Andrew Rondeau
Andrew is the owner of this website and has been a Leader, Manager, Coach and Consultant for the last twenty-five years.
Sports And Business Have Much In Common
- By Andrew Rondeau
- Published 12/9/2008
In sport, motivation is important.
In business, motivation is important.
I have often seen ex-sports personalities give after dinner motivational speeches. Only recently, I had the privilege of seeing Sir Steve Redgrave give a motivational speech on his career and how he handled the successes and knock-backs. How he set goals and objectives, how he worked in a team.
Of course, Sir Steve Redgrave is not the only sporting hero to pass on his brand of motivational expertise to businesses.
Many bolster their pensions by offering their advice to sales teams and management groups.
Of the several I have
seen, the one which sticks out, is by Olympic gold medal swimmer Adrian
Moorhouse.
Adrian Moorhouse knew from an early age what he wanted from life.
From the moment he saw David Wilkie take gold for Britain in the 1976 Olympics of Montreal, he wanted one too.
It was a reward for many years of sacrifice and pain.
As a 16-year-old Moorhouse had just missed out on selection for Moscow in 1980 and in 1984 he went to Los Angeles as Commonwealth and European champion and suffered his biggest disappointment when he came in fourth.
Devastated
"I was absolutely devastated," he said. "Ever since I was a kid all I wanted to win was an Olympic medal.
"Swimming was my life. I was a bit of a `Billy No-mates' because all I spent all my time in the pool.
"It took me four or five months to get over the hurt of missing out but the failure made me tougher."
Moorhouse explained
how he set about winning his medal in the Seoul Olympics of 1988. After failing
at the previous games in Los Angeles, he was determined to win the next time
around.
To do so, Adrian
realised he would need to break the world record, which was then 2 minutes
faster then his personal best.
It seemed an
impossible task: who could improve by 2 minutes. But Adrian worked out that to
speed up by that amount, he needed to reduce his time by 30 seconds each year.
Thirty seconds a year meant 2.5 seconds a month; 2.5 seconds a month was 0.65
seconds a week and 0.65 seconds a week was 0.08 seconds a day.
That means, if he did two training sessions a day, Adrian only had to improve his speed each time by one four hundredth of a second to become Olympic Champion.

It’s easy when you
look at it like that (or is it?)
Moorhouse’s point is
that, as his experienced proved, little improvements accumulate into big ones,
in business as in sport.
The power and clarity
of his speech is still with me today.
Can you use Adrian’s
approach and break down your goals / targets into daily ones?
Which sporting hero
have you seen give a motivational speech?
Spread The Word
4 Responses to "Sports And Business Have Much In Common" 
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said this on 09 Dec 2008 3:35:29 AM EDT
Hi Andrew, that's a great story which will help me focus on the little improvements and not get discouraged. Olivia
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said this on 09 Dec 2008 4:50:23 AM EDT
Olivia,
breaking things down, make them seem easier, don't they? Andrew |
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said this on 09 Dec 2008 12:59:28 PM EDT
This certainly makes a big job doable. This is good to remember when I'm feeling overwhelmed!
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said this on 09 Dec 2008 1:11:42 PM EDT
Darlene,
And hopefully it keeps your confidence high because you see progress! Andrew |
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