Personality Assessments Help Hiring and Employee Development

Personality Assessments such as  Caliper, Disc, Gallup, HBDI and FiroB are popular tools that yield useful, consistent information for medical sales managers.

There are 2 scenarios that assessments are normally used:

  1. As a hiring tool in the hiring process.
  2. As an employee development tool for sales managers.

In the hiring process, you normally take an assessment at the very beginning of the interview process or towards the end.

An assessment that is used in the beginning is usually used to screen out people that wouldn’t fit in the job. When I say fit, maybe it is a very technical scientific job and the candidate didn’t have a science degree. The employer may be using an assessment that focuses on abstract reasoning because that is seen as a good measure of intelligence and they are trying to gauge if the candidate will be able to grasp their new technology quickly. If it is an accounting job, maybe the employer is focused more on the candidate’s ability to work by themselves with no direction.

A good manager believes “Where there is smoke, there is fire” and if the assessment comes back with more than 2 points of contention, they may think they are better off passing on you and moving on to the next candidate.  They don’t want to gamble with their new hires.

It’s much less likely to keep you from getting the job if you are taking the assessment as a final step to receiving an offer—unless your assessment comes back with anti-social behavior patterns, the manager will probably move forward.

People who vociferously disagree with their results are almost always a personnel issue waiting to happen. They think they have all the skills needed for their job and they are great. The truth is that is they don’t have the needed skills and probably won’t change.

Personality assessments work similarly in terms of employee development.  As a manager, sometimes you have a really good employee who wants to move to a different role. Maybe they are in a technical staff position and they would like to transition to a line sales position. You like the employee’s values and work ethic and you want to help them advance in their career, but you don’t want to set them up for failure by putting them in a job that doesn’t match their skill set.

So what happens when they take the test and it shows they don’t like to communicate with people and are introverted?

A good manager will handle it correctly by sitting down with the team member and having a conversation about the assessment and try and understand how the team member perceives and interprets the results.

The conversation should be warm and focused on the individual. As you go through the assessment with them and ask their feedback, you will start to get a picture of how that team member sees his or her self. When you start reviewing some of the needed skill sets for the new job and how their results compare to that, often the team member will see that where they want to go doesn’t utilize their strengths and it would be a really difficult transition.

What happens next?  Are they doomed to stay in that role forever?  No.

The manager and the team member work together to assemble a plan that will develop or supplement the areas they need to be successful.  If they are poor public speakers, maybe Toastmasters is a good idea for them.  If they have no clue what a day in the life of a sales rep is like, what about scheduled ride-along days in the field?

If the assessment and the review is done right, both parties leave with a better understanding of the team member and where they want to go in the organization and what skills they will need to be successful in a new role.

Your thoughts?  Comments?  Put them in the comment section or e-mail me at:  kraig@phcconsulting.com

Kraig McKee

Snr Recruiter

Ask a Medical Sales Manager: ABC’s of Field Travel and Training (Part 3 of 3)

If you have a field travel trip coming up with your boss and you’ve got your head in the game and you’ve taken care of the details that will make your boss comfortable on the trip, now you can get down to the business of how to handle the field travel plan.  (See Part 1 and Part 2 of this series.)

What does a well-executed field travel plan look like?

Let’s talk about your Plan A for travel (the ideal situation you can have if you prepare properly), Plan B (the “duck plan”) and Plan C (if your day falls apart, do this).

Having your boss or someone from the corporate office field travel with you is a total positive and an opportunity for you to establish a relationship and also to distinguish yourself among your peers.

History says that people that hate, postpone, whine about, and dread field travel are losers that won’t last long.  Why so harsh?  Because it is the truth.  If you are doing a good job, you want the recognition and attention.  Why are winners so jazzed to get to go up on stage at national meetings for recognition/performance awards?  It is recognition of a job well done!  If you aren’t proud of what you’re doing and your performance, you want to be “on the down low”.  Successful sales people are self-promoters.

The A Plan with A accounts.

What is it?

