1 min readGuard Your Credibility
by Guy Gage | December 18, 2016 | Business
Every time you agree to do something, you put your credibility at risk. Lots of things can go wrong; some of them are out of your control. Nonetheless, if you said you would, you’re on the hook to deliver, unless you renegotiate your agreement—in advance. You can see how much effort it takes to earn and maintain strong credibility.
When you agree to something, you have best intent. You mean well. But sometimes you set yourself up for failure. There are two common reasons you miscalculate your ability to deliver.
1. You agree without seriously considering everything you will say no to. What else have you promised, agreed to or responsible for? Shoehorning your new agreement in an already-crowded calendar usually means overload.
2. When you consider the time, energy and resources, you think in terms of everything going perfectly: you have what you need, when you need it and the way you need it. In addition, everyone else does everything exactly right. And nothing comes up that you didn’t expect. Now, stated that way, what have you EVER done where everything goes that way? Never? Then why do you expect it will this time?
The point is that your intent isn’t enough. People don’t see your intent. They can only see your actions. No matter how much you want to come through, the only thing that matters is that you DO come through. Anything else falls short.
This week, be careful to guard your credibility.
Read Related Blogs:
Scale Your Expectations to Match the Season, Not the Ideal
Every season is unique and asks something different of you. Some chapters feel spacious and steady; others tighten the margins and demand more time, focus, or energy bandwidth than you’d prefer. When life intensifies, the instinct is often to cling to your ideal...
This Generation Won’t Sink or Swim – They’ll Just Swim Elsewhere
This generation does not respond to the old way of building careers. Seasoned partners often recall their first months on the job: dropped off at a client’s office, told to figure it out, and left to learn the hard way. They may have been under a watchful eye, but...
Same Goals, Near Year?
The start of a new year brings fresh goals, fresh energy, and fresh intentions. But if we’re being honest, many of those goals look suspiciously like last year’s. You know, the ones that quietly fell apart and we barely even noticed. So, before we roll out the same...

