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Sunday, January 12, 2025

Turn Hope into A Strategic Advantage in 2025

 


 

 

 

 

“Always predict the worst,” the satirist Tom Lehrer once said, “and you’ll be hailed as a prophet.”

Lehrer made that remark ironically, but some leaders treat similar ideas as gospel. Famously, Andrew Grove, the CEO of Intel, praised leaders who constantly focus on what might go wrong as their industry evolved.

In work and life today, we pay close attention to what such people say. Negativity attracts attention: Each negative word in a news headline, for example, has been shown to increase the clicks it receives by two percent. Negativity is also often understood as intelligence. In one classic study, critical book reviews were rated as smarter than laudatory ones. In another study, when participants were instructed to appear competent, they responded by acting prickly and removing positive language from their emails. Reflecting on these sorts of behaviors, Teresa Amabile, of Harvard Business School, has noted, “Only pessimism sounds profound. Optimism sounds superficial.”

Focusing on what might go wrong can help organizations stay safe, of course. According to the “smoke detector principle,” false alarms are a feature, not a bug, of our threat-defense system — they might detect threats where none exist, but that’s only because they’re sensitive enough to catch the real threats. In evolutionary terms, being hyper-defensive has helped us survive.

But adopting a permanently defensive posture can diminish you. Think of what happens in sports: If you play a game fearfully and focus simply on not losing, you’ll narrow your focus, which in turn will reduce your creativity and make it hard for you to recognize opportunities. You may avoid losing, but you probably won’t win much.

Hope provides a bulwark against this self-defeating behavior — and if leveraged appropriately, it can be a powerful force in helping organizations thrive. Saying that might sound squishy or pollyannish, but that’s only because most people misunderstand the concept.

What hope is

Behavioral science has shown that hope can power positive outcomes for both people and organizations. Here’s why:

Hope is more active than optimism.

If you’re optimistic, you believe that the future will turn out well. Optimists tend to be happy but complacent, waiting patiently for a bright tomorrow. Hopeful people, on the other hand, believe that things might turn out well — but they also believe that in that context of uncertainty, actions matter. Being hopeful doesn’t just involve imagining positive outcomes, in other words. It also involves willpower (a desire to bring about hoped for outcomes), and ‘waypower’ (the charting of a clear path to achieve them).

Because hopeful people make plans for and work toward the future they want, they’re more effective than optimists. In one study, hope, but not optimism, predicted performance among law students. In another study, hopeful executives from Fortune 100 companies performed more effectively at work and produced m

Hope ignites virtuous cycles at work.

Hopeful individuals work hard and think broadly. A recent meta-study of more than 11,000 employees found that hope was correlated with wellbeing and positive morale at work. Hope also encourages virtuous cycles among colleagues. In a 2024 study, workers who felt supported — especially by their supervisors — experienced greater 'waypower' and used that power for good. In doing so, they grew more committed to their organizations and helped their colleagues more frequently.

In many workplaces, these cycles of kindness can feel miles away, especially when negative bias drives conversation. In my lab we’ve found that people gossip three times more often about selfish people than helpful ones. At work, that sort of gossip makes people defensive and chilly, encouraging them, for example, to hoard knowledge instead of share it. An office full of people who focus only on potential threats might dodge disaster from the outside but in doing so create it among themselves.

Hope is a learnable skill.

In some cultures, hope might feel like a swim upstream, but it’s also a skill that anyone — and any group — can learn through practice. Our culture has stereotyped it as naïve, privileged, and even dangerous, but in fact it can be a useful tool for producing innovative ideas and finding ways to deliver on them. Organizations that tap into it, aligning their people’s imagination and will, can better execute their most ambitious strategies.

Hope as a Strategy

Researchers have often focused on building hope among people facing adversity, such as disadvantaged students or patients suffering from chronic illness. But insights from this work can also help organizations. I draw from them, for example, when I work with leaders to create positive coaching cultures. In particular, I ask leaders to take these three steps:

1. Set goals grounded in shared values.

When college undergraduates, medical teams, and C-suites have been surveyed about their values, participants report feeling deeply invested in connecting with peers and doing work that helps others — but they fail to recognize that the people around them feel the same way and want the same things. Communities tend to overlap more than they know. If hope requires a goal, organizational hope requires shared goals. Leaders can tap into this by reminding people of what they have in common. For instance, Patagonia’s simple but profound mission statement, “We are in business to save our home planet,” has values that resonate with its employees.

