Staying in the zone - A word on governance
Staying in the zone
The power of
momentum in business.
By Carl Bates
On our trip up Kilimanjaro our Tanzanian guides kept
on repeating their most important advice: pole-pole. Translated from Swahili
this means ‘slowly-slowly’ and as you ascend this majestic mountain you soon
realise that this advice may just save your life. We saw many climbers who had
rushed up the mountain, only to be carried down on stretchers in a race to
reach the hospital in time. I have witnessed the same scenario in business – go
too fast and you run the risk of fatal injury, proceed too slowly and you may
never reach your goal.
In The Law of Rhythm, one of the laws in my book The Laws of Extreme Business Success, I speak about the critical
role of momentum and ‘right timing’. Achieving the right balance of timing and
rhythm can be very challenging, but when you do, you create a wave of momentum
on which you and your team can ride. Having momentum in your business enables
you to do so much more. If you are stationary, the effort required just to get
moving is immense. Conversely, too much change or change at a pace that does
not match what the business requires, will destroy your team’s ability to keep
moving. The Law of Rhythm therefore is
about getting into the zone and staying there.
Rhythm is created through the routines, habits and
cyclical activities in your business. Stops and starts kill your rhythm,
whereas regularity and consistency build your capability to sustain the right
pace. In SMEs, it is rare to find the kinds of routines that build sustainable
rhythm. Activities that create rhythm include regular performance appraisals,
monthly management reports and meetings, consistent daily start and end times
for business operation, team member payments always occurring on the same day
every month, accurate financials delivered within a week after the month-end
and any other regular routine that creates measured cycles of activity. SME
business owners and managers therefore need to implement the kinds of habits
that establish rhythm, constantly moving away from a ‘flying by the seat of
your pants’ mentality.
Right timing is also a critical part of this law. It is
about recognising that there is a critical moment for everything that happens
in your business. Taking action outside that time window can result in a fatal
error or a lost opportunity. It is always easy to pin-point the ‘right time’ in
hindsight, but to take action in the moment requires that you develop your own
guidance system.
Daniel Hatfield is a founding director of Edge Growth,
an enterprise development company for small business that facilitates the
process of corporate businesses investing in small businesses, as part of their
corporate BEE scorecard. Hatfield has observed just how critical timing it
right is for their small business clients and he likens it to the game of golf where
a good swing requires the right balance of components, performed in the right
sequence at the right time. You might be doing the right things in your swing, yet
if it is out of sequence your output will be less than ideal and you will not be
able to hit the sweet spot.
Hatfield describes how this applies to the businesses
they mentor: “From a business perspective, there are so many things that are
cyclical and require just the right timing. In an SME the balance of resourcing
is tight and there are so many balls in the air at the same time, that the
margin for error is negligible. Paying attention to your timing is a critical element
of business success.”
In my role at Sirdar, it is always interesting to
observe just how critical a governance process is for an SME in applying this
law. At the heart of effective governance is a board calendar or annual plan
that maps out the themes the business will focus on every month. The planning
and focused review of the business from this structured perspective ensures
that all aspects of the business are given due consideration and that the right
amount of change and movement is brought into the business on a regular basis.
The governance process also requires that reporting and management practices
are stepped up to ensure that the right information reaches the board at the
right time. While establishing new routines is challenging initially, the true
value of rhythm becomes obvious when they develop into organisational habits.
Getting into the zone of extreme business success is
therefore not always about doing something exceptional, but rather about doing
it at a time and pace that is relevant to what your business and team requires
to keep moving forward. If you keep tripping up, perhaps you are going too
fast. If you feel your business is not moving forward quickly enough, consider
how your routines and commitment to regularity can mobilise your team into
action.
>>>>>>>>>>>>COMPETITION>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
ABOUT
THE BOOK
The groundbreaking game rules contained in this book have inspired
thousands of business owners to embark on the journey towards Extreme Business
Success. As small and medium business owners, we often make achieving outrageous
success far harder than it should be. If you know the rules of the business
game, it’s so much easier to achieve success in every aspect of your business.
If you are ready to take this exciting step you can obtain your copy of The Laws of Extreme Business Success at
selected book stores, on Amazon Kindle or directly from Sirdar.
In this
book you will discover:
·
the 12 Laws of Extreme Business Success, and how
by understanding and applying them you can turn your ‘mind’ into ‘millions’
·
that the bigger your ‘promise’, the bigger your
business can become
·
that to achieve success, you must move your
passion from practicing your craft to creating an enterprise
·
why the right timing and rhythm creates momentum
for your business, and how you can use this momentum to achieve Extreme
Business Success
·
that when you take yourself and your business too
seriously, you lose the pleasure of the journey
·
the importance of playing to win and leading your
field
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Carl Bates, Founder of the Sirdar Global Group, is a leading
international entrepreneur, speaker and mentor who is passionate about rapidly
growing small to medium businesses and empowering communities through
enterprise. Growing up in a family of entrepreneurs has inspired and enabled
Carl to transform the attitudes and practices of business owners all over the
world. He challenges business owners to create a business legacy they can be
proud of.
HIGHLIGHTS
Rhythm is created
through the routines, habits and cyclical activities in your business.
The governance
process also requires that reporting and management practices are stepped up to
ensure that the right information reaches the board at the right time.
Getting into the
zone of extreme business success is not always about doing something exceptional,
but rather about doing it at a time and pace that is relevant to your business.
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