Thursday 26 May 2016

What is the shortcut to success?

I recently spent time talking to students at a local college. I was interested to listen to their goals and objectives but was left a little flat after hearing their lack of vision or enthusiasm. Maybe I expected more because I was brought up in a generation of entrepreneurs and yuppies.
 
I asked one of the students what he was studying and he replied a course in computer studies. I felt encouraged that he was trying to better his life and tried to prompt further positive dialog. I questioned him on where he hope his studying would take him, what career did he hope to follow. His response left me deflated, he said “ just a job”.
 
I desperately wanted to help this vulnerable child to get some perspective and direction so it tried a visualisation technique with him. I suggested that he imagined what type of company he would like to work for, where they are based, what type of industry they cater for, how many people worked there, and what job he wanted to have. The next practical stage was to find the person already doing that job and asked them how they got there.
 
I’ve done a lot of walking and climbed many mountains. When you stand at the bottom and look at the top, it may seem almost impossible to know how to get to the pinnacle. When you are standing on the top looking down you can see every path to the summit.
 
By getting the student to talk to someone already doing the job they aspire to have, the experienced employee has already written the map. It creates a shortcut to success.  

http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/
http://www.mikebowden.uk

Thursday 5 May 2016

What are emotional goals?

We have all been ingrained to chase after goals, as this appears to be a measure of our success. Often we fail because we are chasing after the wrong things and feel let down by the process.  

How do you feel when you miss out?

Imagine your goal as if you were baking a cake. The plan is to go shopping for the ingredients, the strategy is how you blend them all together and delivery is putting the mixture into the oven. If you’ve managed to complete the process, “hurray” you have made a cake. But, you’ve merely created a result not a reward, which isn’t very inspiring, most motivated people can follow a similar process. Regardless of whether the cake turns out to be a technical success or a culinary failure, you have still achieved your aim to bake a cake.

So do you leave your results to chance and accept meritocracy or do you want to aspire to something that bigger than that? Think about your baking creation and how it makes you feel, the smell of the sweet ingredients, the perfect appearance of the fluffy masterpiece and the pride you feel when you know that it’s turned out really well. You can now understand “what’s in it for you” that feeling behind the task, the emotions that create a burning desire to excel.

Now focus on how others salivate over your masterpiece, rave over your achievements and aspire to bake a creation worthy to compete; now you are starting to create a legacy. You will be known as the person who encouraged them to cook and be remembered for how you make them feel when they have a baking success just like yours, that’s “what’s in it for them”.


In essence, a sterile process doesn’t drive behaviour whereas positive emotions do. By focusing on the emotional rewards rather than just the end result, you will turbo-charge your successes and receive a far greater level of satisfaction.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/
http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/

Friday 29 April 2016

How to make today a good day

A successful business colleague of mine always had a smile on his face. He was relaxed and happy with a spring in his step. He walked with his head held high displaying quiet confidence. His aura was fantastic for a man in his late sixties. I asked him how he managed it. He said that he didn’t boast about his successes or cry about his losses, he just made sure every day was a good day.

Although he was never a man to stand out from the crowd, he was a genuinely nice guy that became very wealthy from his successes. He had such a confidence about him that he didn’t have to boast his achievements or broadcast his future plans, he took every day as it come and just enjoyed the moment.

I understood that I could get results I so desperately wanted right now, if I focused on “the now” rather than worrying about tomorrow. I couldn’t influence tomorrow when today wasn’t the best it could be. I needed to focus on, my experience of today, because this moment “NOW” is the only true experience I will ever have. I found that making today a good day, then tomorrow an even better day, then next week even better, was the formulate for achieving results that lasted.

I spent too much time trying to perfect my future when my present wasn’t as good as it needed to be. So try it for yourself, changing just one element in your day today and see the rippling effect that it will have tomorrow. Create the foundations everyday for a better day tomorrow, then the day after.

http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/

http://www.mikebowden.uk/






Monday 25 April 2016

Lessons in life - How to talk to strangers

Is this it?

For many years I had asked myself one question, which I could never answer. It was three words and eight letters, so simple to ask but for me a nightmare to answer, the question was “Is this it?” I was never satisfied I always wanted more.

My character forced me to push forward my in life, striving to be the best version that I could be. I placed huge amounts of pressure on myself to succeed, often feeling frustrated and let down, when things weren’t progressing as quickly as I had hoped. Many times outside influences would create obstacles and hamper my progress. I never took time to reflect whether I was content with what I had and where I was going, I was living my life at 100mph and focusing on the Holy Grail. It wasn’t until I began to accept that nothing in life is totally satisfactory, that nothing in life is perfect and that nothing in life is permanent, that I started to gain clarity.