2. Find ways to empower your people.

Especially in large companies, feelings of hope can be scarce, because employees are often feel swept up by forces that they can’t control. Hope blooms only when people feel agency over their future. That’s something that you can help them with — for example, by delegating important tasks and loosening the managerial reins. Google famously uses the “20% rule,” wherein some employees are given a day each week to explore their own ideas. Although the company has not measured the effects of this initiative on hope, the autonomy it provides gives employees greater initiatives to set and pursue goals — two key components of hopeful thinking. 

Leaders can also take a more psychological approach, simply by reminding people of what they can control. At work, that might be delivering a product on time, building a technical skill, or connecting more deeply with your team. The key is to think globally but hope locally: focusing your mind on parts of your life and work over which you have autonomy, and building a sense of control.

Click here to read a related post: Six Magic Words that Will Increase Your Influence and Reduce Stress

3. Celebrate progress.

Hopelessness can snowball. When we expect the worse, we treat one another with suspicion, and our tasks with gloom. When things go badly, our pessimism grows and hardens. But in the right hands hope can also build on itself. One way to lock in a sense of efficacy and will is to pay close attention to progress and celebrate it. Focusing people on their wins, and how they have managed to take control of their work lives, makes them more likely to feel agency in the future.

Pessimism and fear are part of our minds for a reason. These emotions are sentinels, guarding us against the worst. When you feel them well up, consider thanking them for playing that role. But when we confuse these feelings for wisdom and let them dominate our culture, we lose out on countless opportunities.

There will be storms ahead, but it’s the hopeful leaders who can best chart a course through them. If you anchor their strategies in hope — not naïve optimism but a deliberate belief in shared goals and action — you can steer your organization toward growth, connection, and creativity. Hope doesn’t just imagine a better future; it helps you build one.

To your greater success and well-being,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, energy storage, facility services & maintenance, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services,  real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

 

Friday, January 10, 2025

The Ability To Shift Your Mindset is a Superpower. (Here's How to Harness It In 2025)

 



 

 

 

 

 

In a world constantly evolving and presenting new challenges, the ability to shift one’s mindset is not just beneficial; it’s essential. Mindset, in its essence, is an individual’s unique point of view, shaped by experiences, beliefs, and personal values. It’s a lens through which we interpret the world around us. But what happens when this lens restricts rather than expands our understanding? The answer lies in learning the art of shifting mindset.

Understanding Mindset

Mindset is the mental vantage point that colors our interpretation of events, concepts, and objects. It’s a blend of what we see and how we see it. As renowned philosopher Seneca once said, “We suffer more in imagination than in reality.” This profound statement underscores the immense power our perspective holds over our experience of life. It’s often not the events themselves that impact us most but our interpretation of them.

When life presents us with struggles, it’s common to find ourselves immobilized, caught in the grip of the moment’s intensity. This mental paralysis can be overwhelming as we become ensnared in a vortex of negative thoughts and emotions. Our focus narrows, fixating on the problem’s magnitude rather than potential solutions. It’s as if we’re stuck in quicksand; the more we struggle with our standard thinking patterns, the deeper we sink.

“If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.” 

                                                                                      Wayne Dyer

In these moments of struggle, a shift in mindset can act like a lifeline thrown into that quicksand. It’s not just about seeing the glass as half full rather than half empty; it’s about understanding that the glass can be refilled. This shift in thinking can transform the entire situation and, crucially, our reaction to it.

A changed mindset enables us to break free from the mental freeze. It’s like turning on a light in a dark room. Suddenly, the insurmountable obstacles are illuminated in a new light, revealing paths forward we hadn’t seen before. This doesn’t diminish the struggle’s reality but alters our engagement with it.

For instance, consider a professional setback. Viewed through a negative lens, it’s a failure, a blow to our ego and career. Shifting that perspective becomes an opportunity to learn, grow, and perhaps even pivot in a more fulfilling direction. Similarly, when viewed as a chance to develop resilience and empathy, personal challenges transform from burdens into invaluable life lessons.

