Conscious Leadership

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SAMI Radio

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Harnessing Subconscious Behavior to Move Into Conscious Leadership With our constant stream of text messages, emails, meetings, conference  calls, and so on, it is a minor miracle that any of us can accomplish  anything. With our smartphones surgically implanted into our hands, our  time is sliced so thinly that we never have room for error, focused time  to develop big-picture perspectives or the time needed for an action  plan, let alone the time to execute it.  “Ineffective daily  routines, superficial behaviors, poorly prioritized or unfocused tasks  leech leadership’ capacities—making unproductive busyness perhaps the  most critical behavioral problem” in our lifestyles today. For so  many of us—whether CEOs for major corporations, small business owners  or solo-entrepreneurs—there is a fundamental disconnection between  knowing what needs to be done and actively taking responsibility for it.  Calling this disconnection the “knowing-doing gap,” Stanford  University researchers Jeffrey Pfeffer and Robert Sutton pose the  question: “Why does knowledge of what needs to be done frequently fail  to result in action or behavior consistent with that knowledge?” Is  there anyone who hasn’t wondered the same thing? The answer is both  simple and profound. We can sum it up with the term “willpower.” The  problem is not that we self-manage poorly or that our time is divided  ineffectively, but that our consciousness or “will” is divided as well;  according to the theory of mind model, our "will" aka conscious mind  only controls twelve percent of our behavior whereas our subconscious  mind controls about eighty-eight percent of our behavior. Getting things done requires two critical components: energy and focus.  Sadly, both are at risk in our modern lifestyles. Building a bias for  action in yourself and your career requires developing and reinforcing  the skills to become a “purposeful” vs. “volitional” individual. These  are people who can consistently achieve their objectives by making an  unconditional commitment to their self-regulation goals and  sub-conscious strategies — leveraging the power of that intention to  overcome the obstacles in their way, whether their personal doubts or  the bureaucracies within their organizations.  “Purposeful  action-taking depends on engaging the power of the subconscious mind,”  according to John Assaraf of NeuroGym. “Not only does your sub-conscious  mind galvanize your mental and emotional energy -- it also enables you  to make your intention happen against the most powerful odds:  distractions, temptations to move in a different direction, self-doubt,  and negativity. Sub-conscious brain power is the force that strengthens  your energy and sharpens your focus throughout the action-taking  process.” Here are four steps that form the basis of successfully taking action: Challenge your beliefs Your  goals must be in alignment with your core beliefs. Your professional  beliefs must be aligned with your personal beliefs so you can distinctly  visualize its success. Your beliefs will affect your habits and  perceptions. Continued at https://www.thesamigroup.com/blog/conscious-leadership --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thesamigroup/support