When I realised the only guarantee in life is “Change” I started to accept the way things were at that moment in time, nothing remains the same. There are so many outside forces that can knock you off track, that even if you don’t want to change your life, your life will get changed for you. Also, there are so many positive influences that can give you a lucky break when you least expect it.


I changed my own question from “Is this it?” to “Is this enough for now?” and took the pressure off myself. I realised that I was striving for a perfect me in an imperfect world. Even if I hadn’t achieved what I wanted to, there was always another day to get there. Although we can influence how our life turns out, we have to question how much ultimate control we have on our destiny and whether we choose to accept how things are at any particular time.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Wednesday 20 April 2016

What makes you different?

I often meet business professionals from various industries and I’m fascinated to find out more about their company. Usually I prompt them with a leading question, “So what makes you different from your competitors?” in the hope of receiving an inspired and enthusiastic response. Many times I’m presented with a list of their services and they expect me to be impressed.

I’ve found a percentage of people truly believe their “Unique Selling Point” is way ahead of their competitors and if that is true I would be sorely disappointed  by the others following in their wake. What companies fail to recognise is the end users’ expectations and typically the trail blazers only match what the client expects. As a society we have become accepting of poor service as the norm and accept the excuses which are readily provided, as long as it’s cheap enough.

I recently spoke to a firm of solicitors who were proud of their personal service, their prompt responses and their success rate. When challenged “what makes them different” they were confident that they excelled in their industry, but as an end user I would expect these as a minimum starting point.

As a consumer we all end up choosing where to spend our hard earned cash, but our choices generally come down to a sterile process of who can supply a product or service “faster, better or cheaper” and we just accept all the shortfalls that go with the transaction. Usually these cost the company’s bottom line and often the suppler gets squeezed out of the market by decreasing profit margins because their ethos is money driven.


Surely the inspired companies that will win the business and stand the test of time are the ones that do genuinely exceed the customers’ expectations by adding value to the transaction rather than discounting their shortfalls. I believe that creating customer loyalty is never about money but more so about how you are different.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Thursday 14 April 2016

What we say is what we get

I believe that we tend to talk our way into a state of mind on a daily basis just by the language we use. We get sucked into our environment and start to absorb the tone of other people, whether it’s relevant to us or not. Associating ourselves with either positive or negative people will have an influence on our mind-set, but we don’t have to accept what is forced upon us, we can make a difference.

One thing that did have a huge impact on my life was to change the language I used. Rather than saying something was good, I changed to say it was great. Rather than saying my day was okay, I changed to say it was brilliant. Just by changing the emotive words to carry a stronger emotional attachment, made me believe that it was true. Because I engulfed myself in stronger more positive feelings my mood changed for the better.

Alternatively if you tell yourself that something is bad enough times you believe yourself. The subconscious part of the brain can’t rationalise language, it tends to believe what it is told and drives our behaviour accordingly. The conscious part of the brain allows logic, how we interpret and process facts, but it is also influenced by our feelings. Therefore by purposely using more positive words, you can lift your mood and your subconscious brain believes it to be true, creating better behaviours and responses.

Factually the situations going on around me hadn’t changed, but my perception towards what was happening had. My chores became challenges and life seemed a little brighter because I was in control of my language. When negative things happened, they never felt so bad and I could cope with them far better.


Try it the next time you speak to someone and they ask how your day is. Rather than saying that your day is okay, tell them with enthusiasm how brilliant it is and watch their reaction. Generally people will influence the behaviour of others around them, so the words you use can be the catalyst for something better for you and other people.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Monday 11 April 2016

Will you be remember?

It's why you do it

Most business owners follow a similar pattern, trying to beat their competitors with a faster service or larger discounts, but either way it’s a huge business expense that doesn’t drive behaviour. To a degree, it may be cost effective in the short-term to buy customers but it’s not inspiring and it doesn’t create loyalty.

People don’t buy what you do; they buy why you do it!!

To give you an example, why would you buy double-glazing from any company, it’s a very competitive industry with lots of competent companies. You are likely to commit yourself to making a purchase of several thousand pounds and need to leave a sizable deposit without knowing what the result will be like.

Most companies can offer a similar product, made to a similar standard and fitted just as well as their competitors. It becomes a sterile process of comparing prices, haggling for discounts and hoping as a consumer that you’ve made the right decision, it can become a matter of luck.