This reorientation of perspective doesn’t just change our perception; it changes our reality. We move from passivity to action, from being reactive to proactive. What once seemed like an endless tunnel now has a light at the end of it. We navigate through life’s challenges more swiftly, not because the challenges are lesser, but because we are equipped with a mindset that seeks solutions rather than dwelling on problems.

“You have power over your mind – not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” – Marcus Aurelius.

Furthermore, this shift has a ripple effect on our overall well-being. Stress and anxiety, often products of feeling stuck and helpless, diminish as we gain agency over our situation. Our relationships improve as we approach conflicts and misunderstandings with a mindset geared toward understanding and resolution.

Changing our mindset in times of struggle is more than an exercise in positive thinking. It’s a powerful tool that frees us to take effective action and move through life’s inevitable challenges with greater ease and resilience. This approach doesn’t ignore the realities of hardship; instead, it offers a more constructive way to engage with them, transforming obstacles into stepping stones on personal and professional growth.

The Zen Mindset: Harnessing Perspective

Adopting what I like to call the ‘Zen Mindset' means learning to influence and not trying to control your mind. This means actively questioning how a shift in perspective can improve outcomes. Initially, this concept might seem abstract or even unattainable. However, with practice, changing your perspective can profoundly influence your life.

Many years ago when my mindfulness teacher first introduced me to the concept of changing my mindset, it seemed like an abstract, perhaps even impractical, idea. The notion that simply altering how one views a situation could significantly impact real-life outcomes felt far-fetched. After all, how could a mere shift in thought change the tangible realities we face daily?

However, as I navigated through the various stages of life, the profound impact of this ‘mind tool’ became increasingly apparent. It wasn’t an overnight revelation but a gradual awakening to the power of mindset.

In the early days, my skepticism often led me to dismiss opportunities for perspective change. I clung to my viewpoints, believing them to be concrete reflections of reality. However, in its unpredictable nature, life kept presenting scenarios that challenged these fixed perceptions.

Over time, I started experimenting with altering my perspective in small, everyday situations. A traffic jam was no longer a frustrating delay but an opportunity to listen to a favorite book on tape (This was the pre-mp3 era 😉) . A project setback at work became a chance to learn and grow rather than a defeat. Slowly, these shifts in thinking began to change my outlook and my experiences.

The most striking realization was the cumulative effect of these small mindset shifts. Each change in viewpoint acted like a ripple, creating a more significant impact over time. My relationships improved as I began to see conflicts from others’ viewpoints. My professional life advanced as I learned to approach challenges as opportunities for innovation rather than obstacles.

The journey from skepticism to embracing mindset change has been transformative. What began as a puzzling concept taught by my teachers evolved into a powerful tool that reshaped my life’s path. It taught me resilience, empathy, and the value of an open mind.

In retrospect, the influence of this mind tool on my life is undeniable. It has enabled me to navigate life’s complexities with greater ease and adaptability. This journey has reinforced a vital lesson: how we see the world shapes our experiences within it. As I continue to apply this tool in various aspects of my life, I find myself grateful for that initial, albeit perplexing, introduction to the power of changing perspectives.

Strategies for Shifting Your Mindset

  • Ask for Feedback: Sometimes, gaining perspective requires stepping outside yourself. Seeking feedback can provide new insights into familiar situations.
  • Challenge Assumptions: We often operate on assumptions that may not be accurate. Question these assumptions to open up new ways of thinking.
  • Step Outside Your Comfort Zone: New experiences can dramatically shift your mindset. Whether traveling, meeting new people, or trying new activities, each new experience broadens your worldview.
  • Reflect and Journal: Reflection helps in understanding your current perspective. Journaling is a powerful tool for gaining clarity and insight.
  • Practice Mindfulness: Mindfulness and meditation can aid in detaching from preconceived notions, allowing for a more objective view of situations.
  • Talk to a Therapist or Coach: Sometimes, changing mindsets requires professional guidance, especially for deep-rooted beliefs or mental health issues.
  • Visualize Different Scenarios: Imagining different outcomes can broaden your perspective by considering possibilities you hadn’t previously contemplated.
  • Practice Gratitude: Focusing on the positives can shift your mindset from negative to appreciative, altering your entire outlook on life.
  • Learn from Others: Engaging with others who have faced similar challenges can offer new perspectives and solutions.
  • Set Goals: Goal setting can redirect your focus and provide a new mindset centered on future achievements.
  • Educate Yourself:  Learning about new topics can challenge and change your existing viewpoints.
  • Practice Patience: Changing mindset is a journey, not a destination. It requires time, patience, and continuous effort.