The A Plan is a well-thought-out travel plan that hits your most important accounts and is a model of planning and execution.  Here’s how to do it:

  1. You anticipated your guest’s hotel needs.
  2. You have a Travel Summary (paper) in their hands when they walk off the plane.  I always wanted paper so I could put the summary in my portfolio and take notes on it in my lap while I was in the account.  They are also handy to help if you space on a customer’s name.  At the end of the travel, you can make notes on the summary and pass it on to an assistant for a follow up note or maybe someone else in the organization for follow up on a customer’s issue.
  3. You had already sent an email with a brief outline of the accounts to be visited and the objectives for each call.
  4. You ask when they would like to be at the airport for their return and if you need to schedule any one on one time with them.  Your schedule for the following day’s travel should include some time on the morning for you to chat.  That time may come over a cup of coffee on the drive to your account or at a formal sit down meeting in the hotel.
  5. The Travel Summaries are a contained in a presentation folder that contains the following:
  • Cover Page (Prepared For, Prepared By, Date, Travel Guest with name and title spelled correctly–check it twice)
  • Territory Summary-Brief, concise-2-3 paragraphs.
  • Account Summaries
    • Name
    • Contact name and title
    • Role they play (Technical Buyer, Economic, User, Coach)
    • Outstanding account issues or red flags
    • Role you would like the visitor to play
  • A screen shot from his/her hotel that shows directions and phone/fax numbers.
  • Account info from your CRM program (Salesforce, Seibel etc.)
  • Strategic Selling “green sheets” for the accounts you will be calling on if you use Strategic Selling.
  • Maybe a page or two dedicated so some issue important to your territory, a product show, early release of a product to a thought leader in your territory, etc.

Preparing for well-executed field travel takes some time, but the rewards are worth it.  Poorly planned and executed field travel is hard to escape and can haunt others’ perceptions of you in the organization and at review time with your boss.

The A Plan represents the best image or picture in your territory that you would like to present to your manager.  You have confirmed appointments for all customers on the schedule and specific objectives in each call (a single call objective).  If you have done all of the things outlined above, you have already projected the image of an organized, motivated individual.  Anyone that has traveled or managed at all knows that stuff happens and the mark of a winner is the ability to pivot on the new information/scenario and drive forward.

Remember, you aren’t trying to “fake out” your boss.  Sometimes even a poor rep can pull together excellent field travel.  They know the right things to do; they just tend not to do them unless someone is around.  While they may fool some people some of the time, they won’t fool their competent manager much of the time.  How so? People are creatures of habit and if you are a slacker, those slacker habits show up in other ways over time.  The moral of this part of the story is if you are filled with dread about traveling with anyone, you may be in the wrong role.  I swear I don’t know a single high performing rep that doesn’t enjoy showing off by demonstrating their product knowledge and account control/management through field travel. 

Plan B

The specific person you have an appointment with in one of your largest accounts becomes unavailable—sick kid, called in to a meeting, sick themselves, emergency etc.  Hopefully they have left you a message or told you when you are verbally confirming your appointment with them the day of the call.  If not, don’t freak.  If their assistant tells you that he/she is sorry and will have to reschedule, you may ask if he/she (the assistant) is available or if there is someone else that she had directed you to see.

No matter what the case, handle it with style and grace.  Visualize the duck….smoothly gliding through the water seemingly effortlessly until you look below the surface and see it paddling like crazy.  Since you are a sales professional, you have already anticipated this possibility, hence THE B PLAN Accounts.  There is no one else that can see you in the account and you have 90 minutes until your next call.  The B Plan in action.

The B plan is simply a backup plan for your original call plan and it can take many forms.  In this scenario there are 2 immediate things that come to mind.

  • Tell whoever is traveling with you that there has been a cancellation and ask if they would like to go somewhere (maybe the lobby of your next call) and chat or he/she can make calls and check emails.  Now before you freak, competent managers know that a fair amount of success in sales comes from adaptability and driving forward.  Even Mr. Rigid Manager will be ok with this.  The fact that you don’t freak and reflex to Plan B will score points.  Drive forward.
  • Tell your guest that your customer cancelled and you have a maintenance call that you are going to squeeze into the schedule. 

Before offering the second option mentioned above, you have surreptitiously called the account and confirmed that it is ok to stop by.  This is more of a “howdy doody” call, so you will have to formulate you single call objective on the fly.  Most reps have customers that like to see them and will welcome the attention.  In the lab world, many customers will take great pride in offering your boss a tour of the lab.