The inspired few companies out there don’t sell windows they tap directly into the emotional drivers that people want. They sell comfort and security; also they sell reliability and reassurance. These aren’t items on their price list, but are far more important to the end user than any sales pitch a keen representative can muster. People don’t buy what you do; they buy why you do it!! The focus should be, to match an emotional solution to an emotional problem, and for the end user to engage with the real reasons why you want to help them.


http://www.mikebowden.uk/




Thursday 7 April 2016

When to make midlife choices

I have always been very ambitious, striving to make my family financially secure. I measured success with the size of my wage packet and the material things that I could buy. I wanted to be proud of my achievements and gain the respect of my peers. My prosperous retail career was founded on long and unsociable hours often working in excess of a 60 hour week. Over many years the situation became unsustainable and something had to break.

I reached a point in my life when I couldn't reconcile the huge golf between my successful career and the collateral damage left in my wake. My drive and ambition to secure a career had cost me dearly with my family life and left me feeling a total failure. When the phoenix rose from the ashes of my midlife crisis, I realised that I had midlife choices. I had an opportunity to change my hamster wheel lifestyle to something more meaningful.


Regardless of how long you have followed your path or invested in your future, you still have the choice to change if it no longer serves you. We start our plans with naïve optimism but gain valuable experience along the way. Often we become so fixated on the outcome, that we fail to recognise the impact on ourselves and our environment until the pain becomes unbearable. If you knew then what you know now, what would you have done differently?  

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Wednesday 6 April 2016

You get what you focus on

Posture affects our mood

I believe our body posture has a huge impact on our mood and how were interpret what is going on in our daily lives. Our positive or negative stance will ultimately determine the way we perceive information from the world around us. My own body posture has had a huge effect on my attitude and persona. A song that constantly plays through my mind until my subconscious brain believes it to be true, is a song from my childhood sung by Val Doonican called “Walk Tall”.

“Walk tall, walk straight and look the world right in the eye. That’s what my mama told me when I was about knee high. She said son be a proud man and hold your head up high. Walk tall, walk straight and look the world right in the eye”.


Whenever I stooped and hid my face, whenever I dropped my glaze and tried to get lost in the crowd, good old Val starts singing to me from his famous rocking chair. I realised that gravity wasn’t pulling me down, it was my lazy demeanour that was too comfortable and was creating the same effect on my mood.

Next time you read a book try to be mindful of your posture. Read a section hunched over the pages and then again with your head up and shoulders back. Although the words are the same it’s amazing how you will interpret the text in a different way. You will change your task from a chore to a pleasure and register the content more easily.

Now try the same thing when you talk to other people. Allow your back to straighten and forehead to lift. Pull your shoulders back and smile. There are so many books written on body language and posture, yet we all fail to adopt these techniques in our everyday life. Even when you talk to people on the telephone, your posture determines your tone and how others receive your message.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/


Tuesday 5 April 2016

A challenge or a chore? It's the same task

Isn't it strange how one person sees a task as a chore, whereas someone else sees it as a challenge, yet it is the same task? Attitude controls our perception and installs our passion. It will either make us receptive or defensive.

We generally consider the word "attitude" to be a negative trait, but if you take attitude in the correct context, it can be a very powerful motivator to strive and achieve. Someone with a positive attitude will drive forward taking obstacles in their stride, creating opportunities and changing outcomes. Someone with a negative attitude can create barriers to be defensive and sabotage change. 

Naturally in our daily life we sit somewhere in the middle. Circumstances, stimuli and emotions, can all be factors that determine our attitude at any specific time. Being mindful that we have the power to affect our attitude, it will ultimately determine the outcome. It is interesting to consider that we can control our attitude rather than letting our attitude control us. Are we a passenger in our vehicle of life or are we the driver? The choice is yours.

I believe emotion to be a reactive state brought on by what has happened. Therefore attitude is our conscious effort to make something happen. It is proactive and within our control to change the future. Everyone must have a reason to do something, whether that to be through choice or necessity but attitude creates our passion and our desire.

 http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Monday 4 April 2016

ChangingOutcomes.co.uk

Make time for what matters

Inspired Leaders, Creative Managers and You

Inspired leaders grow their business organically by sharing their belief. They hold their vision high so everyone can see what they stand for and share their passion to achieve the result. Inspired leaders spark our imagination and excite us to belong to something bigger than our own contribution. They influence the way that people feel and nurture their self-esteem.
Creative managers don’t need budgets to succeed, they think outside the box and utilise the resources they already have. They manage how people think, how people feel and how people behave. Creative managers are enthusiastic to challenge the status quo. They create a culture that is committed to a “common cause”.
I believe that success isn’t measured by profit, that’s just a tool to keep the process going. There is something bigger at play that inspires leaders and creates managers to flourish. I believe that taking ownership of “the purpose” is what we all strive for and the reason why we prosper. The aim to focus on the way that we feel and then harvest the rewards which are generated from that.
http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Thursday 31 March 2016

Mike Bowden

Loyalty is never about money

I recently had a conversation about Succession Planning with an Accountant that I knew. I asked him what his plans where when he wanted to retire. He happily informed me that he would sell his client list and reap the rewards. I agreed with him that his assets consisted of a series of relationships but challenged him on how loyal they would be.

