Your Personal Guide to Self-Analysis
It is Father’s Day this weekend, and I’ll be spending the day appreciating my husband, Mike, and my brother, Mike Powell, who is a single father. I hope you have an opportunity to spend quality time with the special dads in your life. Sometimes fathers are the least appreciated, and this is a great time to reach out to the dads you hold dear.
Fathers often get the title of Mr. Fix-It, helping their families out of all sorts of jams. I’m sure many of us have called upon our dads when trying to assemble furniture, repair a flat tire, or seal up a leaky faucet.
But the idea of being a Mr. or Ms. Fix-It applies to more than just household chores. Sometimes, we need to pause and see if anything needs fixing in our personal and professional lives, too. We need to slow down and perform some self-analysis.
What exactly does that mean? Self-analysis is a systematic attempt a person takes to understand their own character, behaviors, and personal traits. Like seeking professional coaching, counseling, or spiritual guidance, self-analysis is another tool in your cognitive tool belt.
The reason to engage in self-analysis is simple: it leads to self-improvement.
You can’t fix what you don’t see. And often, it is blind spots that prevent people from reaching their potential. Self-analysis will navigate those blind spots and put you on the road to success that you might miss without introspection.
A good system of self-analysis allows us to respond to challenges in our personal lives, professional lives, and even the larger world with thoughtful reflection.
How can you engage in self-reflection?
- Create time regularly to think and reflect. This is something few people do anymore, but those who do say it is invaluable. In fact, many of the top thinkers and entrepreneurs take time for this weekly if not daily. It’s not a one-and-done event. You could choose to do this reflection daily, weekly, monthly, and/or annually.
- The point of self-analysis is not self-criticism. Give yourself the grace you would give a close friend you care about when evaluating your behaviors and choices.
- It takes courage to look inward. You might not always like what you see. That’s okay. Areas that feel challenging to look at within yourself are the areas to work on.
- The work you do could take different forms—prayer, meditation, ask yourself a series of questions (keep reading), or other forms. Be creative and do what resonates with you.
- Be accountable with honesty and integrity. Work with a trusted friend, a professional group, or a business mentor to hold yourself accountable. I engage my Celeste Giordano Coaching clients in a process like this when we start working together and each year around the end of the year.
Questions or prompts to guide your reflection can include:
- Have I improved my character or personality?
- Have I focused on serving others?
- Have I allowed criticism from others to hold me back?
- Have I engaged in behavior that is not in keeping with my character or weighs heavily on my heart? If so, do I owe anyone apologies?
- Have I been open-minded and tolerant in conversations with others?
- Have I exposed myself to a diverse representation of media, books, and entertainment?
- Have I been overly cautious or not careful enough?
- Have I allowed my ego to get in the way of service to others?
- In what ways have I improved what I offer professionally?
- Have I been persistent, following through on plans, budgets, and time-lines?
- Have I allowed procrastination to rob myself of efficiency?
- Professionally, have I been devoting time to efforts that are neither profitable nor in service to others?
- Have I sought out a diverse group of clients, business associates, and friends?
- Have I provided services or products of real value?
Those questions are loosely based on the Self-Analysis Personal Inventory by Napoleon Hill in his seminal book, Think and Grow Rich. If you have not read the book, which was originally published in 1937, it is one to add to your business bookshelf.
“One goes ahead, stands still, or goes backward in life.” –Napoleon Hill
Self-analysis takes you forward. Which will you choose to do?
At Celeste Giordano Coaching, I support my clients in growing their businesses along with improving their lives with the values of integrity, honesty, and gratitude. If you’ve ever felt like it’s tough to take the high road and grow your business at the same time, I’m proof you CAN do both and I’ll show you how.
Do you want to grow your business with integrity? Contact me today.
Celeste Giordano’s mission is to help business owners develop the skills, knowledge and attitude necessary to “DoublePlus™” their income and become effective and inspirational leaders in their fields. Whether it’s taking your successful business to the next level or starting a new venture, she will teach you the exact skills and strategies you need to enroll more quality prospects, build a rock-solid team, and break through obstacles to achieve real profit and lasting success. Celeste is a professional business growth specialist, a master sales strategist, and dynamic speaker with more than 40 years experience in direct sales and managing high-performing teams.
To learn more about Celeste, click here.
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