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5 Powerful Ways To Confront Change

The only constant in life is change. but are you prepared to handle any change on your workplace? Change is what ultimately drives growth, so you have to be willing to accept it.

Until you recognize that change is going to happen, and get over the frustration that comes with it, you won’t be able to effectively manage your business. This isn’t to say change is no longer problematic after you learn to accept it, but it does become easier to deal with.

From a management and leadership perspective, managing change is a major challenge. Not only is technology advancing at a rapid pace, but the infusion of millennials into the workplace means ideologies and approaches are changing. There’s an entirely new perspective on what work entails and the role people and businesses play in carrying out particular tasks.

This article provides 5 powerful ways to better confront change:

1. Prepare for Multiple Outcomes

The very nature of change is such that you can’t predict or control what happens. The best thing you can do is stop trying to guess what will happen. Instead, you should place as many small bets as you can on a variety of different outcomes. By preparing for multiple outcomes in a scenario, you’re essentially hedging your bets. You’re ensuring that you don’t get caught in a situation where you’re unprepared or unable to move.

2. Quiet Your Limbic System

The limbic system responds to uncertainty with a knee-jerk fear reaction, and fear inhibits good decision-making.  Fear is a big part of change. Once you’re able to deal with the fear component of the equation, your decision making will naturally become more rational and calculated.

3. Get Over the Pursuit of Perfection

Between little things and big responsibilities, we’re all making a handful of mistakes on a daily basis. The sooner you get over the notion that you can or should be perfect, change will come easier. You’ll put less pressure on yourself and be more willing to confront the challenges and decisions that await you.

4. Prioritize People Over Processes

You really need to have strong relationships with people you can trust. Together, you can use your collective knowledge, experience, and creativity to tackle these new issues. Prioritize people over processes and you’ll be better off almost every time.

5. Know Your Limits

When you know what you can and can’t do, you’re able to hand off certain responsibilities and processes to other people who are better prepared to handle a specific element of change. It can be humbling to do this, but it’s usually what’s best for the company.

Image Source: Pixabayjplenio

Changing Mindsets

Which ‘mindset’ do you possess? ‘Mindset’ is a simple idea discovered by Stanford University psychologist Carol Dweck in decades of research on achievement and success, a simple idea that makes all the difference.mindset_2

According to Carol Dweck everyone has either a fixed mindset or a growth mindset. A fixed mindset is one in which you view your talents and abilities as ‘fixed’. In other words, you are who you are, your intelligence and talents are fixed, and your fate is to go through life avoiding challenge and failure. A growth mindset, on the other hand, is one in which you view life as a series of challenges and opportunities for improving and you see yourself as fluid, as a work in progress.

The good news is that mindsets are not ‘set’ and we can cultivate a growth mindset to achieve success and happiness. At any time, we can learn to open our mind to develop our ability to learn new things across a broad range of skills. The more we learn, the more our brain grows and can learn more easily.

In this TEDx talk Eduardo Briceno, co-Founder and CEO of Mindset Works, explains the principles.

Who Moved My Cheese?

Who Moved My Cheese? is the best-selling business book of all time.

It reveals profound truths about change that give people and organizations a quick and easy way to succeed in changing times.

Here there are some quotes you can find in this book:

“The quicker you let go of old cheese, the sooner you find new cheese”.

“See what you’re doing wrong, laugh at it, change and do better”.

” The fear you let build up in your mind is worse than the situation that actually exists”

Image source: http://goo.gl/LNgZH

Spencer Johnson, the first Medical Director of Communications for Medtronic, is one of the world’s most influential thinkers.
His eleven international bestselling books include Who Moved My Cheese?® An A-Mazing Way to Deal with Change, and The One Minute Manager®, co-authored with Ken Blanchard, the world’s most popular management method for more than two decades.

Virtual learning

Knowledge is power, but virtual learning is brilliant! Keep learning everyone.

This is the message that Janine N. Truitt, a human resources professional, conveys in her article “The Futurism of HR Technology: Virtual Learning” published on toolbox.com

Learning as we know it in HR (but not only) is rapidly changing.
Gone are the days of physically traveling to a venue to sit in a chair and hear a presentation.

Learning and training alike have gone virtual and there is no turning back.

Image credit: http://itcilo.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/training-logo.jpeg