On Branding from Success Magazine Blog

It doesn’t matter whether you’re running a Fortune 100 or your own small business. And it doesn’t matter whether you’re conscious of it or not: you’ve got a brand and it’s important to stay conscious of it and consistent with it. Here’s some sound thinking on brand building

Brands to Last:

Building a Winning and Enduring Brand

From Coca-Cola to Harley-Davidson, find out how to execute a brand that will thrive over the long haul.

Emma Johnson February 1, 2010
http://www.successmagazine.com/building-a-winning-and-enduring-brand/PARAMS/article/985

You’ve got a great product. Fair price. Solid service. What’s the problem? You need a brand, experts say. “When businesses are trying to move from survive mode to thrive mode in a winter economy, the ones that break from the pack have branding on their side,” says Roy Spence, advertising executive and co-author of the branding manifesto It’s Not What You Sell, It’s What You Stand For: Why Every Extraordinary Business Is Driven By Purpose.

Sounds good, but how do you define your brand? And once you do, so what?

Until recently, successful brands afforded companies the ability to charge a premium, says Kevin Roberts, Saatchi & Saatchi Worldwide CEO. “It’s not that brands have been dying, but that they’ve been commoditized,” Roberts says. General Motors and Toyota have largely become interchangeable in many regards, as have Revlon and L’Oreal. Similar products, similar target customer, similar prices.

“The goal is to make your brand irreplaceable, and you do that with emotional connectivity: mystery, sensuality and intimacy,” says Roberts, author of Lovemarks: The Future Beyond Brands. “You want loyalty beyond reason and loyalty beyond recession. For small-business owners, this is even more vital because they don’t have the purchasing power that large corporations do.”

Spence, GSD&M co-founder and CEO of Austin, Texas-based Idea City, puts it this way: “Every business needs to be in the business of improving customers’ lives.” In this, a brand is what he dubs a “sacred promise.” Walmart promises to save shoppers money. Southwest Airlines promises the freedom to fly.

On the consumer side, iPods are a great example of loyalty beyond reason. All MP3 players offer the same promise of functionality and freedom of movement and choice. Yet iPod is the clear market winner as Apple’s biggest money maker, proudly dominating 73 percent of the market and capable of commanding a premium price. Why? The industry-changing slick design and related advertising, reliable customer service via Apple’s Genius Bars, and white ear buds that are so recognizable that “when you see them on the street, you feel as if you and the owner are part of the same tribe,” Roberts says. “You want to take the iPod to bed with you—it makes you loyal beyond reason and price.”

The emotional quotient of branding is not relegated to consumer goods, however. B2B companies have the opportunity to offer emotional connectivity by way of value and reliability. “It’s very hard for the big guys to offer deep empathy,” Roberts says. Adds Spence: “Everyone sells pretty much the same thing. The ones that stand for something survive.”

In the B2B world, the most important things are offering reliable customer service and close relationships to set a business apart from the rest.

An independent computer repair company, for example, competes with thousands of other small businesses in the same space. A computer repair company, however, that is committed to superior service offers the promise to improve the lives of frustrated computer owners on the brink of hurling their desktop off the roof. This promise, if fulfilled, has the potential to build a long-lasting successful brand—not just a profitable small company.

So how do you go about figuring out the essence of your brand, your promise, your emotional connectivity?
Idea City’s Spence suggests starting out by examining why you—or your father or grandparents—started the business in the first place. What niche did the business fill? What need? And what do you have to offer the market that is unique? “Where your talent and the needs of the world cross, therein lies your purpose,” Spence says.

Spence then suggests taking an informal survey of 10 members of your fan base—five frank and honest employees and five frank and honest customers. Ask them, what are you doing right? What are you doing wrong? Where can you improve? What are you doing better than everyone else?

“You want loyalty beyond reason and loyalty beyond recession.”

Many successful brands start with a positioning statement. This will identify the target audience, hone in on competitors, and pinpoint the business’s most compelling benefit. From this, the promise can be formulated. The essence of the promise should be a guarantee that can be delivered now, but is also ambitious. “You can’t make a promise you can’t fulfill—it needs to deal with the moment,” says Stan Richards, principal of Dallas-based The Richards Group advertising firm. “It also has to be aspirational.”