The Path to Personal Growth

Remember, changing your mindset is a skill that develops over time. It’s a journey of self-awareness requiring patience and practice. By altering how we view the world, we open ourselves to new experiences, personal growth, and improved relationships. As we embark on this journey, let us recall the words of the great Albert Einstein, “The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.” Embracing this change in perspective is not just intelligent; it’s a pathway to a richer, more fulfilling life.

Click here to read a related post:  Embracing Hardship: The Hidden Benefits of Suffering (3 min read). The article presents ideas for adopting an empowering mindset that will help you benefit from the inevitable adversity in life.

To your greater ability to harness the power of shifting mindsets,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, energy storage, facility services & maintenance, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services,  real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025

10 Quotes When You Need A Nudge to Stretch Outside Your Comfort Zone

 


 

 

 

 

 

As human beings, most of us crave stability, the habits of the everyday. There’s a good evolutionary reason for this: For millions of years, unpredictability and uncertainty were tantamount to danger. There are plenty of benefits to having a routine — it lowers our stress levels and is a building block of good health. The “comfort zone” exists for a reason: to keep us comfortable.

Still, there is such a thing as getting too comfortable. While we may feel safer in a routine, a fear of the unknown can also cause us to live life on autopilot. Too much stability has been scientifically linked to a lack of growth or learning in our lives. As the old adage goes: “Old ways won’t open new doors.” Staying in your comfort zone can restrict you, cutting you off from new experiences or from taking a leap toward what you really want.

Maybe you’re aware it’s time to step out of your comfort zone, but you don’t know quite where to start — old habits die hard, after all. These 10 quotes can help give you that gentle nudge out the proverbial door — and into exciting new territory.

"Go and make interesting mistakes, make amazing mistakes, make glorious and fantastic mistakes. Break rules. Leave the world more interesting for your being here."
~Neil Gaiman

"Without experimentation, a willingness to ask questions and try new things, we shall surely become static, repetitive, and moribund."
~Anthony Bourdain

"Sometimes the bravest and most important thing you can do is just show up."
~Brené Brown

"If you want to conquer fear, do not sit home and think about it. Go out and get busy."
~Dale Carnegie

"[People] make their best work when they’re riding that wave and a little bit uncomfortable. Sell your own myth, but never buy it."
~St. Vincent

"When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be."
~Lao Tzu

"Great people do things before they’re ready."
~Amy Poehler

"Don’t fear failure so much that you refuse to try new things. The saddest summary of a life contains three descriptions: could have, might have, and should have."
~Louis E. Boone

"And the thing about blooming is, nothing about the process is easy. It requires every part of you to stretch upward, with your roots firmly planted in the ground; and in the sun, and in the rain, and wind, you stand anyway, even against the pull of the soil. And through it all, one day you will see all along you were transforming."
~Morgan Harper Nichols

"A bird is safe in its nest — but that is not what its wings are made for.
~Amit Ray

"Comfort can be dangerous. Comfort provides a floor but also a ceiling."
~Trevor Noah 

"We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty."
~Maya Angelou

Paraphrasing Yoda, trying doesn’t count; it’s doing that matters. Do the same things differently. Do things that scare you. Do things that you love but stopped doing them. Do something for the first time. Do something everyone is telling you shouldn’t do.

I invite you to initiate an comfort zone stretching exercise using the quotes by:

1)  Emailing this post to your team.

2) Asking team members to select a quote that resonates the most. (Alternative: team members find a quote they like related to stretching outside the comfort zone that's not listed in this post.)

3) Sharing what the quote means to them during a team meeting.

Keeping motivated at work doesn't happen automatically. It requires deliberate practice and reinforcement.

