Wednesday, April 15, 2020
World Series 2016 Career Lessons from the Chicago Cubs Win
World Series 2016 Career Lessons from the Chicago Cubs Win The Chicago Cubsâ World Series winâ"a phrase that, until last night, was a 108-year-old oxymoronâ"is making waves that will ripple far beyond Lake Michigan. Wednesdayâs neck-and-neck, rain-delayed, extra-innings championship will go down as one of the greatest games in baseball history. Thatâs no question. For the Cubsâ all-star roster, and the off-field heroes like manager Joe Madden and club president Theo Epstein, first place never felt so good. So what happens after Wrigleyville quiets down and the champagne (Old Style) runs out? According to professional career coaches, that depends on the business savvy of each individual player. Big winsâ"whether in sports of businessâ"can be a launching pad for future success or a deep dive into obscurity. Hereâs some advice for the triumphant (and certainly hung over) Cubbies that the rest of us can use. Build momentum In both the business and sports worlds, major wins tend to replicate themselves (Jordan-era Chicago Bulls, anyone?). Bruce Tulgan, a leadership expert and founder of the consultancy RainmakerThinking, advises clients who are celebrating success to use the momentum to their advantage. âDonât declare victory,â he says. âUse the win as a building block to the next challenge â" and to leverage an even more successful career.â Sure, big wins feel good, and itâs important to celebrate your accomplishments. But donât get too comfortable. âYou have to keep moving forward, even when something really big happens,â says Jeanne Branthover, a partner at DHR International. âDonât let your ego get in the way. Now itâs about staying on top.â Deconstruct the win What decisions led to your success? What went right, and how can that knowledge inform your future actions? All of these are important considerations, Tulgan says. âJust as you would with your failures, use the win as a case study to teach yourself what decisions or actions were made, and how to build those into the future,â he says. Roy Cohen, a career coach and author of The Wall Street Professionalâs Survival Guide, calls this âdeconstructing the win.â âThis World Series was not easy,â he says. âIt wasnât effortless ⦠there was a lot of angst along the way. And there are always steps that could have made this easier.â Share the credit Go ahead and give yourself a pat on the back, but be sure to spread the love to all the people around you who made the win possible. It bolsters your business case â"and its the right thing to do. âMake sure you share credit with anyone who deserves it,â Tulgan advises. A smart next step, according to Cohen, is to use the win to build important relationships and strengthen existing ones. âEveryone gets excited about us when weâre on a winning streak,â he says. âColleagues want to be recognized a friends, and those at the senior level start to see us as valuable. So thereâs more attention, good attention, being paid to your career. Use that to your advantage.â
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