Why You Need to Stop Relying on Your Strengths
Liz Kislik
Contributor to Harvard Business Review, Forbes. Management consultant. Executive coach. TEDx speaker.
If you’re new to my work, I hope you find it helpful. You can learn more about me and what I do by clicking?here .
The other day, I gave a leader feedback about how to develop one of his team members, prepared for a coaching session with a different executive, and sat in on a leadership team meeting with a third. These three interactions, with three very different people, sounded a recurring theme:?When we rely too much on our historical strengths and patterns, we sometimes avoid the new work we need to do?and wind up impeding our continuing success.
Even good, solid beliefs and performance can trip us up. Here are some examples:
First, Identify Your Patterns…
It’s so hard for us to give up the behaviors we believe have worked well for us in the past, Marshall Goldsmith explains in his book?What Got You Here Won’t Get You There, that we should stop writing “To-Do” lists and start writing “To-Stop” lists instead.
So?how can you recognize when you’re getting in your own way, and shift to approaches that generate better results? How can you decide what to put on your To-Stop list — and how can you make sure you actually cut out those unsuccessful behaviors, or at least behave less automatically?
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Start by talking to yourself kindly but with a sense of detachment about what’s going on.?Next, conduct an “internal review” of yourself, or ask a colleague or friend to help you do it. That doesn’t mean finding someone to be an accountability partner or play drill sergeant to your sloppy recruit. It’s about paying attention and noticing where you’re not getting the results you say you want, or when your own behavior is contributing to your lack of success.
Now Break Them!
Once you’ve finished your review, use these two thought exercises to get yourself off the dime and onto a better path:
It can be tough to hypothesize about how you could do things differently from what comes naturally, and even tougher to contemplate truly changing. You may actually have to think about someone else who has strengths that are very different from yours — and how they would use those strengths in your situation —before you can see what really needs to change in you.
It’s counterintuitive and definitely uncomfortable, but?by breaking your automatic patterns of past responses, you can be more thoughtful about how to respond now?—?as well as how to develop a more complete toolkit for your future responses. Amazingly, this may lead to building completely new strengths.?
An earlier version of this post appeared on?Workplace Wisdom. ?If you’d like to stay in touch,?you can?sign up for my weekly blog updates and my monthly email newsletter?here .