Friday, December 4, 2015

Using Other People Power and Working in Quadrant II

Fridays are my business days. My wife takes the kids to their grandparents' house and I work on my business. Usually these are what Jennifer White calls "support days" in her book Work Less Make More. I work on getting my ducks in a row and putting out fires and scrambling to meed deadlines and work on the mountain of things on my plate. Today I am having half a "laser day" for 2 reasons.

1. Other People Power (team): My banker is working on writing up a loan. My realtor is working on negotiating a letter of intent to lease a space. I talked with my business adviser this morning to review the initial loan agreement and letter of intent mentioned above. My equipment provider will receive a list of equipment this afternoon and begin working on pricing and invoicing. My contractor is waiting for all the above to come through so he can get to work. My insurance providers will be working on some numbers next week. I am the axle and there are connections out to the wheels via the spokes who are specialists in their given field. Eventually I will build my team such that each axle will be a team reaching out to the spokes (ie. my business manager will be working with my realtor and my finance clerk will be contacting the bank.) All this frees me up to write this blog post and work on laser day things.

2. I've finally gotten out of the trap of working in Stephen Covey's (7 Habits of Highly Effective People) Quadrants III and IV (Unimportant and Urgent, and Unimportant and Not Urgent), I've delegated most of quadrant I for the moment (Important and Urgent) leaving me to work in quadrant IV (Important and Not Urgent). This is what Jennifer White calls a "laser day". This is where the best ideas for future products, services and activities come from. This is where much of the personal and business growth comes from. This is where you can anticipate fires before they start and improve upon products and services and dream to launch bigger and better things to change your life and our world. It's been a long time coming. At first it was a little unsettling--there's nothing urgent and important today...what do I put on my do list? I hope to see more laser days in the days to come!

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Exceeding Customer Expectations and Perceived Value--Under Promise and Over Perform

Value...what do we value? What's more important, actual value or perceived value? Is there such a thing as too much value? Jennifer White in her excellent book Work Less, Make More argues that we can add too much value into our companies and products or services. At some point, there is so much value that we "don't count" parts of it. Two things come into play: 1. What I call supposed value, and 2. What Mrs. White calls perceived value.

1. Supposed value is when we provide a bunch of stuff that our customers don't really want, or want but "don't count". We suppose that they need these things and it leads to frustration because we count them and our customers do not. I'll give you a few examples and you'll quickly understand what I mean. 

1. A. Supposed value that customers don't really want.--Eliminate all these quickly.

Our Playstation 3 will play region 2 DVD's. For those of you who don't know what that is, here's a synopsis. The media world is divided geographically into 6 regions. Region 1 is the US and Canada. Region 3 is Japan, Europe, South Africa and the Middle East. Discs from regions other than your own have coding that prevents players in other regions from playing them. Often tourists are annoyed that DVD'd they buy in Europe don't play in the US.

My wife is happy that our Playstation will play her foreign videos. I suspect that she is one of a small percentage of customers who were thrilled by this news. In fact, it's likely that most people with Playstation consoles don't know what this means and don't care. Listen to that--They payed extra money for value that they don't care about. Sony got smart in latter releases of the same console--they lowered the price and eliminated this hardware. Now the blue-ray player we do value. 

1. B. Supposed value that customers don't count.--Gently help your customers count these.

A friend of mine grew up on a large dairy farm. His father worked very hard to keep everything running well, but at the end of a hard day's work he always made it home on time. One day his father got stuck out on a job and came home over an hour late. When he arrived at home his wife was very upset that he was late and hadn't called. She thought the worst. He was never late, so he must be dead or injured. He was surprised that she was so upset...after all, he's never late. She should cut him some slack for this one occurrence, he thought. 

They are both right. This is supposed value that this farmer provides every day. He counts it. and supposes that she will too. He works hard to come home on time. He leaves farm jobs unfinished to make his family a priority. She takes it for granted. She doesn't "count it"...unless it's missing. This is a case where "we don't realize what we have until it's gone". 

