Make the Most
of What You Don't Do Well -
Leverage your weakness and make it work for you
by Rachelle Disbennet-Lee,
PhD.
One of my early
mentors, Thomas Leonard, advised people not to try to improve a
weakness. He said that, when you try to improve a weakness, the
only thing you get is “a stronger weakness.” I believe that is
true. It is more important to focus on your strengths and
maximize what you do well than to try to fix something that you
may never do very well. However, there is a way to actually
leverage your weakness and that is to make the most of it.
Everyone has
weaknesses, at least those of us who are human. As humans we
spend a lot of time trying to improve, cover up or apologize for
our weaknesses. There is a better way. You can actually make the
most of your weakness. There was a car rental company that
advertised that they were number two so they tried harder.
Instead of seeing second place as a bad thing, they leveraged
it. There is a cough syrup company that is running ads that
boast that the medicine tastes awful, but it works great. On one
radio ad a man calls the company and tells the woman who answers
the telephone that the cough syrup is the worst stuff he has
every tasted. In a very proud voice she says, “Why, thank you.”
Another ad has a man telling the woman that the syrup tastes
like garbage bag leakage, and he asks whether it is supposed to
taste that bad. In her happy voice she says, “Yes, it is!”
Instead of trying to make any excuses about how bad the stuff
tastes, the company simply puts it right out there, makes fun of
it and uses the opportunity to tell you how wonderfully it
works.
A trick question
asked in interviews is “What is one of your weaknesses?” What
the interviewer is really trying to get at here is not what you
weakness is; honestly, they don’t want you to have any. They
want to know a weakness you have had and how have you corrected
it. I actually answer this question to highlight one of my
strengths. My answer recounts that I am challenged to be an
organized person and, although I have that somewhat under
control, I don’t try to over-correct because I am a creative
person and often what looks like disorganization to an outsider
is simply part of my creativity in progress.
You have a least one
weakness and that is okay. You are human, after all. Don’t waste
your time trying to improve every weakness; instead, leverage
it. Make the most of what you don’t do well, highlight it and
build on it. If nothing else, you can always use a weakness to
spotlight a strength.
Rachelle
Disbennett-Lee, PhD provides daily motivation, information and
inspiration to thousands of people through her award winning e-zine
365 Days of Coaching. For a free report, "The Power
of Daily Action - How to create more Wealth, Health and Happiness
by Tapping Into the Power of Daily Action" go to
http://www.365daysofcoaching.com/daily_action.htm
© Coach Rachelle Disbennett Lee, PhD, 2007
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