Research
now shows that the lack of natural talent is irrelevant to great
success. The secret? Painful and demanding practice and hard work
(Fortune Magazine) -- What makes Tiger Woods great? What made Berkshire Hathaway (Charts)
Chairman Warren Buffett the world's premier investor? We think we know:
Each was a natural who came into the world with a gift for doing
exactly what he ended up doing. As Buffett told Fortune not long ago, he was "wired at birth to allocate capital." It's a one-in-a-million thing. You've got it - or you don't.
Well,
folks, it's not so simple. For one thing, you do not possess a natural
gift for a certain job, because targeted natural gifts don't exist.
(Sorry, Warren.) You are not a born CEO or investor or chess
grandmaster. You will achieve greatness only through an enormous amount
of hard work over many years. And not just any hard work, but work of a
particular type that's demanding and painful.
 | | Born Winner? Golf champ Tiger Woods (pictured at 3 years old) never stopped trying to improve. |
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 | | Woods (pictured in 2001) devoted hours to practice and even remade his Swing twice, because that's what it took to get better. |
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Buffett,
for instance, is famed for his discipline and the hours he spends
studying financial statements of potential investment targets. The good
news is that your lack of a natural gift is irrelevant - talent has
little or nothing to do with greatness. You can make yourself into any
number of things, and you can even make yourself great.
Scientific
experts are producing remarkably consistent findings across a wide
array of fields. Understand that talent doesn't mean intelligence,
motivation or personality traits. It's an innate ability to do some
specific activity especially well. British-based researchers Michael J.
Howe, Jane W. Davidson and John A. Sluboda conclude in an extensive
study, "The evidence we have surveyed ... does not support the [notion
that] excelling is a consequence of possessing innate gifts."
To
see how the researchers could reach such a conclusion, consider the
problem they were trying to solve. In virtually every field of
endeavor, most people learn quickly at first, then more slowly and then
stop developing completely. Yet a few do improve for years and even
decades, and go on to greatness.
The irresistible question -
the "fundamental challenge" for researchers in this field, says the
most prominent of them, professor K. Anders Ericsson of Florida State
University - is, Why? How are certain people able to go on improving?
The answers begin with consistent observations about great performers
in many fields.
Scientists worldwide have conducted scores of
studies since the 1993 publication of a landmark paper by Ericsson and
two colleagues, many focusing on sports, music and chess, in which
performance is relatively easy to measure and plot over time. But
plenty of additional studies have also examined other fields, including
business.
No substitute for hard work
The
first major conclusion is that nobody is great without work. It's nice
to believe that if you find the field where you're naturally gifted,
you'll be great from day one, but it doesn't happen. There's no
evidence of high-level performance without experience or practice.
Reinforcing
that no-free-lunch finding is vast evidence that even the most
accomplished people need around ten years of hard work before becoming
world-class, a pattern so well established researchers call it the
ten-year rule.
What about Bobby Fischer, who became a chess
grandmaster at 16? Turns out the rule holds: He'd had nine years of
intensive study. And as John Horn of the University of Southern
California and Hiromi Masunaga of California State University observe,
"The ten-year rule represents a very rough estimate, and most
researchers regard it as a minimum, not an average." In many fields
(music, literature) elite performers need 20 or 30 years' experience
before hitting their zenith.
So greatness isn't handed to
anyone; it requires a lot of hard work. Yet that isn't enough, since
many people work hard for decades without approaching greatness or even
getting significantly better. What's missing?
Practice makes perfect
The
best people in any field are those who devote the most hours to what
the researchers call "deliberate practice." It's activity that's
explicitly intended to improve performance, that reaches for objectives
just beyond one's level of competence, provides feedback on results and
involves high levels of repetition.
For example: Simply hitting
a bucket of balls is not deliberate practice, which is why most golfers
don't get better. Hitting an eight-iron 300 times with a goal of
leaving the ball within 20 feet of the pin 80 percent of the time,
continually observing results and making appropriate adjustments, and
doing that for hours every day - that's deliberate practice.
Consistency
is crucial. As Ericsson notes, "Elite performers in many diverse
domains have been found to practice, on the average, roughly the same
amount every day, including weekends."
Evidence crosses a
remarkable range of fields. In a study of 20-year-old violinists by
Ericsson and colleagues, the best group (judged by conservatory
teachers) averaged 10,000 hours of deliberate practice over their
lives; the next-best averaged 7,500 hours; and the next, 5,000. It's
the same story in surgery, insurance sales, and virtually every sport.
More deliberate practice equals better performance. Tons of it equals
great performance.
The skeptics
Not
all researchers are totally onboard with the myth-of-talent hypothesis,
though their objections go to its edges rather than its center. For one
thing, there are the intangibles. Two athletes might work equally hard,
but what explains the ability of New England Patriots quarterback Tom
Brady to perform at a higher level in the last two minutes of a game?
Researchers
also note, for example, child prodigies who could speak, read or play
music at an unusually early age. But on investigation those cases
generally include highly involved parents. And many prodigies do not go
on to greatness in their early field, while great performers include
many who showed no special early aptitude.
Certainly some
important traits are partly inherited, such as physical size and
particular measures of intelligence, but those influence what a person
doesn't do more than what he does; a five-footer will never be an NFL
lineman, and a seven-footer will never be an Olympic gymnast. Even
those restrictions are less severe than you'd expect: Ericsson notes,
"Some international chess masters have IQs in the 90s." The more
research that's done, the more solid the deliberate-practice model
becomes.
