10x Takes You Out Of Your Industry

November 29th, 2011

This year, I started a new program based on the idea of multiplying everything in your business and life by 10. In preparing for this, I spoke to about 100 individuals who’d made the passage into achieving real multiples in their personal income, in their capability, in their achievements, and in freeing themselves up to achieve bigger things—and I noticed something peculiar about these discussions.

The people I spoke to got very excited as they talked about what they did, but almost never mentioned what they sold. They just weren’t interested in having that conversation. But how they grew and multiplied themselves—they found that fascinating.

These entrepreneurs came from a range of totally different industries. In business terms, they had nothing in common with one another. In talking with them, however, I began to see that they had far more in common with each other than with anyone else in their respective industries.

Imagine a group of people who’d climbed Mount Everest. After such a literally “peak” experience, they would share an incredible bond and all kinds of reference points that other people who hadn’t had that experience couldn’t really understand. Any sort of epic adventure and achievement will unify people at a certain level.

It’s the same with people who’ve achieved 10x—except the commonality isn’t any external factor, but an internal clarity, confidence, and capability they’ve gained from achieving something big.

This leads me to think that 10x is an industry unto itself. Those who’ve attained it have passed from a commodity-based industry, where what draws people together is what they sell, to a realm of 10x aspiration, progress, and results. At that level, you’re no longer in your original industry, but in this new, limitless industry that simply can’t be commoditized because it’s internally generated.

That’s the first 10x transformation—where you as an individual reach a multiplier level and transcend your industry. The next transformation occurs when you take this dynamic into your company, so every aspect of it has the capability of going 10x—including all your team members.

How Do You Make 10x Growth “Normal”?

August 26th, 2011

Imagine someone from 1911 traveling along in their horseless carriage, and then suddenly they’re transported into the driver’s seat of a car going 65 miles an hour on a modern freeway. What a nightmare that would be for them — there’d be cars darting in and out of lanes and flashing signs, and they’d just be trying to work out how to operate a vehicle at that speed! They’ve had nothing to prepare them for an experience like that, yet you likely manage something like this every day without even thinking about it. For you, that speed is just normal.

The scariest feeling is being surrounded by events and not understanding them. Your lack of comprehension becomes your greatest threat and starts eating away at you. A lot of people are feeling this way about the economy right now.

Thinking in terms of 10x makes just about anything that’s happening on the planet explainable. It’s a global philosophy that allows you to process and take advantage of the speed at which changes are taking place today.

Human beings normalize things very quickly. Just watch a tennis player responding to a 110 mph serve — it’s incredible. They’ve simply normalized that experience. Their reflexes and hand-eye coordination are geared to it.

So what we have to do is say, “This change is going to constantly be with us.” The microchip continues to increase in speed and power. It continues to have a greater and greater impact on everything in our society. What kind of thought would organize everything in a way that makes it not scary and actually let you take maximum advantage of what’s happening? That thought is “10x.”

So here are four questions to get you thinking this way:

  • • What in my life supports 10x?
  • • What in my life doesn’t support 10x?
  • • What’s lacking in my life that I need in order to go 10x?
  • • What’s present in my life that I could take advantage of to go 10x?

The more you process every event in your life through this thinking, the more you’ll find yourself in the 10x flow.

Are You Creative Or Reactive?

August 3rd, 2011

Nobody goes to snail races. Why? Because slow is boring.

Right now, fast change is not only possible, it’s inevitable. So the question becomes, are you going to be creative with that experience or reactive? Whether the consequences of change are good or bad will be entirely a function of your mindset.

If you adapt your mind to thinking 10x, no matter what happens around you, you will have a creative experience. You’ll feel like you’re on top of events and will actually enjoy them.

Educational and organizational structures that stress incremental change simply don’t prepare people for the world we’re living in right now. An incremental outlook lacks the crucial elements that engage people the most — which 10x provides, because it’s:

  • • emotionally satisfying
  • • psychologically reassuring
  • • intellectually enlightening

I don’t see any evidence that people who keep their heads down and keep doing what they’ve always done get rewarded these days. They’re certainly not any safer. If two people are in a situation that’s crumbling around them, the one who’s capable of thinking 10x bigger will be able to create a new and better possibility for themselves. They’ve become accustomed to generating reality from scratch. The incremental thinker, on the other hand, will lose the foundation for growth they were expecting to build on.

If you’re a small business owner or entrepreneur of any kind, 10x is the most promising future imaginable. It perfectly situates you to take advantage of opportunities and generate endless entrepreneurial growth.

Project yourself out of your present circumstances into a 10x future — one where your results happen 10x faster, 10x easier, 10x cheaper, and 10x bigger. Looking back, what would you change now?