OR The Hug Your Kids Today Manifesto
- Version for Mothers and Fathers in Sales
Word count: 500 words
By Michelle Nichols
If it feels like you’re in a struggle to juggle being successful in both selling and parenthood, welcome to the club. When you try to make enough sales calls, keep up with your offerings, help your children learn their multiplication tables, and go to their soccer games, it can be a real challenge.
JUGGLING LESSONS
As the profession of sales has grown over the last few generations,
high-achieving salespeople who love their children have developed some
strategies to deal with this challenge. Here’s a quick history
of the evolution of their juggling strategies.
First, they…
- worked, but they wanted more sales. So then they tried…
- working harder. This grew their sales, but they also got tired. Then
they turned to…
- work smarter, not harder. This strategy was their first try at prioritizing.
It required making tough choices. Meanwhile, many in our culture were
clamoring, “I want it all.” As a compromise, this led to…
- “work-life balance.”
Although work-life balance sounds good, parents in sales worldwide are realizing that it is the wrong goal, and an impossible one, to try to “balance” their livelihoods and their lives. There are two basic reasons it’s a bad idea – physical limits and relative value.
Physical Limits. No matter how many vitamins you take or assistants you bring on, you still have personal limits because there is only one you. For example, let’s say your schedule is already full, and your boss asks you to take on an extra sales territory for the next few months, so you also agree to coach your child’s sports team two nights a week. In theory, you’re in balance, but in reality, you’re overbooked.
Relative Value. Your sales job and your family can’t be balanced because they don’t have the same relative value to you. For example, if you lost your sales job today, you could get another one and you’d soon be back in the workforce. If you lost one of your children today…OK, I’ll wait while you get a tissue, but you get my point. You can’t balance the replaceable with the irreplaceable.
SOLUTION
So what do busy, quota-busting, sales professionals who love their kids
do? Instead of “balance,” it is wiser to prioritize “family
first and work a close second.” I talk about this new way of thinking
in my new book, Hug Your Kids Today! 5 Key Lessons for Every Working
Parent (www.HugYourKidsToday.com)
If you’ll put “hug (or show my love to) my kids” at the top of your Things to Do list every day, you’re guaranteed that at the end of the day, no matter how much or how little you sold, at least you got the most important task accomplished. That’s better than balance!
The truth is, no matter how much love you feel toward your children, your most loving feelings and intentions don’t really matter. It’s putting them into action that counts. Now, go hug your kids. And tomorrow, remember to hug them again. Hugs matter!
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Michelle Nichols is a cutting-edge thinker, author and speaker on work-life
balance. She is also the creator of the Hug Your Kids Today project
and the founder of National Hug Your Kids Day (July 21, 2008.) Her book,
Hug Your Kids Today! 5 Key Lessons for Every Working Parent,
is available at Amazon.com, BN.com and at her website. For more information:
http://www.HugYourKidsToday.com
or toll-free (877)352-9684.
TAKEAWAYS:
1. Sales professionals have always struggled to juggle their work and
family
2. Forget work-life balance. It’s the wrong goal, and an impossible
one.
3. Instead, prioritize “family first and work a close second.”
Hug your kids, or otherwise show them you love them, every day!