In summary, The B Plan could be called the duck plan.  Your original plan/schedule blew up.  You remain calm and smooth (like the duck on top of the water) but immediately begin paddling to fill the time with productive sales calls.  The big thing to focus on here is that you have already thought about an alternate plan and how to execute it if your A Plan explodes.

Plan C

  • My boss is in town, my schedule exploded and I was hoping we could come by and show you the new X.
  • My boss is in town, my schedule exploded, you have a pulse and won’t throw things at us—will you see us?
  • My boss is in town, my schedule exploded and I will buy pizza for your lab if you can see us and show us X.

Get the picture?  Plan C accounts are accounts that will see you on short notice and generally like you.

The message here is planning.  By investing the thought and effort into well planned field travel, there is no obstacle or circumstance that can make you look bad.  You just flex from A to C if needed.

–Kraig McKee, Senior Recruiter, PHC Consulting

PS – Are you trying to break into medical sales?  Get a picture of what life will really be like on the job with the Ask a Medical Sales Manager posts.

Medical Sales Job Interviews: What Hiring Managers Really Think About What You Wear

Listen to this conversation between two former medical sales managers Chris Norris (formerly with GE, CCS, Bayer) and Kraig McKee (formerly with Ventana Medical, Transgenomic, Bayer/Chiron) chat about what to wear to the interview and how to think about it–for both men and women:

Hear about how to buy a suit, all the details about what’s appropriate in terms of attire, jewelry, hair, and more.  And get the inside scoop about what all those details tell the hiring manager about you in your job interview.

For additional information, check out this survey of what hiring managers expect you to wear in the job interview.

If you have a topic that you would like a manager’s perspective on, let us know in the comments below.

Sales Forecasting: Use the Rule of 78

Everyone knows what their annual goal is, but how do you calculate how much you need to close each month if you missed your goal for the first 3 months of the year?  The Rule of 78 to the rescue.

Sales goal planning needs more than a crystal ball.

The Rule of 78 is used in the diagnostic industry to calculate how much new business you need to close to hit your annual sales goal. It allows you to recalculate that increment or growth as the year unfolds.

You say, “Why do I need to recalculate, I have a sales budget that breaks down my goal by the month?

I say “That’s great, tell me what new business you have to close for the remaining 9 months of the year if you missed your goal and didn’t sell enough in the first quarter.

That’s why you need the Rule of 78.  It allows you to calculate how much new business you need to close to hit your growth budget based on where you are at that time.

This tool is very valuable for reps formulating tactics to help them achieve their goals. It is also very helpful for managers to help reps realize that there is a point of no return, i.e., a point in the year that they cannot “catch up”, even if they get a big order. The reason being, there aren’t enough selling opportunities in the year.

Before we work through an example, consider these facts:

1) The Rule of 78 (Ro78) assumes that you maintain your base business.

2) The “increment” is the amount of new business you need to sell to add to your base business to hit your sales goal.

Base business + New Business (growth or increment) = Your sales goal for the year.

3) The Ro78 allows you to calculate in “real time”.

How much will you have to close to make up for an account that you lost in March?

Let’s look at some simple examples now:

Your sales goal for the year is $122,000 and your territory finished at $100,000 last year…so, $22,000 is your growth or increment.

The company wants you to grow your territory $22,000 larger than it was last year.

$100,000 + $22,000 = $122,000
Base Growth/increment Annual Sales Goal

$100,000-your total last year’s production.

It seems like you need to sell $10,166.67 (base +increment/growth) per month, starting in January (122,000 / 12 = $10,166.67)

That seems simple enough—but hold that thought.

This is where they get The Rule of 78.

January 12

February 11

March 10

April 9

May 8

June 7

July 6

August 5

September 4

October 3

November 2

December 1

The numbers to the right represent the number of selling opportunities in a year. You start in January with 12; February has 11, March 10 etc.

That equals 78 selling opportunities.

Now to the fun part.

It is the end of March and you have only sold $2,000 and you should have sold $30,499.98. ($122,000/12=$10,166.67 per month. $10,166.67x 3 = $30,499.98)

Tell me how much new business you need to close every month for the rest of the year to achieve your sales goal?

First, I need to calculate how many selling opportunities I have left in the year.

78 Total Selling Opportunities in a full year

-33 (Selling opportunities lost-Jan-12, Feb-11, March-10=33)

45 Remaining selling opportunities

Your annual growth budget divided by the remaining selling opportunities equals the new increment or growth that you need to sell each month for the remainder of the year.