Parents and children often have this problem of unperceived value. It can be very damaging to a relationship and happens frequently in close relationships. One party overvalues something, the other takes it for granted They are suddenly offended when things don't go as usual. 

My wife and I often nip this one in the bud when one of us starts complaining that something didn't go as expected instead of saying, "I can't believe you didn't take out the garbage!!" we'll say, "Thank you for taking out the garbage all the other times.". 

This is dangerous territory because we need to distinguish between what our customers don't want and what they do want, but are not counting so we can eliminate the things they don't need or want, and gently help them "perceive" the value of what they just aren't counting. Pray that you don't accidentally eliminate something they really do want but aren't counting. It can be tough to know the difference. 

2. Perceived Value is that bunch of things that you provide that your customers love...they "perceive" or count the value even if it doesn't really exist. There are two categories. 

2. A. Perceived value that customers don't really need, but value anyway.--You will want to eliminate anything that falls into this category that costs you more money than it brings in. Double down on anything that brings you more money than it costs (hype, fads, brands and one hit wonders fall into this category). These are what make rabid customers, but it can be fickle. 

Beanie Babies. Need I say more? They are merely tiny stuffed animals, but when there was a shortage, people got injured at the mall trying to get their hands on one and were willing to brave weather, long lines and threats of death to get one. Just know that all good fads come to an end. For some reason customers perceived value where there really was none. 

Black Pearls (Tahitian pearls). In the 1970's black pearls were considered inferior to white pearls (never mind that pearls are just parasites covered in layers of calcium carbonate-what antacids are made from). In the mid 1970's Salvador James Assael a pearl manufacturer if you could call him that, brought several black pearls to jeweler Harry Winston in New York and had them set in extravagant settings and placed them in the window next to expensive stones. This piece of sheer marketing genius created for these junk pearls a perceived value far greater than that of white pearls. This perception remains true today. Starbucks did the same thing with gourmet coffee.

2. B. Perceived value that customers need and love.--Run with these. It's your bread and butter. These are what create consistent customers. 

What do you get at McDonald's that doesn't fall under the heading of hype from above? A consistent size, shape, look and taste (not to mention quality of meat, at least in cleanliness) to everything on the menu anywhere in the world. And you get it fast, to boot. Start messing with quality and customers will run for the hills. 

How can you increase perceived value? Some ideas: 

Find ways to gently point it out. I read a book once that said if you come in early and leave late, send your boss an early morning e-mail periodically so he might notice your sacrifice.

Under promise and over perform. I recently failed at this when I told my banker I'd email a document within the hour and then didn't get it sent for several hours. Now I look like a slacker. How much better to have said I'd have it by the end of the day and then send it in several hours instead?

Figure out what your customer wants and give it to them.

Surprise them. Front loading special bonuses makes a customer feel like you only have a bonus because you want a sale. Back loading special bonuses make a customer feel important or valued. They value you in return. Zappos routinely sends flowers with their shoes. 

Inexpensive ways: remember names (of customers, kids, grand kids), use names, send a thank you email or note with specific information from a prior meeting, smile, say thank you, make a special offer for each customer group "just for people like you (new customer, old customer, young customer, etc.), communicate well, remember birthdays, remember special events (and mention them), point out features, refer out when you can't meet needs (keep a list of professionals handy).

The possibilities are endless. Get out there and exceed customer expectations and create perceived value. 

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Method for Improvement

I'm not sure where I picked this up, but I think it was likely several books and possibly a few research articles. The one that stands out in my mind is Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People. Some audio book I've listened to recently must have brought it again to my attention. If I run into anything I've read on this subject again I'll try to add a reference here, or you can add it in the comments section.

So here it is: any situation you have, you need to think through it ahead of time and answer the following questions.

Before:
B1. What outcome do I want to have from this (meeting, conversation, negotiation, etc.)?
B2. What will I do to cause this to be the outcome?

During the situation you need to ask yourself the following.