An example of a killer positioning statement is that of The Richards Group client Motel 6:
Target audience: Anyone who is on the road and a budget traveler. “It doesn’t matter how much money you have or if you’re driving a BMW—if you are on the road and on a budget, you are a potential customer,” Richards says.
Competition: Other budget motels including Days Inn, Econo Lodge, Microtel and Super 8.
Compelling benefit: “Always the lowest price of any national chain,” and “always a comfortable place to stay.” These are promises that are both actionable now, but also require planning to make sure they are true in the future.
The sacred promise: Motel 6 offers anyone on the road who is a budget traveler a comfortable place to stay at the lowest price of any national chain.

Establishing the sacred promise is tougher than it may seem, experts agree. But once you’ve gotten it, then the real branding begins.

How do you build a brand that keeps on keeping on?
First, realize a brand is much more than a tagline or elevator pitch. In a general sense, a strong, successful brand will permeate every aspect of the company. “It is everything a company does,” Richards says. “The way employees answer the phone, the way you greet customers, deal with constituents both internally and externally. Everyone in the business is, in effect, making a promise to customers, and everything you do will either enhance or detract from the brand.”

The brand messaging must be consistent throughout all communication—PR, advertising, internal communications—and should be incorporated into every element of employee relations. “The internal audience is very, very important,” Richards says. “The brand should affect the performance of everyone who comes in contact with it.” Training, corporate communications and all business development should focus on this promise. Not only does this drive home the message, but an appropriate promise is inspiring and motivating for the entire company.

The key is to keep the brand alive for the long run. This requires a delicate balance of remaining true to the sacred promise while reinventing the product and messaging to address customers’ ever-evolving needs.

An epic example of brand longevity is Coca-Cola. The company has fulfilled its promise of lighthearted fun for 124 years—with its bottle shape, logo and flavor remaining recognizable for nearly all of that time. Yet this branding powerhouse is constantly inventing new products, most recently Coke Zero with new types of artificial sweeteners, and Diet Coke Plus with vitamin additives.

Innovation is not relegated to product alone, but target markets as well. In 1935 Coca-Cola went Kosher to attract Jewish customers, and today the beverage is being peddled in developing countries that have booming populations with growing disposable incomes, like India and China. Such moves are expected to position the corporation to gross an astonishing $200 billion by 2020.

“Everyone sells pretty much the same thing. The ones that stand for something survive.”

The brand is so successful, so ubiquitous, that few realize that the logo and graphics are in fact gently tweaked every three or four years to help retain a significant market edge over competitor Pepsi Co., which has had some of the most innovative advertising and product advancements in consumer products.

“Coca-Cola has combined the past, present and future in a brilliant way,” says Saatchi & Saatchi’s Roberts. “They’ve approached advertising and packaging in a way that it is always happy, always sociable, and always part of the local community.”

These emotional promises, he adds, are what give the beverage maker its edge—not the bubbly black drink. “There is no technology in making a soft drink,” Roberts quips.

Another example of staying current while remaining brand-true: Southwest Airlines’ promise to keep costs down to afford customers the freedom to fly recently required a CEO-level decision to forgo the new industry movement to charge for all checked bags.

“They realized they were leaving hundreds of millions of dollars on the table, but by not charging, they stayed true to their purpose,” Spence says. “[Southwest executives] decided that they were going to market the heck out of it, get the whole organization behind that decision, and attract new customers in order to stay true to their purpose.”

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The 2 paths of Success

In my coaching/consulting work, I’ve found that clients fall short of unleashing ultimate potential because they think of it in finite terms. We’re a goal-oriented society and we’ve come to believe that the only way to succeed is to name a goal, make a plan, work the plan, and attain the goal. Or, not attain the goal and thereby fail. Goal methodology works – no question that many great things have come out of goal setting and achieving. However, as a sole modus operandi, it’s limited and archaic.

paths coming togetherAn equally valid, but less recognized path is the heuristic way. A heuristic path requires being present in the moment. It requires using discernment to discover right action rather than relying on a set of predetermined rules or steps. The heuristic path requires that we stay conscious of our moral, physical, emotional, and spiritual edges. It’s less standardized and so requires latitude for adaptation. Heuristic contributions can be hard to measure with current assessment tools and have only recently begun to be valued enough to qualify for measurement. Nonetheless, there’s increasing documentation that heuristic elements like relationship, dignity, and creativity have positive effects on productivity, recruitment, retention, and vitality. My own practice with successful professionals confirms what the statistics are finally telling us and I know that’s true for many other coaches.

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Questions

“Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves…Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.” —Rainer Maria Rilke

Such wise words – I think my most important contribution to my clients is my ability to question and to be comfortable with open questions. I find that when I personally, or my clients focus too hard on answers, that important questions are left unasked. The hard part for me is my own impatience with living in question. But when I find the grace to do that, the magic of open inquiry happens and I find answers to so much more than what I was asking about.

