How To Overcome The Real Problem At Your
Shop
By
Eric M. Twiggs
“You cannot rise above the level of your
limiting beliefs.” Jordan
Belfort
As part of my training to run a full
marathon, I ran a half marathon which was 13.1
miles. It took me two hours and twenty minutes, which was just under an
eleven minute per mile pace. I believed that it was
impossible to run a full marathon (26.2 miles) at this pace.
My feelings were
forever changed on the morning of the full marathon. During the opening
festivities, Desta Morkama, the winner of the previous week’s Marine Core Marathon, was
introduced as the guest of honor.
I was shocked to
discover that he ran 26.2 miles in two hours and twenty-five minutes, a 5.5-minute
mile pace! My belief about
how fast a marathon could be run was proven to be wrong!
Noted author &
motivational speaker Jordan
Belford defines a belief as “nothing
but an idea that you are really certain about.” I was really certain about my eleven minute mile
idea, but that didn’t make it true!
Likewise, you may be really certain about the idea that your customers
don’t like to be exit scheduled. You may be really certain about
the idea that you can’t present a large estimate to a first time customer.
You may be really certain about the idea that the ATI program won’t work in your area.
But how can you be
certain that what you believe is true?
If you want to take
your shop to the next level, you have to embrace what I refer to as the open
door possibility: You must always
leave the door open to
the possibility that your idea may be wrong.
What’s the biggest problem at your shop
right now? The most common answers are usually the following: cash
flow, car count, or hiring.
Well, I have some good news. Those
aren’t your real problems. The real problem is the limiting story
you tell yourself to explain why you don’t have what you want in these areas.
Here are some examples of limiting
stories. Cash flow: “I can’t charge more because my customers are on a
fixed income.” Car count: “It’s an election year and everybody’s slow.”
Hiring: “I can’t conduct interviews until I have an immediate
opening.”
By embracing the open door
possibility, you will be on your way to overcoming the real problem at your
shop; you’re limiting beliefs. Stay with me to learn one
specific strategy to make this happen.
Find Living Proof
In a recent video, I shared a story about this guy, let’s call him “Mike”,
who was walking down the street and fell into a hole. He was
frustrated because he had no idea how to get himself out. He was
starting to believe that he would always be stuck.
An hour goes by and he sees his friend
“Jim” walk by and he yells out to him, “Help! Get me out of here!” Jim
responds by jumping into the hole with him.
“Jim, why did you do that? Now we’re
both stuck!” Here’s what Jim said back: “I’ve been stuck in this
hole before. Follow me and I’ll show you how to get out.”
Luckily for Mike, he was able to find
someone who had done what he believed to be impossible. Jim was living
proof of what was possible.
Have you ever felt like you would
always be stuck in the hole of low cash flow, low car count, or working
the counter? This “feeling” that you would always be stuck, is an
example of a limiting belief. I challenge you to be like Mike, by finding “Living Proof” to lead you out of the
hole.
“Living Proof” will be at the
Super Conference
after netting big profits in a small town. “Living Proof” is
in your 20-group growing their car count in a “bad local economy.”
“Living Proof” will be in your next ATI
Owners class after hiring their replacement, even though “you just can’t find
good people anymore.”
You trying to convince one of these
individuals of what can’t be done, would be like me trying to convince the
Marine Core Marathon winner that it was impossible to run a marathon at an
eleven minute mile pace!
After he finished laughing at me, he
would remind me that living proof is the
best cure for limiting beliefs.
Conclusion
So, there you have it. Finding living
proof of what’s possible will help you to overcome the real problem at your
shop.
Accomplishing your goal is like running
a marathon. If someone else has done it, it must be doable!
Sincerely,
Eric M. Twiggs
The Accountability Coach
PS.
Email etwiggs@autotraining.net to receive a Limiting Beliefs Questionnaire with Five questions that will challenge what
you believe.
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