Adjustments

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From Coach Traub:

It is impossible to progress without change, but making adjustments often encounters resistance. Consider the top reasons that people resist changes within their team, school, or organization (assuming here that the change is for the better):

Fear of the unknown - a great synonym for the "comfort zone" is the "familiar zone." Taking advantage of the opportunity to expand one's comfort zone a little every day will reap immense rewards. Buyer beware: humans are creatures of habit. Not changing comes naturally to us.
Satisfaction with the status quo - we all agree that if something is not broken, do not fix it. However, "broken" can be defined in many ways. Clearly, winning once does not mean that nothing is broken. Perhaps a better definition for broken is "not as good as it could be."
Resentment - It is often difficult to get the ego out of the way. Sometimes the brain says yes, but emotions shout, "No!" What is right is important. Who is right is not. Resentment can often be nipped in the bud by making the decision making process inclusive. Research shows that subordinates do not have to get their way to feel satisfied or accept change. They simply need to be heard.
Lack of confidence/motivation - The perception is that the cost is too high or the reward too low -- what's in it for me? This discussion is only about good change, but just because the change would ultimately be helpful does not mean that everyone knows this. In fact, the future is impossible to know and it is unlikely that everyone concerned will think the change is a good idea. Buy-in comes from effective communication. Great leaders communicate their vision with clarity.
Lack of faith - The idea may be good in theory, but the people involved may doubt their ability to see the adjustment through to its positive end. Change typically involves an initial performance decline before the benefits kick-in and outweigh the costs. It takes confidence to decide to change and faith to see it through.
Fear of failure - we all worry to some degree about not being good enough. The goal is not to eliminate fear, but rather to eliminate fear's effects. It is okay to be scared; it is not okay to act scared. This takes the courage to do our best, one step at a time. When we define success as Coach Wooden does, "The peace of mind that comes from knowing you did your best," we can actually eliminate "failure" as a possibility by forming a plan (e.g. pre-performance routine) and executing it as best we can.


If faith and courage both exist in excess, look out world! Continuous improvement abounds.

As you read this article, you were led to think about change at an organizational level. Read the list again, this time thinking about adjustments at the individual level. The list still applies. Great adjustments come from athletes who are paying attention. Here are the specific questions of an Effective Rational Response that they are paying attention to:


  1. [*=left]What was I trying to do? (answer should be 100% controllable)
    [*=left]What happened?
    [*=left]Why?
    [*=left]What do I want to do next time I'm in a similar situation?
    [*=left]How might I best do that?

Coach Wooden Quotes: "The best way to improve the team is to improve ourself."
"If I am through learning, I am through."
 
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Same basic principles we focus on when working with girls in Scouting to help them develop their leadership skills. No matter if their experience focus is sports, classroom, or youth group, don't we all want DDs who can advocate for themselves, stand alone against peers when it means doing the right thing, and take advantage of every change opportunity? Girls who learn from "failure/mistakes" and/or change are way farther ahead in the long-term game of life!
 
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