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Breaking
Through The Comfort Zone Barrier
By
Virden J. Thornton
After
completing a workshop on personal
productivity or time management, we usually
find participants react to the instruction
on goal-setting in one of three ways:
1.
Some workshop attendees really don’t want
their lives to change nor does a greater
level of achievement appeal that much to
them. Therefore, they do nothing as a result
of the training and their number of sales
remains the same as they were before
attending the training session.
2.
Other trainees get excited about the
techniques for improving their lives and
begin setting goals that get them fired up
for short periods of time. They don’t
place enough importance on the procedures,
however. Without the daily discipline of
reinforcing the ideas and methods they have
learned, they quickly fall back into a more
comfortable routine and soon, like the first
group, are doing nothing more to achieve
their sales goals.
3.
The third group of workshop participants
open up their minds to the concepts taught
and carefully set new sales goals. They then
commit to follow through on them and
systematically work through the comfort zone
barrier to obtain their objectives. These
are the participants who ultimately achieve
much higher numbers of sales and improved
closing ratios.
Whenever
you try to change your attitudes or your
habit patterns, you run smack into a
personal comfort zone. These are the natural
barriers or roadblocks of your mind. It’s
the part in each of us that silently says,
“I like things just the way they
are—comfortable thanks!” Once you’ve
settled down for the night in a big easy
chair with your shoes off to watch
television or read a book, it’s difficult
to put your shoes back on, get dressed up to
go out again.
Selling used to be a whole lot more
comfortable. But the marketplace changed all
the rules on us. Now you have to sell rather
than take orders. You have to set goals and
track your progress. You have to get out of
that easy chair, put your shoes back on,
turn off the television and get going all
over again.
If you look closely at why change makes you
uncomfortable, you can begin to overcome
your natural resistance to it. When you have
to change how you do things—learn new
behaviors—it will take a lot of practice
(spaced repetition) before you feel
competent in the new activity. When you feel
less confident about your actions, you have
a high degree of discomfort—it’s only
natural. It’s the fear of looking foolish.

Think about how employees felt when the
company installed a new computer system, or
when the government required another form to
complicate reporting, or when you first
learned about the internet or when PDA’s
were first introduced. PDAs, the internet
and computers still make, some people
extremely uncomfortable, even fearful.
Change is a fact of life. How you react to
it is a matter of personal choice—a matter
of attitude. Unfortunately, fear of looking
foolish is not the only comfort zone barrier
you face when trying to achieve specific
goals. Another obstacle occurs with
well-meaning friends, co-workers and
relatives. They’re the people who often,
unintentionally, discourage you from trying
to attain our goals. Motivational
professionals call them “dream
stealers.” They’re the ones who find the
flaws in your character or in your plans.
They point out to you all the reasons why
something you want to try won’t succeed.
The barrier they create is one of criticism
or fear and it’s a tough one to break
through. It’s a lot easier and more
comfortable to go along with the crowd. When
dealing with naysayers, you must remember
that they don’t want you to become more
successful than they are. The way to get
through their barrier is to affirm to
yourself that change is possible and that
you will allow no one but yourself to
control your personal success.
The fear of failing is yet another barrier.
This barrier occurs when you think about
what you don’t want to happen in the
future or dwell on what may have happened in
the past. To allow this barrier to creep
into our thoughts is to misuse your
imagination. Your attitude about failure
should be that it is merely a stepping-stone
to success. If you never fail, it means you
have never taken any action.
Your comfort zone barriers—the fear of
looking foolish, the fear of criticism, the
fear of being successful and the fear of
failure—are quite simply attitudes. They
are the negative mindsets you allow yourself
to have. You can become as successful as you
allow yourself to be. So start today to
break through your individual barriers. Set
your goals and program your mind for success
through positive affirmations and positive
attitudes.
"What
lies behind us and what lies in front of us,
pales in significance when compared to what
lies within us."
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
To
obtain dozens of ideas, proven methods, and
field-tested systems to help you overcome
your own Comfort Zone Barrier, check out my
new book, Organizing For Sales Success at: http://TheSellingEdge.com/organize.htm
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VIRDEN
THORNTON is the founder and President of
The
$elling Edge®, Inc.
a firm
specializing in sales, customer relations,
and management training and development.
Clients have included Sears Optical, Eastman
Kodak, IBM, Deloitte & Touché, Bank
One, Jefferson Pilot, and WalHMart
to name a few. Virden is the author of Prospecting:
The Key To Sales Success and the
best selling Building
& Closing the Sale, Fifty-Minute
series books and Close
That Sale, a video/audio tape
series published by Crisp Publications, Inc.
Menlo Park, California. He has also authored
a Self-Directed Learning series of sales,
coaching & team development,
telemarketing, and personal productivity
training guides. To obtain a substantial
discount on two of Virden's new manuals, 101
Sales Myths and Organizing
For Sales Success, just click on
either of the titles above.
Note:
You
can contact Virden at virden@TheSellingEdge.com.
You can also see an expan- ded biography
at http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/bio.htm.
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