The One Thing You Need to Create Wow Experiences - Michael Hyatt
The One Thing You Need to Create Wow Experiences
How to Overcome the 5 Obstacles to Excellence
Today’s marketplace is more noisy
and competitive than ever. If you want to capture—and keep—your
audience’s attention, you need to build wow into whatever you’re offering. But that’s harder than it sounds sometimes.
Several years ago, when I was CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers, I had a
conversation with one of our editors. He had just finished a new
manuscript from one of our biggest authors. I asked, “So what did you
think?”
“Honestly?” he replied, slightly hesitant. I assured him that I wanted the truth, and he gave it to me. “Not great,” he said.
My heart sank. We had invested a lot of money in this book and were counting on significant sales from it. “Okay,” I said, now a little apprehensive, “what’s wrong with it?”
“I dunno,” said the editor. “It just feels like the same ol’ same ol’. I didn’t really see anything new here that he hasn’t said before.”
“That’s a problem,” I said, stating the obvious. “This project is too important to settle for anything less than wow.”
I almost always get to this point in a project, the fork in the road. I have a choice—you have a choice. Either we can settle for good enough or press on toward wow. In my experience, one or more of these five obstacles tempt us to settle.
See if any of these ring true for you:
Whatever the reason, if we are going to create wow experiences, we must become courageous.
If we are going to create wow experiences, we must become courageous - Michael Hyatt
You have to listen to your heart, take stand for excellence, and remind yourself of what’s at stake. This is a personal, psychological bridge we need to cross. The experience we want to create is on the other side of the ravine, and there’s no other way to get there from here.
PS : This Article is written by Michael Hyatt - Your Virtual Mentor and it is published in his website - Article
“Honestly?” he replied, slightly hesitant. I assured him that I wanted the truth, and he gave it to me. “Not great,” he said.
My heart sank. We had invested a lot of money in this book and were counting on significant sales from it. “Okay,” I said, now a little apprehensive, “what’s wrong with it?”
“I dunno,” said the editor. “It just feels like the same ol’ same ol’. I didn’t really see anything new here that he hasn’t said before.”
“That’s a problem,” I said, stating the obvious. “This project is too important to settle for anything less than wow.”
I almost always get to this point in a project, the fork in the road. I have a choice—you have a choice. Either we can settle for good enough or press on toward wow. In my experience, one or more of these five obstacles tempt us to settle.
See if any of these ring true for you:
- We lack time. The deadline looms. We scramble to
get the product out the door. We have to wrap up so we can get to the
next client. We simply don’t have the time to give our best effort. So
we let it go. Half-baked. Before the job is really done.
-
We lack resources. We’d like to do a better job. We
sincerely want to take it to the next level. But we just don’t have the
money or the people-power. We rationalize, “I did the best I could do with the resources I had.” And again, we let it go and turn our attention to the next project or client in the queue.
-
We lack experience. We just don’t know how to do
what we know needs to be done. Our vision exceeds our know-how. We know
what the product or service could deliver, but we don’t have
the knowledge or the skills to get us there. So, we settle for something
less than our vision demands.
-
We lack resolve or conviction. Too often, we
acquiesce to the committee. Perhaps we’re a little unsure of ourselves.
“Everyone else seems to like it,” we say to ourselves. “Maybe they’re
right. There are a lot of smart people in this room. Just let it go!”
And so we do. We succumb to the collective judgment of the group and
dial back our own vision for what could be.
-
We lack courage. The biggest obstacle of all is fear.
If we’re honest, we must admit that the previous four obstacles are
mainly excuses. If we had enough courage, we would find the time, the
resources or the experience. We would stand up to the committee. We
wouldn’t settle for something less than wow.
Whatever the reason, if we are going to create wow experiences, we must become courageous.
If we are going to create wow experiences, we must become courageous - Michael Hyatt
You have to listen to your heart, take stand for excellence, and remind yourself of what’s at stake. This is a personal, psychological bridge we need to cross. The experience we want to create is on the other side of the ravine, and there’s no other way to get there from here.
PS : This Article is written by Michael Hyatt - Your Virtual Mentor and it is published in his website - Article
No comments