I suggested 50% of his client would discontinue the relationship with the new owner almost immediately and the others would dwindle away over a period of time, reducing the value of his treasured list. He became quite protective of his prized database, but I explained further what I meant by it.

I suggested for example, that if the dentist he used decided to sell their practice, it would create a change point where their clients would have an opportunity to re-evaluate their relationship with that surgery. After all they would have no knowledge of the new dentist. They would have a choice, either to shop around for a new dentist or give unknown loyalty to the new business owner. They could possibly opt for another surgery that was either nearer, cheaper or by referral, but whatever the outcome an indirect choice had been given to them.

The accountant’s business was no different; he was trying to entice clients because of what he did rather than why he did it. He was relying on the commitment of his clients without giving any emotional value back. He wasn’t trying to get his customers to engage with his common cause or believes, so there is no tangible reason why should they remain loyal.


He had made himself a commodity within own business and the possible demise of his life’s work didn’t make him feel great. He started to realise the need for emotional satisfaction for himself and his customers that would satisfy their existence. He had to create an engaging commitment that was far more than money alone. He had to find a way of getting his clients to buy into his passionate for business and why they should remain loyal to his brand, even after he had gone.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Tuesday 29 March 2016

Creating space to grow

How often do we cocoon ourselves with people that no longer serve us but are too afraid to change the status quo? I’ve reflected on many people, including myself, as to the true value of these relationships and how they could be holding us back.

If you imagine your environment to be a forest and your relationships are trees. The more dominant characters create a canopy which blocks out the sunshine and stifles the eco-system. When one of these mighty trees fall, sunlight can nurture the forest floor and encourage growth of new saplings, which otherwise would never had a chance to exist.


I appreciate that it can be a tough decision to let go of situations and people that suppress us, but better alternatives could be waiting to develop if only we gave them the space to grow.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Thursday 24 March 2016

It's not essential to be liked

Typically we are all social creatures that want to be accepted by society in general. Often we strive for approval through popularity and yearn for the need to be liked, but is this a true measure of our worth?

Although it is nice to be liked it is not essential in shaping the person that you are. Whether you are liked or loathed, it isn’t your responsibility to chase after someone else’s opinion of you. Whatever you do will be judged by them regardless of how you do it, therefore their perception of you is formed without your control. Some people may be drawn to you for personality or appearance whereas other people may be repelled by it, but you can’t change that. It is an impossible task to be all things for all people, but often that is what we try to achieve. When we don’t get the response we crave for, we feel let down and rejected.


Surely it is more important to be respected for your influence and ability which are more tangible aspects of your personality rather than someone’s personal opinion about you. Forthright people such as Alan Sugar may not be your choice of social company but there will be an element of respect for what he has achieved. 

 http://www.mikebowden.uk

Tuesday 22 March 2016

A pane of glass on a rainy day

If you have ever watched a pane of glass on a rainy day you will realise water doesn’t go in a straight line, it follows the path of least resistance. If this is true then surely we should follow nature’s path within everything that we do.

We interact with people and expect some sort of behaviour from them, assuming that if we encourage and persuade them enough they will like us and want to engage with us. We strive to profit in some way from our relationships regardless of how aligned we are.

Alternatively we could take a proactive approach and behave in such a way to be aligned to them to encourage rapport. This may feel alien and uncomfortable to us, forcing us to be insincere and unauthentic.

Either way the harder the dynamics of the relationship the more effort required to win the prize.  Surely the goal is to follow nature and find people that are aligned to our values and beliefs. Actively find people that aren’t resistant to us will create the easier successes and stronger relationships.


We naturally gel with some people and have personality clashes with others. In social setting we can choose more freely, whom we want to associate with but business scenarios have a different motivation. But there is no reason why we can adopt similar principles to gain greater success by honing our efforts on people of least resistance.

 http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Wednesday 16 March 2016

Love is spelt T-I-M-E

I was always very ambitious in my career, trying to carve the best professional path I could. It was partly for my own satisfaction and partly to help us get out of the escalating debt we were subjecting ourselves to. I wanted to establish a secure future for my family so we could reduce stresses that were dragging us down.

I knew there would have to be a period of hardship to endure before we could reap the rewards of our labours. I worked every hour I could, including evenings and weekend in an effort to provide. Eventually working 60 hours a week became the norm.

Through guilt of not being at home I lavished my children with material trinkets to try and justify my lack of involvement in their daily lives. I tried to buy their affections by providing a nice house and treated them to holidays whenever I could to give us some quality time, but it never felt enough. I created a perpetual cycle of having to work more to pay for the guilt of not being there.