In coaching terms, it’s the difference between answers and solutions. Answers satisfy the moment but solutions are sustainable over time. Deeply sustainable success, the kind that’s full of vitality, requires that we sometimes heed Rilke’s advice (given in the early 1900’s) and learn to love our questions and to live our questions.

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From BNet – Which Is Worse for Your Brain: Texting or Pot?

(Hint: Pass the Pipe)

by Richard Young, posted on BNet

Texting and instant messaging can hinder your ability to get work done.

It’s a challenge of modern life: email, Twitter feeds, instant messaging, text messages, and other snippets of information are coming at us so fast that it’s hard not to feel under digital attack. Sure, some of it’s important — and that’s precisely the problem. Turn it all off and you might as well quit the workforce. But read it all and your mind becomes so drained that it’s a challenge to get anything else done.

In some ways, technology has evolved in a way that puts mere humans in a bind. Consider the email conundrum. From the moment you wake up, it seems the inbox is calling your name. And if you’re like most of us, you answer its call pretty quickly.

“The brain hates uncertainty,” says David Rock, the CEO of Results Coaching Systems and author of “Your Brain at Work.” “It’s literally painful to not download your email the moment you arrive at your desk in the morning. But once you’ve processed

30 or 40 emails, you’ve ruined your brain chemistry for higher level tasks that are going to create value.”

In fact, a University of London study done for Hewlett-Packard found that “infomania” — a term connected with addiction to email and texting — can lower your IQ by twice as much as smoking marijuana. Moreover, email can raise the levels of noradrenaline and dopamine in your brain by constantly introducing new stimuli into your day. When those levels get too high, complex thinking becomes more difficult, making it harder to make decisions and solve problems — key roles for all managers.

In short, the brain’s capacity for decision-making evolved at a time when people had less to think about. Great, so now you have an excuse for not keeping up. But you still need a game plan.

1. Take control of email.

Don’t start your day with email. Set your email so it doesn’t download new mail automatically or, at the very least, turn off any alert system. Instead, set a time to check for messages manually — preferably later in the day, after you’ve used your brainpower for more important things.

Equally important is that others at your business know how you want email used. “Emails should be short, concise, and used only when a conversation is not an option,” says Adrian Moorhouse, managing director of executive coaching firm Lane4. “The easier communication is to digest, the more likely it is that the messages will be delivered effectively.”

Some colleagues seem unable to help themselves. We all know the type. They send too many emails; they gossip or forward jokes. Get them to divert their personal chatter online by allowing them to use social media at work (even if it’s just at set times of the day). Or talk to the worst offenders one-on-one. Peter Taylor, the director of the project management office for Siemens and author of “The Lazy Project Manager,” says when he’s cc’d on emails, he tells the senders to cut it out. “If people had to produce single sheets of paper and hand them out every time they wanted to communicate, they’d be a lot more conscientious. I educate everyone who I communicate with and as a result, the emails I do receive are pertinent to me. I restructure those emails, copy them into ongoing documents, and keep my inbox very small.”

If you’re reaching a breaking point, do the email equivalent of filing for bankruptcy. Simply wipe your inbox to start afresh. It seems drastic, but it can work. Send a message to all contacts letting them know what you’re planning, select all emails, and delete or archive them. If you’re planning a new regime of folders, rules, filters, and information-sharing disciplines, starting from scratch isn’t so crazy.

2. Prioritize your prioritizing.

To help you prioritize, start by setting clear goals. We all tend to do this subconsciously, according to Lane4’s Moorhouse, but writing them down helps you actually achieve them. Here, too, time of day really matters. Prioritizing is one of the brain’s most energy-hungry processes,” writes Rock in his book. That means it’s best done when your mind is fresh and well rested. Allocate time to order your thoughts — dashing off a to-do list of tasks that are “front of mind” is easy, but it won’t break the back of the work you need to cover.

Try organizing your thinking visually. One great way is with Mind Maps, diagrams of ideas linked together in a tree system that help you visualise all of them in context to each other. That way you won’t forget any of your ideas when you have to decide which ones are the most important.

3. Blindside the data (approach it from an unexpected direction).

Break down complex information into sub-groups. Once you’ve determined a goal, you can “chunk” your work into groups to achieve it. You can also do this with your to-do lists.

