Thursday, December 31, 2009

New Years Resolutions - help from Randy Park

Tips for making and keeping New Years Resolutions

This is a summary from an interview that Global Television conducted with Randy Park

Here is a short recap of some of the points:

When most people talk about New Year's Resolutions they are referring to breaking a habit. Basically they want to do something differently. For successful New Year's Resolution strategies, it is important to understand the nature of habits.

Habits are automatic thinking - thinking without consciously thinking - walking, getting dressed, driving a car. You can see several common characteristics:

1. the examples listed are all behaviours you have learned2. you learned these through repetition3. they are all useful4. they are self reenforcing - every time you do them they become more ingrained5. they are all controlled by your brain

Since most of the habits that we learn are helpful, our brain has evolved to make it hard to change habits. (If it was easy, we might forget how to ride a bicycle if we didn't do it for a while.) The "hardware" of our brain where the habits are stored can't distinguish between a good habit and a bad habit - it will resist changing either.

Here are some suggestions for setting up and continuing successful resolutions:

1. Acknowledge it is hard. Your conscious will is trying to change an automatic learned behaviour, and we've seen your brain resists that change for very good reasons.

2. Make sure it is possible. Let's say you're on a volunteer committee and you resolve to be on time for your meetings from now on. You calculate that if you leave work right at 5:00 p.m. you can make the meetings on time. But if in reality you are seldom able to leave at 5:00 (for one reason or another) then realistically it will be very difficult to keep the resolution. Think things through to make sure there is a possibility of success.

3. Acknowledge there will be setbacks. DON"T fall into trap of predicting one future because if you have a setback, you might be tempted to admit defeat and tell yourself that your resolution won't work since you have proof that your view of what would happen is not accurate.

4. Plan for the setbacks - what will you do? If you are quitting TV and accidentally watch a show, what will you do when it is finished? If you have a plan, it might be to finish watching the show, then immediately pick up a book (rather than saying to yourself, oh well might as well keep on watching)

5. It may be helpful to have support, for two reasons. One, they can remind you - bring into consciousness - what you were so clear on when you started, especially as your resolution gets overwhelmed by day to day life. Two, they can provide help if you do slip with your resolution.

6. Sometimes a physical reminder is useful for some people. Maybe it is a note sitting on your desk; I use alarms during the day that remind me "am I following my planned priorities?"
The key is to keep conscious both the new behaviour you want to do as well as the moments when you slip toward the old behaviour. The goal is to make your new behaviour as automatic as your old one was!

Randy Park

Upcoming Event... Randy Park and three other professional speakers are staging an evening titled "Life Skills Business Success - Essentials for Thriving in Turbulent Times." This is a fundraiser for Laura's Hope, a charity that is actively funding research for Huntington's Disease.

It will be January 26 in the evening, in Burlington; for more information go to www.the4speakers.com

Randy's second book The Prediction Trap is now in select stores. Eric Reguly of The Globe and Mail says "Randy Park's stimulating book is a must-read for anyone who wants to confront the temptation to sacrifice long-term planning for short-term gratification."
Phone: 416-703-9202 Fax: 416-703-9198
e-mail: rp@ThinkingforResults.com web site: www.ThinkingforResults.com


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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

PowerPoints: The Best of 2009

MONDAY MORNING MANAGER
PowerPoints: The Best of 2009
December 28, 2009 Globe & Mail HARVEY SCHACHTER

“Do something that scares you at least once a year.” Burlington, Ont.-based consultant George Torok counseled earlier this year. For many business leaders, the economic downturn raised more scares than they might have preferred. But Mr. Torok’s advice, which appeared in his Motivational Speaker blog, makes you stop and think – as should many other nuggets of wisdom on leadership, strategy, execution, meetings and marketing that were dispensed over the year. Here’s a review of the most illuminating ideas that appeared in 2009.

Read the rest of The Best of 2009.

Harvey Schachter's guide on how to handle everything from overflowing e-mail to meeting overload

George Torok
Canadian Business Speaker

The Globe and Mail, Canada's National Newspaper

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Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Interivew with ING Bank

Leadership
How We Created A New Kind Of Savings Bank
by Robert Reiss

Imagine entering a heavily regulated ultracompetitive industry as a start-up. That's what The Dutch-based ING Group decided to do in 1998. It founded ING Direct as a Robin Hood of the banking industry, a new kind of bank aiming to bring back saving to the average American. The idea was to have a bank without branches and pass the savings from reduced overhead on to the customer in the form of higher rates. ING Direct opened for business in 2000 and was an immediate success. By early 2001 it had passed the 100,000 customer mark, and just six months later it passed 200,000.

Through unconventional but focused advertising and marketing outreach, the word spread so explosively that today ING Direct is America's largest savings bank, with more than $90 billion in assets. I talked to Arkadi Kuhlmann, its founder and chief executive officer, about how he introduced something truly new into the banking industry.

Forbes: What is ING Direct's model, and how is it different from that of other banks?