During:
D1. Are my actions causing my desired outcome to be more or less likely?
D2. What can I change now (in my approach, method, tactics, tone, mood, etc.) to make my desired outcome more likely?

Then after the situation ask yourself and answer the following.

After
A1. Did I get the outcome I desired?
A2. Why did I or why didn't I get the outcome I desired?
A3. What will I change next time I have a similar situation?

Carnegie suggests that a businessman he associated with stated that he reviewed his business and personal dealings every week. This weekly review was the single most important thing he did to bring about positive change in his businesses and life.

Here's the rub. If you don't go into a situation with an expected outcome, you have no measuring stick. How will you know if you did well or poorly? How will you know if you got what you expected? How will you know what to do in the future to avoid reliving bad outcomes and keep getting good ones?

Practical application: My 4 year old is not going to brush her teeth to get ready for bed.

Me: What would you rather have happen? You can complain here for ten minutes and not get a bedtime book, or you can quickly go brush your teeth and you might have time for two chapters of your bedtime book?
(Read: B1. Which outcome do you want? Extra book time. B2. What do you need to do to get it? Get ready for bed quickly. )

Child: Erg. Two chapters!

Me: Then why are you standing here complaining? That's not going to get you what you want! Go get your toothbrush!
(Read: D1. Are your actions (complaining) causing you to get your desired outcome? No. D2. What should you be doing to get your desired outcome? Quickly get your teeth brushed.)

Child: (runs to get toothbrush)

Me: Good Job! You got ready so fast we have some extra time for TWO WHOLE CHAPTERS tonight! You should do this every night!
(Read: A1. You got your desired outcome--two chapters. A2. You got your outcome (book chapters) because you got ready for bed quickly (action). A3. What will you do next time? You can have this every night if you just get ready for bed quickly instead of complaining.)

Simple. If you're having trouble remembering, notice that it's the same thing three times. 1. Outcome.
2. Action. It's that simple.

Now my 4 year old child is already savvy enough to know that sometimes she doesn't want to do the action that leads to the outcome. My only answer to this is "When you want it badly enough, you will do what you need to do to get the outcome." My old therapy mentor used to say, "Some people just aren't hurt badly enough to get better yet."

There was an old rat poison commercial where a lady saw a mouse and screamed, "I hate you!" Then a guy in a giant mouse/rat suit standing in her kitchen takes a bite out of some food and says, "Prove it."

You wanna lose weight? Quit smoking? Learn Spanish? Change careers? Open a business?...Prove it. 1. Outcome. 2. Action. It's that simple.

Sunday, November 1, 2015

"You Are on a 0 Day Streak"...Fail. Your Simple 3 Step Plan to Stop Failing.

I have begun learning Spanish. I took Spanish in Jr. High and High School, but pretty much purged what little Spanish I did know one year after high school when I learned Mongolian to a high level of fluency and spent nearly two years in Outer Mongolia. Since knowing Spanish may connect me with another 470 million native speakers and Mongolian only connects me with 5.7 million speakers at best including many dialects that I doubtless would not understand, I figured now might be a good time to take the plunge. Next on my list will be Chinese.

Anyway, I got a Duolingo account and began learning. The first few sections were enjoyable and easy as I relearned the most basic "Hola" etc. Then I had to buckle down and start learning. After a few weeks of sporadic efforts at best, I decided that I really was going to put in the effort, so I busted out a 52 day streak. Then Halloween happened. 

I worked late and went straight to my sister-in-law's party, then went straight home arriving some time after midnight and Kabaam! Now I have a 0 day streak. Lame. As in, I am lame. 

So the question is when did I lose my 52 day streak?

Answer: The day before Halloween when I did not foresee the fact that I usually study in the evening and likely would not get that opportunity on Halloween, duh. 

And the moral of the story is...we all need to do a better job of planning ahead. 

