The One Thing High Achievers Do Differently

The One Thing High Achievers Do Differently

I’ve been talking a lot lately about ways we sabotage our goals. If you haven’t yet seen my video please watch it here. It hit a chord with thousands of professionals. Why? Because we spend an awful lot of time strategizing our goals and dreams, but very little energy contemplating the forces that sabotage those dreams.

True increased performance comes from pushing through pain and discomfort, not simply from vowing to change. High achievers learn to move past annoyances and push through pain. Think of it this way. Like an athlete needs to move through pain to make her muscles stronger, we must move through emotional, psychological and spiritual pain to become wiser and more successful.

One of the reasons less than ten percent of people never reach their goals is because the pain of rejection, uncertainty, overwhelm and discomfort becomes unbearable.

You will be rejected.

You will face ridicule.

You will feel resistance at every level.

Progress hurts.

Last year, I published my first book after three years of rejection, signed on new clients from five different verticals and starred in a documentary film produced by the largest CRM company on the planet. Was it painful at times? You betcha. Was it worth it?

The best year of my life.

So, if you’re determined to manifest something different this year, or what we now call “crushing it,” you need to push to crush. And I don’t mean the kind of pushing where you ignore your family and friends. Life and work aren’t two adversaries battling for our limited attention.

In fact, the opposite is true. When we have meaningful, purposeful work, we radiate optimism and that optimism will fuel happiness and productivity in every area of our life.

At the end of 2018, when you look back, your success is going to be the result of how much you pushed through the pain. The pain of rejection, the pain of uncertainly, the pain of restraint, the pain of a bruised ego and the agony of failure.

MY ADVICE? DO THESE THREE THINGS:

#1: Do That Which You’re Most Afraid Of

The greater the resistance the harder you must push through. One of my favorite books is The War of Artby Steven Pressfield. The major theme is that when attempting any worthwhile endeavor—anything you’d love to accomplish—you will encounter resistance. It’s often easier not to try than to risk failure. What separates professionals from everyone else is that even though they are fearful of something, they never resist trying everything. They do whatever it takes. “Resistance is directly proportional to love,” writes Pressfield. “If you’re feeling massive Resistance, the good news is there’s tremendous love there, too. The more Resistance you feel, the more important your un-manifested goal, enterprise/project is to you.”

#2: When a Project Seems Too Big, Break it Down

Make the large things small, the smaller things smaller and complete one next step right now. Assign redundant tasks to a helper. Delegate. I started in sales in my twenties well before the Internet, and well before the first CRM. I learned that by hiring an assistant to book calls for me, I could make an extra $90 per hour by focusing the majority of my time talking directly to buyers. What can you delegate?

#3: When You Lose the Deal, don’t Lose the Lesson

We don’t learn from failure by beating ourselves up and turning it into a catastrophe, we learn from failure by facing it and gleaning lessons from it. Isolate what happened. Separate what just happened and what could happen in the future, and for goodness sakes don’t turn it into a refrain of “I’m a failure, my life is terrible and I always screw up.”

You don’t have to push yourself to a new level, every day, but you do have to push yourself. You have to step beyond the boundaries and the pain of your last year to achieve your best year.

Happy 2018!


About Shari Levitin

Shari Levitin helps sales teams bridge the gap between beating quota and selling with an authentic heartfelt approach.  As the founder of the Shari Levitin Group, Shari has helped create over 1 billion dollars in increased revenue for companies in over 40 countries. Shari is the bestselling author of Heart and Sell: 10 Universal Truths Every Salesperson Needs to Know, a contributor to Forbes, CEO Magazine, and Huffington Post. 

Carole Smyser

Documentation: Development/Maintenance, Project Management, Refresh

6 年

Thanks for the article! Great insight from someone who's "living it" now!

Mario. M. Martinez Jr.

CEO at FlyMSG.io | The World's Best Productivity App Saving Sales Reps, BDRs/SDRs, Biz Owners, Recruiters, Customer Service & Success 20+ Hours per Month | Try FlyMSG.io It’s Free! | Host of The Modern Selling Podcast

6 年

Boom! Shari Levitin love all of the points specifically "We don’t learn from failure by beating ourselves up and turning it into a catastrophe, we learn from failure by facing it and gleaning lessons from it." so true. dust yourself off, learn, grow and sell more!!!

Wendy Gertridge

B2B Content Writer for Technology & SaaS Companies ?? SEO-optimized blogs, case studies, sales pages & more ?? LinkedIn Profile Optimization ?? LinkedIn Ghostwriting & Consulting ?? Dog Lover

6 年

Thank you for the inspiration, Shari. I needed this. Great article!

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Warren Smith

Executive Vice President

6 年

This is such a good article Shari!

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