According to an experiment at Wilfred Laurier University, (It’s About Time: Optimistic Predictions in Work and Love, European Review of Social Psychology) people are generally very bad at estimating when they’ll finish their own work, but good at guessing for others. So gauge your timing by using someone else’s experience. You’ll be less stressed if you’re realistic about your workload.

4. Do less.

To do less, you should delegate more. Too many managers can’t resist the temptation personally to get involved in everything that’s happening. But effective delegation means limiting the amount of information you have to process, as well as empowering those around you. Then, ask for regular briefings.

5. Unplug.

Many managers feel they can’t shut off the fire hydrant of information. But they can take a break from it. “It’s tempting to think that more information makes for better decisions,” says Penny de Valk, CEO of the UK-based Institute of Leadership and Management. “But in most cases, it just erodes your focus. You need time to synthesize information and generate real intelligence.”

That takes discipline, of course, but it’s useful to stop thinking when you are stuck on a project so your brain can recover. “You do need to switch off and rebalance your brain chemistry if you’re going to come up with new ideas,” says Rock. Stefan Sagmeister of New York-based design firm Sagmeister says he so much believes in the power of time off that he closes up shop for 12 months every seven years to pursue “little experiments” that he doesn’t have time for in his daily life.

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From Forbes.com: Six Tips On Hiring A Business Coach

It seems like everyone is peddling advice. Now to cut wheat from chaff.

image

Steven Berglas, Ph.D., 12.04.09, 03:00 PM EST

What is a business coach, anyway?

I get that question all the time, and honestly, the answer is pretty squishy. In today’s “helper” economy (as Warren Buffet snidely coined it), a coach can play the role of consultant, shrink, drill instructor, sounding board–whatever “help” managers, executives and entrepreneurs need to boost their performance, or just get through the night.

There are no easily comparable data sets. There is no coaching regulatory body. Like I said: squishy. So how to tell if a coach is right for you?

Start with what, specifically, you think you need. If you want to improve your overall executive comportment, focus on someone who specializes in that. (Marshall Goldsmith has written extensively on the topic.) Need help with public speaking? Check out Nick Morgan, author of Working the Room. There are coaches for everything–the key is knowing how to cut wheat from chaff.

Here are six points to remember:

Coaches aren’t paid to make people feel good. No golfer pays $100 an hour for a swing coach to shout bravo as he bangs balls on a driving range. Legitimate coaches offer incisive critiques and useful techniques to improve your game. If your coach lauds more than prods, her goal is to turn you into an annuity, not lower your handicap.

Coaches respect boundaries between the professional and personal realms. It’s easy for you and your coach to develop intense positive feelings about each other, especially if the coach has proven truly effective. Some coaches may begin to see you as a friend first, and an employer second. This dilutes the coaching. Avoid that devolution.
Coaches are not intermediaries. I have spent many years helping leaders of corporations, law firms and start-ups learn to modulate their anger and communicate displeasure. I do not, however, act as a go-between when things get sticky. That’s not the help these folks need, and in fact, acting as an intermediary only exacerbates the problem. If your coach offers to step into the breach on your behalf, show her the door.

Good coaches never gossip. There is enormous temptation for the coach of a powerful executive to say, “Look, when the Big Guy and I were talking the other day …” Coaches that succumb to gossip are too insecure to be effective (and that’s being charitable). If they open their mouths, close yours and walk away.

Beware the up-sell. Just because your coach has helped you become a captivating public speaker doesn’t mean he knows a whit about management technique. If a coach looks to sell you additional services that are clearly beyond his bailiwick, and many do, politely take a pass.

Coaches are not life-directors. If you remember nothing else about hiring a coach, let it be this: Effective coaches do not hand down wisdom from on high. The best ones offer encouragement, observation and ideas, and let their clients make their own decisions. If you hear a coach say, “You should do this,” one thing is certain: He or she doesn’t have a clue.

Dr. Steven Berglas spent 25 years on the faculty of Harvard Medical School’s Department of Psychiatry. Today he coaches entrepreneurs, executives and other high-achievers. Direct questions or comments to: drb@berglas.com.

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From Success Magazine

Napoleon Hill January 26, 2009

Lesson 1: Definiteness of Purpose
Definiteness of purpose is the starting point of all achievement. Without a purpose and a plan, people drift aimlessly through life.

Lesson 2: Mastermind Alliance
The Mastermind principle consists of an alliance of two or more minds working in perfect harmony for the attainment of a common definite objective. Success does not come without the cooperation of others.

