How to Take Calculated
Risk to Achieve More and Become Successful
Risk is something we all have to face
in our lives but appreciating its value and impact on our lives is not always
easy.
I asked my social media friends on a survey whether they felt
risk was a good thing and 100’s said yes and yet I know from my clients that
this doesn’t equate to 100% of people taken every risky action they could to
achieve more and live a life that fulfils them.
Take the client that needed a coaching session to get them to
take the jump into self employment. They knew in their heads that with over 20
years at the pinnacle of their career, they could do it. But they needed their
coach to be the one that took the training wheels off and said “let’s do this!”
We don’t all take the risks we should in life. What makes a risk
feel too big? What external impactors change our perception of risk and what’s
the difference between good risk and bad? When should we be risk adverse?
And how can we work out the difference and step up to take the risks that could
change our lives (for the better)?
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. What is calculated risk?
2. Is all risk calculated?
3. How to grow your risk tolerance to achieve more?
The RRIS method
The know-it kit
4.
Face your fear and take risks
1.What is
calculated risk?
Let me ask you:
“Would you cross a 3 lane road of fast moving traffic?” The
answer is likely to be “no” right?
What about if I asked “Would you cross 3 lanes of traffic at
night?” Still a “No?”
What about if I said “Would you cross 3 lanes of traffic that
had a pedestrian crossing?”
Look how the risk changes. It is the same road with the same
cars, but we’ve gone from a risk that we are unprepared to take to one that has
an element of control and expected outcomes. That is what a calculated risk is.
Would you quit your job right now and set up in business on the
street corner in an hour’s time? No of course not. However, would you quit with
a plan of action in a set period of time? Possibly?
The thing about calculated risk is that humans have to deal with their perceptions or
reality, their emotions, feelings and even beliefs to be able to take on
risk. And that is why you may see 100% of people saying “Take the
risk”. However if questioned further, I could probably find at least one
occasion where every single person should have taken the risk and they didn’t.
I’ve seen people turn down contracts, delay travelling, delay
saying “yes” to marriage, delay quitting their job and even delay having their
hair chopped off because they’ve not been able to calculate the risk with an
outcome that they deem will be satisfactory.
2. Is all risk
calculated?
In a speaking
engagement, I once re-enacted the moment when the hero of the film is hanging
on for dear life to the side of a mountain. There’s no hand places left going
up. They can’t go down and there’s no way out, the baddies are shooting at them
from every angle and you think “there is no way out of this!” and then
miraculously they let go tumbling through the air, landing in a helicopter that
flies into view being flown by the gorgeous incredibly clever side kick.
Risk is a bit like that.
The first time James Bond, Jack Reacher or Lara Croft let go and
went in a new direction, they were probably experiencing massive levels of
fear. However, by overriding that fear, they were able to create a new
definition of what is possible. It’s not called mission impossible for nothing.
But how can we know it’s a good idea to jump and when it’s going
to lead to impending doom?
Interestingly, children seem to be risk blind for a while. It is
adults that stand behind them shouting “don’t do that, you will fall and break
your neck!” Do children stop doing stupid things? A and E departments would
argue no.
But if we didn’t take on risk we’d never learn to walk. The
first time you pulled yourself up on to your legs and stood there jumping up
and down with a grin that says “Look what I can do” was sheer joy, not so much
fun the next time you tried it and nearly removed your nose. Most parents will
have a story of how their child made their hearts leap with absolute terror as
they did something stupid, but risk needs us to test its limits or we will all
be still sat in baby gyms unable to reach the cool toys.
The reason some people achieve great things is because they are
prepared to test their risk limitations.
3. How to grow
your risk tolerance to achieve more?
Here I’ve aimed
to break down what you need to keep your eyes peeled for, how to fix what you
find and what you need to do so that you can calculate risk and achieve more
with the following methods:
The RRIS method
R – Research
everything you aim to achieve.
But also know when to stop researching and get on with it. The
amount of clients I’ve worked with who are so ready they could be the most
intellectual person on the planet on their area of expertise.
It’s easy to get in the trap of “doing just a bit more research”
to get you out of taking action. So do your research and use the other tips to
help you to take action on your knowledge.
R – Rationalize
your reality.
I often hear clients say things that once said back to them they
can quickly (and often embarrassingly) see that it’s just not true. They’ve
twisted reality to enable them to stay safe.
Question what you believe to be true and the results you
perceive to be impossible to avoid. Do you have evidence to prove your reality
or are your thoughts just enabling your comfort zone to stay the same size?
Comfort zones are like big thick duvets. Glorious in the middle
of winter with the rain battering the windows and you are curled up safe and
warm, but hideous in summer, when the same duvet can wrap itself around you
becoming a sweaty trap for your legs to get caught in.
If you know that a comfort zone is twisting your reality, you
can be like two versions of my clients:
1. They like to
get so far out of their comfort zone that they can’t see it any more. They do big
actions putting into action the right support to achieve them. Learn and move on.
2. They would
literally feel stuck in fear if you offered them option 1, therefore they like
to do things in small tiny morsel sized bites. If this is you, arrange to challenge your beliefs around
anything in your life (not just related to the calculated risk to
achieve more).
If you like structure, start the day in a way you wouldn’t. Get
dressed before you brush your teeth, listen to a different radio station,
choose a different route to work.
Silly things that make you think about what you are doing can
help you see that different is not bad. Different can be exciting, new,
rewarding and so much else. And tiny steps can be right for some.
I – Ideas can
reduce or inflame our capability for calculated risk.
Before you do anything, somewhere in your head it was a thought.