To your greater success and fulfillment,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

 

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services, energy storage and third-party maintenance providers, real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Sunday, January 5, 2025

The Ability To Shift Your Mindset is a Superpower. (Here's How to Harness It In 2025)

 



 

 

 

 

In a world constantly evolving and presenting new challenges, the ability to shift one’s mindset is not just beneficial; it’s essential. Mindset, in its essence, is an individual’s unique point of view, shaped by experiences, beliefs, and personal values. It’s a lens through which we interpret the world around us. But what happens when this lens restricts rather than expands our understanding? The answer lies in learning the art of shifting mindset.

Understanding Mindset

Mindset is the mental vantage point that colors our interpretation of events, concepts, and objects. It’s a blend of what we see and how we see it. As renowned philosopher Seneca once said, “We suffer more in imagination than in reality.” This profound statement underscores the immense power our perspective holds over our experience of life. It’s often not the events themselves that impact us most but our interpretation of them.

When life presents us with struggles, it’s common to find ourselves immobilized, caught in the grip of the moment’s intensity. This mental paralysis can be overwhelming as we become ensnared in a vortex of negative thoughts and emotions. Our focus narrows, fixating on the problem’s magnitude rather than potential solutions. It’s as if we’re stuck in quicksand; the more we struggle with our standard thinking patterns, the deeper we sink.

“If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.” 

                                                                                      Wayne Dyer

In these moments of struggle, a shift in mindset can act like a lifeline thrown into that quicksand. It’s not just about seeing the glass as half full rather than half empty; it’s about understanding that the glass can be refilled. This shift in thinking can transform the entire situation and, crucially, our reaction to it.

A changed mindset enables us to break free from the mental freeze. It’s like turning on a light in a dark room. Suddenly, the insurmountable obstacles are illuminated in a new light, revealing paths forward we hadn’t seen before. This doesn’t diminish the struggle’s reality but alters our engagement with it.

For instance, consider a professional setback. Viewed through a negative lens, it’s a failure, a blow to our ego and career. Shifting that perspective becomes an opportunity to learn, grow, and perhaps even pivot in a more fulfilling direction. Similarly, when viewed as a chance to develop resilience and empathy, personal challenges transform from burdens into invaluable life lessons.

This reorientation of perspective doesn’t just change our perception; it changes our reality. We move from passivity to action, from being reactive to proactive. What once seemed like an endless tunnel now has a light at the end of it. We navigate through life’s challenges more swiftly, not because the challenges are lesser, but because we are equipped with a mindset that seeks solutions rather than dwelling on problems.

“You have power over your mind – not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.” – Marcus Aurelius.

Furthermore, this shift has a ripple effect on our overall well-being. Stress and anxiety, often products of feeling stuck and helpless, diminish as we gain agency over our situation. Our relationships improve as we approach conflicts and misunderstandings with a mindset geared toward understanding and resolution.

Changing our mindset in times of struggle is more than an exercise in positive thinking. It’s a powerful tool that frees us to take effective action and move through life’s inevitable challenges with greater ease and resilience. This approach doesn’t ignore the realities of hardship; instead, it offers a more constructive way to engage with them, transforming obstacles into stepping stones on personal and professional growth.

The Zen Mindset: Harnessing Perspective

Adopting what I like to call the ‘Zen Mindset' means learning to influence and not trying to control your mind. This means actively questioning how a shift in perspective can improve outcomes. Initially, this concept might seem abstract or even unattainable. However, with practice, changing your perspective can profoundly influence your life.

Many years ago when my mindfulness teacher first introduced me to the concept of changing my mindset, it seemed like an abstract, perhaps even impractical, idea. The notion that simply altering how one views a situation could significantly impact real-life outcomes felt far-fetched. After all, how could a mere shift in thought change the tangible realities we face daily?

However, as I navigated through the various stages of life, the profound impact of this ‘mind tool’ became increasingly apparent. It wasn’t an overnight revelation but a gradual awakening to the power of mindset.

In the early days, my skepticism often led me to dismiss opportunities for perspective change. I clung to my viewpoints, believing them to be concrete reflections of reality. However, in its unpredictable nature, life kept presenting scenarios that challenged these fixed perceptions.

