Washington Allston said “The only competition worthy of a wise man is himself.” And the source for constant improvement comes from the power of one. Strive to be better than the best you’ve ever been. Don’t settle for beating your competitors. Raising the bar of your own standards, even those proven successful in the past, is the only way to continue surpassing your competition. As I like to always say, there is no traffic jam on that one extra mile. The power of imagination may be that one thing that leads to your discovering a new solution that makes the difference between survival of your company and overwhelming success.įinding your power of one as it relates to each and every one of your personal interactions will provide favor and opportunity previously unattainable. But the difference is infinite.Ī single idea can launch an entire company, some of which can pioneer entire industries, technologies, resulting in benefits for us all. That extra gesture of kindness, that extra effort, that extra perk you weren’t contractually obligated to provide, that extra minute when a customer shows up at closing time, that extra phone call answered after hours. And that one thing can make all the difference.
In each of us is the potential to produce that difference of one. If you remove that power of one from the equation, what might have been an otherwise compelling interaction fails to move hearts or open minds. The same holds true for the powers of persuasion, inspiration, and motivation. But reduce the water temperature by one degree and you won’t move that train an inch. That energy can be used to power machinery, even huge locomotives. That one-degree difference produces steam that can be captured as energy. The power of one can be the difference between success and failure, between yes and no, between moving forward or not moving at all.Īt the temperature of 211ᵒ water is extremely hot, but at 212ᵒ it boils. When it comes to dealing with other people, they can accept or dismiss you based on that power of one. The power of one has an even greater application for the personal interactions of professionals in relationship-centric industries. If it’s your goal to be the very best, most successful version of yourself, then the power of one is the distinguishing factor between second best and very best. Not only does the power of that one detail make all the difference in terms of results, but it’s YOU who can make that difference with an understanding of what it takes to capture its power. Whether in sports, in school, or in business, no doubt, we can all relate. I lost the golf tournament and a $xxx purse by one stroke… One more inch and we would have come in first place… If only I’d had that one extra piece of information… One more minute would’ve made the difference… I’m missing only one piece of the puzzle… Who of us at one point or other in our lives hasn’t felt that way about something? If we had only done that one more thing. Poet John Greenleaf Whittier once wrote, “Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these: It might have been.”