Other times we "plan to fail because we fail to plan", then make excuses as to why it wasn't our fault even though it really was:

Waiting until the last minute to buy gifts for a birthday, anniversary, Christmas, or other holiday. "I can't believe every store was out of _____." (They weren't out 3 weeks ago when you should have ordered it.)

Waiting until the last minute to get ready to go to your event, party, meeting, date, job interview etc. "Traffic is never that bad" (Yes it is...every day...you should have left 20 minutes earlier and you would have been on time...and you should know how long it really takes yourself to get ready by now.)

Eating all that junk at work, that party, home. "Cravings happen, and I just had to try _____. (No, they don't just happen and no, you didn't have to try it. You know what sets off your cravings and you should have a healthy snack ready.)

Smoking, drinking, snorting, or otherwise participating in ______. "I just can't help myself." (Yes, you can. But maybe not in that moment. If you had planned ahead, you could have because you would have had a plan for just that moment, situation and/or scenario.)

Recent research has shown that you may be right. You may not be thinking straight in the moment of temptation or neglect. That is precisely why we need to plan ahead when we are level headed. We need to have a "pre-mortem".

In a situation where things could go wrong or have gone wrong in the past do the following:

1. Ask yourself, "If this was going to fail, why would it have?" in other words, "If tomorrow I wake up and I have failed, in what way did I fail and what could I have done differently so I would not have?" 

2. Make a plan that fixes or prevents that failure (kills the excuses).

3. Follow your plan no matter what.

So, when Thanksgiving and Christmas and Kwanzaa and New Year's come around I will:

1. Ask myself the day before. "Adam, how will I lose my __ day streak on Duolingo tomorrow?"

2. I need to do my Spanish in the morning so I don't forget to do it after dinner when I'm "Trippin' on Tryptophan". I think I'll set an alarm for the morning so I wake up on time and schedule a phone reminder to ring in at noon in case I forget in the morning. Also, I think I'll plan my outfit and pack the diaper bag tonight so I'm not late even after getting stuck in that horrible holiday traffic. Then, when that delicious pumpkin pie comes my way I'm going to reward myself for having done my Duolingo by eating three slices with an extra helping of whipped cream--can't win them all, right?

3. Wake up on time. Do my Duolingo. Eat my pie! 365 day streak here I come.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

You can make money doing anything...especially moving garbage!

Fortune 400 list makers include people in oil (which really seems cool, but think about how uncool it is too), lumber, as well as real estate, hedge funds etc. A while back I listened to the audio book "All the Money in the World: How the Forbes 400 Make--and Spend--Their Fortunes" by Peter W. Bernstein. He details the myriad ways that the richest among us make and spend their cash.

Since listening to this (and before too) I would often look at the variety of shops as my wife and I drive down business districts in local towns and I gawk at the assortment of businesses in each town (yet another way I overwhelm her that this blog might ease).

More recently I have been thinking that in order to make money, you either have to improve many people's lives in a small way, or improve several people's lives in a very profound way. There are only a few out there who touch many people's lives in a profound way. I've noticed that those who manage this usually do it in a nearly imperceptible, but ubiquitous way. They often are not the inventors of a technology, but bring it to the masses packaged in a convenient, predictable way. Examples are all around us. Some well known, others obscure:

German brothers Wilhelm and Georg Shaeffler developed a new way to make ball bearings and grew the company they founded in 1946 to be one of the worlds largest manufacturers of ball bearings making loads of cash in the process. Tiny balls helping billions of people (drawers, cars, wheels...lets just leave it at that. If you use anything with wheels, you've probably used several of their tiny balls).

Ray Croc--you may not agree with McDonalds, but you probably have heard the story of how he brought burgers to the masses. In fact, you've probably had one of his burgers. He didn't invent the burger or McDonalds. He just brought it to the world helping you fill your hunger in a convenient (drive through, short wait), predictable (same every time--same amount, same size, same cooking procedure delivered by a 16 year old exactly the same every time) way.

