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Talent is overrated! "Talent is cheaper than table salt. What Separates the talented individual from the succesful one is a lot of hard work " (Stephen King). Contrary to what many still believe, is due to a high creative level within any discipline, whether it be music, art, sport or business is not an innate talent. Super Talent when the rare to the top Massive hardship and people who do not believe you are the most crucial factors in order to reach the final. Few or none of the best Danish and Norwegian athletes were the best, when they were young. Why? Because, it is not there you can determine how far you reach. Does that mean, that I with a height of 180 cm can be an elite turner, if I only want it hard enough? Or if I train hard enough at home in the living room? Unfortunately, not quite. It is clear that a physical or technical advantage does not impair your ability. But it is far from a guarantee of success! It is therefore very few super talents who are world stars. In reality talent misunderstood concept in the sense, that talent is often confused with skill. A talent requires skills, but it is is not the same. Far more important factors to reach the top in both sports world which is the business sector's willingness to pay the price in time, energy and training and not least the ability to handle adversity. It is clear that in my work with the Olympia top and senior managers to see, that many are experiencing massive hardship and frustration before a huge success. In addition is the ability to grow in such a process, perhaps the most important factor in the creation of a winner. I'm pretty sure that because of this factor that Marit Bjørgen today's Olympic gold medal winner, that Caroline Wozniacki is one of the world's best female tennis players and Stine Bosse controls TrygVesta. Talent Tuning Mozart, Picasso, the Beatles and Steve Jobs was not born with the ability to to break conventions and set new standards in each of their of activity. In the book, "Genius Explained" estimates Dr. Michael Howe, Mozart to have 3500 had music lessons with his father in his 6-year birthday. Worth noting is that Wolfgang's father had a background as a composer and status as one of contemporary music's most progressive instructors, while he undoubtedly had a great pedagogical talent.
History repeats itself with Pablo Picasso. Already the age of 13 was he admitted to the art school in Barcelona. Pablo had received training from his father (a professor at the School), since he could say piz, piz "(brush on Spanish baby language). But it was only in 1907 that 26 year old, that Picasso with work Les Demoiselle d'Avignon (Misses from Avignon) made his breakthrough as cubism developed a midwife. Les Demoiselle d'Avignon was by no means the result of a light moment, but of a long and intensive creative progress to understand, interpret and paint on the basis of some African sculptures that Picasso random acquaintance of the Musée d'Ethnographie in Paris .
Steve Jobs was a hippie Hustler and college drop-out from Berkeley University of San Francisco with a tendency to constantly be in a form of even solemn oppsternasig opposition to everything-and-all. Steve Wosniak (the candidate of reason puts Apple Computer Inc) was the technical Wizzard, who built the Apple I and II. Jobs was the businessman who first a bit of time into the personal computers growing up came to the combination of usability, product design and marketing that was needed to succeeded in creating one of the 20 century's most successful businesses. Winner Mentality Often, I ask managers and leaders in Olympiatoppen and in business the same question: what is most important: that they believe in their players or not believe in them? It seems provocative, because we, of course, is conditioned to believe that good leadership is about faith in his team. Of course faith with to create optimism and positive energy. I can therefore say that those who when the longest, along the way has had to contend with a sea of people, even more competent people a themselves, who have not had faith in them. It's about the ability to see their own hardship as a test and an opportunity to grow, which helps create winning mentality. My thesis is that the development of a talent, the redemption of a potential, is on a knife edge between unconditional faith and lack of the same. That it necessarily has to be people who believe in you, when you do not even do it. But it also will be other and to many, that test your idea, your talent and your willingness to reach your goals. "Talent is 1% inspiration, and 99% perspiration," Edison Wolfgang, Pablo, Steve and Marit was not born with a God-given creative talent. The road to success was not "a-walk-in-the-creative-park" or a good hold of his pocket filled with wonderful ideas. The history of the world's most "outstanding" creative people is a far higher degree of early specialization in a given field, and a hard and exhausting struggle to move from the ordinary to the extraordinary level. The Swedish Professor Anders Ericsson is the first one, through a wide range of scientific studies have proven that innate talent is strongly overvalued as an explanation for the great achievement, whether it is sports, arts or business. Ericsson's scientific breakthroughs have created after many debates, and leads to a number of interesting books on the topic, browse a few of my favorite books: "Outliers" by Malcolm Gladwell, "The Talent Code" of Daniel Coyle, "Talent is overrated" by Geoff Colvin, and the arc "education af a winner of Rasmus Ankers. Ps. Female talent I have previously in my "Womenomics" column written about, that women in short period of time will make up the majority of the workforce in the United States, and this is the trend throughout the rich world. High professional participation among women is that known, one of the most important competitive advantages a country can have. But it is not just countrys that will increase competitiveness by creating arrangements that make it more attractive to be working. Also the companies will fight for the female talent. The companies must do so by arranging for talent and career development as well as to organize work that makes it possible to combine family and work, if the companies will be attractive in the future. The war for talent will dominate and change the workplace in the years to come. Only second best! To win this match it does not give room for your own and employees' explanations for a lack of innate creative talent. There is nothing more than a misunderstanding and a pretty poor excuse not to go ahead with an active improvement of their business creative competencies. In reality, I do not think that we basically want things to be easy and that everyone should have faith in us. It's less about the goals we reach, the more about the person we are growing to be underway.
Source:"Outliers" by Malcolm Gladwell, "The Talent Code" of Daniel Coyle, "Talent is overrated" by Geoff Colvin, and the arc "education af a winner of Rasmus Ankers, winnerslab.dk
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