You can have outstanding ideas, yet never leverage them into
winning at working results. That's because the secret behind
those ideas lies in performance. Yours.
Getting the okay to pursue your idea is directly related to the
level of confidence other people have in your ability to deliver
it. And if you do, you will create for yourself opportunities on
a regular basis. One successful idea delivery leads to another
and another and another. Bigger and bigger ideas are entrusted
to people who consistently turn ideas into reality.
You see, not only does an idea need to be a good one, but the
idea-maker needs to be a performer who can deliver the vision.
That doesn't mean you need to have executed lots of ideas before
getting one approved. It does mean the base quality of your work
is a deciding factor.
In twenty years of management, I've vetoed more good ideas than
I've approved. Most were vetoed for one reason: performance
trust. I didn't trust the person to deliver the idea they had. A
mediocre idea from a strong performer will win approval over a
great idea from someone with inconsistent follow-through and
poor results.
If you can't do the little things, why would anyone give you
bigger or more important things to do? And while every idea
might not be big, it takes energy, time and resources away from
other work endeavors. Not all ideas that get approved turn out
to be successful. That's OK. Lots can be learned from the ones
that fail, too. Look at Edison and the light bulb. But if an
idea fails because it was poorly executed, we only learn the
competency quotient of the initiator.
There is a mercenary side to idea approval. What happens with
your idea is a reflection on the person who approved it. I know,
for one, I'm not willing to risk my reputation on someone's
half-baked or half-executed idea. That doesn't mean I don't take
risks on individuals or ideas. I do on both. But, business
decisions are about odds and risks. Make sure both are in your
favor. Being a strong performer is the best way to get your
ideas noticed and sell them to the powers that be.
You can start enhancing your performance reputation by
implementing ideas that don't require anyone's approval. Do what
needs doing, what would be helpful if implemented or beneficial
if created. Of course, this at-your-discretion work is always in
addition to current responsibilities. People who are winning at
working use ideas to build performance trust. And performance
trust builds careers.
(c) 2005 Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.
About Author :
Sign up to receive Nan's free eColumn, Winning at Working, at
http://www.winningatworking.com. Nan Russell has spent over
twenty years in management, most recently with QVC as a Vice
President. Currently working on her first book, Nan is a writer,
columnist, small business owner, and instructor.