I recently heard a local story of Harold E. LeMay of Tacoma, WA. I had previously noticed that we use LeMay Recycling at work and heard that we were saving bundles over the previous company we used...and it was more convenient (there's that word again) too. I had also seen the Lemay America's Car Museum as we drive down I-5 in Tacoma (more on crazy ways to spend your millions in another post). I learned his story from one of my patients.

Out of high school, Harold partnered in an automotive business. As my patient put it, one day he won a garbage truck in a car auction. He had trouble selling it, so he looked into the trash collection business. He began Spanaway Garbage Collection Company with one truck. Soon he had more trash than he could handle so he bought another truck. The rest is history. His company became Harold LeMay Enterprises after WW II. He also owned Lucky Towing, HELM Trucking, Lucky Sales and Services and the list goes on. While building his empire on garbage, he also gathered the world's largest collection of autos, motorcycles, trucks and other vehicles and memorabilia (over 3,000 vehicles). Each summer Harold and his wife Nancy would open their estate for the annual LeMay Car Show. After his death most of his vehicles were donated to Tacoma for the museum.

In 1991 he was elected to the National Solid Waste Association Hall of Fame (who knew that existed!?)

In 2011 Harold and Nancy LeMay were inducted into the Washington State Hot Rod Hall of Fame

The moral of the story is threefold:

1. Sometimes your fortune is right under your nose. You just have to see it and seize it. See Acres of Diamonds by Russell Conwell

2. You build your fortune on your failures. Lemay could not sell that truck. If someone else had bought it, it could have been the Someone Else America's Car Museum.

3. Before you can get inducted into the "Hall of Awesome", you have to wade through the "Hall of Garbage" and help out millions of people in a very profound way. Before you can collect cars, you have to collect heaps and heaps of garbage. Imagine a nation without garbage collection and recycling services.


Friday, August 28, 2015

Your Customers Are Not You

I've been doing a lot of research on advertising and marketing. In the process a friend of mine from LDS Business College's Self Reliance "Starting and Growing My Business" class suggested I take a "free advertising class" and take a close look at all the mail that comes to my house and dissect the strategies of the advertisers that have targeted me.

What are they doing well?

Which pieces of mail am I likely to open?

Why am I drawn to some parcels and not to others?

Which mail do I look at right away and which go on "the stack"?

I have also been checking out the newspaper advertisements, billboards, TV ads, want ads, garage sale signs, other signs etc. There is an old phrase, "When the student is ready, the teacher will appear." I have learned much about good and bad advertising. One of the main principles is that your customer does not care about you. They do not think like you. They do not know what you know. They do not have the same needs, wants and desires as you. But if you can draw their attention and let them know that you can give them what they need, want and/or desire, you will never go hungry again!...I digress.

A graduate student named Elizabeth Newton at Stanford University performed a study in 1990 about tappers and listeners which I think applies. Try this at home!

Ms. Newton divided a group of human guinea pigs into two groups "tappers" and "listeners". She asked to tappers to choose a familiar song and tap out the rhythm on a table for the listeners to guess. Before the listeners guessed, she asked the tappers to predict the probability that the listeners would correctly guess their song. Out of 120 tapped songs, listeners guessed only three correctly (2.5%). Tappers had predicted a success rate of 50%.

Think of that! The tappers conveyed their message effectively 1/40 times, but guessed that they would convey their message 1/2 times! Does this every happen when we are marketing?

We hear the tune of how awesome our product or service is. We think about all the time and work we put into thinking of a name, a jingle, a meme. We think of all the ways we have made ourselves better than the competition. Then we tap out our message and the customer does not understand or care.

When we advertise we need to make sure that we are not being like the tappers. We should not play the message we have chosen. Instead we need to tune into the song our customers are tapping and fill those needs--not the needs we think they need filled, not our needs. Then we will be able to create simple, effective marketing strategies and campaigns that reverberate with our customers and highlight the ways our products and services meet their needs. Not what we think they should need, and especially not what we need or want.

