“If you’re the first one in (to work) in the morning and the last one to leave (work) at night and you take fewer vacation days and never take a sick day, you will do better than the people who don’t do that. It is very simple.”[1]That’s the advice New York City’s Mayor Bloomberg gave recently to college graduates. I had similar advice for my sons when they were growing up. The parental lecture went something like this:
Now comes an article in the Harvard Business Review that says expertise in our chosen fields has less to do with IQ than it does with practice-makes-perfect. The writers report that research shows “there is no correlation between IQ and expert performance in fields such as chess, music, sports, and medicine…”[2] They give us the recipe for becoming experts:Let’s say the recipe for success in life is equal parts intelligence, good luck, and hard work. Native intelligence and good luck are out of our control, but we can control how hard we work. Working hard tips the odds in our favor, giving us a better-than-average chance of success.
- Start early,
- Practice a lot (for at least ten years); and
- Find good mentors along the way, preferably unsentimental ones who give us honest feedback
Years of doing something does not necessarily make us expert at it. Experience alone is not sufficient. Performance improves to expert status only by “deliberate practice.” Deliberate practice means the concentrated rehearsal of skills that we cannot do well. One example from the article is that of a novice golfer who, in a relatively short amount of time (perhaps 50 hours), learns to play a reasonable game. Without deliberate practice, however, that golfer, even after decades of social games, will not significantly improve.
With deliberate practice we improve the skills we already have, plus we work on new skills, especially those outside our comfort level. “Moving outside your traditional comfort zone of achievement,” the authors report “requires substantial motivation and sacrifice.”[3]
Even if we don’t have a teacher or coach, the article suggests we can learn from people in the work place who are more expert by closely observing what they do – and then by deliberately practicing on our own the skills we’ve observed in others.
I do think there’s something to Mayor Bloomberg’s advice. The person who takes his job seriously and devotes time to it will succeed. But continuous learning – deliberate practice – helps make one a true expert in one’s field. Significantly, practice, like hard work, is something we control. It is not dependent on others or on lucky breaks. Becoming an expert requires only confidence in ourselves, some self-discipline, and perseverance.
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[1] Michael Bloomberg’s address to graduates at of City University of New York’s College of Staten Island, May 31 2007, as quoted in “Bloomberg’s Roadmap to Success,” the Wall Street Journal Washington Wire, June 20, 2007. See: http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2007/06/20/bloomberg%E2%80%99s-roadmap-to-success/
[2] Ericsson, et. al., “The Making of an Expert,” Harvard Business Review, July-August 2007, p. 116.
[3] Ericsson, et. al., p. 119.