It was only in more recent years, when my daughters were adults themselves that I realised children spell the word love T-I-M-E. I got things so badly wrong during their upbringing, they didn’t need material gratification they needed my time. In my quest to provide I couldn’t see the missing ingredient that would show them that I loved them.


Naturally if I could turn the hands of time and replay my life things would be different but I can’t, those missing years can never be replaced nor the experiences that could have been shared.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Monday 14 March 2016

Will you be remembered?

I'm  interested to know if you would be content going through life being that pleasant person that no one really gets to know and is very difficult to be remembered. Being that person that people struggle to recognise your face and forget your name doesn’t make you feel great, but it’s safe in our own comfort zone. 

I can’t even ask you to recall a person like this, because they don’t exist, or actually don’t exist to you because they have never made an impact on your world. You will never remember these people because they are blurred objects in your line of vision. I may sound a little harsh but you don’t have a reason to remember them. How would you feel being that nameless, faceless person that ends up on a plaque in the corner of a graveyard?


It sucks, doesn’t it?

I believe that it should be everyone’s aim in life to be noticed by people around us, to create some sort of impact on other people, so we are remembered in a positive way. I’m not advocating an arrogant or forceful approach, just standing out from the crowds for the positive way we help other people.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/






Wednesday 9 March 2016

Chase emotions not goals

We have all been ingrained to chase after our goals, as this appears to be a measure of our success. Often we fail because we are chasing after the wrong thing. If we are determined and have a certain amount of luck we may be fortunate to achieve our goal, often but that is not enough to achieve success. How do you feel when you miss out?

For example if we chase after a million pounds, it maybe is a nice thing to have it but it is not inspiring in anyway. The money achieved is merely the result not the reward. How you feel when you spend the money is the emotional reward that you receive, therefore the money is merely a tool to get there.

Imagine your goal as if you were baking a cake. The plan is to go shopping for the ingredients, the strategy is how you blend them all together and delivery is putting the mixture into the oven. Hurray you’ve made a cake, but it isn’t very inspiring, most motivated people can follow a similar process. Regardless of whether the cake turns out to be a success or failure, you have still achieved your aim to bake a cake.

So do you leave your results to chance and accept meritocracy or do you want to aspire to something that bigger than that? Think about your baked creation and how it makes you feel, the smell of the sweet ingredients, the perfect appearance of the fluffy masterpiece and the pride you feel when you know that it’s turned out really well. You can now understand “what’s in it for you” that feeling behind the task.


Now focus on how others salivate over your masterpiece, rave over your achievements and aspire to bake a creation worthy to compete; now you are starting to create a legacy. You will be known as the person who encouraged them to cook and be remembered for how you make them feel when they have a baking success, that’s “what’s in it for them”.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Monday 7 March 2016

A pane of glass on a rainy day

Boiling the frog

Toxic relationships of any kind can slip under our radar and go unnoticed until we become consumed and suffocated by them. They creep up on you like silent assassins and often take hold of our well-being long before we notice. The same applies to our comfort zone and often we don’t realise how painful a situation is until it’s already too late. It becomes more difficult to change as we have already formed an attachment, so we try to justify the discomfort as being acceptable.

If you were to place a frog in a saucepan of boiling water, it would instantly feel pain and hop straight out. It knows that it’s a harmful environment to be in and takes instant action to survive.

If you were to place a frog in a saucepan of cold water it would feel safe and comfortable. Then turning up the heat slowing would go unnoticed by the creature inside. Eventually the water would reach boiling point and the frog would die without realising the danger.


Often we engulf ourselves in situations, which may suit us initially, but when we out grow them they become more harmful that good. If we are mindful enough to recognise the signs we are the lucky ones, but often we go passed the point of no return and struggle to let go of the poisonous scenario. It would be interesting to look at your own situations and decide at what point you need to change, before the pain becomes unbearable.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Friday 4 March 2016

Don't be frightened to say NO

Many times people say to us “could you just do this for me?” when we really don’t have the time but we don’t want to offend them. The reality is whether you have enough time to spare to complete their request without suffering as a consequence of taking on this extra task.

We tend to fear upsetting others by saying NO and assume some sort of reprisal or hostility. Let’s reverse the roles and assume you asked someone to help you and they politely told you “I’m really sorry I can’t do that I’m too busy” I doubt that you would be offended. I’m sure you would understand that they meant no malice by their comments and you would find an alternative solution.

Therefore is our intention of taking on more than we can achieve an act of charitable goodwill or is it self-sabotage so we can become a martyr? You need to do what’s best for you at that specific time, so that you are in a position to help others when the spare time arises. Like many of us, I have been brought up to be a “people pleaser” to make everyone around us happy. We do this in the hope that the results will make us happy. Sometimes this works, but quite often it doesn’t and we feel short-changed as a result.


