A recruiter friend once told me that a good manager is one who gets things done and honors appointments or at least calls and reschedules, but a true executive makes time for priorities even in the midst of crisis. At the time, we were trying to figure out how to accommodate a mutual client, who was dealing with too many urgent items. I hadnât thought much about my friendâs observation until I reflected on the advice in Executive Stamina by executive coach Marty Seldman, Ph.D. and endurance athlete/fitness coach Joshua Seldman. Iâll share ideas that can help you become calm, focused, energetic, and successful.
Breathe (deeply). Joshua offered this tip as the most cost-effective and easiest way to reduce stress. Detect your tension or anxiety by noticing changes in your breathing and calm yourself through deep breathing exercises. For more on stress reduction, there is an entire chapter on yoga in the book.
Identify and focus on high pay-off activities. If youâve made it to mid-level management, you should be able to establish what these are. If you are working in an entry-level or staff-level position, studying your performance objectives (rather than job description) is a good place to start; you might also arrange time to speak with your manager about priorities and talk with colleagues who are a few steps ahead of you on how to concentrate your efforts.
Define what needs to be done extremely well, what just needs to be done, and what can be left undone. The board presentation and preparation for a client meeting should (most likely) receive your highest attention and best effort. If you have too many âextremely wells,â re-evaluate your priorities.
Hire the best possible person for each job opening and be aggressive about filling openings. Finding the right person can make a huge difference not just in your groupâs long-term performance but also in your day-to-day working life. Having diligent, responsible, and responsive employees allows you to focus on priorities rather than spending time correcting or covering for other people.Â
Delegate effectively. I like this guide:
Control your calendar, which is tough but essential to effectiveness. Here are ways:
Get a good nightâs sleep. Exercise, combined with avoiding excessive use of alcohol and caffeine, can help you sleep at night. The promise of a good nightâs sleep is often the key to motivating clients to exercise, Joshua told me in a phone conversation. After a few days of working out for just 20 minutes or so, they become believers in the power of exercise. That their employers, major corporations such as T. Rowe Price, are paying for executive/fitness coaching probably helps too.
Build stamina through exercise. Joshua, who holds a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Physiology and Minor in Sports Psychology, recommends exercise in moderate, but consistent, amounts. Pushing yourself is encouraged but not required in the exercise regimens included in the book.
Though he has trained elite athletes, his coaching of cancer survivors and those associated with cancer treatment helped him to realize that anyone can become an endurance athlete. He trained a 5-person team for the Lance Armstrong/Bristol-Myers Squibb Tour of Hope (also see this rider's account), an 8-day, cross-country bicycle ride to raise awareness of the need for cancer research. Four teams rode 100 miles at a time, rotating with other teams and resting on tour buses between stages.
I asked him: âwhat is most important to physical endurance: training, mental toughness, or nutrition?â He told me that often there is one âweak linkâ that breaks the endurance chain. Here are ways to strengthen all of them:
Basic fitness tips:
Joshua recommends determining your level of fitness before starting an exercise regimen. You can use Rockport Walking Fitness Test and/or see your physician. Ask about the condition of your heart and see if he or she has any concerns. If you have any questions, get a stress test. And, ease into a program not just to protect your heart but also for your muscles and joints.
Make sure that you have the time or can make the time to respond to crises and opportunities that may arise in your work or personal life. This flexibility may be what separates the contender from the champion. It threatened to derail the career of the soon-to-be-unemployed senior manager who my recruiter friend and I were trying to help. He was so busy taking care of his employees that he nearly failed to have time (we needed just an hour of his schedule) to tend to his career.
Executive Stamina is a mixture of fresh insight and others' wisdom (books mentioned include Good to Great, Now Discover Your Strengths, and Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience). I received a copy of the book in exchange for a book review. There is more to the book but I found the sections on controlling commitments and fitness particularly useful for both managers and non-managers.
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Great tips, especially the exercise and fitness part. Thanks!