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Five business lessons you can learn from the golf course
Reproduced with permission from Business Insider>
WE LIVE IN A hyper-connected society, and being disconnected for four hours if you’re in sales or marketing can be daunting—and seem like a major loss of time.
While Twitter, Facebook, email and even text messaging have made it easier to communicate with more people in the course of a single day, for some people, they mean devoting less time to the in-person interactions we use to actually build relationships.
That’s why golf, a four-hour (or more) adventure through greens, fairways, bunkers and other hazards, remains one of the greatest ways to build and maintain solid business relationships.
“It’s a bit of a looking glass into how people think,” notes Brad Brewer, a PGA Professional and founder of the Brad Brewer Golf Academy in Orlando and the author of the recently released Mentored by the King: Arnold Palmer’s Success Lessons for Golf, Business and Life.
Contrary to popular belief, though, deals are rarely closed on the golf course. If you approach the round with that sole intention, you’re likely to leave without a contract—and with a ruined relationship.
Good things take time, and golf provides a relatively low-stress, tension-free look into business executives.
“No matter how sophisticated the business world becomes, golf remains the communication hub,” says David Rynecki, the founder of Blue Heron Research Partners, a former golf and business journalist, and the author of Deals on the Green: Lessons on Business and Golf from America’s Top Executives.
“Golf teaches you about a person’s reactions in adversity—how they deal competitively with situations—because with golf there is such an easy mechanism to take advantage of the rules,” Rynecki writes. “I’m not worried about their skills as a player, but rather how they conduct themselves, as golf, like business and life, will test you in a multitude of ways.”
So how do you ensure that you don’t take yourself, or the game, too seriously while you’re playing a round of golf intended to build or strengthen a business relationship?
It’s important not to let small things get to you. It really is all about having fun and making sure that everyone you are playing with is having a good time.
“A lot of it is just common sense and common courtesy,” says Brewer. “Making sure you play the game with the integrity it was designed with, you are immediately starting to build a relationship with somebody. That’s why old Tom Morris and the boys came up with the etiquettes to get along with one another—where you stand, not talking and watching others ball flight if they lose it. I think playing by the traditions of the game itself, it starts to form these deep bonds.”
Brewer goes on to write about 35 principles he has learned from practicing, working with and becoming friends with the legendary Palmer over the past 25 years. Perhaps the biggest takeaway from his book is that connecting with people at the golf course isn’t much different from connecting in business or in life, principles preached by Palmer.
Five of the most relevant principles from Palmer that apply to business include:
Read more at Business Insider>
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