Real-world examples
All
this scholarly research is simply evidence for what great performers
have been showing us for years. To take a handful of examples: Winston
Churchill, one of the 20th century's greatest orators, practiced his
speeches compulsively. Vladimir Horowitz supposedly said, "If I don't
practice for a day, I know it. If I don't practice for two days, my
wife knows it. If I don't practice for three days, the world knows it."
He was certainly a demon practicer, but the same quote has been
attributed to world-class musicians like Ignace Paderewski and Luciano
Pavarotti.
Many great athletes are legendary for the brutal
discipline of their practice routines. In basketball, Michael Jordan
practiced intensely beyond the already punishing team practices. (Had
Jordan possessed some mammoth natural gift specifically for basketball,
it seems unlikely he'd have been cut from his high school team.)
In
football, all-time-great receiver Jerry Rice - passed up by 15 teams
because they considered him too slow - practiced so hard that other
players would get sick trying to keep up.
Tiger Woods is a
textbook example of what the research shows. Because his father
introduced him to golf at an extremely early age - 18 months - and
encouraged him to practice intensively, Woods had racked up at least 15
years of practice by the time he became the youngest-ever winner of the
U.S. Amateur Championship, at age 18. Also in line with the findings,
he has never stopped trying to improve, devoting many hours a day to
conditioning and practice, even remaking his swing twice because that's
what it took to get even better.
The business side
The
evidence, scientific as well as anecdotal, seems overwhelmingly in
favor of deliberate practice as the source of great performance. Just
one problem: How do you practice business? Many elements of business,
in fact, are directly practicable. Presenting, negotiating, delivering
evaluations, deciphering financial statements - you can practice them
all.
Still, they aren't the essence of great managerial
performance. That requires making judgments and decisions with
imperfect information in an uncertain environment, interacting with
people, seeking information - can you practice those things too? You
can, though not in the way you would practice a Chopin etude.
Instead,
it's all about how you do what you're already doing - you create the
practice in your work, which requires a few critical changes. The first
is going at any task with a new goal: Instead of merely trying to get
it done, you aim to get better at it.
Report writing involves
finding information, analyzing it and presenting it - each an
improvable skill. Chairing a board meeting requires understanding the
company's strategy in the deepest way, forming a coherent view of
coming market changes and setting a tone for the discussion. Anything
that anyone does at work, from the most basic task to the most exalted,
is an improvable skill.
Adopting a new mindset
Armed
with that mindset, people go at a job in a new way. Research shows they
process information more deeply and retain it longer. They want more
information on what they're doing and seek other perspectives. They
adopt a longer-term point of view. In the activity itself, the mindset
persists. You aren't just doing the job, you're explicitly trying to
get better at it in the larger sense.
Again, research shows
that this difference in mental approach is vital. For example, when
amateur singers take a singing lesson, they experience it as fun, a
release of tension. But for professional singers, it's the opposite:
They increase their concentration and focus on improving their
performance during the lesson. Same activity, different mindset.
Feedback
is crucial, and getting it should be no problem in business. Yet most
people don't seek it; they just wait for it, half hoping it won't come.
Without it, as Goldman Sachs leadership-development chief Steve Kerr
says, "it's as if you're bowling through a curtain that comes down to
knee level. If you don't know how successful you are, two things
happen: One, you don't get any better, and two, you stop caring." In
some companies, like General Electric, frequent feedback is part of the
culture. If you aren't lucky enough to get that, seek it out.
Be the ball
Through
the whole process, one of your goals is to build what the researchers
call "mental models of your business" - pictures of how the elements
fit together and influence one another. The more you work on it, the
larger your mental models will become and the better your performance
will grow.
Andy Grove could keep a model of a whole world-changing technology industry in his head and adapt Intel (Charts) as needed. Bill Gates, Microsoft's (Charts)
founder, had the same knack: He could see at the dawn of the PC that
his goal of a computer on every desk was realistic and would create an
unimaginably large market. John D. Rockefeller, too, saw ahead when the
world-changing new industry was oil. Napoleon was perhaps the greatest
ever. He could not only hold all the elements of a vast battle in his
mind but, more important, could also respond quickly when they shifted
in unexpected ways.
That's a lot to focus on for the benefits
of deliberate practice - and worthless without one more requirement: Do
it regularly, not sporadically.
Why?
For
most people, work is hard enough without pushing even harder. Those
extra steps are so difficult and painful they almost never get done.
That's the way it must be. If great performance were easy, it wouldn't
be rare. Which leads to possibly the deepest question about greatness.
While experts understand an enormous amount about the behavior that
produces great performance, they understand very little about where
that behavior comes from.
The authors of one study conclude,
"We still do not know which factors encourage individuals to engage in
deliberate practice." Or as University of Michigan business school
professor Noel Tichy puts it after 30 years of working with managers,
"Some people are much more motivated than others, and that's the
existential question I cannot answer - why."
The critical
reality is that we are not hostage to some naturally granted level of
talent. We can make ourselves what we will. Strangely, that idea is not
popular. People hate abandoning the notion that they would coast to
fame and riches if they found their talent. But that view is tragically
constraining, because when they hit life's inevitable bumps in the
road, they conclude that they just aren't gifted and give up.
Maybe
we can't expect most people to achieve greatness. It's just too
demanding. But the striking, liberating news is that greatness isn't
reserved for a preordained few. It is available to you and to everyone.