affiliate internet marketing web, targeted internet marketing, internet
marketing seminar
Reliable, Respected, Revered or Feared
What is most the most important attribute to developing your reputation?
Would you prefer to be known as reliable, respected, revered or feared?
Is it possible to be all of these things over time? Constructing your
reputation is like solving a Rubik's Cube puzzle. It takes time, several
steps and the right combination of twists and turns. It is also
important to know what it should look like when you are done. When you
have the goal in your mind, then you can go about solving the puzzle.
The GOAL
The goal of developing your reputation is to be true to yourself. Be
consistent with your principals and your personal values. Your actions,
your decisions and your interaction with others should be a reflection
of the way that you live your life. If you attempt to disguise your
intentions or beguile your associates, you will not be able to maintain
trust or confidence. If your intentions are to help your customers, look
for other individuals with similar intentions. If you are content with
your own situation, then enjoy the camaraderie of your peers and help
them to achieve their goals. If your intention is personal advancement
or promotions, be open about searching for people who will support your
efforts.
If you define and share your goals, you will either find supporters or
other individuals with similar goals. At the same time, be cognizant and
supportive of the goals of those around you. Be prepared to listen
intently and understand the aspirations of coworkers and customers. You
person who listens the most is heard loudest.
RELIABLE
First, establish a reputation for being reliable. Regardless of your
position, title or tenure, the foundation of your reputation should be
reliability. If you are the leader, manager, director, clerk, associate
or representative, maintain a dedicated focus on being consistently
reliable. It is equally important to be a reliable customer as it is to
be a reliable vendor or supplier. No matter how powerful or seemingly
unimportant you may perceive your responsibilities, there are other
people who rely on you. Be consistently reliable for the people you
report to, to the people who look up to you, the people that you support
and to the people who support you.
Even if some people respect you, revere you or fear you, you will have
no value to anyone if you are not reliable. Do not forget this basic
foundation in the search for power or prestige. You may be respected for
your capability, but what good is it if you can not be counted on as a
reliable individual? This is based on your ability to perform
consistently and to be supportive of others.
RESPECTED
You do not have to be the president or a brain surgeon to be respected.
Take a look at the positions and the people that you respect most in
your life. Then look to see what these people have in common. School
teachers and police officers are respected for their individual
sacrifice and dedication to their profession in the service of others.
Respect can be earned by great achievements through consistent effort,
self-sacrifice and being someone that other people can count on, being
reliable. A leader or a coach does not earn respect for the position,
but rather by what they do with the authority and responsibility of the
position. A coworker may earn respect by diligence, effort or
self-sacrifice. Winning the lottery may achieve instant wealth, but it
does not earn instant respect.
What can you do to earn respect? You might be respected for your talent,
for your character or for your perseverance. Respect may be earned by
the way that you use your experience, knowledge or previous
achievements. If you want to be respected and do not know how to begin,
start by being reliable.
REVERED or FEARED
For centuries there has been a debate regarding the benefits of being
revered or being feared. One dimensional leaders often choose one of
these attributes for their reputation and dedicate their ambitions
toward a single goal, to be revered or to be feared. Machiavelli
described the importance of being feared, and many dictators who
embraced this approach were eventually rewarded with revolution. On the
other hand, individuals who take extreme measures to be liked or revered
may run the risk of being taken advantage of, and thereby losing much
more than respect.
In the balance of leadership, individuals are more likely to make
perform or make sacrifice for something and somebody that they believe
in. When performance and sacrifice is demanded through fear, the output
is reluctant and can not be sustained. From a personal perspective, are
you more likely to repeat a task and improve your personal performance
when doing something that you enjoy, or for someone that you want to
please? Are you more or less likely to expend extra effort consistently
for a job or a person that you resent?
Good decisions are made when clear purpose and goals are established and
shared. The predominance of fear impairs good decisions, or even worse,
may precipitate a culture that lacks any decisions for fear of being
ostracized. Avoiding a decision is the same as making a decision to
allow unmanaged consequences.
It is possible to be both revered and feared. By virtue of being
respected as a reliable individual, you will become both revered and
feared. Some individuals will appreciate consistency, predictability,
direction and reliability. By the same token, if you are consistent with
your own personal goals and values, you may be feared by other
individuals. If your values are self-serving, you will be revered by a
small group of like-minded individuals and feared by many. If your
values are self-sacrificing toward the greater good, then you will find
yourself revered by many and feared by the self-serving. In any case,
consistency of purpose and character will create circumstances that
cultivate opportunities to be revered, feared or both. This depth of
character is far superior to a hollow one dimensional approach of
choosing to be only revered or feared.
What does all this mean? Stop worrying about your reputation and
concentrate on doing those things that reputations are built on. Listen
intently to others. Be willing to make sacrifices for others. Be
consistently reliable, and be true to yourself. Do your job with the
same principles and passions that you live your life, and your
reputation will take care of itself. By coincidence, if you can achieve
this dedicated diligence to your values, you will discover an inverse
relationship that your reputation will grow as your care less about it.
Words of Wisdom
"Conscience and reputation are two things. Conscience is due to
yourself, reputation to your neighbor." - Saint Augustine
"You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do." - Henry Ford
"Regard your good name as the richest jewel you can possibly be
possessed of - for credit is like fire; when once you have kindled it
you may easily preserve it, but if you once extinguish it, you will find
it an arduous task to rekindle it again. The way to gain a good
reputation is to endeavor to be what you desire to appear." - Socrates
"There are two modes of establishing our reputation: to be praised by
honest men, and to be abused by rogues. It is best, however, to secure
the former, because it will invariably be accompanied by the latter." -
Charles Caleb Colton
Copyright 2006
SEO ONE, inc All Rights
Reserved
4100 Spring Valley Rd. Suite 203 - Dallas, Texas - 75244
Toll Free: 866-886-4608 | Phone : 972-755-4592 | Fax : 866-409-7978