Over time, I started experimenting with altering my perspective in small, everyday situations. A traffic jam was no longer a frustrating delay but an opportunity to listen to a favorite book on tape (This was the pre-mp3 era 😉) . A project setback at work became a chance to learn and grow rather than a defeat. Slowly, these shifts in thinking began to change my outlook and my experiences.

The most striking realization was the cumulative effect of these small mindset shifts. Each change in viewpoint acted like a ripple, creating a more significant impact over time. My relationships improved as I began to see conflicts from others’ viewpoints. My professional life advanced as I learned to approach challenges as opportunities for innovation rather than obstacles.

The journey from skepticism to embracing mindset change has been transformative. What began as a puzzling concept taught by my teachers evolved into a powerful tool that reshaped my life’s path. It taught me resilience, empathy, and the value of an open mind.

In retrospect, the influence of this mind tool on my life is undeniable. It has enabled me to navigate life’s complexities with greater ease and adaptability. This journey has reinforced a vital lesson: how we see the world shapes our experiences within it. As I continue to apply this tool in various aspects of my life, I find myself grateful for that initial, albeit perplexing, introduction to the power of changing perspectives.

Strategies for Shifting Your Mindset

  • Ask for Feedback: Sometimes, gaining perspective requires stepping outside yourself. Seeking feedback can provide new insights into familiar situations.
  • Challenge Assumptions: We often operate on assumptions that may not be accurate. Question these assumptions to open up new ways of thinking.
  • Step Outside Your Comfort Zone: New experiences can dramatically shift your mindset. Whether traveling, meeting new people, or trying new activities, each new experience broadens your worldview.
  • Reflect and Journal: Reflection helps in understanding your current perspective. Journaling is a powerful tool for gaining clarity and insight.
  • Practice Mindfulness: Mindfulness and meditation can aid in detaching from preconceived notions, allowing for a more objective view of situations.
  • Talk to a Therapist or Coach: Sometimes, changing mindsets requires professional guidance, especially for deep-rooted beliefs or mental health issues.
  • Visualize Different Scenarios: Imagining different outcomes can broaden your perspective by considering possibilities you hadn’t previously contemplated.
  • Practice Gratitude: Focusing on the positives can shift your mindset from negative to appreciative, altering your entire outlook on life.
  • Learn from Others: Engaging with others who have faced similar challenges can offer new perspectives and solutions.
  • Set Goals: Goal setting can redirect your focus and provide a new mindset centered on future achievements.
  • Educate Yourself:  Learning about new topics can challenge and change your existing viewpoints.
  • Practice Patience: Changing mindset is a journey, not a destination. It requires time, patience, and continuous effort.

The Path to Personal Growth

Remember, changing your mindset is a skill that develops over time. It’s a journey of self-awareness requiring patience and practice. By altering how we view the world, we open ourselves to new experiences, personal growth, and improved relationships. As we embark on this journey, let us recall the words of the great Albert Einstein, “The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.” Embracing this change in perspective is not just intelligent; it’s a pathway to a richer, more fulfilling life.

Click here to read a related post:  Embracing Hardship: The Hidden Benefits of Suffering (3 min read). The article presents ideas for adopting an empowering mindset that will help you benefit from the inevitable adversity in life.

To your greater ability to harness the power of shifting mindsets,


Peter Mclees, Leadership Coach, Trainer and Performance Consultant
SMART DEVELOPMENT

Take the Next Step...
Interested in learning how to develop your organization's leadership capability, culture, and employee engagement? We begin with a collaborative discovery process identifying your unique needs and business issues. To request an interview with Peter Mclees please 

contact: Email: petercmclees@gmail.com  or  Mobile: 323-854-1713

Smart Development has an exceptional track record helping service providers, ports, energy storage, facility services & maintenance, sales teams, restaurants, stores, distribution centers, food production facilities, wealth management services,  real estate services, nonprofits, government agencies and other businesses create a strong culture, leadership bench strength, coaching skills and the teamwork necessary for growth.

Having worked with several companies throughout their growth cycle, we have valuable insights and strategies that would help any late stage startup, small or medium sized company achieve sustained growth and prosperity.