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The “Lucky 500” is Not a Stock Car Race!

The “Lucky 500” is Not a Stock Car Race!

(A Lesson I Learned About The Importance of Gaol-Setting)

Robert Brents, "The 80/20 Guy"

I have been a seminar and workshop leader for over fourteen

years, mixing in stints as a consultant and project leader

in order to stay current and be able to speak from

experience.

Over those years, I have refined my message and created my

niche. I’m now known as “The 80/20 Guy”, and my

presentations are based on what I call The Pareto

Perspective.

For about the last three years, however, I had pretty much

just let things happen, taking gigs when they came along,

delivering a wide variety of topics. Jack of many seminars,

master of one - but not focusing on delivering it

consistently.

Well, folks, when you coast along like that, eventually the

momentum runs down and your vehicle comes to a stop by the

side of the road.

Thus, for the first time in fourteen years in business for

years, mixing in stints as a consultant and project leader...

myself, my income last year wasn’t higher than the year

before. In fact, it was lower.

So at the beginning of this year I decided to consciously

set goals. Specific goals. Long-term goals, because I knew

that they would drive my short-term goals. And I did this in

a way I had never used before.

I started with the largest end-objective, and then worked

backwards to figure out what I would have to do specifically

to make it happen.

I determined the financial goal I wanted to attain within

the next six years. Then, based on my current speaking fee

schedule, I calculated that to produce that result I would

need to deliver 500 presentations.

Hence, “The Lucky 500”: the 500 companies or decision-makers

who will hire me to deliver my message that will help them

focus resources on breakthrough objectives to improve their

productivity, profitability, and creativity, and create

outrageous success.

So the lesson I learned through painful experience (which I

have incorporated into the Planning segment of my keynote

speech, “Frank Sinatra Didn’t Mover Pianos!”), start with

the end in mind.

P.S. I have also discovered that using this approach -

having a specific target of 500 presentations – makes it

easier to take the “No’s” that are an inevitable part of

cold calling prospective clients. (The close ratio in my

business is only about 1 out of every 20 to 30 calls.) My

aversion to those “No’s” was what caused me to stop making

cold calls, which led to the decline of my business. Now, my

attitude is that I “only” have to find 500 companies or

decision-makers to reach my goal. So, if not this prospect,

then possibly the next. If I get a “no” I move on to that

next call immediately because the sooner I do, the sooner I

will find my “Lucky 500”!

About the Author

Robert Brents, "The 80/20 Guy"

Create Outrageous Success with P.A.R.E.T.O.!

http://www.RobertBrents.com

email: RobertBrents@RobertBrents.com

(619) 479-1249 Fax: (651) 317-4594