This Saturday is June 30th. Unbelievable, I know, but it is. The kids have finally all graduated from high
school and summer is officially underway.
I seem to be going to a lot of graduation parties lately. It’s fascinating to me to watch these high
school graduates moving to their next stage.
I love these long days – we need to be energized, exercise
and fuel our bodies properly so we can take full advantage of them.
The year is half over.
As in sport, it’s halftime. It is
a great time to look at yourself, look at the scoreboard, assess your offense,
look at your defense, and prepare to come out for the 2nd half of
the game - strong and ready to win.
I like to use this time right now to assess my situation, think
a little, and develop a game plan for the 2nd half of the year. I do this with myself and my clients - and it works.
The time right now is perfect – use the July 4th week
for short halftime sessions with yourself.
Get your June 30 numbers as quickly as possible – then do a halftime
review of your business’s performance with your team.
Assess your initial plans – what did you get done, what
didn’t you get done, what went right, what could have been better?
Assess your team – how are the players performing, do you
need to work on developing any strengths and weaknesses?
Assess the score and the statistics - How do the numbers and
statistics look, how are you doing compared to how you thought you’d be doing? How’s everyone else in your space doing?
Revise the game plan for the 2nd half based on
what you learned in the first half and engage the team to explode and
deliver.
I remember watching a Syracuse University girl’s lacrosse
game last year against University of Connecticut. My friend Gary Gait is the SU coach and my
good friend’s daughter was an All Big East first team junior at UConn. The two teams seemed well matched and went
into half time tied at 6-6. Right from
the start of the 2nd half, SU dominated the field in every way and
wins 17-9. My guess it wasn’t a rah-rah
session at half-time, but Gary was able to assess his situation and develop a succinct
approach to shut UConn down. That is an
example of excellent leadership in a non-business setting, but it’s the same
approach in your business.
Take a halftime in your business this year, look at the
scoreboard and your numbers, assess your situation, project the plan with
numbers, then come out for the 2nd half strong and shut the
competition down and win.