4 Lessons Learned Spending 8 Weeks Outside My Strength Zone

On July 20th of this year my website was hacked and malware was installed on my backend servers. My website was promptly shutdown and the next 8 weeks spawned into more work outside of my natural strength zone than I could have ever imagined.


4 Lessons LearnedPhoto Credit: Compfight

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One of my biggest challenges was staying calm and clear about the issue in front of me. I had to try extra hard to focus and remain objective so that I could speak with the right person who could help me find a solution.


I also had to constantly remind myself to treat others with respect throughout the process, even if I initially believed they were the cause of the problem. Believe me, no one wants to help you if you’re attacking them. They will only defend their position and leave you stranded.


3. Structuring Your Life Around Your Strengths Breeds Success

As I was toiling through the mess of website problems I kept having one thought return over and over again, when will this nonsense end so I can get back to what I’m good at?


What I was thinking about was podcasting, product development, and running. I was dreaming about spending my days doing what I love because I knew that I loved spending time on my strengths.


The more time I spend podcasting and leveraging my ability to speak, the better I am at communicating and inspiring others. The more time I spend running the trails, the more energy, athleticism, and enjoyment I experience doing an activity that provides phenomenal personal rewards.


What became crystal clear during the last two months was that I wanted nothing more than to delegate this hard work I hated to someone else. I knew that by continuing to try to solve these problems myself I was chasing a rabbit I would never catch.


On the other hand, by clearing my calendar of all things I should not be personally managing I would be able to devote more time to what I was born to do.


4. Simplicity Wins Every Time

Amidst all of the technical battles I was facing, somehow I missed the most obvious lesson of them all, simplicity is everything.


Keeping things simple removes friction. It clarifies confusion and moves everything forward faster.


When you find yourself surrounded by problems that exceed your current skill set there is no other better first step than to figure out how to define the problem in the most simplistic manner.


In the world of sales it is well-known that if you can clearly define the problem you can sell anything because your customer will believe if you know the problem so well you must also know how to solve it.


That’s what simplicity brings, only in this case you are the salesman and the customer. You must sell yourself on keeping complexities to a minimum while maximizing the effectiveness of the smallest number of moving parts.


It’s not easy, but it’s always the right answer.


Where We Are Now

Today, the website is in the best shape of its life. The site is faster, more secure, more reliable, and more customizable than ever. I have new systems, processes, and programs that enable me to bring my vision to life.


However, the site is far from perfect and problems are certainly not avoidable. Although, I am confident that these last couple of months have been worth the incredible effort and I hope you can see some of the fruits of my labor.


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When too much of my time falls outside of my strength zone,

I know I will ultimately become inefficient, frustrated,

and wildly less productive.


JEFF SANDERS




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Going forward I am making it my mission to stay focused on maximizing my strengths and delegating everything else that I can. As a productivity junkie, it only makes sense to invest my time, energy, and money on the few things that provide the greatest return.


When too much of my time falls outside of my strength zone, I know I will ultimately become inefficient, frustrated, and wildly less productive.


Reorient Your Life and Work

As a final action step today, take a minute to analyze your current situation.



Does working outside your strength zone frustrate or embolden you?
Do you spend a significant amount of time working in your strength zone?
Is your career based on what you’re good at or what pays the bills?
Could you find a new job or start a new business that optimizes what you are naturally suited for?

Next Week

On the blog next week I will be shifting gears and sharing 7 reasons why trail running may be the best pre-breakfast activity, even if you wouldn’t consider yourself a runner.


“Jeff

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Published on September 23, 2015 22:00
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