Whenever you travel on an aeroplane, the stewardess always tells you to fit your own facemask in an emergency before helping someone else. That’s not being selfish; it’s ensuring you get what you need so you have the time to help others.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Wednesday 2 March 2016

You get what you focus on

http://www.mikebowden.uk

I’ve noticed so many times through my life that people tend to get what they focus on, whether that is good or bad. We often anticipate a problem so guess what that’s what happens, it seems like we are a magnet for everything that we are trying to avoid. Not only do we attract negativity due to our focus, but it also distorts any solutions to correct the situation. Many times the result can be worse than problem that we started with.

Many years ago I worked for a furniture company. A family run transport contractor was assigned to deliver our goods to customer’s homes. The owner of that company was proud to let his son deliver the goods in his brand new removal lorry. The lad was only just turned twenty years old and went out on his own for the first time.

He was driving along the road and failed to steer around a tight bend. The lorry came off the road and headed in a straight line across a ploughed field and crashed into the only tree in the field. He was focusing so much on the crash that he forgot to apply the brakes or turn the steering wheel.

It is easy to focus on the negative things in life, all the obstacles and barriers we face. We can visualise things going wrong and make a catastrophe of the outcome before we begin, but that only gives us what we see as the result. Paint your picture of what you want rather than tainting the image with negativity. You have to believe in a positive outcome if that is what you really want.

Monday 29 February 2016

Goal is a hollow word

I personally, am not a fan of the words “goal” or “objective” which are bantered around so freely without any true meaning. I find the words hollow and sterile because they are words without emotion. I prefer to focus more emotional charged words that get your pulse racing and a smile on your face, words such as “passion” or “desire”, imaginative words like “dream” or “vision” which paint a picture of a thousand words.

I agree that it’s so important to focus on the outcome to understand the journey. But, I believe there is far more benefit to achieve what you truly want if it generates a feeling. Following a typical SMART goal can be sterile and meaningless, often creating a response of “never mind I tried” when you don’t achieve what you set out to do.

Let me explain what I mean, if you are one of the lucky few who achieve your “goal” then you tend to look at it and think what’s next. It doesn’t create any great sense of satisfaction; it’s just a process, a stepping stone to something else, but what?


Let me give you an example. If your “goal” was to earn a million pound, in reality it’s just numbers on a bank statement. If you now imagine what that money will buy you, things become difference. Suppose that money bought you a yacht, now how do you feel on that boat. Can you now feel the wind on your face, the smell of the sea and the sound of the gulls? You are chasing after the experience and the money becomes merely a tool to get you there.

Focus on the feeling every time and it will turbo-charged your journey into and emotionally charged challenge where failure becomes too painful for you to comprehend. 

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Thursday 25 February 2016

Blindly going where others won't

I today chatted at length to the most inspirational guy that I have ever met. This unassuming man in his late fifties could easily be passed by and go unnoticed. He sat with confident grace soaking up the atmosphere of his surroundings and I’m sure in his mind every detail was being logged firmly into his memory.

I had earlier heard a brief presentation from the man affectionately known as “Blind Dave” at an event we both attended. He gave a short but very humorous account of his new book “From Light to Dark” and I was compelled to buy a copy.

Dave Heeley is a local man that lost his sight over three decades ago, but his handicap has never held him back from achieving things beyond our wildest dreams. He is the first and only blind person in the world to have completed the ultimate endurance challenge 7 marathons in 7 days on 7 continents. He has run marathons through The Sahara Desert and cycled/ran the length of the country completing 10 marathons in 10 days, just to name a few of his amazing achievements.

By chance, we met later the same day at another event. This time I had the ultimate pleasure of chatting to him in depth, having the opportunity to ask him details of his extraordinary challenges, which he willing obliged to share his stories. This charismatic guy has unbelievable courage and commitment to everything that he attempts. I was mesmerized as he recalled in detail some of his achievements and hung on every word like a schoolboy listening to his favourite teacher.

I sincerely wish him every success for his new book which I’m sure, will ooze passion and humanity from every page. Good luck with the next challenge in June and I’ll be cheering you on all the way.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Tuesday 23 February 2016

Change is in the detail

We tend to create habits in our routine that for some reason we never seem to break. This could be due to us being in our comfort zone, or just being absent-minded about situations but when they no longer serve us, they can cause frustration and pain. Often we are oblivious to our routines until something snaps and forces us into action.
 
Henry Ford’s saying "If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you've always got" and it is so true. If we want change the results that we get, then we have to change something in our life. Even if you alter one detail in our pattern, it’ll be surprising what a difference it can make.