If we play the game of tapping out our marketing message, we will likely have a success rate similar to Newton's tappers about 2.5%. If we instead tune into what our customers want. We will be tapping out a song they already hear and our success rate can be much higher than 50% with our target market.

Try the game this way. Have a listener hum a song, then begin tapping out that song on the table. See if the hummer can figure out what you are tapping. What do you think the success rate will be now? Let's play tappers and hummers. In this game everybody wins!

Now go figure out what your customers want and advertise that! Listen to them and they will hear and understand your message loud and clear!

Addendum: While I was in the processes of writing this post my (Italian) wife told me that McDonald's had run an ad in Italy stating that Italian kids like Happy Meals more than pizza. While this may be true, it's not a song that they want to hear!

Quiz: Recently in preparing an exercise class I heard some statistics that the class can help elderly people avoid falls. This is a measurable fact. We may even hear an old person say they don't want to fall and are fearful of falling (the class also decreases fear of falling). Should I run an ad that says "ATTENTION OLD PEOPLE: come to my exercise class so you can avoid falling!"?

No! That is not the song they are singing. If it is, it's not the song they want to hear. They don't want to be called old, they don't want to exercise and they don't want to be reminded that they might fall.

How 'bout this: "Mature adults come try this new class! You can stay independent and healthy while meeting new people!"

I'm sure you can come up with an even better message. Leave your comment below to improve the above advertisement!

Sunday, August 16, 2015

100 Things To Do On a Free Day

100 Things to do on a free day in no particular order, repeats allowed:
1. Pre school
2. Play with my kids
3. Science experiments
4. Take my wife on a shopping spree
5. Learn to fish
6. Go golfing
7. Fly to my brother's house and go golfing with him/them
8. Learn to fly an airplane
9. Learn to fly a helicopter
10. Sail
11. Learn Spanish
12. Learn Chinese
13. Read a fiction book
14. Read to my kids
15. Have my kids read to me
16. Rent/buy rollerblades and go rollerblading
17. Miniature golf
18. Cook lunch
19. Cook dinner
20. Do laundry...is that a free day thing...I don't get around to these things on other days-Support day?
21. Learn to Sail
22. Play the song Sail while sailing
23. Go sailing with my wife's grandmother and say "look I'm sailing...I sail"
24. Watch What About Bob on a boat even though I think I like it about as little as my wife's G-ma
25. Play guitar
26. Have my wife teach me to crochet
27. Go to the zoo
28. Go to the temple
29. Have a picnic
30. Fly to NC and play a board game with old friends (not old ones, but old ones you know?)
31. Learn to scuba dive
32. Plan a vacation for another free day (or is that a support day or delegate thing?)
33. Read
34. Sleep in
35. Breakfast in bed
36. Kiss my wife
37. Give my wife a massage
38. Get kissed by my wife
39. Go for a long walk
40. Eat cake
41. Go get a maple bar and a slurpee and figure out how to mail them to NC
42. Read the newspaper
43. Go to an estate sale
44. Go to an auction
45. Play football
46. Play soccer
47. Play basketball
48. Play volleyball on a real beach
49. Go to the beach with my kids
50. Build sandcastles
51. Lie on the beach
52. Learn to surf
53. Surf
54. Go someplace warm and exotic and surf
55. Go visit my cousin in NY and surf in cold water
56. Surf in the surf tee hee.
57. Visit a rainforest
58. Visit a national park
59. Visit a state park
60. Learn Dvorak (typing)
61. Lean Dvorak song on piano
62. Learn to play piano
63. Learn a piano concerto and duet with my wife and teach my oldest child a song on piano and invite people over for a concert with brownies
64. Make brownies with my son
65. Help my mother clean out her basement
66. Ride a horse
67. Ride my brother's horse
68. Golf
69. Eat delicious food
70. Eat delicious food in Italy
71. Hang glide
72. Climb cliffs
73. Go spelunking
74. Write a book
75. Do a crossword puzzle start to finish
76. Make a crossword puzzle with fun words like spelunking and galoshes
77. Write a song
78. Write a song and play and sing with guitar/piano with high school best friend
79. Eat Pringles
80. Go on a campout without pre-planning (prob with my kids) a la my high school self with two besties (not with my kids then..)
81. Row
82. Explore an island
83. Draw with sidewalk chalk
84. Golf with my Father-in-law and Brothers-in-law
85. Learn to fish
86. Shoot a gun
87. Get really good at archery
88. Take up fencing again
89. Poke someone with a sword (with safety gear)
90. Plan a bank heist scenario
91. Write an action novel with a bank heist scenario
92. Shoot the bull
93. Camp in a tee-pee
94. Make (have made) cowboy and Indian costumes and get laser tag equipment and play cowboys and Indians on real horseback
95. Before doing above research if laser tag equipment could harm horses. If so, do above with broomstick horses with kids instead of adults
96. Plan and act out zombie scenario for my brother-in-law's birthday
97. Watch Bones with my wife--all day
98. Pick a new show to watch with my wife
99. Play video games including retro ones
100. Watch old timey horrer movies with bro-in-law