$22,000(annual sales growth goal)-$2,000(your actual sales for that period) / 45 = $444.44

Since you sold only $2,000 in January, February and March, your increment/growth went from $282.05 per month (total growth goal for the year / 78) to $444.44. That means that you can still hit your annual sales goal if you maintain your base business and add $444.44 of new business each month for the remainder of the year.

Try one yourself:

Use the same annual sales growth goal of $22,000.

You sold $8,000 worth of new business by June.

How much new business (while maintaining your base) do you need each month to hit your annual sales growth goal of $22,000?

1) Calculate the selling opportunities left in the year after June.

78-57(12-11-10-9-8-7) =21

2) Subtract the new business that you have done through June from your annual sales growth goal ($22,000-$8,000=$14,000) to derive the amount of new business you need to add each month for the last six months of the year ($14,000).

3) Divide $14,000 by the remaining selling opportunities (21) to get your new growth/increment-$666.66.

What does the $666.66 represent in this example?

That represents the amount of new business you need to add each month, beginning in July to hit your annual sales goal of $122,000 while maintaining your base business.

It assumes that you sold $8,000 through June, when you needed to sell $11,000 to be on track to hit your annual growth budget of $22,000.

So, if you maintain your base business and add $666.66 of new business per month beginning in July, you will hit your annual sales goal. Did you notice that your increment more than doubled because you missed you goal for the first six months of the year?

This example is a little misleading, because technically, the rep could close a big order in December and hit his growth goal—but that’s a big gamble. I kept the numbers small to make the math easier. Realistic growth goals in today’s diagnostic market are somewhere between 8-30% and make the “Point of No Return” in June or July.

This model only applies to reoccurring consumables and doesn’t apply to capital sales.

Here is a visual representation of The Rule of 78 based on needing to generate $22,000 growth for the year:  Click here to view the Rule of 78 Chart

Your thoughts? Questions?  Put them in the comments or email me at: kraig@phcconsulting.com

Kraig McKee
Snr Recruiter

Top 3 Social Media Tips for the Medical Sales Job Search

A social media presence is a big part of your online personal brand, and a necessary part of any job search–especially a medical sales one.

But if I boil it down to the 3 essential things you need to know, it would be these:

  1. Be there.  You must utilize social media.  The safest thing would be to say the more sites the merrier, but for those in a time crunch or just wanting the most bang for their buck, concentrate on the big 3:  LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter (although Google+ is coming on strong).  Not only does it help you actively search, it also helps you shape what potential hiring managers will see when they Google you.  You have tremendous power here to control their perception of you as a candidate.  Use it.
  2. Post a professional photo–preferably, the same photo for all your profiles.  Many job seekers shy away from this one, but it will hurt you if you don’t have a photo.  If you want more details than that, check out this post on LinkedIn photos.
  3. Use your social media resources to skip HR and contact hiring managers.  Take advantage of the networking you’ve got here.  Going straight to hiring managers will get you way more interviews than going through HR applications ever will.

Want more in depth info on this subject?  Click to go to this video post on The Secret to Standing Out in Your Medical Sales Job Search.

Ask a Medical Sales Manager: How will my boss measure my success after my first 90 days as a medical sales rep?

Are you trying to break into medical sales?  We talk a lot about preparing for your medical sales interview with a 30/60/90-Day Sales Plan.  A well-done plan is your blueprint for the first 3 months on the job–but what about after that?  How will your performance be assessed once you’re “on your own”?  Well, the stakes get a little higher.  “On your own” means the performance meter is running and your evaluation and scrutiny will increase.

Life after the first 90 days as a medical sales rep

Welcome to the big leagues!  By now, you better be very familiar with your company’s CRM program (e.g. Salesforce.com) and used to the constant conference calls and/or Facetime calls.  If you own or have a company-issued Iphone or Ipad, your regional manager is likely to use that as a tool to update the region’s forecast.  What does that mean to you?  Don’t be sitting in your jammies at the time the call is scheduled and always have your information and your office area organized.

You’ll probably have very little in-person time with your manager (maybe once a quarter field travel plus national meeting time), so the time you do have with him or her counts.  Your manager probably didn’t get to be the manager of your team by not being observant and judgmental, so when you are around your manager, the recorder is running:  evaluating your words, actions, and presence.  When he/she gets good data and feedback, your life and how your manager deals with you will get better.

