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Archive for September 10th, 2007

Winning With People #8 – The Learning Principle

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Targeted Audience: Entrepreneurs, Students, Recent Graduates.

Background: Renowned leadership expert and author John C. Maxwell describes how anyone can improve his or her relationship skills with 25 principles in his book Winning With People.

I plan to cover each of his principle in this series.  Please read more principles here: Winning With People

John Maxwell’s The Learning Principle 

Each person we meet has the potential to teach us something. All of us can learn things in unlikely places and from unlikely people. But that’s only true if we have the right attitude. If you have a teachable attitude, you will be positioned well to learn from others. Then all you will need to do is to take the following five steps:

1. Make Learning Your Passion. Management expert Philip Crosby notes, “There is a theory of human behavior that says people subconsciously retard their own intellectual growth. They come to rely on cliches and habits. Once they reach the age of their own personal comfort with the world, they stop learning and their mind runs on idle for the rest of their days. They may progress organizationally, they may be ambitious and eager, and they may even work night and day. But they learn no more.” If you desire to keep growing, you cannot sit back in a comfort zone.

2. Value People. People don’t learn from people they don’t value.

3. Develop Relationships With Growth Potential. Find people who are especially likely to help you grow: experts in your field, creative thinkers who stretch you mentally, and achievers who inspire you to go to the next level.

4. Identify People’s Uniqueness and Strengths. Philosopher and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson remarked, “I have never met a man who was not my superior in some particular.” People grow best in their areas of strength and can learn the most from another person’s area of strength. For that reason, you can’t be indiscriminate in choosing the people you seek out to teach you.

5. Ask Questions. Learning begins with listening. The best way to learn is to watch others and ask questions.

This is my favorite principle. This is exactly I have been practicing in my personal life and mentioning on this blog. The passion and desire to learn more and grow more is something which I firmly follow. I become restless when I waste too much time in the comfort zone. Building long term relationships with experts and learning from mentors are guaranteed ways to reach to the next level. Also, asking for help and observing other people are the best resources to grow faster in the right direction.

Have a super learning week ahead!

To read more principles from this series, please visit: Winning With People.

Written by Aditya

September 10th, 2007 at 10:30 am