Idea from Work Less, Make More: Stop Working So Hard and Create the Life You Really Want by Jennifer White

Friday, July 24, 2015

Today Matters--The Daily Dozen

I have developed the habit of listening to audiobooks on my commute. Since my commute is only about 20 minutes each way, I get less than an hour of "reading" in each day which usually is not enough time to finish a book in the 21 days I have before the library calls the audiobook due (I rent books on my smart phone from OverDrive). So I have gotten into the habit of listening while I do the dishes. This gives me extra listening time soI can finish a few books a month (somehow my wife and kids dirty a lot of dishes while I am at work:)). While I think this annoyed my wife at first because she was not always interested in my book, now I think she appreciates only having to do the dishes occasionally and has moved into the other room while I listen and clean. Now I only annoy her with conversations about the books...we can't win them all.

As an aside: according to Tom Corley http://richhabits.net/?s=read+non+fiction 63% of wealthy people listen to audio books during commute to work vs. 5% for poor people... I must be one of the 5% :) I wonder if when I become wealthy I'll pull the wealthy up to 64% and the poor people will drop to 4%...

I recently finished listening to a book Today Matters: 12 Daily Practices to Guarantee Tomorrow's Success by John C. Maxwell. I really liked how he discussed how each practice affected him in each decade of his life. This sort of showed me a timeline of how practicing each of his "Daily Dozen" principles could affect my life if I start living them now. As a physical therapist I recognize how small changes in behavior can make large changes over time, but it's easy to give up before you see the fruits of your labor. Almost like a farmer giving up on his seeds because he doesn't see them germinating underground. Many times it takes a long time to see progress and it can be difficult to recognize the progress as it comes slowly. I often tell my patients that they may not notice the changes just like a child cannot see their growth in height day by day, but it is significant if measured against a standard scale every 6 months or year.

Maxwell recommends ranking the daily dozen from 1-12 with #1 your strongest and #12 your weakest. Then discuss your ranking with a friend. Then spending 60 days working on two practices from your top 6 and one from your bottom 6. I had trouble ranking them 1-12, but dividing them into top 6 and bottom 6 was easier. Below see the list of "daily dozen" in the order he covers them in the book. I am starting by working on #'s 2, 4, and 5. However, I find that they all are connected and I can't help but be working on others simultaneously. As part of #5 and in an attempt to not overly annoy my wife with random babblings about the books I am listening to, I will begin posting more frequently in this blog. I also feel that this will show my progress in much the same way Maxwell demonstrated his. Without further ado, the daily dozen:

1. Attitude --> Possibilities
2. Priorities --> Focus
3. Health --> Strength
4. Family --> Stability
5. Thinking --> Advantage
6. Commitment --> Tenacity
7. Finances --> Options
8. Faith --> Peace
9. Relationships --> Fulfillment
10. Generosity --> Significance
11. Values --> Direction
12. Growth --> Potential

Now get out there and live them every day...because Today Matters!