Kuhlmann: There are 9,600 banks in this country. When we started, we thought, there's no point making another bank exactly like all the others, so let's do what's great in America, let's innovate. Let's innovate around marketing and technology and productivity.

We wanted an important and clear idea, and that was the idea of leading Americans back to savings. We saw that there was too much spending going on. Credit cards had become the opium of consumerism. Let's encourage Americans to save, we decided, and that has been our mission.

Our model was to grow organically with a high-volume, low-margin business. We wouldn't target the 30 million rich people in America; we would target the 270 million who are the backbone and who we thought needed a better value proposition--that is, more affordable savings. We could offer significantly higher rates if we removed costs from our model. Branches are usually a huge cost, up to 50% of a bank's expenses, so we didn't have branches and could pass on the savings to our customers. All our services are provided over the telephone and the Internet. We have also opened up several ING Cafes, to underscore the idea that opening an account should be as easy as buying a cup of coffee.

We have no minimums. You want to open an account for your grandchild for a dollar, you can do it. We have no fees. But we do have a maximum. You can't put more than a million dollars into this account. Why? If you have a million dollars, you need private banking. You need a whole bunch of other services that a high-volume, low-margin player isn't going to deliver to you. We are here for the everyday American.

How did you develop this model?

If you look within the banking industry, you'll end up doing what everybody else does. So we looked at other industries, airlines, hotels, retailers, electronics--models like Dell, for example.
We set out to be a high-volume, low-margin pure retail play, which meant we had to cut out fees. We would need a productivity advantage, just like retailers have. So we looked at grocery retailers who do a high-volume, low-margin business. They have to have a service-differentiated edge, clearly focused on who their customers are. We set out to take those ideas and create a new type of banking model.

As CEO, what are your most important roles?

CEOs need to be clear about how they express the vision and then the mission. Vision is aspirational, and mission is how you hold yourself accountable. Our vision is to lead Americans back to saving. Our mission is to simplify financial products.

How do you as CEO view social media?

Many of our customers are on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. In electronic networking, people talk about everything. We do want people to talk about us. Forty-three percent of our customers come by word of mouth. So whatever you say in an ad, you'd better deliver, and what you say in social media had better be true. If you are like me, you want to ride a Harley-Davidson, you want to carry a nine-millimeter gun, it had better be real. It cannot be for show. So either you're authentic about this or you're not, and people see through it.

But the other problem is you can't control social media. You can't go out and shape the public conversation. People are going to say what they want, negative and positive. And that irritates a lot of businesspeople. It certainly irritates CEOs, because they still believe they're in control of their brands and how their conversation in the public is shaped. Social media force you to let go of your brand and return it to where it belongs--with the customers.

Is the customer always right?

In most places, every customer is right. But in a highly automated productivity kind of business, we create value for the customer by simplifying everything and having just one highly successful model. It's like when Ford started and you could have any Ford you wanted as long as it was black. With ING, you can have any high-rate savings account you want as long as it's orange. It's simple because it's done in a uniform way, and everyone, regardless of account size, gets the same service. We can do that through high volume. We can pass those savings on to our customers.

As an example, we will not give you a mortgage unless you have a good down payment. I will not give you a mortgage for 100% loan-to-value. That's not our program. Now, Uncle Sam will do that, and he is competing with me, but I'm appealing to Americans who basically say that just because you can do it doesn't mean you should.

I have seven and a half million customers, and I am willing to stand up to every one of them and ask, have I given you a good deal? Have I tricked you? Have I surprised you? Have I disappointed you in any way?

What is your philosophy about building a culture?

The fundamental premise about culture is that you are either in a job or on a mission. Many of us have a simple contract. You put in time, you apply skills, you do certain tasks, you get the result, and you get paid for it. But that isn't really enough for most of us.

Most of us want to know that what we work on fulfills something we want to accomplish. It can be personal development. It can be doing good for society. It can be helping the environment. It can be creating something that improves the quality of life of people around us.

Culture gets created by itself. If you don't do anything, it gets created in a vacuum. Things just seep in, and a culture gets created on its own. Or you can direct it in a certain way. We said, well, let's direct it, and let's make sure it's consistent and aligned. I believe you need to direct the culture--and let the culture direct the business.

It sounds like this is more than just business to you.

In America our core characteristic is optimism, but underneath that Americans have a strong belief in independence and freedom. Our country has grown because we rely on ourselves. Our grandparents, yours and mine, found their own resources. They didn't believe every answer was a line of credit on a credit card or the government helping them out. The self-reliance of Americans is what founded this country, and we somehow have forgotten that.

I want people to say, those guys at ING Direct, they helped bring that self-reliance back. That's what we want to leave behind. It's not about just making money. Money is the oil in the economic machine, not the machine. And it all starts with the mentality of bringing America back to saving.

Robert Reiss is host of "The CEO Show," which is nationally syndicated by Business TalkRadio Network. This article was adapted from an interview that aired on "The CEO Show." To hear podcasts of it and other CEO interviews, click here.

Source: Forbes
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George Torok
Business Speaker
Toronto Business Speaker

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