Unleash Personal & Organizational Exceptionalism

Unleash Personal & Organizational Exceptionalism

Remember back to when you were in school and you brought a grade card home.

Let’s say you had 3 A’s, a B and a C+. Now, imagine the conversation you knew you were about to have with your parent when you got home. Where was the conversation likely to go? What were you told to focus on? For most of us, the conversation quickly went past the A’s and the B and went right to “You need to bring up that C+.” It isn’t that we aren’t excited about the A’s, it’s that our brain is negatively biased, and we can’t help but focus on the weakness.

Focusing on weaknesses is a practice that is killing personal and organizational exceptionalism and keeping us from increasing happiness in our life, our work and our compensation. We should be ignoring our C+ entirely and focusing on finding our A+.

As a culture we are obsessed with improving our weaknesses almost as if we are afraid to admit we have any weaknesses at all. Instead, it seems as though we value the idea of a well-rounded person, which is admirable, but people aren’t biologically engineered to be well-rounded. We are given certain advantages and disadvantages in our DNA. For some of us, source code just makes sense, or some can do complex math problems in their heads. Some can easily dunk a basketball, hit a curve ball or some of us can just sit down at a piano and play. We may not understand why some things come easy to us, they just do. It is our DNA manifesting itself and we shouldn’t ignore it.

We are not taught to be exceptional; we are taught to be mediocre

Our culture and primary educational institutions have essentially taught us to spend our time and education to improve our weaknesses in order to meet a floating status quo of mediocrity. If we get an A, we have satisfied that standard and we should move on to the next weakness to improve. This process of weakness improvement might produce some measurable form of success in building a well-rounded individual, but it is contrary to our biology.

As parents, mentors and business leaders, we need to begin to abandon the ‘straight A’ mentality and focus on finding the A+. The A+ is all that matters. By focusing on what we were biologically engineered to do, we will provide the most value to society, contribute the most to our community, and maximize our wealth and happiness.

Your C+ is unlikely to play a role in your personal or professional future at all, you’re A+ will define both.

Like people, organizations aren’t well-rounded either

Like you, your organization has its own characteristics in its DNA. Organizations operate similarly to how people operate. After all, organizations are amalgamations of people. They have their own personalities, language, moral code, etc. So, organizations aren’t well-rounded either.

What is your organization best at, that is, what is your organization’s A+? In all likelihood, your answer to this question is where you make the most profit – which is not a coincidence. So why do many organizations create unnecessary capabilities, products and service lines that don’t reinforce core organizational strength? It is the same reason we tend to continually improve our personal weaknesses – the foolish pursuit of being well-rounded.

Just like highly productive and exceptional people, exceptional organizations know their A+ and it shows. These exceptional organizations are typically highly niched, are seen as thought leaders in their respective industries and enjoy market-leading profit margins. They don’t participate in economic downturns or recessions. They attract the best talent, have very little organizational waste and they say ‘no’ to opportunities more than they say ‘yes.’

Creating an exceptional organization

Even though it is painful, in order to build a sustainable and highly profitable organization, you must eliminate ALL of your weak product and service lines and direct those resources to turning your most promising A into an A+. There are 2 basic things you need to do to help identify your most promising A:

  1. Obsess over your financials. Make sure you are itemizing every revenue stream and that you thoroughly understand the indirect costs associated with them. Many low-margin lines are allowed to continue because they are evaluated on their face without understanding the opportunity cost of their efforts. How many great people do you have in low-margin areas? What would happen with the additional capital and labor if you killed a weak line and focused on creating an exceptional line?
  2. Study your customers and prospects. Your customers will reveal your most promising A and tell you how to turn it into an A+ so you can refine and exploit its full potential in the market. Your prospects will give you a sense of relativity on your direct and indirect competitors and allow you to understand how elastic your pricing can be if you turn an ‘A’ line into an ‘A+’ line.

You must abandon the mindset of straight A mediocrity and embrace your exceptionalism. Your industry is being more commoditized every day and it is inevitable that niched competitors will start flanking you and you will be forced to compete on price with each passing year. The sooner you understand your A+, the sooner you can unleash your personal and organizational exceptionalism on the world.

Mercedes Givens, CFP?

Partner / Private Wealth Manager at Creative Planning, LLC

3 年

My take away: I’m not engineered to be well rounded! ?? sidebar, my waistline needs to get that memo ??

Cathy Busch

Account Manager

3 年

Really enjoyed this, thank you!

Steve C Johns

Chief Executive Officer at Heartland Heroes, Inc.

3 年

Grant is an innovative thinker with an exceptional view of leadership. Thank you, Grant for this post.

Gregg Brown

Soldier, Economist, Educator, Farmer

3 年

Dude, we need to turn this into a CAPS experience...

Nick Giuliani

On a mission to uplift communities by reshaping how financial decisions are made.

3 年

This is absolutely incredible and so true. Thank you for the share Grant!

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