The Midas Touch
By Gabrielle Ferguson
It’s a new year! What better time than this to reflect on successes
and mistakes of the past year and launch improvements. One lesson I learned
many years ago is this:
If you want to excel
in something, find someone who already does and ask them how they do it.
Recently I sat down with Joe Haasen, CEO of Blue-Con
Construction, a multi-million dollar excavation company in London, Ontario, and
asked him for his secret to success.
Here are his ten tips.
1. Be able to take a risk.
This is number one! Don’t be afraid; be knowledgeable. Take
a deep breath and leap but only for things you thoroughly understand. Plus, by the time you’ve done the required
extensive research, the risk is greatly minimized.
2. Surround yourself with great people.
Can you detect passion in people? This will make you
successful. Your people will make or break you. Then, similar to a coach, once
you’ve discerned the strengths of each person you hire, do everything you can
to foster and grow them.
3. Know your industry.
If you know nothing about cooking food, for heaven’s sake,
don’t open a restaurant. Know your market otherwise your business will be belly
up in no time. Having a dream doesn’t excuse you from the hard-slugging
preamble.
4. Get up early.
Your sharpest hours are the ones before noon. Rolling out of
bed at 10:00 a.m. isn’t going to set you ahead of the pack.
5. Use common sense and creativity.
It isn’t all about book smarts. Conceiving brand new ideas
requires a delicate balance of creativity and common sense. If it’s in a book it’s
been done before which, by extension, often leads to humdrum-already-been-done
ideas.
6. Stop feeling sorry for yourself.
Dust yourself off after a setback. Such a crucial life skill!
Get up, stand up straight and move forward. Don’t wallow! No one ever said this
was going to be easy. Or smooth.
7. Be okay starting at the bottom rung.
Don’t expect to start at the top. In fact, it can be to your
disadvantage if you do. Working your way up the ladder affords you vital insight
into what those people encounter day in, day out. You may think you appreciate
their struggles but without firsthand experience, it’s only imagination, not genuine
knowledge.
8. Don’t put on a show.
If you don’t have the money to back it, don’t pay for it. Flashing
gifts and goods around when your bank account is in the red is worse than
futile; it’s financial suicide. You can
act the big player but eventually the truth will surface and it has a harsh
bite.
9. Treat your people fairly.
Being miserly will cost you in the way of talent. Money is
easier to replace than exceptional staff.
You don’t have to be extravagant but you do have to be fair.
10. Believe in yourself.
Every person has something to offer the world that is unique
to them. If you’ve done your research, if you’ve got the passion and drive, if
you’re willing to start low and aim high, then believe you can make it.
