Positive Paranoia

June 1, 2011

As a professional speaker I was in the airport the other day getting ready to fly to Las Vegas. (I’m there more than Cher.) I was relaxing at the President’s Club, eating cheap cheese and old fruit with all my elite-status, high-mileage brethren. The gentleman who sat down beside me wore a baseball cap that read “NYC Police.” He proceeded to tell me he was an undercover cop, so I had to ask, “Then you only wear this hat on your days off?”

I think a great number of people have no idea how they appear to others. You could fill a large psychiatry office with all the books that have been written about how we perceive ourselves. But few books have any real impact in the area of how we are viewed by others. Taking a look at how others see us is not an easy thing to do. However, if we want to have enough personal influence to make all the communication skills and brilliant ideas we have succeed, willingness needs to raise its ugly head. For example, if you sit down to put on your rollerblades and your spouse calls out “Honey, please be careful,” it means you do not skate well! If people look at your artwork and say things like “Wow, you sure used a lot of paint!” or “This would look awesome in the garage,” it means you don’t have any talent.

Getting honest about who you really are to others is crucial to success. It’s a practice common among top businesspeople. In our 10-year survey of 5,000 top professionals, Wynn Solutions found that the most successful – the top 1% – had a realistic view of how others perceived them. This dose of realism serves them well because they can influence others only as far as those others will allow. So if the great self-portrait I’ve painted in my mind far exceeds the exhibit I’ve put on display to the public, I’ll struggle to convince anyone of my genius.

Believing in yourself is great, but you need others also to believe in you if you hope to motivate or lead people in the direction you want. It’s good to have confidence, and certainly self-esteem is important … but if I believed I was OK regardless of society’s opinions, I would be at the grocery store in my underwear.

We sometimes make the mistake of thinking that something’s true if we just believe strongly enough. I believe the speed limit on toll roads should be 100 mph. That’s slower than the no-speed-limit autobahn, so it seems fair to me. But the cop who pulled me over last week believed I should go to jail. So what I believe is often not only irrelevant; it’s illegal!

Is it possible that some things you believe about yourself may not be true? Can you ask a very close, give-it-to-you-straight friend how you come across to others? This may sound to some like an invitation to developing a slight case of paranoia. But spending your life obliviously unaware of what is preventing you from being seen as valuable is much worse. Being worried about not being OK makes you human and relevant. Showing up to the big board meeting in an ’80s dress with shoulder pads could make you (literally) history – especially if you are a man!

Hire  Guest Speaker Garrison Wynn


Get-over your overnight success theories

January 25, 2010

Response to The Washington Post “On Success” question about Scott Brown’s stealth success?
Q: How often do achievements like that of the newly elected Republican senator from Massachusetts seem to materialize out of thin air? Do you believe in the concept of overnight success?

Most overnight success is about working really hard for a while – or, in some cases, most of your life! – and then having one action or set of circumstances throw you over the top. We don’t track people in their careers when they’re doing nothing special. Why would we? Still, most people like the idea of overnight success because we can just wait for someone we’ve never heard of to emerge to a position of success and then we can say, “This guy came out of nowhere and now he’s big time; maybe I can do that even though I have no experience and I’m the living embodiment of mediocrity!”

My point (and I’m pretty sure I just made it, but because I’m a professional speaker I’ll do it again) is that, to a great extent, overnight success is a myth. It’s more than extraordinarily rare for someone to be working at Burger King one day and running for governor the next. Even VP candidate Sarah Palin was an actual governor, not just a housewife we found in the wilderness! Now, maybe the entertainment world can fool us because some singer we’ve never heard of competes in a contest and suddenly has fame and success. But none of those people started singing yesterday. … OK, clearly some did, but Simon Cowell or some other mean British guy usually crushes their dreams before their lack of talent can infect the public.

As far as Brown goes, he may be someone to watch; he has some presidential qualities about him (which means he is not goofy or overtly fake and looks like the winner of a central casting call for politician-looking guys). If he works hard for a few years and plays his cards right, he might eventually become an overnight success in the White House.

Read more from “On Success” pannelist at the Washington Post


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