Commitment. This is the most important word in my
vocabulary. When I make a commitment, it means that I will absolutely, without
a doubt, accomplish what I promised to. Commitment is an absolute. The words maybe, might and try do not belong anywhere near the word commitment.
I spent the first 3-1/2 years of my professional life in a
sales organization - a very intense sales organization. We stood in front of a
room of our peers every single Monday morning at 7:00am and made a COMMITMENT
that we were to accomplish for the upcoming week. If anybody heard you use the
word “try”, they would challenge you.
“Are you going to actually hit your
commitment this week or are you going to ‘try’”, was a very common
response. We eliminated the word “try”
from our vocabularies. “Trying” is a
pre-meditated excuse. It leaves you an out. Don’t leave yourself an out. When
you make a commitment, you do absolutely everything in your power to honor it.
If I showed up to a sales meeting having missed my prior
week’s commitment (which happened on occasion), the questions started. “Why did you stand up here last week and say
you were going to do [something] and NOT do it?” How is that for
accountability? It didn’t matter if there was a good reason for missing your
commitment, there was always something more that you could have done to
accomplish it. I remember being a college intern and one of my sales managers
asking the group what type of person we wanted to be. He asked us if we wanted
to be one who said we would do something and actually did it, or if we wanted
to be a person who constantly made promises that we didn’t honor. That was an
extremely powerful question. It really made me think. I made a decision in my
first couple weeks that I didn’t just want to be a person whose word meant
something. I wanted to be a person whose word was absolute gold. I have a
vision statement that I read aloud every morning and one of the most important
affirmations on that sheet is the following, taken directly from my vision
statement: “I am a commitment-oriented
person and the second I say I will do something, it gets done. My word is gold.
I never make promises that I cannot keep and people admire the power of my
words”.
Two things happen when your mind shifts to commitment-mode, as I call it. First, you start really
thinking of how you answer requests for your time and energy. If someone asks
you if you can get something done by tomorrow, and you can’t, you speak up.
Instead of just agreeing, you give a realistic timeframe and set an expectation
for the requester. This puts you in a very professional light. The second thing
that happens, is you give yourself and everyone else a realistic timeframe
and/or measurable goal or expectation for an accomplishment. It’s really easy
to confidently say something like this: “John,
I am not going to be able to get that proposal to you tomorrow, but, I will
have it on your desk at noon on Wednesday.” You just defended your own schedule
and your own time, suggested an alternative, and gave a reasonable deadline to
be expected of yourself and all parties involved are aware of it. It’s a
win-win for everybody. The more you do this, the more people will begin to
respect your word. ***BONUS IDEA*** If you really want to impress somebody, do
everything you can to get the aforementioned “proposal” to “John [made-up]”
prior to the expectation you set! Boom! That’s much better than promising Tuesday
and being a day late.
So asking you the tough question a sales manager asked me in
the first month of my professional life: What type of person do you want to be?
If you’re not where you would like to be – work at it. This is a skill that can
be learned by anybody. I was fortunate in being in an environment where this
was the most prevalent theme. It still takes practice – like anything worth
learning in life. I think deep down, everybody wants to be the person that
people say, “WOW! When he/she says
something, or makes a promise, it ABSOLUTELY, gets done. You can totally count
on him/her!” Challenge yourself to get better at this. It is a skill that
will set you apart from your peers and build a heck of a reputation for
yourself. Better yet, set a COMMITMENT, to get better at committing. I know you
knew that was coming ;)
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