Perceptions are reality, so make sure your manager’s perceptions of you create the reality you want.  A painting is composed of many brushstrokes, and every interaction is a brushstroke to your manager.  Always remember to use the same skills internally as you do externally.

Your hiring manager’s perceptions of you have a big impact on your reality–your life on the job.  Some of the rules he has to implement are dictated to him by the company, but on a lot of other stuff, he has discretion on enforcing.  For instance, in my experience as a sales manager/director, the rule was that everyone starts out even and everyone does everything for the first 90 days.  If you were at or above plan at the end of the 90 days, you got some reprieve based on your performance and compliance.  That meant that you had longer to turn in your forecast, your pick of check-in times, your choice of projects to lead, etc.

Will you be a top medical sales rep?

Influence your hiring manager’s positive view of you

Your attitude and interactions have a big impact on your manager’s perceptions of you, too.  (Brushstrokes, remember?)  In my 20 years of managing sales reps, I noticed that players always like to have attention and contact.  Top reps enjoy chatting with the manager and gaining his or her perspective.  Because they’re good, they most often have thought through their situations and have already formed a plan of action, but they believe “two heads are better than one” and are interested in the manager’s input.  Reps that are scarcity-based don’t like working in a team environment and rebel at authority.   They will have a very difficult life in the corporate world.  It doesn’t mean they’re bad, it just means that maybe they’re an entrepreneur and don’t know it yet.

How will your boss measure your success?

My rule was always “Constant Improvement,” and that’s likely to be your manager’s rule, too.  As a new rep, that means you should constantly be making strides toward meeting or exceeding your sales goals.  So this month is better than last month, and the month after will be better than this one.  If you are doing the right things, the right things will happen to get you to that goal.

There are always exceptions and it’s true that if you took over a territory at 65% of plan and after two quarters in the field you’re at 70%, your manager is not likely to be pleased.  An improvement of only 5% in 6 months just isn’t fast enough.  At that rate, it would take almost 3 years to turn around a poor-performing territory–and if it takes that long, your manager will not likely survive.

10 critical checkpoints to help you stay on track:

1.  Have you made face-to-face calls for all of your Best Few prospects in your sales funnel?

a.  Have you documented the status of these accounts in your CRM records?

b.  Is the sale on track to close?  By definition, a Best Few prospect is a 90/90 prospect, meaning 90% is will happen and 90% it will happen in the specified time frame.

c.  If it’s off track, have you developed a plan for correction and gained your boss’s input?

2.  Have you met all the thought leaders in your territory?

3.  Are there any special events/shows planned in your territory?  If not, what do you need to do to get one?

4.  Have you called Marketing and asked for one of the product managers to field travel with you?

5.  Have you corrected any customer satisfaction issues?  If it’s a longer-range issue, do you have a plan in place with the buy-in of your boss and the service/technical organization?

6.  Have you identified who you can develop as a positive reference/demo site in your territory?

7.  Have you met your service engineers and taken them to lunch/breakfast?

8.  Are you using a “blown up day” to use as your office day to set appointments?  (You haven’t set a particular day like Monday or Friday as your office day every week, have you?  You shouldn’t.)

9.  You are focusing on accomplishment instead of activity, aren’t you?

10. Are you being a seeker?  (Seeking those with information you need.)

Keep a great attitude

Don’t associate/commiserate/communicate with team members that are always negative and complaining.

90% of selling is mental and the rest is in your head.

–Kraig McKee, Senior Recruiter, PHC Consulting

PS – Got questions that only a medical sales manager can answer?  Put them in the comments section below.

How To Answer 5 Medical Sales Job Interview Questions

Here’s a quick guide to answering 5 common (but tricky) job interview questions within medical and health care sales.  Click the link for the answer.

Don't make a mistake in your medical sales job interview!

1.  “Tell me about yourself.”

2.  “What’s your greatest weakness?”

3.  “Are you a team player?”

4. “What’s your sales style?”

5.  “Can you sell me this pen?”

Perfecting your answers to these typical questions will go a long way toward helping you with what you have to prove in the interview to get the medical sales job you want.

