“I don’t know if I practiced more than anybody, but I sure practiced enough. I still wonder if somebody — somewhere — was practicing more than me." – Larry Bird
(via nba.com)
There are few things as exciting as a new idea. When we have the inkling we're on to something that could be big, we want to share it. I am approached for help on new products or services and the person sharing the story can barely keep their enthusiasm in. They want to rush out and share it with the world, right now. Six to twelve months later, the idea is dead or dying.
The reason? Not enough directed practice time.
To use an old speaker's trope, for a lobster to grow it has to shed its old shell and grow a new one. The problem with shedding its shell is it's defenseless. New ideas grow by being shared and each time it happens the idea is vulnerable to predators. Most ideas are killed in break rooms, over beers, and in trade show hallways. Long before they have a chance to take flight. They aren't ready to shed their shells.
You can give your new product or service idea a fighting chance by nurturing it with practice, specific directed practice.
For instance, if you have an idea you're trying to bring to life, start by working through the three most common objections you think you'll be facing. Don't dismiss them or minimize them. Build each one into a reason why someone will reject the idea and work through how you will get them over it. Use equal parts emotional intelligence and logic and come up with three ways to approach each of the three objections.
That is directed practice.
At first your directed practice will be internal, but it will need to shift to external practice to build its defenses. Like Mike Tyson said, everyone has a plan until they're punched in the face. Share your idea with friends and family but ditch the overview. You won't pitch overviews in real life, you'll use a practiced pitch. Ask your people to give you feedback on your pitch.
Again, directed practice.
For your idea to not just survive, but thrive, it needs to get some callouses and scars. Nurture it along its path with a deliberate practice process. Don't let it die during an aside over a cocktail. It deserves a better chance. Do the work to bring it to life.
|