college basketball program for an extended period of time, Coach Wooden prepared. And prepared. And prepared.

He worked on building the right kind of program for over 10 years before seeing the fruits of his labor.

What kind of opportunity are you looking for?

What kind of person do you need to make the most of that opportunity?

What kind of preparation can you do to prepare to make the most of that opportunity?

We will all be presented with opportunity. In fact, we are all presented with opportunity every day.

Are you prepared for it?

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 8 12

RISK IS FREEDOM
To laugh is to run the risk of looking foolish;
To cry is to take the risk of being sentimental;
Getting close to another person is to risk being compromised; To show emotion is to risk being known;
To present to people your ideas and dreams is to put them at risk; To love is to risk not being reciprocated;
To live is to risk dying.

If you allow yourself hope, you run the risk of becoming desperate. In any attempt to perform, there is the risk of failing.
But risks have to be taken,
Because the greatest danger in life is not to risk anything.

He who never takes risks, does nothing, has nothing, and is nothing.

Maybe he can save himself suffering and pain, but he can’t learn, Or feel, or change, or grow, or love or live.
Chained by certainty, he will be a slave; he will sacrifice being free. Only by taking risks do you consecrate freedom.

Author Unknown

Where do you need to take a little more risk in your life?

Most of us grew up thinking that risk is bad and it should be avoided.

This is another area of our lives where we must seek and build wisdom. The wisdom to know when and how to risk.

Make it a great day by taking some risk today.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 7 12

As the Olympics move to the track, it reminds me of one of my favorite success stories.

Roger Bannister and the 4 minute mile.

I found this great summary and inspirational thoughts:

I have been on a one-man crusade over the past few months – in my writing, in my public speaking, in my day-to-day encounters with colleagues – to summon a can-do spirit in these can’t-do times. Everything seems hard, from rescuing the financial system to keeping a job to just walking outside in this brutal winter on both sides of the Atlantic.

So how do I persuade people to stay positive in such a negative environment? Increasingly, I tell them the story of the legendary British runner (and gifted neurologist) Sir Roger Bannister, and his quest to run the four-minute mile. It is the right story for these difficult times, a story that reminds us it is possible to do what others say is impossible.

We all know that Bannister (who turns 80 next month) became the first person to run a mile in less than four minutes. It was in a race in Oxford on 6 May 1954. He ran it in three minutes 59.4 seconds. Bannister was a 25-year-old full-time medical student who devised his own approach to training. He was, dare I say, something of a maverick – both in terms of what made him tick and in his approach to competition.

The quest to break four minutes had been in full force since at least 1886 and it involved the most brilliant coaches and the most gifted athletes in North America, Europe and Australia. It was truly the Holy Grail of athletic achievement – for 70 years it didn’t happen, and when it did, the event defied all the experts.

Those experts believed they knew the precise circumstances under which the record would be broken. It would have to be in perfect weather; 20C and no wind; on a particular kind of track – hard, dry clay; and in front of a huge crowd urging the runner on. But Bannister achieved it on a cold day, on a wet track, at a meeting in Oxford before a crowd of only 3,000 people. He broke the mark and even his most ardent rivals breathed a sigh of relief. And once they saw it could be done, they did it too.

Only 46 days later, John Landy, an Australian runner, not only broke the barrier but crushed Bannister’s time. Then, a year after Bannister’s “impossible” achievement, three runners broke the four-minute barrier in a single race.

What goes for runners goes for leaders running organisations and for all of us leading our own lives. Progress doesn’t move in a straight line. It’s not incremental. Whether it’s an entrepreneur, a scientist, or an athlete, someone does something that is thought to be impossible, and what was unreachable becomes merely a benchmark, something for others to shoot for and surpass.

Professor Jerry Wind of the Wharton School has written about the symbolism for business and entrepreneurship of the four-minute mile. In his book, The Power of Impossible Thinking, he offered this assessment of Bannister’s feat: “The runners of the past had been held back by a mindset that said they could not surpass the four-minute mile. When that limit was broken, the others saw that they could do something they had previously thought impossible.”

Today, we all are poised on the track, doubting that we can run and win the race when the odds seem so steep. My advice is to put yourself in Bannister’s shoes: set your own personal four-minute mile, whether it’s starting a company or changing career. Then decide what you are prepared to do to achieve it – and fire the starting gun for the rest of us to run our own race .

By Bill Taylor

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 6 12

Yesterday’s sermon at church was about how we are all created differently and because of those differences the world is a better and more beautiful place to be.

We all have our own version of success that is unique to the person we were created to be.

I know you have all heard this from me before but I realized one little extra tidbit yesterday during the sermon.

