ABE LINCOLN’S AXEBy Dirk Zeller How much time do you spend
improving your skills daily or even weekly? The skills of selling
real estate include our listing presentation, follow-up systems,
prospecting, negotiating, and qualifying, to name a few. It’s your
mind, what you say, how you say it. How much time do we actually
spend practicing these skills? Do we truly need to practice them? I
ran across a quote once that stopped me in my tracks. Abe Lincoln
said, “If I had six hours to chop down a tree, I’d spend the first
four hours sharpening the axe.” He would spend two thirds of his
time improving the tools that make him effective at his work. What
would your business look like if you spent time sharpening your
axe? Your skills in selling real estate are your axe. What if we
were to spend even just 30 minutes daily working to become better
at selling homes, serving our clients, and running our business?
What would the end result be? We would be investing 2.5 hours per
week in personal and professional improvement, or 10 hours per
month, for a total of 125 hours in a year. That’s three weeks a
year of straight work on your skills in selling real estate.
Imagine the difference in income for you and the increase of
service to your clients with that approach. You won’t miss the 30
minutes at a time that you are investing. Most of us, when we get
to work, do the same thing daily — we start right in trying to chop
down the tree. We don’t evaluate how best to chop down the tree; we
just start chopping, and hope that eventually the tree will fall.
We keep swinging the axe until the sweat is pouring down, without
stopping to consider whether this is the best approach. We expect
progress just because we are working so hard, and it is true that
by working hard we make good time. But we are often making good
time in the opposite direction from our desires in life. The
problem is that we don’t know where we are going. Many of us have
not clearly defined what we want. We would get much better results
from our efforts if we spent the time to sharpen our skills and to
think about what we are doing. Many speakers talk about being
efficient. When your efficiency increases, they say, you have won
the game. It is true that there is value in increasing your
efficiency. Efficiency is great, as long as we are effective as
well. But being highly effective is more important than being
highly efficient. Let me give you an example. Being efficient is
having the skills to drive at 70 mph versus being able to control a
car only up to 55 mph. Being effective is taking the most direct
route to drive fromDenvertoChicago. If you are not focused on
effectiveness, you may drive fromDenvertoDallasto get toChicago.
The goal isChicago; even if you can drive at 70 mph the whole way,
going toDallasfirst wipes out all of your efficiency gains. Take
the time to ensure that you are heading directly in the direction
you desire; that you are not taking the wrong turn; that you are
not stuck on the turnpike of life with no exit for hundreds of
miles. You must spend time to focus on being effective, to “sharpen
the axe.” What is your axe in the real estate business? Which tools
do you need to spend time sharpening in order to be more effective?
Most of us have quite a few things that we need to sharpen in our
business. Select one thing that really needs your attention today.
Don’t wait until tomorrow — do it now. Then work, focus, and
improve that one area, even if only for 30 minutes a day, to
sharpen your axe. You will be amazed at the ease with which you can
fell the big trees of life. Like us on Facebook- Click hereFor more
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