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Play to Win!

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Play to Win!
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Are you playing to win? Or are you content just to play and not lose?

Shared by: Holly Green
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1/10/2012
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Play to Win!



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Are you playing to win? Or are you content just to play and not lose?



Did you catch the New Orleans Saints/Detroit Lions game last Saturday?



What an exciting game between two high-powered offenses! And once again, the sports

world offered a powerful lesson for business leaders. Specifically, I’m referring to Saints

coach Sean Payton and how he approaches the game of football. Now there’s a coach

who plays to win!



If you follow pro football, you know it’s nothing new for Payton. In the Super Bowl a few

years ago, he shocked the Colts (and just about everyone else) by doing an onside kick-

off to start the second half.



Conventional wisdom says that you just don’t do that in the Super Bowl. Especially

against an explosive offense like the Colts had at the time. Give them the ball at midfield

and they’ll score in no time at all. But Payton plays to win (as opposed to playing not to

lose), and his calculated risk served as the turning point in a hotly contested game.



In Saturday’s game against the Lions, Payton again demonstrated this philosophy going

for it on fourth down. Not once, but several times. Conventional football wisdom says to

punt and play it safe when your team has the lead. But Payton knew that holding onto

the ball gave his team the best chance to win. So he took a few calculated risks, and

they paid off.



Of course, it helps to have a quarterback like Drew Brees and plenty of offensive

weapons, as the Saints do. But Payton’s “play to win” attitude clearly rubs off on his

players. No matter the opponent or the situation, they don’t just believe they can win,

they expect to win.



Why is playing to win so important?



People want to be on the winning side, and playing not to lose sends a subtle message

that changes their thinking and their behavior. People become a little less focused on

the small things that lead to winning. When faced with adversity, they get discouraged

and disheartened a little more easily. And when major setbacks occur, they have doubts

about whether the company can still win. When you play not to lose, you’re playing for

second best (or worse).



What does playing to win look like in the business world?



Dare to take risks.

This doesn’t mean to call a fake punt on 4th down at your own 10-yard line. Risks should

be calculated, not foolhardy. Look for opportunities that offer huge upsides with minimal

downside if they don’t pan out. Or outline the risks and mitigate or minimize them

beforehand.



Get comfortable with failure.

When you take risks, you will fail much of the time. They key is to make it safe for

people to fail, and to learn from your mistakes. Even Tom Brady throws an interception

every now and then, for gosh sakes. His coach puts him back out there every time. If

you’re not failing, you’re not trying hard enough and you are probably falling behind.



Shake up the status quo.

This is hard for most business leaders to get comfortable with. In the U.S., we tend to

have a real short-term mentality, especially in large public companies. We’re so worried

about the quarterly numbers that we play not to lose rather than to win. When we

innovate, we usually do it incrementally, which yields a safe but minimal return.



In today’s markets, becoming a market leader requires shaking up the status quo; going

for the long bomb rather than the 3-yard run up the middle. Easier said than done. But

if you don’t at least aim for it, you’ll never hit it.



Change your thinking.

Most of all, get rid of the idea that what made you successful today will continue to

make you successful tomorrow. In football, the players keep getting bigger, faster and

stronger. Coaches know they can’t stand pat, so they continually develop new offensive

and defensive schemes to stay ahead of the game. In business, your competitors are

also getting bigger, faster and stronger. To stay ahead, your products, services, and

ways of doing business must continually evolve.



When it comes to winning, there’s one big difference between pro football and business.

In football, the rules of the game are imposed on every team by the NFL. In business,

when you play to win, you get to impose a lot of the rules.



When you change the way customers perceive value, they have to play by your rules.

When you come up with a new product or service that transforms your industry,

competitors have to play by your rules. And when you build an organization that is so

passionate about winning that the top performers clamor to work for you, other

employers have to play by your rules.



Doesn’t that sound like more fun than playing not to lose?





TAGS: win, football, innovate, organization, competitors, success, leader, business,

risks, change, behavior



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