How To Move from Excuses To Excellence
By
Eric M. Twiggs
“There is nothing either good or bad. Thinking
makes it so.” William Shakespeare
Do your results at the shop
depend on external events? As I ponder this question, I’m reminded of a
story I shared in a previous post about this single father with two young
sons.
The father was laid off from his
job and struggling to make ends meet. After several months of
unemployment, he became desperate and robbed the local convenience store.
The father was arrested and
sentenced to twenty years in prison. The two boys were separated from
each other and placed in the foster care system.
Fifteen years later, a news
anchor got wind of the story and decided to check in to see how the boys were
doing. The youngest son had become a drug addict who was always in trouble with
the law. The older son had become a successful entrepreneur and community
activist.
The reporter met with the boys
separately and asked them both the same question: "Why do believe you
turned out the way you did?"
They both had
the same reply: "What else would you expect with a father like
that? The boys got different results, even though they
experienced the same event. But why?
The Bridge
It’s the same
reason that you, and that owner in your 20 group, can get different parts
margin results, even though your customers have the same median income.
It’s the same
reason that you and that owner you met at The Super Conference, can have
different car count results, even though you both share the experience of being
in a small town.
You both are
experiencing the same event, but one of you is making excuses, while the other
is achieving excellence. You bring a different perspective to the
shared experience.
Your perspective is the bridge that can take
you from excuses to excellence. Which
side of the bridge are you on? Dictionary.com defines perspective as a
particular attitude toward or way of regarding something.
For example, when you watch the news
and the reporter interviews two people who witnessed an accident, they usually
mention a different account of the same accident. Their individual
beliefs have shaped the way they regard the event.
Here’s the bottom line:
If your beliefs about your situation, your shop, or yourself, aren’t
moving you closer to your goals, then a change of perspective is in order.
When your perspective lines up with your goals, it becomes the
bridge that takes you from excuses to excellence.
The Question
I spoke with two shop
owners this past week, one named “Tom” and the other named “Todd”.
Tom ranked in the ATI Top 25 for 2017, while Todd has a negative gross
profit dollar lift average for the year.
Both told me how their
vendors were saying that the entire area was slow. Both mentioned that
their competitors were complaining about their bays being empty.
Tom experienced a
record setting week in mechanical sales and Gross Profit, while Todd blamed his
local economy for his subpar performance. Why did they get different results, despite
experiencing similar slowness?
As Tom was going
through his experience, he asked himself the following question, “What can I
do differently?”
When you’re faced with
a problem, like low sales, or low car count, ask yourself the previously
mentioned question until you can come up with eight different options to
overcome the issue.
Doing this will change your perspective and cause
you to move from excuses to excellence.
Conclusion
So, there you have it. Embracing the right perspective will move
you from excuses to excellence.
Asking the right question will position you to experience profits while
others are complaining about problems. What else would you expect with a mindset
like that?
Eric M. Twiggs
The Accountability Coach
PS: I have a
Perspectives Tool that can help you to identify eight different options to overcome
your most pressing problem. Email etwiggs@autotraining.net if you would like a
copy.
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