I recently organized a public speaking training. While talking to the participants about their expectations from this training, one woman told me she was looking for a job and she wanted to learn skills which will help her get a good job. For a moment, I had to ask myself: “Wait! What training is this?” Cause I could only see a thin, anorexic link between public speaking and getting a job.
Did the training help her? Sure. Did it have a great impact on her ability to get a good job? Probably not. Because what she needed for that was mainly to develop interview skills, job hunting skills, networking people skills, skills to sell herself. Not skills to speak in front of an audience (unless she would have panel interviews with 50 interviewers at once).
This example reflects what in my experience is a common scenario for people who are interested in personal development. They usually know they want a better job, better relations, a better life, more money, more happiness, but their awareness stops here. They don’t have a clear and accurate image of the skills or attitudes they need to develop in order to achieve these objectives.
Mark Twain said: “Use the right word, not its second cousin”. Well, it also applies to personal development. We can also say, for instance: “Use the right training, not its second cousin”.
I think a lot of people embark in this process of personal development mostly by doing undocumented guessing about the skills and attitudes they need to develop. As a result, one of two things happens: either they choose to work on skills which in reality are not that relevant for getting what they want, or they define these skills in a very broad, general way, like; “I need to work on my people skills”. Which ones? Cause there are about a dozen of them I can think of right now.
The result is they waste a lot of time, energy and money by using them in the wrong area. They sabotage their personal development and don’t get the results they hoped for. Some people realize this mistake and refocus their personal development; some just give up and become bitter.
There is a very simple and important lesson here: start your personal development with the right foot, by getting a clear understanding of the skills and attitudes which will help you the most if you develop them.
Don’t overestimate how easy this will be. The preparation for personal development can involve just as much work as the personal development itself. Clearly understanding your self-improvement needs means doing some very intelligent detecting work. Here are some of the things you can do:
- Observe your specific behaviors and results, look for the patterns;
- Focus inward, on your feelings and automatic thoughts in various situations;
- Get some quality, 360 degrees feedback;
- Go to trainings and activities dedicated to improving self-awareness;
- Study people who have the results you want;
- Work with a competent coach;
- Stopping and really thinking about what you have and what you need.
As you do these things, you will be able to define your personal development goals in a more clear and accurate way. As an immediate consequence, this will boost your motivation and at the same time will make you more selective in what you read, the training you go to and so on. In the end, it will make your growth a lot more effective and you’ll see some very impressive results.
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Hi Eduard.
This is true about how we have to focus on where we need improvement, or want to see gains of some type. Throwing a wide net will leave us not improving in the specific category we actually came for. Someone wanting to improve their writing skills won’t do well to join a city council group where they spend their time talking, and a person who wants to learn how to cook fast meals won’t do well with a cookbook about slow-cooked soups.
We have to keep our eye on the ball.
.-= Armen Shirvanian´s last blog ..An Interview With Chris Guillebeau =-.
We can not change something we do not understand. With out taking the time to question ourselves and understand the answers we get to those questions all personal growth whether it produce results or not is built on a faulty foundation. when stress comes, and it will come the foundation will be tested and if it is faulty we will return to who we were our hours of hard work wasted.
.-= Quinn´s last blog ..Our war torn inner landscape =-.
A great post, I agree with everything you say. As you say the key to moving forward with your Personal Development is an analysis of your current position.
Where are you starting from? What do you already have in your toolbox? Questions that aren’t as easy to answer as you may think, for some people.
Very true and wise words. I have seen people make this type of mistake very often and it is my observation that often they not only do not know what their personal development needs really are, but they also do not have a clear definition of what it is they wish to achieve overall.
.-= Carol King´s last blog ..The Negative Limiting Beliefs from Hell (Part 2) =-.
Some people do know what their needs are but are unwilling to change. You make some excellent points!
.-= Tess The Bold Life´s last blog ..Why I Love To Blog =-.
Sometimes we need to get clarity on what we actually want to achieve. You highlight some good ideas for gaining clarity and beginning the journey to self development.
.-= Eric | Eden Journal´s last blog ..Life is a great big video game =-.
Hey Eduard,
I remember Tony Robbins saying clarity is power and the above example is no exception. When you’re clear about what you want you can easily establish what you need. Nicely put! 🙂
.-= Amit Sodha – The Power Of Choice´s last blog ..How To Inspire The World In Under 160 Characters =-.
Hey guys (and gals),
Thanks for all your comments and ideas. It’s good to get your input on the topic of effective personal development. 😉
Its always great to study those above you, it helps you understand
what action steps needed to reach their level. We all should be looking up at
all times. Wanting an desiring to be better and get better.
What go you into personal development Eduard?
Hi Jonathan,
The major thing which got me into personal development was wanting to improve myself so I could get the things I wanted in life.
But I didn’t get into it all at once. I started with wanting to become a good public speaker, then moved to communication 1-on-1, confidence and so on. Now I’m mostly focused on my look and my salsa dancing 🙂
“Having a plan” is not something that I think we in the West are really taught that much these days. We’re taught to do what we need to do – go to college, get a job, have family, pay taxes, get promotions, and die. Most people don’t really care and just saunter along, some become bitter and crash hard, while some become genuinely happy doing what they do. But, the important point in this article is to consciously think. You start somewhere and do something, and then readjust until you achieve your desired results; people these days are taught to start and keep doing the same thing over and over, with few options being presented before them. It’s great you made this point – so many people just sleepwalk through life!