Out of Practice

by Daria Steigman on November 7, 2011

Business, Networking, Boston Red Sox, Jon Lester, Independent ThinkingBoston Red Sox pitcher Jon Lester suggested that his team’s historic late-season collapse had nothing to do with the fact that he and his teammates were drinking on the job. His rationale: they were doing the same thing in April and May–and the team was winning.

Sure. And if I substituted laziness for running laps, the fact that I’d be sucking air after a couple of months would be coincidental too.

You have to practice. And practice isn’t just for athletes. 

  • If you get out of the practice of blogging, you stop looking for inspiration.
  • If you get out of the practice of networking, your pipeline dries up.
  • If you get out of the practice of business development, it’s harder to make that first call.
  • If you get out of the practice of budgeting, it’s easy to go into debt.
  • If you get out of the practice of planning, it’s easy to miss market signals.

If you get out of the practice of doing, what falls down in your business?

Photo by Newtown grafitti (Flickr).

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Ashvini November 8, 2011 at 2:32 am

Hey Daria,
Excellent post. It is important to keep the wheel turning if you don’t want them to get rusted.
It is very pertinent to people losing weight. Because of small setbacks or interruptions they stop working out. Thus they are never able to lose any weight.
The key to be on the top is to keep working, learning new thing and most important “practicing your craft” otherwise soon the inspiration dries up.
Very inspiring post :)
Ashvini recently posted..A few ways entrepreneurs can avoid burnouts

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2 Daria Steigman November 14, 2011 at 8:42 am

Hi Ashvini,

You make a great point about continuous learning. In a business context, if practicing is just about doing the SAME thing over and over, how can you iterate, improve, or adapt?

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