A friend of mine always left home at 8.30am to take the children to school before work. The queues of traffic on the school lane would frustrate him. He would then struggle to get parked at the school gates, and then once again fight his way through the traffic to get to work on time. The whole episode was a stressful experience and would put him in a bad mood for the rest of the day.


He decided to change his routine. He began to leave his home at 8.15am, park his car at the end of the school lane and walked the children to school. He enjoyed the exercise and smiled at the other motorists stuck in the mayhem. He would take the children into school, then walk or sometimes jog back to his car, before the onward journey. He would still get to work at the same time, but he felt refreshed and ready for his working day. His mood was different because he did something different.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Thursday 18 February 2016

Emotionally what do you sell?


One business story that I was told to me many years ago has changed the way I look at the world and how I think about any business contact that I have. Whether it is true or not I’m unsure but the moral is worth hearing.

Allegedly the Parker Pen factory employed a business consultant to analyse the company and offer recommendations to help the business to become more profitable. The consultant spent a week talking to as many people as he could on all levels within the business. He watched, he studied and he wrote up his report.

On the final day he was expected to give his findings to the panel of directors. He entered the boardroom to see in front of him a long table with several stony faces staring back at him. There was obviously tension from some of the board of director’s, feeling uncomfortable with what was about to be said. It would highlight some people’s shortcomings and clearly some members where squirming in their seats.

The consultant faced the panel and said, “before I give my report can I ask you one question, what do you make?” The chairman roared at the consultant, clearly taking the comments as a person attack. The chairman said, “we have paid you a large sum of money to conduct a report on our company and you ask what we make, we make pens of course!”

The consultant remained calm and replied, “no you don’t make pens, you make presents”. Clearly the directors of the company had been so consumed by the practicalities of running a business that they forgot why the business was in existence, they have overlooked their sole purpose they were in the business of make memories.


I have had several Parker pens over the years and I can never remember buying one for myself. Every writing item from this company has come as a gift for various reasons and I’m sure that most people feel the same. This large company that everyone knows so well isn’t a stationery supplier, they are a creator of memories every time someone uses their product, their pen just happens to be the tool that gets the result.

http://www.mikebowden.uk/

Monday 15 February 2016

Are you a carmaker or a driver?

Imagine we are stood in a factory and I give you lots of spare parts. There are wheels and seats, a shiny new engine and several body parts. I give you a box of small component parts, an instruction book and all the tools you will ever need.
You work tirelessly for weeks constructing a new car from all the parts until one day you turn the ignition key and its fires up, bringing new life to elements that individually meant nothing. With a huge sense of pride you climb inside and start to drive the car around the factory. The feeling of achievement and satisfaction are making you burst with happiness.
The question is, are you a carmaker or a driver?
A carmaker will go back to the factory and find all the component parts to make another car and do the same things over again and again. Although he could improve on his machine, no one was there to share his labours. The process has a result but it is sterile and repetitive. Eventually the pain becomes greater than the pleasure, so the carmaker makes no more cars.
A driver will revel in the experience and tell everyone else how fantastic it is to drive a car. He will enthuse how brilliant it was to complete his first motoring masterpiece and broadcast how wonderful it would be to go faster. He would encourage everyone around him to get excited about his vision until other people started to build his next project. They would want to satisfy his need for going faster and to enjoy the glory of being part of his history.
A legacy is born from passion and desire. Getting noticed by the people who believe in what you believe and share the positive emotions you express creates it. No one noticed the carmaker regardless of how hard he worked, so no one followed him. 

http://www.mikebowden.uk/



Friday 12 February 2016

CGM blog: Taking the Mike


Or at least take a lesson from Mike – a fella called Mike Bowden to be precise, who is a life coach based in the Black Country.

I’ll be honest, I didn’t know much about Mike or his business, Changing Outcomes, before I read his book, Understanding the Mirror.
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It is a self-published work and just about the best example of the extended business card vision someone writing their own business book could wish to produce.

Partly autobiographical, partly providing practical tips, Understanding the Mirror says so much more about Mike’s real life background and suitability to coach than any number of network meeting elevator pitches or boastful sales spins could ever achieve.

I won’t spoil it for you, but Understanding the Mirror, is based on a personal experience and offers a series of potentially life changing solutions we can all absorb. There but for the grace of God…

Now, I don’t know if Mike is any good at life coaching – I haven’t met any of his clients or experienced his work. Neither would I say Understanding the Mirror is the most grammatically correct book I have ever read. But here’s what I do know:

– I can hear Mike’s voice throughout Understanding the Mirror – it has pace, power and is warts and all;

– Mike has first hand experience of bouncing back from serious problems so his advice isn’t vague theory. It is thoroughly felt and understood by the person offering it;

– He is a warm, sincere and genuine person (and that oozes through the pages).

