6 Tips For Taking Leaps of Faith

6 Tips For Taking Leaps of Faith

6 Tips For Taking Leaps of Faith

As a former Marine, cancer survivor, and highly successful serial entrepreneur, I've learned a thing or two about risk. If you're happy languishing in a gelatinous pool of indifference and stagnation then, by all means, keep doing what you're doing. If you're ready to take a leap and change things for the better, here's some wisdom to get you started:

1. Realize you take risks every day.

Getting up, answering the phone, and heading out the door are all risks, albeit minor ones. However, every time you do those things you're putting yourself out there--you're even risking rejection daily in your professional and personal life. You do these things every day and survive. Trust me, it won't kill you. You are very capable of risk taking. Now it's time to ramp it up. You've already got a toe in the water so jumping in the rest of the way isn't as big a shock. Taking risks is a state of mind. Knowing you can do it on a small scale makes it a lot easier to start taking risks on a larger one.

2. Find comfort in the uncomfortable.

Life begins at the end of your comfort zone. You don't have to go sky diving or base jumping--although you certainly can if you want--but you do have to go beyond doing what you're used to doing and stretch out into new territory. Learn where you're most comfortable, most skilled, and most proficient - and then step right past that to a place where you feel the most uncomfortable, the most uncertain, and the most unsure of yourself. That's where the real progress begins. Consider any world-class athlete, artist, or entrepreneur. No matter what their area of expertise, they put in the hours and continually push the limits to achieve beyond what anyone thought possible. You don't break world records - or break out of ruts - without making that push

.

3. Risk it right now.

At this very moment you have everything you need.  Sound impossible? It happens to be true, you just may not appreciate it. Do you have food, clothing, and shelter?  Then you have everything you need and, once you live by this simple philosophy, taking risks becomes far easier.  The most important part of this notion is that most business opportunities don't wait around, so take action now. Don't make the mistake of waiting on someone or something to come along to make taking that leap of faith more viable. "Perfect timing" is a fallacy--there are few if any such moments in life. Don't wait so long that you can't take a risk even when you want to, only to be consumed with remorse for what "could have been."  Now is the time to capitalize on opportunities that present.  Make it so.

4. Do your own thing and do it your way.

The concept of going your own way and doing your own thing is not new.  The problem is, most people don't do it because it bucks tradition and goes against the grain, and frankly, it scares the s#%! out of most people. But on the other hand, it can provide you with a hell of a lot of freedom, and provide you a life-long exemption from blindly or reluctantly following protocol. Mavericks live according to their own agenda and goals and, even in the corporate world, there is more latitude to blaze new trails in business than you might think. The key is to look at each task for the opportunities they present. Sure, there may be a "perfectly fine" or traditional way of doing something to achieve a good result. But, when you have a better approach or process in mind that can achieve an even more desirable result, it may just be time to go rogue. In today's cutthroat culture, originality is perhaps your greatest gift. Use it.

5. Fail.

Don't just give yourself permission to fail. Actually fail. Go out there and fall on your face. It's the only way you're really going to learn anything. The lessons you learn from those failures will be the ones that propel you to success. Here's an idea: try living life like a two year old. In other words, fall down often, screw up repeatedly, and occasionally be defiant. Children are extremely resilient and, as adults, we lose this enviable quality. Throughout our career we proverbially fall down, get bruised, and even skin our knees. We might even literally shed a few tears. But, perseverance and tenacity, honed with hindsight-based perspective so as to not repeat the same mistakes, are key to staying the course up the ladder of achievement.

6. Repeat.

Taking risks is not a "one and done" proposition. It takes tenacity, the ability to keep forging ahead, trying new things, and pushing past obstacles to achieve results. Tenacity determines how hard we fight for our dreams. A tenacious person never has to look back at all the missed opportunities. Once you take that first dive off the edge of the cliff, subsequent dives become a lot easier. In fact, they become a way of life. After experiencing the exhilaration and ROI of risk taking, you'll wonder how you ever lived without it.

Scott Petinga is chairman and CEO of The Scott Petinga Group. He is a pioneer in developing businesses with lasting impact in the fields of communications, sustainable real estate, business acceleration and philanthropy. Through his flagship company AKQURACY--a full-service, data-fueled communications agency - he earned a spot on the prestigious 2012 Inc. magazine list of fastest-growing private companies. He may be reached online at www.ScottPetinga.com.

Published: March 10th, 2015

Share this Feature

AnswerConnect
SPONSORED CONTENT
AnswerConnect
SPONSORED CONTENT
AnswerConnect
SPONSORED CONTENT

Recommended Reading:

American Family Care
ADVERTISE SPONSORED CONTENT

FRANCHISE TOPICS

Pepper Lunch
ADVERTISE SPONSORED CONTENT
Conferences
Caesar's Forum, Las Vegas
MAR 25-28TH, 2025

At Twin Peaks, expect to enjoy scratch-made food, sports on TVs from every angle, frosty 29° beers, and the fun and friendly Twin Peaks Girls....
Cash Required:
$2,000,000
Request Info
Own a highly profitable business that impacts lives in your community by jumping into action as an Urban Air franchisee owner.
Cash Required:
$750,000
Request Info

Share This Page

Subscribe to our Newsletters