We have already won. The world is already a beautiful place just because we are in it.

That certainly takes the pressure off a little now, doesn’t it?

The world is already a great place, we just need to do our best to make it even better. We need to become the best version of ourselves in order to make this great place shine a little more.

What a great thought. We are just adding icing to the cake.

And who doesn’t like icing?

Make it a great day.

Jake

Daily Attitude Email 8 2 12

Arlin Sorenson’s (he started HTG, the peer group Mavidea belongs to) father recently passed away. Yesterday he emailed HTG with some of the lessons he learned from dad.

I am sharing them below with all of you.

If your dad is still around, call him today and get some more of that dad wisdom while you have a chance.

Make it a great day.

Jake

Lessons Learned From Dad

So what did I learn from Dad? Well it was a long list, but here are some of the key areas where he changed my life:

1. Faith – this was foundational. It wasn’t negotiable. Church was required. His life led us to come to the Savior by the example he set. His number one focus was making sure we knew the Lord and had eternity covered.

2. Legacy – looking forward was how he lived. Not just a little ways, but way down the road. BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal) was his friend. He always had his eyes set on the next big thing he wanted to accomplish.

3. Planning – he was a planner. He didn’t do things until he knew what that meant. It wasn’t always completely detailed and spelled out, but he knew enough of the path to move forward and followed the plan until he achieved the goal.

4. Worry – just don’t. People aren’t thinking what you think they are, and even if they are, who cares. He told me thousands of times ‘you can’t start swimming til you get to the water’ so stop worrying about what might be and deal with what is.

5. Do it right – he was a stickler for doing things right the first time. ‘If you can’t afford to do it right, you shouldn’t do it at all’. And ‘if you don’t have time to do it right, when will you find time to do it over?’ Words I didn’t always appreciate but have learned are very true.

6. Perfection – doesn’t exist and is seldom needed. Good enough usually works. We didn’t have to have the best of things, just things that did what was needed. It is far more important to take action and do something than sit around and wait for perfection while doing nothing.

7. Hard work – ‘the early bird gets the worm, and those who work are those who eat’. I got some of my workaholic traits from him, but I now appreciate the power of work ethic and putting full effort into getting a job done. I wasn’t always a fan of working, but it has served me very well.

8. Risk – ‘even a turtle has to stick his neck out to get anywhere’. There must be investment before there is any return. So if you want to grow, you have to risk. It needs to be measured and never taken to the point failure will kill you, but you can’t be afraid to take some chances.

9. Family – ‘you can pick your friends, but you don’t get to pick your family’. Make the best of it and work to make it a wonderful thing. God put you where you are for a reason. It won’t always be easy, but it is where you are so make it a great experience.

10. Marriage – get over yourself. Marriage is not about “I.” Your job as husband is to love and lead, not lord and lash. Marriage is for life; there are no options. ‘Til death do us part means exactly that. What God has joined together, no one should ever change. Covenant marriage is forever.

11. Kids – the greatest blessing we experience as parents is the birth of a child. Spare the rod though, and we spoil the child. Spanking is not fatal; it is necessary. Kids need to learn to work and be responsible. There may be time to goof off tomorrow, or after the work is done, but play comes after we work first.

12. Time – it is our most precious commodity and something we have to use wisely. The best time is the time early in the day, before you get up, because that is time you can add to your day and accomplish more. Wasting time is a sin. ‘There is ALWAYS enough time to do the things that are important’. ‘We can ALWAYS make time to do what matters’. Anything else is an excuse.

13. Living – we always took time to have some fun and live life. Every year dad made sure took a family vacation. Didn’t matter if we could afford it, or had time for it, we did it. It was a priority and we saw a lot of the country together as a family.

14. Love – not so much an outer expression but rather a way of living. He wasn’t much of a hugger, or pat on the back kind of guy. But he was always there and always had our back. He loved us with the love of a father – tough love when we acted up – but gentle love when we needed it.

15. People – at the end of the day, life is all about people. There is nothing more important, nothing more worthy of investing in, nothing that should consume us more than building relationships and pouring ourselves into the people in our patch.

Daily Attitude Email 8 1 12

“There are none who are as deaf as those that don’t want to hear.”

This one doesn’t need much explanation from my part.

What are you being deaf to in your life?

Are you not hearing when it comes to your weight?

Are you not hearing when it comes to your finances?

Are you not hearing when it comes to an important relationship?

If we take a look in the mirror I am sure we can find at least one area where we have become the person who doesn’t want to hear.

Make a commitment to listen. Make a commitment to paying attention.

And make it a great day.

Jake