I’m sure writing Understanding the Mirror was a cathartic exercise for Mike but imagine having those features established in the mind of a potential client?

Publishing a business book isn’t easy or cheap – and certainly not for everyone. The sanguine advice that most people have a book in them and that’s where it should stay rings true.

But planned and written in the right way, a business book can work wonders. Not in a sterile and cynical way to win business by battering readers around the head with a litany of lies about how fantastic and wonderful you are and always have been – but by touching people’s hearts and souls with deep values, beliefs and ethics that matter.

Those are the kind of characteristics we encourage when we provide publishing advice at Chris Green Media. It is a journey and we support you in taking the right steps.

Chris Green is an author, broadcaster and media consultant – and managing director of Chris Green Media. 

by ChrisGreenMedia on May 12, 2015

http://www.chrisgreenmedia.com/cgm-blog-taking-the-mike/
http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/

You can be heroes for more than one day

I was sadden to hear of the passing of Dave Bowie, he was a music hero of mine from my 70’s childhood. I can recall with clarity his performances on Top of the Pops and playing his 12” records on my dad's old stacking HiFi system.

​How he created this heartfelt memory, was partly due to his music, but more so the way he made me feel. He facilitated my passion for the Glam Rock era, he inspired my interest for flared trousers, outlandish hairstyles and reinforced my love of a diverse range of music. I’m sure his intention was to entertain a nation but he did far more than that.
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Knowingly or not, he orchestrated my childhood memories by creating various personas that the masses wanted to copy. He created role models that people could aspire to be, it help them escape their mundane existence. This was never a physical transformation but he did create emotionally satisfaction thus he will be remembered for the way he made people feel.

People wanted to be just like him, copying his dress, his makeup but also his dreams. They wanted to own his success for themselves and they strived for people to follow them, in the way they followed him. He created a lifestyle for others to aspire to and his music was just a tool to get there.

I believe that the memory of a feeling is far more powerful that what someone gives you. Dave Bowie was an artist just like many others, but what made him so special was how he constantly reinvented himself to appeal in a fresh and exciting way. He gave a message that if you reach your pinnacle and accepted the prize, you could still invent a new summit to chase. He inspired a nation to explore an emotional journey which I applaud. 


http://www.changingoutcomes.co.uk/

The self-prophecy of a label

I recently took on a client that I would have never expected. She didn’t fit into my usual remit but her father was desperate and didn’t know where to turn for help.

This client was a teenage girl suffering from anorexia. She had undergone a dozen different counsellors over several years with no success. She had been systemised by society and the mechanical process that the medical profession had adopted. Her language was very factual and it was clear that she was telling me information that she thought I wanted to hear.

I’m not a trained counsellor but I am a qualified coach and my heart stretched out to this vulnerable child that had grown up far too quickly. She was in turmoil and had lost her innocence to a monster that she didn’t even understand. Her parents naturally wanted to protect their daughter and cocooned her from any harm that they could image.

It became clear to me that the process of protection, was also taking away any choices she had. It left the only control which she had “food”. She is an extremely intelligent girl who managed to control her calorie intake to the minutest detail. She had self-harmed out of frustration and her condition, although somewhat stable at this point, was far from where she needed or wanted to be. She had realized that her body was under-developed and would cause serious medical conditions in the long-term.

I couldn’t believe that the medical profession had let her down by not exploring the motives for change. They had “told” her what she should do and even “frightened” her with the dire outcomes of continuing this path, but never once asked her how she felt. They failed to highlight the positive emotions that make us all enthusiastic enough to change. Everyone that was trying to help her was just suffocating her spirit and branding her with a generic label that she didn’t want. It was becoming a self-prophecy of the box she had been put into.

I got to know this very clever girl and learnt to respect her views. Although the system had made her grow up very quickly, she was still a little girl inside and wanted to have the freedom of adolescence. Sure she would make mistake but she needed to have choices, she needed to have fun. She had lost confidence with her peer groups and couldn’t develop friendships, but she recognised what was holding her back. She had a vision of how she wanted to look, what she wanted to achieve and what the future would look like. 

I gave her the trust that she was the best person to design her life and offered the support to get her there. I expanded her list of choices and gave her a focus greater than food. I wanted her to explore a new life ruled by her heart rather than her head. I wanted excitement to prevail over her stifling logic and I wanted to give her permission not to be perfect. 

This is still a work in progress but I’m optimistic about the outcome. She is so much more positive about life and is getting healthier each day. I have changed her mind-set and improved her wellbeing. My heart fills with joy listening to her enthusiasm and watching her progress. 

http://www.mikebowden.uk/