By: Jason D. Nickerson, CFP®, EA, Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer, John G. Ullman & Associates
That’s right, I said it. A quiet voice amongst a crowd of gurus and life coaches that surface this time of year to help you get on track. I am the opposite of this. Not because I don’t believe in goal setting. As an advisor and Certified Financial PlannerTM, this is the second step in our process. It is essential to have goals. As Zig Ziglar said, if you aim at nothing, you’ll hit it every time.
We need to aim for something in our personal and professional lives. So, we set our targets, goals, and New Year resolutions. Increase profits, increase customer satisfaction, lose weight, and get our financial lives in order. We use “proven” systems to lay out our goals and plans, we buy-in to the hype of some consultant who is going to help us set our sights, and then ultimately, we fail. Why? “I used the SMART system.” “I had an accountability partner.” “I did everything they told me to do.” I am telling you it’s not your fault, its psychology that is built into us.
First, let’s dive into why we set New Year resolutions. Psychologists call this the Fresh Start effect. We pick some arbitrary point in time that we feel is the beginning. Monday, January 2nd, whatever, this is the first step in our failure. We make such a big deal out of the starting point. We eat worse because we know we won’t be able to eat the junk food starting at that point. We rest and reduce intensity and focus knowing we have this big goal we will start working towards starting at some point. We spend a certain amount of time just getting ourselves up to a pace of work and intensity to make progress and we find ourselves already behind our timeline a short time in. You see, not your fault. Its psychology programmed into us.
Second, there are two places we fail in this goal setting and chasing:
- We set big, huge, monstrous goals, and as humans, we tend to believe we are capable of more than we are. This is related to the Dunning-Kruger effect.
- We lose sight of the fact that there is very little within our control.
Again, I am all for setting goals and achieving them, so please don’t take this article as you should not be setting goals. There is great advice out there to support this process (like SMART goals). Let me present ideas on how we can do this better, given the errors I have pointed out.
- “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step” (Chinese proverb): Focus on the single step. If you want to lose 20 pounds in 2023 as an example, focus on losing 1-2 pounds the first week. Then another 1-2 pounds the following week. That success drives motivation and motion. This can be attributed to the snowball effect in psychology. A snowball rolling downhill picks up speed and size.
- Realize that there is so much more out of our control than within our control and you won’t lose site of the goal when you get delayed or behind. At the beginning of 2020, people and businesses were on their way to chasing down those big goals and resolutions. Then a global pandemic hit and shut down the world. Realize there will always be something that knocks you off course. The universe is built this way. Use it to toughen your resolve. Reset your timeline and then go back to focusing on that next single step.
Psychology has failed you, but do not let that be your crutch and excuse. Set your goals, get started now, know you will fail, toughen up, reset, and get back after it. Cheers to you all for a successful 2023!
CEOs are entering 2023 better prepared after a long period of unique challenges yet facing many of the same risks and issues. According to the most recent Fortune/Deloitte CEO Survey, the majority of CEOs are cautiously optimistic that their companies will perform well this year and will continue to focus on investing in key strategic areas, particularly digital transformation and talent acquisition and retention.
2022 proved to be a good, but challenging year for construction industry employers. Buoyed by both private and public sector investments throughout central New York, the industry enjoyed an abundance of work but saw tighter margins as competition remained strong. Employers endured supply chain issues, a thin labor market with labor shortages and sky-rocketing inflation that impacted material costs. In the end, 2022 was a good year for most contractors, but of course their attention has quickly shifted to future opportunities and challenges.
2022 was an interesting year, right? Actually, I’m sure that most of us would agree that we’ve had an interesting few years now. The manufacturing industry has certainly seen its share of ups and downs over that period. Supply chain issues, inflationary pressures, and workforce shortages are just a few of the issues that have challenged every industry, not solely manufacturing. By definition, most of us understand that we were already technically in an economic recession earlier this year. But most industries didn’t necessarily feel the extent of its pain due to the atypical path that it took our economy to get to that point. However, as we look ahead, we’re suddenly facing the real possibility of a painful recession in 2023. What can manufacturers do to prepare for this, as well as continue to plant the seeds for growth?
We have certainly been living through interesting times these past few years. Leadership has faced numerous challenges—some “once in a hundred years” events. Still, I am happy to report that the vast majority of our clients have thrived as they turned up their creativity and ingenuity, leaned their businesses, and opened their minds to new ways of operating. But as we all know; our work is never done. Change is the only constant, and leaders are looking cautiously toward 2023.
As its name implies, continuous improvement is a never-ending process. Whether it is the need for greater sales, increased productivity, or anything in between, there is always something that can be improved upon. Continuous improvement can occur as a major event or transformation such as a Kaizen event, or it can occur through daily, gradual improvements with a Kata approach. When organizations realize successes with these continual improvement efforts, many will claim to have achieved some degree of operational excellence. But what is operational excellence, and what does a manufacturing organization look like once it achieves a level of operational excellence?
The topic for this article came through a request that focused on Medicaid. However, I decided to expand the topic to include Long Term Care Planning because this is an extremely robust topic, as you will see. The question that serves as the title of this piece illustrates how much confusion lies in this area of Wealth Management.
Politicians. Lobbyists. Elected officials. Legislation. Laws. Regulations. Do those words generate a positive or negative connotation? While answers will vary depending on individual circumstances or experiences, one thing is for sure: They all impact how the construction industry functions and influence decisions of construction industry employers. The Syracuse Builders Exchange chooses to advocate and educate in an effort to support a position which is most advantageous to the industry.