It’s December and the time when prospects go mad and deals inevitably stretch out to January! Hold on to your sanity, because this is a great time to plan for success in the next 12 months. If you’re in the office over the Christmas period and there’s not much going on, get your house in order, do the things you have to do, then take time to reflect on your professional and personal year. This is how you will arrive at the vision of the person you want to be this time next year.
I know we’ve said it time and time again, and it sounds trite, but there is a lot of truth in the old mantra that, if you don’t know where you’re going, you can’t know how to get there. Here are some helpful links to inspire your planning of sales and personal success for 2010 and some advice on how to make the most from high-impact New Year’s resolutions.
- Are you motivated to get the best from next year? A Productive Seller favourite, ZenHabits answers your top 20 questions on getting motivated and overcoming bad habits.
- Are the people around you helping or hindering your success? Now is the time to decide.
- Think about changing your working processes (trust me, process is a critical success factor, the other is activity) and becoming a more productive seller.
- Take an opportunity to think about your brand and how it is affecting your success.
- Explore ways to improve your sales effectiveness that you may have overlooked in the past.
- Get above the clutter.
High-impact New Years Resolutions
What you are looking to create for your New Years resolution is a list of top level projects (like “expand into European market”) that are underpinned by actionable items (like “write advert for French speaking telemarketer”). If you can’t sit down and do it, it isn’t an actionable item. e.g. “Write Novel” is not an actionable item, it is a project. “Research Babynames.com for main character first name” is an actionable item: providing you have the time, energy and resources available, you can begin an actionable item immediately.
The reason I mention this and underpin it with repeated examples, is that so many resolutions are broken because they contain no substance, hence are not actionable. “Get Fit” is far easier a resolution to break than “Attend gym on Monday and Thursday evenings for 1 hour workout”, providing you have – of course – defined the items that will make up your workout!
Essentially, start broad and then focus on details. Keep the above at the front of your mind and you can’t go wrong.
Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all of you.
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