Posts Tagged ‘Deliberate Practice’

How to Be a Master at Anything

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Wilma Rudolph runs in 1960 Olympics.

In the 1960 summer Olympics in Rome, Italy, Wilma Rudolph became the first American woman to win three gold medals in track and field during a single Olympic Games, despite running on a sprained ankle. She was nicknamed the “Tornado” the fastest woman on earth, and the Black Gazelle. 

By all accounts, Wilma Rudolph was a master at track and field. Some called her a “natural athlete.” But if you know Wilma Rudolph’s story, you’ll know the truth is that Wilma wasn’t a born athlete. She was a sickly, crippled child who turned herself into a world-class runner through tremendous determination and discipline.

Wilma Rudolph was born prematurely at 4.5 lbs., the 20th of 22 siblings born into a black family in the South in 1940. She was struck with polio as a very young child, leaving her with a twisted foot and leg. She wore a brace and her family drove her to Nashville regularly for treatments. By the time she was 12 years old, Wilma had also survived scarlet fever, whooping cough, chicken pox, and measles.

Wilma was determined to overcome her physical challenges and become an athlete like her older siblings. Eventually she left the leg braces behind and became a star on her high school basketball team. Wilma was discovered by Tennessee State track coach Ed Temple, the man who prepared her to win Olympic gold in the 100 and 200-meter dash and the 400-meter relay.

What would YOU like to become a master of? If you’re in the work force, you may wish to become a master at your job. If you’re retired, maybe you would like to achieve mastery at a hobby - become a master gardener, or a master fisherman. Or we could apply mastery to people and relationships – becoming the best in the world at being a parent, or a spouse, or a friend to those in need. But what does it take to truly achieve mastery in any area of our life? Why do only a select few ever become great at what they do?

It is a common myth that talent is what makes some people great. From an early age we’re taught that some of us just have a natural aptitude for athletics, or managing companies, or playing an instrument. God given talent is what makes some people masters. So if we try something and discover we’re not all that great at it, or if we experience initial success only to hit a plateau, we give up on mastery, thinking we just weren’t cut out for it. We become a hacker, content with average performance or we give up entirely.

In his book, Talent is Overrated, Geoff Colvin points out that research conducted in the past 30 years or so has proven this idea of inherent talent false. Studies of a variety of subjects - violin players, chess champions, golf pros, etc. - all indicate that the difference between great performers and average performers is hard work and practice, not natural talent. Masters in a given field did not show unusual giftedness, but rather logged many more hours of practice time than their peers and engaged in “deliberate practice” - systematic practice of techniques involving specific goals and regular feedback to improve performance.

George Leonard wrote an inspiring little book called Mastery: The Keys to Success and Long-term Fulfillment. Leonard identifies 5 principles that can help you achieve mastery in any area of your life. 

1. Instruction

There are some things you can learn on your own, but if you really want to be a master in your field you must find a good teacher or coach to guide your efforts. It’s no accident that Bela Karolyi’s gym produced so many Olympic gymnasts or that Meisner, Adler, and Strasberg taught so many great actors - including Jack Nicholson, Marlon Brando, and Paul Newman. Find someone whose students are performing with excellence and learn your craft at their feet.

2. Practice

This weekend I watched my friend, Jeff, play his acoustic guitar so beautifully and masterfully it seemed effortless. But I know that Jeff goes home every night after work and practices his guitar for at least two hours. Deliberate practice is the key to mastery. We have to learn to love to practice in order to become great. You have to love playing scales on your instrument as much or more than you love performing in the concert hall. An old martial arts saying goes, “The master is the one who stays on the mat five minutes longer every day than anybody else.” Be that guy.

3. Surrender.

The courage of a master is measured by his or her willingness to surrender. To your teacher. To the constant routine of hard work to become better. And sometimes we must surrender our own expert status and become beginners again in order to reach the next level of achievement. Tiger Woods famously remade his golf swing AFTER he had already achieved tremendous success in his sport. For the master, surrender means there are no experts. There are only learners.

4. Intentionality

Intentionality is mindfulness, mental practice, having a vision of what you want to accomplish. Arnold Schwarzenneger argued that pumping a weight one time with full consciousness was worth ten without mental awareness. Average distance runners let their minds wander during a race in order to forget about the pain. Master runners focus on their bodies the whole time in order to perform to the best of their ability with every stride.

Cognitive psychology has discovered that visualizing an activity triggers the same parts of the brain as if we were actually DOING that activity. Mental practice can be as effective as actual practice in achieving mastery. 

