Excuse making is not the answer to moving  your business forward and making a success of your efforts  -  working  harder is not the answer; you need to change a losing game. 
Work differently like the successful people in this article did:
they   subjected themselves to fairly merciless self-examination that  prompted  reinvention of their goals and the methods by which they  endeavored to  achieve them. 
They looked inward and subjected themselves to brutal self-assessment. 
In interviews with high achievers for a book, the authors expected to hear that talent, persistence, dedication and luck played crucial roles in their success. 
Surprisingly, however, self-awareness played an equally strong role. 
 The  authors learned that challenging our assumptions, objectives, at times  even our goals, may sometimes push us further than we thought possible. 
 
 This is  the cognitive approach that Professor Argyris called double-loop learning wherein we are advised  to   question every aspect of our approach, including our methodology, biases and deeply held assumptions. 
..........
Secret Ingredient for Success 
By CAMILLE SWEENEY and JOSH GOSFIELD 
WHAT does self-awareness have to do with a restaurant empire? A tennis championship? Or a rock star’s dream? 
David Chang’s experience is instructive. 
Mr.  Chang is an internationally renowned, award-winning Korean-American  chef, restaurateur and owner of the Momofuku restaurant group with eight  restaurants from Toronto to Sydney, and other thriving enterprises,  including bakeries and bars, a PBS TV show, guest spots on HBO’s “Treme”  and a foodie magazine, Lucky Peach.  
He says he worked himself to the bone to realize his dream — to own a humble noodle bar. 
He spent years cooking in some of New York City’s best restaurants,  apprenticed in different noodle shops in Japan and then, finally, worked  18-hour days in his tiny restaurant, Momofuku Noodle Bar. 
Mr. Chang could barely pay himself a salary. He had trouble keeping staff. And he was miserably stressed. 
He  recalls a low moment when he went with his staff on a night off to eat  burgers at a restaurant that was everything his wasn’t — packed,  critically acclaimed and financially successful.
He  could cook better than they did, he thought, so why was his restaurant  failing? “I couldn’t figure out what the hell we were doing wrong,” he  told us. 
Mr. Chang could have blamed  someone else for his troubles, or worked harder (though available  evidence suggests that might not have been possible) or he could have  made minor tweaks to the menu. 
Instead he looked inward and subjected himself to brutal self-assessment. 
Was the humble noodle bar of his dreams economically viable? 
Sure, a traditional noodle dish had its charm but wouldn’t work as the mainstay of a restaurant if he hoped to pay his bills. 
Mr. Chang changed course. 
Rather than  worry about what a noodle bar should serve, he and his cooks stalked  the produce at the greenmarket for inspiration. 
Then  they went back to the kitchen and cooked as if it was their last meal,  crowding the menu with wild combinations of dishes they’d want to eat —  tripe and sweetbreads, headcheese and flavor-packed culinary mashups  like a Korean-style burrito. 
What happened next Mr. Chang still considers “kind of ridiculous” — the crowds came, rave reviews piled up, awards followed and unimaginable opportunities presented themselves. 
During the 1970s, Chris Argyris, a business theorist at Harvard Business School (and now, at 89, a professor emeritus) began to research what happens to organizations and people, like Mr. Chang, when they find obstacles in their paths. 
Professor Argyris called the  most common response single loop learning — an insular mental process  in which we consider possible external or technical reasons for  obstacles. 
LESS common but vastly more effective is the cognitive approach that Professor Argyris called double-loop learning. 
In this mode we — like Mr. Chang — question every aspect of our approach, including our methodology, biases and deeply held assumptions. 
This more psychologically nuanced self-examination requires that we honestly challenge  our beliefs and summon the courage to act on that information, which  may lead to fresh ways of thinking about our lives and our goals. 
In interviews we did with high achievers for a book, we expected to hear that talent, persistence, dedication and luck played crucial roles in their success. 
Surprisingly, however, self-awareness played an equally strong role. 
The successful people we spoke with — in business, entertainment, sports and the arts — all had similar responses when faced with obstacles: they  subjected themselves to fairly merciless self-examination that prompted  reinvention of their goals and the methods by which they endeavored to  achieve them. 
The tennis champion Martina  Navratilova, for example, told us that after a galling loss to Chris  Evert in 1981, she questioned her assumption that she could get by on  talent and instinct alone. 
She began a long exploration of every aspect of her game. 
She adopted a rigorous cross-training practice (common today but essentially unheard of at the time), revamped her diet and her mental and tactical game and ultimately transformed herself into the most successful women’s tennis player of her era. 
The indie rock band OK Go described how it once operated under the business model of the 20th-century rock band. 
But  when industry record sales collapsed and the band members found  themselves creatively hamstrung by their recording company, they  questioned their tactics. 
Rather  than depend on their label, they made wildly unconventional music  videos, which went viral, and collaborative art projects with  companies like Google, State Farm and Range Rover, which financed future  creative endeavors. The band now releases albums on its own label. 
No  one’s idea of a good time is to take a brutal assessment of their  animating assumptions and to acknowledge that those may have contributed  to their failure. 
It’s easy to find pat ways to explain why the world has not adequately rewarded our efforts. 
But what we learned from conversation with high achievers is that:
 challenging our assumptions, objectives, at times even our goals, may sometimes push us further than we thought possible. 
Camille Sweeney and Josh Gosfield are the authors of the forthcoming book “The Art of Doing:  How Superachievers Do What They Do and How They Do It So Well.” 
Source:
Secret Ingredient for Success - NYTimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/20/opinion/sunday/secret-ingredient-for-success.html?_r=0
Secret Ingredient for Success - NYTimes.com
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