“But what’s to worry about?” Cahill (Cal) Brown asked. He was a packaging designer and marketing consultant. “For an entrepreneur, you’re very fearful.”
“I think I’m supposed to be fearful,” I answered. “That’s part of my job. I’m supposed to worry.”
I know: fear and worry, not good words, not entrepreneurial, it’s all “you can do it” and “don’t let the bastards get you down” and “nothing to fear but fear itself” in entrepreneur world.
But I say fear, in the right measure, is good for management. It’s related to having the antenna up, watching for danger.
Do you ever do SWOT? Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. Threats are one fourth of SWOT.
That’s not paralyzing deer-in-the-headlights fear. It’s fear like the deer in the forest standing very still, ears perked up, listening for danger. Alertness. Thinking ahead.
If you’re interested in this, I had a good talk with Jim Blasingame about this last week, on his daily Small Business Advocate radio show. It was about at this point in the discussion that Jim added the idea of fear as motivator, not fear as immobilizer.
To hear the archived radio interview click here
Which also reminds me, Jim and his team are archiving everything these days, meaning that the Small Business Advocate site has an amazing array of 20-minute interviews on every topic in business. He’s a natural interviewer, and his guest list is enormous. He’s been doing this three hours a day for five days a week for almost 12 years.
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