Get an inside track with my free training webinar:  How to Land a Medical Sales Job

Top 3 Tips for Your Medical Sales Job Search in 2012

Happy New Year 2012! 

If you’re in a medical sales job search, you’ve got your work cut out for you…but I’ve got 3 ideas that will get you rolling in the right direction:

  1. Take advantage of free training.  Register for this free webinar:  How to Land a Job in Medical Sales.  Whether you’re an experienced sales rep or a brand-new rookie, you will benefit from the tips you’ll learn in this discussion.
  2. Learn how to find medical sales hiring managers.  Going straight to the source is the most likely way you’ll find a spot before everyone else hears about it.  Hiring managers appreciate an aggressive go-getter.  Here are some ideas for how to find hiring managers.
  3. Learn to write a 30/60/90-Day Plan.  Not everyone does this, because they’re a lot of work…but I would never go into a medical sales interview without one of these babies if I really wanted the job.  It’s the key to what you have to prove in the interview.

Bonus Tip:  Don’t forget to sharpen up your resume and submit it to PHC Consulting!

Best of luck!

What NOT To Say to Your Medical Sales Recruiter

Just for fun…

I hope you enjoyed that.  Now click here for real help with your medical sales interview questions and answers.

Reach Your Medical Sales and Job Search Goals With Visualization

What are your goals for 2012?  To be the top performing medical device rep in your company?  To land the medical sales job you want? 

A big part of how I achieve my goals (when I was a laboratory sales rep and now as a medical sales recruiting business owner) is that I actively visualize my success–what it will look and feel like when I reach my goals. 

Here is a great article about effective visualization techniques that will help you achieve more success–not just in your professional goals, but in your life:

Effective Visualization– How To Use The Subconscious & Law Of Attraction To Materialize Our Dreams

By Kurt DuNard, The Exceptional Life Coach

The secret is that you have an amazing power within yourself that can bring about miraculous outcomes. The power that you have has been known to cure incurable diseases, build billion dollar companies, create magnificent symphonies, paint masterpieces and build fantastic loving families. The light switch that turns on this power is called visualization. Anyone that has created anything worthwhile in their lives used visualization whether consciously or unconsciously. The ones that systematically use visualization consciously have created amazing success. We all know who they are. They are Olympic athletes, the super rich, star entertainers, top salespeople, and almost anyone you can think of whom you believe has created an exceptional life. Visualization is such a powerful tool that it pays to practice and increase our visualization skills. Here’s how.

Why Visualization Works

    • It puts the subconscious on notice by saying “Here are my dreams—help me achieve them.” The subconscious then sends creative ideas and amazing inspirations.
    • There is a place in the brain that is called the Reticulated Activating System (RAS). You might tell your subconscious that you would like a blue Lexus LS 430 and all of a sudden you start seeing these cars everywhere. The RAS has been activated and you are noticing lots of beautiful blue cars. Visualization causes you to notice. Before you were blind and now you notice.
    • Here is the spooky part. Visualization, like prayer, activates the law of attraction. In totally unexplained, accidental, coincidental ways you attract the right people, the right situations, and the right resources. You are living a charmed life. Most successful people will tell you that they worked hard but they also were very fortunate. You can also be fortunate.
    • Visualization creates enthusiasm, excitement, and joy because your subconscious starts believing that your dreams are coming true. Enthusiasm, excitement, and joy are the fuel that is needed to emotionally make it OK to take action to achieve our dreams. You believe that success is yours for the taking and so you are enthused and take action. If diamonds are in the road, you must take action to pick them up and you are enthusiastically picking them up. There must be action—pick them up.

 

Start Where You Are

Visualization should be a fun relaxing exercise. Visualizing your dreams should never be a chore, a have to, or routine. It should always inspire emotions of happiness and peace.

If you think you are new to visualization, you are mistaken. You have visualized all your life, you were just not conscious of your practice. What may be new is that you have decided to become better at the practice and to be a conscious guide to your visualizations. You have decided to consciously tap into your power. You can only succeed. Follow these few simple rules.

    • Visualize what you want. Make them positive visualizations.
    • Avoid visualizing disaster or what you don’t want. Avoid negative visualizations.
    • Visualize living your dreams now in the present tense and how you feel.
    • Use lots of emotions and all the five senses if you can. It is important that your subconscious believes this is real.
    • Do balanced visualizations to create a balanced life. Visualize health, prosperity, family, friends, job, spiritual, wisdom, creativity, etc.
    • Visualize every day in the morning and just before going to bed. The more you visualize, the more you will look forward to it and the more you will notice positive changes in your life as a result.