Lesson 3: Applied Faith
Faith is a state of mind through which your aims, desires, plans and purposes may be translated into their physical or financial equivalent.

Lesson 4: Going the Extra Mile
Going the extra mile is the action of rendering more and better service than that for which you are presently paid. When you go the extra mile, the Law of Compensation comes into play.

Lesson 5: Pleasing Personality
Personality is the sum total of one’s mental, spiritual and physical traits and habits that distinguish one from all others. It is the factor that determines whether one is liked or disliked by others.

Lesson 6: Personal Initiative
Personal initiative is the power that inspires the completion of that which one begins. It is the power that starts all action. No person is free until he learns to do his own thinking and gains the courage to act on his own.

Lesson 7: Positive Mental Attitude
Positive mental attitude is the right mental attitude in all circumstances. Success attracts more success while failure attracts more failure.

Lesson 8: Enthusiasm
Enthusiasm is faith in action. It is the intense emotion known as burning desire. It comes from within, although it radiates outwardly in the expression of one’s voice and countenance.

Lesson 9: Self-Discipline
Self-discipline begins with the mastery of thought. If you do not control your thoughts, you cannot control your needs. Self-discipline calls for a balancing of the emotions of your heart with the reasoning faculty of your head.

Lesson 10: Accurate Thinking
The power of thought is the most dangerous or the most beneficial power available to man, depending on how it is used.

Lesson 11: Controlled Attention
Controlled attention leads to mastery in any type of human endeavor, because it enables one to focus the powers of his mind upon the attainment of a definite objective and to keep it so directed at will.

Lesson 12: Teamwork
Teamwork is harmonious cooperation that is willing, voluntary and free. Whenever the spirit of teamwork is the dominating influence in business or industry, success is inevitable. Harmonious cooperation is a priceless asset that you can acquire in proportion to your giving.

Lesson 13: Adversity & Defeat
Individual success usually is in exact proportion of the scope of the defeat the individual has experienced and mastered. Many so-called failures represent only a temporary defeat that may prove to be a blessing in disguise.

Lesson 14: Creative Vision
Creative vision is developed by the free and fearless use of one’s imagination. It is not a miraculous quality with which one is gifted or is not gifted at birth.

Lesson 15: Health
Sound health begins with a sound health consciousness, just as financial success begins with a prosperity consciousness.

Lesson 16: Budgeting Time & Money
Time and money are precious resources, and few people striving for success ever believe they possess either one in excess.

Lesson 17: Habits
Developing and establishing positive habits leads to peace of mind, health and financial security. You are where you are because of your established habits and thoughts and deeds.

Read Rich Man, Poor Man the story of Napoleon Hill.

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From Business Guru Seth Godin

Upside vs. downside

How much of time, staffing and money does your organization spend on creating incredible experiences (vs. avoiding bad outcomes)?

At the hospital, it’s probably 5% on the upside (the doctor who puts in the stitches, say) and 95% on the downside (all the avoidance of infection or lawsuits, records to keep, forms to sign). Most of the people you interact with in a hospital aren’t there to help you get what you came for (to get better) they’re there to help you avoid getting worse. At an avant garde art show, on the other hand, perhaps 95% of the effort goes into creating and presenting shocking ideas, with just 5% devoted to keeping the place warm or avoiding falls and spills as you walk in.

Which is probably as it should be.

But what about you and your organization? As you get bigger and older, are you busy ensuring that a bad thing won’t happen that might upset your day, or are you aggressively investing in having a remarkable thing happen that will delight or move a customer?

A new restaurant might rely on fresh vegetables and whatever they can get at the market. The bigger, more established fast-food chain starts shipping in processed canned food. One is less reliable with bigger upside, the other—more dependable with less downside.

Here’s a rule that’s so inevitable that it’s almost a law: As an organization grows and succeeds, it sows the seeds of its own demise by getting boring. With more to lose and more people to lose it, meetings and policies become more about avoiding risk than providing joy.

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Thought for the day

dreamstime_6003693

I think this comes from Hindu wisdom:

The higher a monkey climbs, the more you see its behind.

Climb anyway!

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From Forbes Magazine:

Leadership

Stop Trying To Get Rich!

John Hope Bryant, 10.22.09, 12:40 PM EDT

Yes, greed is at the root of our current mess.

What we’re going through is not just a recession, it’s a reset.Sure, the impact of the crisis is being felt economically, but the root cause isn’t economics, nor is it the failure of free enterprise and capitalism. The problem is the abuse of free enterprise and capitalism–greed.

