Friday, January 31, 2014

What’s the next big thing you can do?

We run a weeklong leadership mentoring programme called “Inspired to Inspire”, and we had our first class for the year this week. PHOTO/FILE

We run a weeklong leadership mentoring programme called “Inspired to Inspire”, and we had our first class for the year this week. PHOTO/FILE 
By WALE AKINYEMI
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We run a weeklong leadership mentoring programme called “Inspired to Inspire”, and we had our first class for the year this week.
Day one focused on transformative thinking, and today, I want to share some of the thoughts with you.

Have you ever been in a situation in which things look so good and it’s hard to believe that there could be something better, and then only a short while later, you look at what you considered to be great and it comes across as child’s play?

What happened is that you, like many other people, had arrived at what I call a false peak.
A false peak is one of the most containing places that a person or organisation can ever be. Let me paint a picture to show you how bad it is.

Imagine a person who in school scored very high grades and was always at the top of the class. Now fast forward a few years and the same person is working. 

Imagine how ludicrous it would be if the person bragged about the fact that he used to score high grades in school and therefore expected to get promoted on that basis. You get the picture, don’t you?
Wherever you are today can either be a destination or a transit point. If you are so impressed with yourself and what you have accomplished today, you will be more inclined to pitch a tent there for a while.

You must always have a vision that makes your present success almost irrelevant. My favourite question to my team all the time is: “What’s the next big thing that we can do?”
Stagnation can only happen in the life of a person whose mind has been deceived to think that they have arrived. In reality, therefore, we must never arrive.
The transformative mind is that which is always pondering over the next form.

NUMBER ONE?
What is the next form of your life? What is the next form of your company?
Like I have often said, hardly do people remember number two in a contest. You know Usain Bolt, don’t you? But who came second at the last Olympics? I bet you are scratching your head.

In my books, the number two is simply the winner among the losers. One way to therefore ensure that you never get to a false peak is to ask yourself constantly: “Am I number one in the country?”
Even if the answer is yes, ask: “Am I number one in the continent?” If the answer is yes, go on and ask further: “Am I number one in the world?” If the answer is yes then ask: “Am I number one in the history of humankind?”

Mediocrity is a cancer that deceives you into believing that anything other than the best is acceptable. It is the cancer that makes you think that you cannot do better than you have done. It is the cancer that makes you think that you can slow down. It is the cancer that makes people encourage themselves with low standards instead of inspiring themselves with the best that the world has to offer. It is the cancer that is satisfied with being present instead of making their presence felt.
Africa is a great land that is being ruined by mediocrity. We have a knack for producing two standards – a poor one for Africans and a better one for export.

I flew on one airline recently from Nairobi to another African destination, and the only difference between the business class and economy was the size of the seats.

Everything else was crammed up, even though we had paid about double for the business class seats. The same airline on the London, Dubai or New York route has a totally different feel.
We will not be delivered from ourselves until our thoughts towards ourselves are no more mediocre. We must tap the potential of Africa for Africans.

As long as we are content with relegating ourselves behind others, the journey has truly not yet started.

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