Today's favorite post is a joint choice and comes from our Demand Generator team of Dan Gerjets and Pete Stein. Given that their job is to generate the demand and create sales ready leads for our clients, they understand first hand that while home runs are great, winning comes from consistency.
While this is a lesson that I teach my son - it's not only okay to risk failure, it's absolutely necessary - it's one that is causing businesses today a tremendous amount of harm. Here's the thing people tend not to talk about Babe. His career batting average was .342. Only 9 people have a better career batting average than Babe, and his on-base average (the percentage of time a player gets a hit, a walk or gets hit by a pitch) is the 2nd best all-time. While Babe was a prolific home run hitter - he was, simply, a great hitter.
To continue my baseball metaphor, business success is not about hitting home runs - its about getting on base consistently. If you learn to hit well, and get on base, you'll win baseball games. Win enough games and you'll win championships - and championships are what people really remember.
This pursuit of The Home Run manifests businesses in a variety of ways:
What they all have in common is that disproportionate resources, and lots of disruption, are allocated to low probability events (Babe, one of the best, hit a home run less 7% of the time). Because so much was invested, businesses are forced to stick with their approach, even when they begin to know that's it's not working. When it doesn't work, they literally have to start over. The Home Run strategy makes for a great press release, but unfortunately, it rarely leads long-term business success.
So, if you want to pursue The Home Run, go right ahead. I'll take the walks, the single and the doubles - my home runs will come in time. And I'll have championships pennants in the form of delighted, loyal clients, and sustainable profits to show for it.