3?? Stop the shiny object syndrome: Persistence wins in business

3?? Stop the shiny object syndrome: Persistence wins in business

This tip applies to any business leader who feels stuck in a cycle of trying new initiatives without seeing significant results. You've implemented different sales and marketing strategies, experimented with production methods, and explored various ventures, but the needle isn't moving.

Problem or challenge

Many leaders fall prey to the "Shiny Object Syndrome," constantly chasing the next big thing in the hopes of finding a magic bullet for success.?

Complexity

The challenge lies in recognising that sometimes, the problem isn't the strategy itself, but rather the execution. It's easier to jump ship and try something new than to analyse what's not working with the current approach and refine it.

Solution

The counter-intuitive solution: persistence. Instead of constantly switching gears,? focus on mastering one strategy at a time.


  1. Choose a strategy: Select a core strategy that aligns with your business goals, whether it's email marketing, cold calling, a specific production method, or a marketing campaign.
  2. Test and analyse: Implement the strategy and actively track its performance. Analyse the results to identify areas for improvement.
  3. Learn and iterate: Don't be discouraged by initial setbacks. Use the data to understand what's not working and refine your approach.
  4. Repeat and refine: Keep testing, learning, and improving your chosen strategy. Over time, you'll become highly skilled at execution, maximising the strategy's effectiveness.

Benefits

Here's why persistence pays off:

  • Mastery: By focusing on one strategy, you and your team become experts at executing it. This leads to higher quality results and a greater return on investment.
  • Focus: A persistent approach fosters a culture of focus within your organisation. Everyone is aligned towards a common goal, leading to more efficient operations.
  • Momentum: As you refine your strategy and see results, it creates positive momentum. This motivates your team and fuels further success.

Why it works

Imagine trying to learn a new language. If you constantly switch between different languages, you'll never become fluent in any. The same applies to business strategies.? Persistence allows you to develop the deep understanding and expertise needed to truly unlock a strategy's potential.

Measurement

Track key metrics relevant to your chosen strategy. For example, if it's email marketing, monitor open rates, click-through rates, and conversion rates.? Use A/B testing to compare different versions of your strategy and identify what resonates best with your audience.

My story

I simply can’t refer this back to a source. It’s simply something I have learnt the hard way.? And it’s something I’ve found very hard to communicate to business colleagues as well. So often I’ve faced the situation where colleagues have been motivated by sales people to see the solution to our sales and marketing challenge as doing something new, not getting better at doing what we were already doing.

I completely understand why that happens and clearly I’m not arguing one should never try something new. I’m simply highlighting that there is a potential subconscious reinforcement going on between your own business leader brain desiring a solution and sales people and businesses that have an incentive to promote their solution as the answer to the challenge. So all the temptation is to do something different rather than to stick with and do the hard work of improving the existing approach.


Stop chasing shiny objects!?

Focus on mastering one core strategy at a time. Test, learn, refine, and iterate. Persistence and continuous improvement are the hallmarks of true business success.

Thanks for reading. If it was useful please comment or share so others see it too.

Subscribe to see next week’s edition on rethinking sales motivation.

Ring the bell on my profile to see more actionable insights and practical thoughts, tips and tools for operational business leaders running adolescent businesses

Save time as I share shortcuts that work and deadends that don’t based on my own real practical experience as a business leader working with business leaders.



Jessica Wontor

I help coaching and consulting companies with generate more high quality leads and convert more leads into customers by developing marketing strategies that attract, engage, and convert clients.

1 个月

I totally agree. It is VERY easy to chase a shiny object, but long term, you will end up with a bunch of trinkets and not a lot to show for it.

回复
Joy Lugard

I Help Founders Build Authority & Fill Their Pipeline with Ideal Clients through Lead Gen, Content, & PR

1 个月

Absolutely agree, Bob Bradley I usually give myself at least 100 days before making any hasty decisions, and it has had a positive impact on my decision-making.

回复
Nikki Bush, Business Speaker

Leading the way to increased team performance and bottom line impact

1 个月

Love Bob on Business! And Shiny Object Syndrome is a real thing.

回复
Andrew Pain

Motivational, Mental Health Speaker, Podcaster & CPD accredited. Talking about men's mental health, testosterone, masculinity, burnout, resilience, psychological safety, fatherhood, imposter syndrome, work/life balance.

1 个月

completely agree Bob Bradley - last week, one of my social media videos was on this very topic. For me, accepting that 'game-changers' don't exist in business, that there is no magical rescue or single catalyst, has helped me to be more measured with new initiatives/innovations. I still consider them, but at all times, I appreciate that even if the new shiny thing is useful, it would only ever be a marginal gain - and you need lots of marginal gains, spread over time, in order to create the success you want.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录