When you really appreciate this, you are able to see that before you take on
any risk, you have to have the ideas behind it to achieve.
Ideas like this will be exciting, life changing, and will work
and make my career. What phrases would you create to describe the result of
your idea?
If you notice they are negative, where’s your evidence? Clients
often tell me that I make them take risks. As a coach, that’s impossible. My
job is to enable them to see what they really want and overcome the beliefs and
obstacles towards going for it.
Once we are faced with our facts on our skills, past successes
and capabilities, we can’t help but ask “what is stopping you?” By doing this,
you are creating solid foundation to get great results because your ideas are
positive and not made up of illogical untruths like “it won’t work”, “what if I
fail”, “it’s not done like that”, “I will end up looking stupid”.
S – Success over
scares
It is a calculated risk and therefore something that is worth
investing in and going for when our level of fear is reduced and our belief
about success is raised. Where do you stand on this scale?
Scared! vs Success!
Now add in the following words to the above scale. Where would
they sit?
- Staying
safe
- Stuck
- Self
esteem
- Stopping
myself
Can you start to see how there is a big gap between scared and
success? And between the two there will always be elements of feeling safe or
stuck and worrying about whether you can do it. The important thing to remember
is that you will never completely bridge the gap between scared and
successful. A little fear is
really good for you.
I’ve never had a speaking engagement where I don’t feel a little
nervous. 9 years ago that wasn’t nervousness that was absolute terror. And I
once read “it’s not stage fright, it’s performance energy.”
What description would you like to use do describe your
calculated risk? If you were to say it out loud, would it be a positive
sentence or one that reduce you to fear? Your words and finding your place on
the scared to success scale could define your likelihood of success.
The know-it kit
Taking the risk is scary, from the client that wanted to
confront their boss of 10 years and make a suggestion that they knew flew in
the opposite opinion of their boss, to the singer who is too scared to stand in
front of an audience. The important thing is to remember that you are in
control of the risks you take and a know it kit can help.
Know the times
you’ve been successful.
Lot’s of clients will tell me that their fear is overriding
their beliefs about what can be achieved. At times like that it’s no good to
think something different and expect it to magically make it seem easy.
Get the facts on your side. As much as you heart will fill your
head with negativity, hanging on to the facts of what you’ve already done in
life is something you can’t argue with.
Know the skills
you have.
As above, when we take on a risk, we need to know we’ve got what
we need to get the results we want.
Know that
mistakes are good.
No exceptional rise to success didn’t have set backs, no great
inventions didn’t have failures (with many of those becoming inventions in
their own right) knowing that mistakes are an opportunity to learn and good for
the end results can ensure you take action even when the fear is raising its
ugly head.
International Vocal Coach Gemma Milburne shared,
“I think many
of the greatest singers are the most willing to take risks. You have to risk
going out of tune, making mistakes, sounding awful, in order to get REALLY good
at singing. As a vocal coach a lot of what I’m doing is helping singers to face
that ‘mental’ risk that’s in a person’s head.”
Know the people
you can trust.
When everything is in place, you’ve got the evidence, you’ve
done your research, you are accountable, focused and ready for action,
sometimes just a chat with the right person can be all you need.
Who is in your Know it Kit? You can trust them to say what you
need them to say. And not just “you will be great dear, go for it.” Having the
right people there that will challenge, empower and ensure you’ve ready in
every capacity to make it happen.
Before a petrified public speaker has taken to the stage or a
client has walked into a room to go for their big dream, I’m often the one they
text as they walk in for that last minute reminder that they’ve got this.
Know the way
you have to feel.
And lastly, don’t forget that even with the right words from the
right people, it is still down to you.
Sometimes cultural beliefs and feelings can slip into our
mindset, other people in the same industry can tell us “it’s never been done
like that” and it can knock our focus and derail our thoughts.
How do you need to feel to get the results you want? If I told a
person from 200 years ago that they could fly anywhere on this planet in the
same day, I’d likely have been locked up. Our beliefs change with time and
experience. Do you want to be the person that creates the thoughts and beliefs
of the future? Or wait for someone else to have taken the risk (and the glory!)
and to leave you wishing “I wish I’d taken that risk”?
4. Face your fear
and take risks
Looking back to
myself years ago, Mrs. Nervous Wreck lacking in confidence…
She looked up at the chandelier that was taller than her house
and tried to focus her thoughts. No amount of “thinking positive” was working
and she just wanted her spleen to burst so she could end up in hospital safely
away from this extravagant room and all these people. How could she ever have
thought it would be a clever idea to speak to a room full of her peers?
Less than 5 months prior to this moment, she’d stood in front of
just 25 business owners and faffed, and fumbled through her words, feeling like
a complete fake wishing to never see any of these people ever again. Heck even
a career in a local fast food place would be better! She’d made a memorable
impression but for all the wrong reasons and one of the audience had taken
great delight in reminding her of her epic fail, so what had driven her to do
it again?
That was me but for some reason, I’d decided to take the risk
and speak on another stage in front of more people.
In many ways, I was hardly recognizable from 9 years ago to
today when I’m described as “one of the best speakers I’ve ever heard” and
“changed my life in one hour.” Clearly my ability and attitude to speaking to
an audience changed but what else?
It was how I faced my fear and how I grew my risk tolerance to
achieve more.
By taking my advice on how to take calculated risks, you will
gradually find yourself becoming braver and embracing more opportunities.
You’ve got this!
Mandie Holgate
https://www.lifehack.org/768345/how-to-take-calculated-risk?ck_subscriber_id=168781672
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