The problem is that we have lost our story line, as a nation and as a world.

My friend and mentor Quincy Jones, the musician, who is one of the people I profile in my new book, Love Leadership: A New Way to Lead in a Fear-Based World, once told me that “it takes 20 years to change a culture.” Well, over the last 20 years we changed it for the worse. We made dumb sexy. We even celebrated dumb. Over the next 20 years we have to make smart sexy again.

For as long as any of us can remember, our real heroes have woken up in the morning on fire with the power of an idea.

Warren Buffett was obsessed not with money and power but with the idea of investing and creating real value. That’s why he still lives in the same home he lived in more than 20 years ago, and why he has vowed to give away most of his tens of billions of dollars before he dies.

Or take Bill Gates, now on fire with his second big idea (philanthropy 2.0), or Steve Jobs, the founder of everything Apple ( AAPL news people ), from iMac to iPod to iPhone.

Or consider social innovators such as Mother Theresa, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mohandas Gandhi and Nelson Mandela. Certainly their aim was not money and power.

Or take my personal hero, the civil rights legend Andrew Young, who will only undertake a project or initiative when he determines that no one else can bring together the parties involved. Young cannot seem to give his money away fast enough. I estimate that he donates three-fifths of his annual income, yet he is one of the richest people I know, measured in values and quality of life, and he wants for nothing.

Or take the founder of Wal-Mart ( WMT news people ), Sam Walton, who drove the same pickup truck until the day he died. He was passionate about finding ways to provide the working poor with quality products and services at affordable prices.

Or look at an earlier great American innovator, Henry Ford, who built the first modern automobile and paid his workers enough to be able to afford to buy the cars they were building. Or look at the Henry Fords of our time, the men and women who have revolutionized how we interact in the 21st century. A decade ago MySpace, Facebook and Twitter didn’t exist, and Google ( GOOG news people ) was a brand new baby. Now they are driving innovation and defining the modern-day social nexus.

All these men and women had one thing in common. They were all alight with passion and purpose that fueled, or was fueled by, a big idea. Yes, in most of these cases the power and the money soon came. But the power and the money were the byproduct. They were never the product itself.

The problem today is that over the last couple of decades too many of our so-called leaders (and of the rest of us too) awoke in the morning not only without the fire of the power of a useful idea; they awoke with only one thought in mind: I want to make money. The next day they awoke wanting more of the same, more money. It was like any addiction.

Enough was never enough, but the castle was built of sand, and the cup that gathered the sand didn’t have a bottom. Being inauthentic, and not from a place of giving vs. getting, couldn’t last. In some cases, it simply disappeared. In others, it destroyed lives.

During the subprime mortgage bubble, in the run-up to what is now the global economic crisis, we treated clients and customers as transactions rather than relationships. We focused on getting a fee rather than giving good service. That’s why the crisis isn’t even economic at its core. It became an economic crisis, then a credit crisis, then a liquidity crisis and finally, today, a global crisis of confidence.

It is now a crisis of confidence because we feel that our systems and values have failed us. Yes, we put Bernard Madoff in jail, and of course we should have. What he did was offensive to the soul of decency. But in a way we were all Madoffs. We had an entire generation of families and of leaders of companies and countries, who spent more than they made, bought what they could not afford, lived beyond their means, robbed Peter to pay Paul and had absolutely no idea how the story was going to end.

The change we need is not a new economic system. Capitalism is like democracy as described by Winston Churchill: The worst system there is except for all the others. What we really need is a revitalization of our virtues and values, a return to the power of good ideas as the source of our wealth, prosperity and opportunity. We need to reclaim our classic American story line.

I strongly believe that fear is the ultimate prosperity killer. But while fear seems to have a hold on our hearts, far too many of us still have only money on our minds. You combine that toxic brew with a focus on “me” and not “we” and you have a generation of Americans with a serious identity problem.

The change we really need is facing each of us in the mirror. Watch how you live your life. You never know who might be taking their cues from you.

John Hope Bryant is the founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Operation HOPE, a nonprofit organization that promotes financial literacy, is vice-chair of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Literacy and is the author of Love Leadership: The New Way to Lead in a Fear-Based World.

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Return on Investment in Coaching

Return on investment in coaching studies show 150% to 689% yield. Here are a few:

Sherpa Study: Coaching best for Leadership Development vs. Problem Solving

1000 Ventures Study: Return = 5.7 times the investment in coaching

MetrixGlobal Study: 689% Return on Investment in Coaching

Sherpa Study: Coaching Pays

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