Sunday, March 31, 2013

Give thanks and be grateful

"You should count your blessings," OE advised.

Today is Easter Sunday. A day for some quiet time to give thanks.

As individuals we are all so unique and different, but we are bound together by a common thread - regardess of our age or the colour of our skin of the city we live in - we all yearn for happiness.

In our search for happiness, we often do things that we think will make us happy. Some of these may offer moments of happiness, but they end too soon and our quest for lasting happiness continues.

Today is Easter Sunday. A day for some quiet time to give thanks, and be grateful for all that we have and all that the future holds.




Friday, March 29, 2013

Set out to enjoy

One of the areas of the Observer Assessment for Avril which I had to rate was "perfectionism"

I find that if I set out to enjoy, I actually do a better job than if I was determined to make it perfect.

As I keep reminding ACE - that if he sets the dials of his mind to enjoy the classes as much as he can, I bet the results will surprise him. I try to get my team to do their work with as much enjoyment as possible. Through experience, there would be an improvement in their performance.

Setting out to achieve perfection, by contrast, will become stressful and demoralizing. The end result will probably be discouragement.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Be authentic

One key message which was repeatedly mentioned at the recent SRM conference was about being authentic.

Mean what you say and say what you mean. Appearing to hide something breeds skepticism.  Being candid, whether it is about business performance levels or hard economic conditions, puts your team members on the same page and builds trust.

Some leaders withhold bad news because they are more worried about being liked than dealing with issues that affect everyone. Those who are frank and transparent become trusted, and the team remains unified. Frankness and authenticity inspires.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Corporate athlete

I completed 4 workouts on my abs today and cycled for 16 minutes on a stationery bike. Shirley yogas. Clarice cycles. Minte runs.

We've all heard the basic rules of peak performance: get the proper amount of rest, eat a good diet and exercise. Somehow many top leaders think they do not need what the rest of us mere mortals must have to be at their best. Virtually many whom I know drive on relentlessly - irrespective of how their energy levels work.

As I type this, the manchester united vs reading game is about to kick off. These professional footballers are extra-attentive to what works and what doesn't work in terms of driving themselves. No athlete would dream of driving hard all the time. They know they would risk burnout.

After all, we only have only one life. Without our health, we have nothing.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Success meaningless without failure

Marriott international gave me a Seizing the Future award in Washington DC last month.

That was a high point in my career and life. That achievement and recognition came at the end of a year when I'd endured many low points.

I strongly believe that if we really want to perform well, we can't be conscientious - it prevents us from thinking like an artist. To make a mistake and then worry about it and sit down and figure out what went wrong and spend the rest of our Ives apologising for it is lack of confidence.

Many I know are concerned with perfection. Conservative ones are quick to calculate risks and get terrified by them. They look at me like I'm a madman.

Why do some look at failure, disappointment and loss as the unthinkable, instead of regarding them as among life's most fundamental experiences? If you've never been discouraged in life, I know one thing for sure about you - you're not a very big dreamer. You can't enjoy bright days without the frame of reference of darker ones; success is meaningless without failure

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Don't just hope...

Less than a week ago, my Uncle Lawrence died after an 8-month battle with the tyrant we call cancer. He was extraordinary in the very ordinary things of life. The world is richer, and a better place, because he lived.

There is a memory that refuses to leave me. With my cousin, I was a pallbearer - pushing his coffin in the church. A couple of images etched themselves in my mind at that moment.

The last image I have of him, is one of him laughing at my home during the Chinese New year reunion dinner. Another image is one of his excitement when we were planning that reunion dinner on Chirstmas Day in Kuala Lumpur. I treasure those memories now that he is gone.

His dying has taught me one lesson: take time to get to know the people you love, deeply, for one day they will no longer be there, and when that day comes we will all wish we had known them better. Great relationships don't come to those who hope for them. Hope is worthless unless coupled with real effort. Great relationships belong to those who decide to put in effort and make them a priority. Don't just hope...decide!