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Winning in the Margins--50 cents = $434,124

Winning in the Margins!! 
Richard Paul Evans wrote the book The Five Lessons a Millionare Taught Me. Lesson four is "Winning in the Margins". It's been several years since I read his book and I don't truly remember how he explained the principle, but this principle is one that has stuck with me and somewhat haunted me. Though this isn't exactly how he meant it, if I remember correctly, I'm beginning to see that we need to "win in the margins" of every part of our life and business. Said another way, it's the great magnitude of little things.
 
I’m convinced that this is the primary reason for business success or failure. Success in business finances and personal finances isn't a matter of doubling income, it's a matter of doubling net profits! This can be done in several ways. A failing business and successful business are usually not that far apart. Understand that if I make $4,000/month and I am saving $400/month. I only need to make $4,400 and save the extra $400 to DOUBLE my retirement income. In other words an increase of 10% in salary can increase your retirement savings by 200%! And if we take the same principle into retirement things get even better! If you can retire on 100% of you retirement savings (and I hope you can, otherwise you probably should think three times about retiring, and then keep working instead) then you can blow the extra on whatever floats your boat (how 'bout buy a boat and then buy what floats it to the little island that you also will own one day) or retire a lot sooner! Or realize that your time is freed up to make some real money and make a real difference in the world and your world.
 
All the little things matter a ton! It’s the last little push that makes all the difference. Your salary pushes you up the hill, the margin pushes you the last 3 feet so you can coast down the other side. Once you've paid for all of your expenses, every dollar you earn goes in your pocket (after Uncle Sam picks your pocket of course).The little things--the extra dollar you earn (Richard Paul Evans' mentor's meaning), the extra dollar you don't spend, the extra smidgen of a percentage point added to a loan, the extra smile you give your customer, the extra perk you give to over-perform, the extra flair you give your marketing, the extra thanks you give your employee, the extra few dollars negotiated in a business contract, the extra $1/hour you negotiate in your salary which equals $2080 if you work full time. If you can’t get an extra dollar try an extra 50 cents for $1040, or even 25 cents for $520. Ask your boss for an extra 25 cents when you are negotiating your salary--who can say no to that?--and you get yourself a nice Christmas bonus of $520. You may even get a Christmas bonus from work too!
 
In addition to skills and attitude (much of which depends on your upbringing and social construct and much of which depends on what you are willing to work for), I bet this largely accounts for the disparity between classes--at least between low and upper middle class. If you and I both live on $50,000 to pay all our bills and you make $50,000 and I make $55,000 and invest the extra $5,000 at 7% per year interest in a Roth IRA from age 20-65 (check out bankrate.com for many easy financial calculators). I will have over $1.5 million dollars when I retire and you will have $0. If I want to double my retirement to over $3 million, I need only make $60,000 per year instead of $55,000. Or perhaps I ask for an extra 25 cents/hour when we get hired and I make $50,520 per year. That 25 cents ($520/year) invested = $158,991 in retirement. You could go on a SWEET 25 cent vacation for $158,991 even factoring in inflation. Or blow it on Christmas for the next 45 years, that works for me too. If you can make an extra 1% (8% instead of 7%) on your interest, you get an extra $58,071. Two simple tiny changes: 25 cents and 8% = $217,062. May as well ask for a dollar, you may get 50 cents and then you’re well on your way to half a million!
 
As a business owner, if you negotiated 25 cents lower, you could give out some sweet $520 bonuses to all your employees every year! Or if you are an owner of a company with 1924 employees, you could pocket an extra $1,000,000 a year. Of course you’d have to consider whether that extra 25 cents would lose you some good employees or morale which may cost you more. But most studies show there are better ways to say “thank you” to your employees than an extra 25 cents an hour...like saying "thank you"…though a $158,991 Christmas retirement check wouldn’t hurt either.