Why is Passion Important
to You & Your Organization & How Do We Use it Effectively?
By Brian Norris, All Rights Reserved, ©2000
414-688-8252, info@briannorris.com
Passion isn't a soap
opera. Neither is passion what you get from a pill or what you find on
the cover of a magazine. Passion is how life is supposed to be lived...
Somewhere
in the early 20th century, people lost their passion.
Instead
of working to live, they started living to work. 50. 60. 70. 80 hour work
weeks became the rule rather than the exception. The line between work
and home disappeared. And instead of waking up each day with a sense of
optimism and purpose men and women went to their jobs with dread and apathy.
Careers
were chosen, decisions were made and products were created and sold based
solely on financial gain.
Business
owners, CEOs and managers stopped leading from the heart and instead became
prisoners of political correctness, spread sheets and overzealous bean
counters.
People
stopped communicating with each other. At home and at work. Some simply
forgot how to talk, write or convey their thoughts and emotions. Others
were just too afraid of getting sued, verbally attacked or physically
abused for saying the wrong thing to the wrong person at the wrong time.
Negativity in the workplace soared, while morale plummeted.
Ultimately
families suffered as marriages ended in divorce and loveless infidelity.
Neglected children spent more time at the therapist's office than they
did sitting at the dinner table. Prozac shared a spot next to the one-a-day
vitamins and fat-burner pills.
Meanwhile,
thousands were fired abruptly in the name of "re-engineering"
Entire businesses went bankrupt or were swallowed by virtual monopolies.
Most unfortunately,
people started listening to the cynics.
They stopped
dreaming about creating a better world. They accepted the lie that life
wasn't meant to be experienced with unbridled enthusiasm. That love, faith
and imagination were somehow less relevant than pure science. That mental,
spiritual and financial prosperity was reserved for a select few. That
laws and politics could somehow save us from ourselves.
The ancient
rivers of passion and inspiration began to dry up. People lost their ability
to connect with others. Power hungry politicians and religious leaders
used race and religion as a wedge to divide groups, cities, nations and
entire continents.
Many people
stopped respecting themselves and the rights of others. They stopped taking
pride in what they did. Customer service and quality assurance virtually
disappeared. In place of honesty and integrity sprouted manipulation,
hyperbole and spin.
Add to this truth
still another reality...
The
comfort zones of the 20th century are evaporating. Today's cutting-edge
technology is tomorrow's old news. The rules are being rewritten daily.
As a consultant and strategist, I hear the questions in meeting rooms
and offices across the nation; how will our businesses thrive in an age
of fierce competition? How do we get the attention we need for our
services and products to be successful? The answer -- Communicate with
Passion !
What
does it mean to communicate with passion?
From
a fundamental dictionary point of view, communicate means to exchange
ideas. Passion means boundless enthusiasm or powerful emotions such as
love, anger, joy, pain or sorrow.
Simply
put, it means being human enough to let your guard down and connecting
with your clients, constituents, and everyone else in your life on a soul
to soul basis. It means doing what you love and sharing your love for
what you do in every action you take, including the way you talk, walk,
dress, respond and interact with others. It means being real and moving
beyond dogma and archaic rules that hinder instead of help.
Note
that I said earlier that communicating with passion was simple to explain.
Actually doing it takes some work. In the past century we've managed to
develop a mind set that says running a business is different from leading
a family or developing a relationship. Well I say that perception is wrong.
Why should
you even be concerned about communicating with passion?
Answer these
three questions.
-
First are you
a business owner, sales professional, executive, or have a position
which involves interacting with others?
-
Secondly do
you have bills to pay, mouths to feed, shareholders to keep happy,
and anticipate having to do so for the foreseeable future?
-
Thirdly, do
you have a desire to grow your organization and prosper in the next
few years?
If you
answered yes to any of these questions, then you cannot afford to ignore
the need to communicate with passion (CWP). In my keynotes and workshops,
I share a powerful formula for integrating passion in the different areas
of your life. Passion truly is the foundation for health, wealth and happiness
....
As we've
already established, the rules of business are changing with lightning
speed. Certain fundamentals, however, will never change. Let's call them Brian's Universal Laws of Success.
Those laws say this:
-
Age,
color, race, and religion do not change the fact that we are all human
beings and are woven into a brilliant tapestry called life.
-
Everyone
wants to be treated with respect and dignity and wants to be validated.
-
Everyone
wants to be wanted or needed.
-
Everyone,
and consequently every business has a soul (even those who refuse
to acknowledge it). These souls desire to connect to other souls by
sharing in the human experience.
Brian's
Universal Laws are the key to CWP and excelling in business and your personal
life. Incorporate these principles into every aspect of your business
and you'll have employees who work with you, not against you, customers
who use only your services and products and the satisfaction in knowing
that your business is going to be around for a long time.
Passion
is a philosophy, a way of life. But like anything else, the idea of passion
is dead unless you act upon it and liberally rub it deep into every crevice
of your existence. The following is the formula I've developed to communicating
with passion, every day of your life. It's the foundation of my keynotes,
marketing and positioning services and coaching.