5. The Edge.

The edge is the point where the master takes a flying leap. It seems to be a contradiction of what got the expert performer to the height of their field in the first place. After dedication to the fundamentals of their discipline and years of small, incremental steps forward there comes a point where these masters take a leap off the edge. “They challenge previous limits, they break the rules they’ve worked so hard to learn, they take risks for the sake of higher performance.”

With All Your Might

Ecclesiastes Chapter 9 verse 10 says, “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might.” Like Wilma Rudolph, you don’t need to be limited by challenges or the myth of talent. Whatever you’d like to be a master of, apply these five principles and be satisfied with the slow, steady rewards of deliberate practice.

If you liked this post, you might also enjoy:

On Planning for an Uncertain Future: Will someone please tell me what’s going to be on the test? or

Good to Great Obama Style: Why he won the White House and how it applies to You.

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Three career strategies I learned from Barack Obama and John McCain

Friday, November 7th, 2008
                                                                                                                                    
With years of campaigning behind us, it’s time to move forward and embrace the new future of America, whatever it holds.  For us job seekers and career changers facing our own uncertain future, I offer three lessons I believe we can take away from this historic presidential election and its two fascinating candidates.

1.  Have the audacity of hope.

 Barack Obama built his campaign on the premise that even though he was an unlikely candidate for President, anything was possible in America.  

John McCain survived 5 long years in hell as a POW, staged long-shot political comebacks time and again, and won the nomination of a party that really didn’t like him.

Don’t be afraid to apply for a job just because you’re too young (or too old).  Or too different.  Or lack the “right” experience according to so-called authorities.  Or because it doesn’t seem to be the next logical step up based on what your peers are doing, or what the people who preceded you have done. 

 

If you truly believe you’re the right person for the job, that you are uniquely qualified, and can make a good case for yourself - go for it.  The greatest barrier in turning opportunity into triumph is believing you can. 

 

Sometimes an individual is created “for such a time as this” and we can’t look to precedent alone to determine the right course of action.  Especially if we’re working on a frontier, looking at a task that may never have been done before, in a set of circumstances we’ve never seen before, using technology that may not have existed before, at a unique turning point in history,

 

2.  Diligently study the art of communication.

 

In “Choice 2008,”  the excellent Frontline documentary about Obama and McCain, I was floored by the revelation that Barack Obama’s celebrated, history-making speech at the Democratic National Convention – the one that launched him onto the national stage and set him on a trajectory for the presidency – was a stump speech he had given dozens of times to tiny audiences around his home state. 

 

This fact has huge implications for those of us who wish to change the world with our ideas.  Barack Obama, the great orator of our time, did not draft his career-making speech in one inspired session in his study before the big day.  He refined his words, he perfected his delivery, he incrementally enhanced his ability to affect his audience, through deliberate practice over a long period of time.

 

Are you practicing your message, fine tuning your delivery, weighing every word so that when your day comes and you can finally tell thousands of people instead of ten – they weep and cheer?

 

3.  Embrace your unique story.

 

McCain and Obama each captured our imaginations and rose to power by being himself and embracing his own story, his personal history.  People are suckers for a good story, and you should tell yours.  Just find ways to make it compelling.

 

Don’t start making excuses about how your story isn’t as good as theirs, because you don’t have stuff like an absentee African father, crash-landings in Vietnam, or the Harvard Law Review to spice up your narrative. 

 

You’ve got to do the hard work of figuring out what it is you were put on this earth to do, and then do it.  Because THAT story is interesting.

 

We all like to hear about somebody who is passionately focused on doing that thing they can be the best in the world at.  (See Good to Great by Jim Collins, The Dip by Seth Godin, or Now Discover Your Strengths by Marcus Buckingham if you need help.)

 

We can’t waste time in a job we aren’t suited for, on a career path that doesn’t spark our passions.  Our calling is out there and we have to slow down and listen for it. 

 

We must stop numbing our dissatisfaction with food and drugs and technology and entertainment and sex.  We must tackle the much scarier and riskier proposition of finding what we were meant to do in the world.  We must seek out meaning, and find those things and people that resonate with who we are at our deepest core.

 

Every one of us was brought to the earth with a unique purpose.  We were each born in a particular place, at a particular time, with particular parents and a family to love us (or not), with particular advantages or disadvantages.  We experience events, both good and bad that shape us.  We live in cultures and interact with people who influence what we think and who we become.  Our challenge is to figure out how to harness all that and use it to make the world a better place. 

 

A key distinction: Telling anyone who will listen about all the bad things that have happened to you in your life does not make the world a better place, unless you don’t stop there.  You must also tell us how you have been resilient and triumphed in the face of that adversity, or embraced peace and forgiveness and moved on, or used those bad experiences to compel you to help other people.

 

We have to live a story worth telling.

 

How about you?  What career or life lessons will YOU take away from Obama and McCain?

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