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Many professional
golfers go on to develop successful and significant business interests.
Greg Norman is a standout example of this. Many senior business leaders
play golf at a high level. This link between success at golf and
successful business may not be coincidental, the attributes required for
both are very similar. Consider the following.
Applying Fundamentals
Champion golfers
spend hours getting the fundamentals right. They call this practicing.
Very few golfers become champions without establishing the right grip,
shoulder turn and stance. These fundamentals are developed and harnessed
with extraordinary rigour. Still fewer champion golfers spend their time
‘reinventing the wheel’. Reverse grips and broomstick putters were an
evolution in the game aimed at overcoming ‘the yips’ not a means of
improving putting.
Business also relies
on fundamentals – the fundamentals of doing the job right. Whether the
function is operations, marketing, administration or finance there are
fundamental good practices that should be applied. Champion businesses
rigorously adopt known good practice to their individual situation.
Strategy
No champion golfer
would approach a tournament without first understanding the layout of the
course, knowing the various distances, where the hazards are and probably
having played the course before. For every hole a strategy is determined
before stepping onto the tee. This is called course management.
The equivalent in
business is understanding the market, collecting data that helps determine
the ‘lay of the land’, knowing what hazards may lie ahead and how they are
to be avoided. No successful business ‘steps up to the tee’ hoping
that they have the right club in their hand!
Flexibility and Range
No golfer can be a
champion by mastering only one club or shot. Despite good fundamentals and
strategy, the weather, lie and execution can result in a misplaced shot or
undesirable outcome. Shot making flexibility and use of a range of clubs
define a champion.
Businesses that are
unable to adapt to unexpected outcomes generally fail. Imagine being on
the golf course and saying, ‘I don’t care if the ball is in a bunker, I
planned to use my putter for my third shot and that is what I am going to
do!’ The flexibility to adapt to situations, without abandoning
strategy, and to manage different and new situations separates the
professionals from the amateurs.
Use of a Caddy and Coach
All professional
golfers use a caddy and most have a coach. These two advisors help the
golfer in both skill development (coach) and execution assistance (caddy).
The job of both the coach and the caddy is not to play the game for the
golfer but to help him get the most out of himself. The most famous of
golf coaches, David Leadbetter, has never won a major championship yet he
is the most sought after coach.
Compare this with
business where advisors and consultants are often derided for not having
direct experience. In fact, in many instances having an outside advisor or
coach is seen as a weakness. Perhaps if more businesses approached their
advisors as caddies rather than players they might then get more out of
themselves. Knowing how to do something yourself and knowing how to
communicate to others how to do something are two entirely different
skills.
Both Small and Big Things Count
Few sights are more
awesome in golf than seeing a +300m drive that lands smack in the middle
of the fairway. Yet, in golf this scores exactly the same as a
two-centimetre putt. In fact without the putt the hole cannot be
completed.
In any business
there are many actions that can be taken that are high profile and
demonstrate progress but it can be the smaller detail that counts just as
much. For example, generating sales is important but if you don’t collect
the cheques or trade out of terms then you will be unlikely to win the
game. The expression ‘drive for show and putt for dough’ is equally at
home in business.
Equipment
Champion golfers do
have the best equipment – but the equipment doesn’t make them a champion.
Tiger Woods with cane clubs would beat a weekend hacker (like me) using
the latest equipment. Equipment can enhance your game but it is how you
use it that is more important.
In business we have
all seen companies that have invested in new equipment or systems for very
little sustainable gain. Equipment can make a difference if the change is
fundamental but in many cases the difference between a champion and a
hacker is not the equipment, it is how it is used.
Passion
Imagine playing golf
for 40 weeks of the year. Sound good? Now imagine having to hit a thousand
balls before breakfast, everyday. Then having to practice every afternoon.
Then moving to a new hotel every week (or sleeping in your car because you
can’t afford a hotel). Then missing the cut and not getting paid a cent.
Life on the PGA tour may look good but getting there takes passion and
commitment. Plus this is the ultimate performance based system; if you
don’t make the cut you don’t get paid. Ian Baker Finch had a period where
he missed 32 cuts in a row, ouch!
Most successful
business leaders have this sort of passion, a belief in themselves, their
ability and their company. Success rarely comes without passion and a
willingness to do the ‘hard yards’.
The golf course is
often seen as the place to do business, seal the deal and win the client.
However next time you tee up consider whether your business is applying,
the fundamentals, strategy, execution and passion that are needed to be a
champion.
About The Author
Phillip Slater is the
author of the book
A New Strategy For Continuous Improvement and the developer of systems that help
companies reduce their costs in a systematic and lasting way. For more
information visit his website at
http://www.InitiateAction.com.
Note:
You are welcome to reprint this article online on the condition that it
remains complete and unaltered (including the ‘About the author’ info at
the end) and you send a reprint to
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