Peel off that outer layer, and we’ll find, at the next deepest level, our attitudes. You’ve heard many times about the importance of a good attitude. That’s because your attitudes give rise to your habits and your goals.
When you’re burdened with a depressed, pessimistic attitude, you don’t set worthwhile goals or aspire to great accomplishment. The opposite is also true. When you have positive, optimistic attitudes, you naturally aspire to challenging goals, and that leads to energy and positive behavior.
If your attitude is positive, you’ll feel like you can positively influence a prospect. That positive attitude can lead you to creating a goal and developing the strategy that you’ll need to achieve that goal.
Back to the asking questions example. Let’s say your positive attitude has led you to develop the goal of acquiring three new accounts this month. Now that you are optimistic enough to set a challenging goal, you need to create a strategy to achieve it. So, you decide on a strategy, part of which requires you to ask good questions of a certain number of prospects.
In this example, your attitude led to a goal, which led to a strategy, which led to the actions you took with your prospect. Your actions bubbled up from the inside out.
But, you’re still not at the very heart of things. Underlying your attitudes are your values. Values refer to the things you hold dear and important. For example, you may value integrity, success in your job, and the well being of your spouse. These values give rise to certain attitudes about those things.
Take the situation where you highly value your spouse’s physical well-being. Since you value him or her so highly, you think positively about your ability to provide protection and security. Out of that attitude arise your goals and strategies.
But, you’re still not finished. Underlying and supporting your values are your beliefs. For example, you may believe that it is always the husband’s responsibility to support the family no matter what. This belief may be so deep inside you that you never really articulated it. It’s just been embedded deep into your psyche.
As a result of that belief, you place a high value on the physical well-being of your spouse because, after all, it’s your job to take care of that. That value leads to attitudes, which lead to goals or habits, which lead to behavior.
Notice how the deeper issues impact and share our behavior? When we make changes at the deeper levels, those changes impact everything above.
There is yet one layer deeper. And that is your worldview. Your worldview is comprised of your fundamental, core beliefs about the world and yourself. It’s composed of the absolute deepest beliefs you hold about your purpose in life and the way in which the world functions. It differs from the beliefs above it only in degree. The worldview comprises the beginning of the spiritual
part of ourselves. These beliefs shape everything above them.
For example, one person may believe that the universe is so connected that everything we do is a result of fate or destiny. Another individual may believe the opposite, that we are creatures with free will existing in a world that responds to us. A third may believe that we are the creation of a loving God — designed for a specific purpose.
If you hold a world view that attributes everything that happens to you as controlled by fate, or destiny, you’ll have little interest in building positive attitudes, creating goals, developing strategies, practicing skills, and using effective tactics.
I’ve personally seen tribal people in developing countries who hold a world view like this. As a group, they never seem to make much progress, and many live in a lifestyle and economic conditions that have changed little over the generations. The lack of improvement in their conditions is, in my opinion, a function of their worldview. In many cases, millions of dollars of aid and years of
assistance at the more superficial levels have done little. Real change won’t happen until they make changes in their worldview.
This basic view of yourself and the world is usually influenced by your culture. It is often influenced by religious education, because it borders on the spiritual part of us.
Now, you’re probably wondering what all this has to do with sales, time management and life management. Study the illustration. Notice that there is a direct relationship between the higher layers and the deeper layers. When changes are made in the deeper layers, those changes affect everything above them. A small change made deep down in a person will impact almost everything above
it.
If you change your attitudes, you’ll change your strategy, habits and actions. Change your values and your beliefs, and you can’t help but change your attitudes. Modify your worldview, and everything above it will change.
Now, what does this have to do with time management? Follow this: If you are going to be an exceptional salesperson, you must be good at time management. In order to be good at time management, you must devote dedicated, quality time to thinking about your job, and making informed, intentional decisions about how you use your time. That means you regularly deal with the deeper issues in
your life. The deeper issues impact and inform all the decisions you make at more superficial levels.
Take control of the electro-chatter that occupies your days, harness the power of attitude, beliefs and worldview to impact everything you do. Decide what should be done, and done effectively. Live deeper.