 

Priming the Visualization Pump

The real power to change our lives comes through visualization; however, there are other practices that can help us augment the subconscious other than visualization. These practices can be done through the day or just before a visualization session.

 

    • Use pictures to help you visualize

Find pictures that make you emotionally excited, that represent goals, and aspirations. They could be the perfect house, you at the perfect weight with your picture Photoshoped onto another body, or it could show laughing friends and children. The pictures are more powerful, when you are in the picture. When you test drive your favorite car, have a picture taken of you with the car and another picture that you have taken from behind the wheel. Have a picture for all your dreams and goals. Make sure your goals are balanced in all areas of your life. Otherwise, you could have a great career with a sadly neglected family. Jack Canfield talks about how he took a $1.00 bill and then wrote six zero’s behind the “1″ to make it a million dollar bill. He then put that “$1,000,000 bill” above his bed so he would see it every morning. That representation of a million dollars soon materialized in Jack’s life.

 

    • Written Goals on 3 X 5 Cards

Put each goal on one side of the card. You could make it even better if you put a picture on the other side representing the goal. Morning and night, look at each card and visualize how you feel having accomplished this goal in the present moment—not the future.

 

    • Convert Your Goals to Affirmations and Memorize Those Affirmations

These affirmations are a statement of how you feel having accomplished the goal. It is a verbal visualization.

I feel fantastic, full of energy, and always ready for action now that I weigh 150 pounds.

Because you repeat these affirmations so frequently, they almost become a mantra that can be used to still the mind during meditation and visualization. To be effective, however, they must be done with thought and never as a thoughtless chant.

 

    • Get Ready For Success Because You Know it is Here

If you don’t prepare for success, then you don’t believe in success and even if it came you would not be ready. Part of making it happen is to assume all of these ideas work and you must get ready. Buy the new wardrobe for the new job. Learn Italian for your dream vacation to Italy. Move to where you want to live even if everything is not perfect right now. We must have an unwavering faith that everything is going to go our way or maybe even better. That faith is what convinces the law of attraction to go into overdrive.

Example of a Simple Visualization Session

You get very relaxed and sit down in your favorite chair that you use every morning. It is quiet and you have learned to love this time of day. You get out your power pictures that help your visualize. You go through them and get more and more positive. Then you go through your index cards and look at all your goals. You are starting to get ready for visualization. Now you relax, with both feet flat on the ground and both hands resting lightly on the chair arm or on your legs. You close your eyes and slowly you say your affirmations.

Legend has it that Bill Gates, Paul Allen and many Silicone Valley entrepreneurs were influenced by the book The Master Key System by Charles F. Haanel. Here is a series of affirmations he talks about.

I am whole,

Perfect,

Strong,

Powerful,

Loving,

Harmonious,

And Happy.

You say your affirmations to yourself at least three times. As other thoughts outside of your visualization invade your mind, you come back to saying your affirmations. Now you are in the right frame of mind for effective visualization. You start imagining your life as you live your dreams in the now. You imagine perfect health and what that means to you. You imagine perfect friendships and how they interact with you in your home. You imagine your career working with the kind of people you love and how every day you are being recognized and appreciated for your excellent work. You imagine going to those wonderful places you have only dreamed of—now you are there. Your clothes, the food you eat, where you live, everything is in living color and you can smell the ocean breeze as you sail in your yacht. Everyday as you do your visualizations, the images, the inspirations and faith will become stronger and stronger. One day you will come to a clear realization that you are living what you lived in your visualization only two years ago. It will be no surprise.

Visualize all your goals, dreams and affirmations. Change them when they are no longer exciting. Spend at least fifteen minutes a session.

Copyright © 2008 Kurt DuNard

Kurt DuNard, The Exceptional Life Coach, is the author of EXCEPTIONAL LIFE: Living the Life You Were Meant to Live. High achievers seek him out to pinpoint their soul’s goals, increase abundance, and find more happiness and joy. If you think you would also like these things, then receive your FREE success tools from Kurt DuNard now at www.DuNard.com.

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