There are
two reasons players are handed a sports drink within minutes of the conclusion
of a contest and only one of them is sponsorship.
Athletes are
trained to be as diligent about their post exertion recovery as they are about
the game plan, fitness and skills execution.
The athlete
who is best at recovery with consistently be the most successful.
The recovery
process in sport has become a science of its own and plays a key role in
allowing maximum, high performance, high intensity athletic output.
I ask
the question, what is the difference between high performance in athletic
endeavours and high performance in business?
I have
attended many training sessions, seminars, hackathons and similar all aimed at
achieving maximum personal outcomes.
I have
attended coaching, coach the coach and how to motivate webinars and conference sessions all aimed at performance
maximisation.
I cannot
ever recall any reference to the need to recover.
Further, I cannot
recall any leader who under pressure, referenced personal recovery or similar
in order to meet a corporate expectation or solve a tricky situation.
I
specifically recall a Chief Manager advising the management team that he is
working 7am to 7pm, 7 days a week and if they are not they had better start
doing so. I should add, this was not 30 years ago but occurred this decade.
I recall
another CEO who would pose the question “who is losing sleep in order to
resolve this” and delighted in hearing the hours being worked by his team. Much
of it was theatre. It was the 1980's after all.
A LinkedIn
connection shared a video today that specifically referenced recovery as a high-performance
criteria of successful business outcomes. This was one of a package that
specifically talked about maximising engagement by managing energy flows, of
which recovery and renewal was a key factor. This was the first time I recall
recovery being discussed in business as a “genuine thing with real outcomes” and in manner that was practical, sensible and achievable.
For all the
life balance, healthy work environment and duty of care mantra, there is still
a common trait of seeking more work, more hours and more commitment from staff
and Leaders. The default answer to many problems is to work longer and harder.
The person who starts earliest, finishes latest and takes work home is still
highly regarded. Quantity so often trumps quality.
The athlete
who neglects their recovery is considered unprofessional, selfish and
irresponsible.
In business,
the person who neglects their health to work longer and harder is lauded.
Business has
much to learn from professional athletes and sports performance science.
Does
business have the courage to do so?
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