In
his book No B.S. Time Management for Entrepreneurs, business coach and
consultant Dan Kennedy reveals the steps behind making the most of your
frantic, time-pressured days so you can turn time into money. In this edited
excerpt, the author describes the one habit you should adopt--and stick to
without fail--if you want to be successful.
I'm
sure there are exceptions somewhere, but so far, in 35-plus years of taking
note of this, everybody I've met and gotten to know who devoutly adheres to this
discipline becomes exceptionally successful and everybody I’ve
met and gotten to know who ignores this discipline fails. Is it possible that
this one discipline alone is so powerful it literally determines success or
failure?
The
discipline I'm talking about is punctuality -- being where you're supposed to
be when you're supposed to be there, as promised, without exception, without
excuse, every time, all the time. I cannot tell you how important I believe
this is. But I’ll tell you some of the reasons why I believe in its
indescribably great importance.
First
of all, being punctual gives you the right—the positioning—to
expect and demand that others treat your time with the utmost respect. You
cannot reasonably hope to have others treat your time with respect if you show
little or no respect for theirs. So if you're not punctual, you have no
leverage, no moral authority. But the punctual person gains that advantage over
staff, associates, vendors, clients, everybody.
It
is my conviction that a person who cannot keep appointments on time, cannot
keep scheduled commitments or cannot stick to a schedule cannot be trusted in
other ways either. There is a link between respect for others' time and respect for others’opinions, property,
rights, agreements and contracts. A person reveals a great deal about himself
by his punctuality or lack of punctuality. As a general rule of thumb, I use
this as a means of determining whether or not I want to do business with
someone. And, when I violate this, as I occasionally foolishly do, I always get
burned.
Let
me give you one example. Dozens of years ago, a person seeking to do business
with me arranged to meet me at an airport, where I had a 90-minute layover. We
agreed, and I confirmed by fax that we would meet at my arrival gate, at my
arrival time, and then go to that airline's club room right
there on the concourse for the meeting. When I arrived, the guy wasn't
there. Some ten minutes later, I'm paged and told to
meet him in the main terminal where he is because he ran late getting to the
airport. It takes me ten minutes on the tram to get to the main terminal, and I
have to cut another ten minutes of our meeting to allow time to get back to my
gate. I have to go through this to meet with a man so disrespectful of a
commitment made and of my time that he cannot organize his life to arrive at a
meeting on time in his own home city. If he could not be relied on to honor
such an easy commitment, why should anybody believe he would honor more
important ones?
Still,
violating my own rule, I went ahead and accepted this guy as a client. It was
predictably ugly. He lied, he cheated, and he was completely disorganized,
dysfunctional, and unreasonable. He sucked up a pretty good chunk of my time,
and it cost me thousands of dollars to get rid of him.
Now,
here's a“success secret”for you: I'm not the only person to have figured out this
punctuality-integrity link. I'm just not that
smart. I’ve stumbled on something that a whole lot of other
smart, successful, and influential people already know and secretly use to make
their determinations about who they will buy from or not buy from, do business
with or not do business with, help or not help, trust or distrust. If you are
not a punctual person, others you wish to positively influence negatively judge
you.
If
you think that successful people—people you want to
deal with—do not have their own little“systems”for judging people, you're very naïve. Not only do they have such a system,
most successful people make a point of having “instant
reject criteria,” to save time in determining who they want to deal
with and who they don't.
One
of my earliest business mentors said that there were only two good reasons for
being late for a meeting with him: one, you're dead; two, you
want to be.
So,
to borrow from Dale Carnegie, if you want to win friends and influence people,
be punctual. And, if you'd like to save yourself a lot of time and trouble,
start using this as a means of judging those who would do business with
you.
From
Entrepreneur
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