Mon. Aug 4th, 2025

How to Achieve Olympic Levels of Success

London 2012 Olympics

I love watching the Olympics because it’s one of the few places where you can spend a few weeks watching the best in the world. It’s really a celebration of sacrifice, training and performance that’s hard to beat.

But how do they achieve these extraordinarily high levels of success? Certainly it’s a complex answer, but when I was writing my new book One Big Thing: Discovering What You Were Born to Do, three areas stood out as absolutely essential to Olympic level success on the field or in business:

1) Learn to Focus. Great performers have the remarkable ability to focus on the one big thing they’re facing. Today we live in the most distracted and disrupted culture in history. In an age of email, instant messaging and mobile technology, it’s more difficult than ever to focus on the task at hand. But research study after study reveals that “multitasking” simply doesn’t work. The only thing it does is help us do multiple things badly. If you want to excel, and reach new levels of productivity and excellence, then learn to focus.

2) Leave the past behind. I spoke at a CEO conference in Los Angeles a few years ago and after the talk, the audience wrote their questions on index cards and passed them to me. Flipping through the cards, I was stunned at how many of the questions were alike: “How can I get over a past failure, and move my career and business forward?” It doesn’t matter if it was a defeat in the last race, or a financial, marriage, career or personal failure. Dwelling on the past only distracts us from the future. Let it go.

3) Don’t settle. As I look around, every area of life today is filled with mediocrity. Athletics, business, politics, school—even church and religious organizations. We settle for a lot of reasons—the need to be liked, laziness, insecurity and sometimes oddly enough, pride and arrogance. But whatever the reason, I honestly believe it’s tearing apart the fabric of our society. Our politicians in Washington have exchanged vision for whatever the polling tells them, CEOs have exchanged integrity for a quick profit, educators are more focused on their careers than their students. Chances are the level of excellence in your own work is something you’ll regret later. Man up (or woman up). Make a stand. Push the boundaries, take a risk and be willing to create a few enemies. As Winston Churchill said, “You have enemies? Good. That means you’ve stood up for something, sometime in your life.”

Which of these three do you struggle with the most?

By

Leave a Reply

By submitting your comment, you agree to receive occasional emails from [email protected], and its authors, including insights, exclusive content, and special offers. You can unsubscribe at any time. (U.S. residents only.)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Podcasts

More News
The End of the 10 Kings
The End of the 10 Kings
10 Steps to Honor God and Be Less Contentious
10 Steps to Honor God and Be Less Contentious
Deliverance Is a Decision Part Two: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Deliverance Is a Decision Part Two: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Demons In Hell
Demons In Hell
The Best Things Happen to Those Who Decide to Try
The Best Things Happen to Those Who Decide to Try
Deliverance Is a Decision Part One: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Deliverance Is a Decision Part One: Jesus Healing on Shabbat
Mocking God Brings Destruction
Mocking God Brings Destruction
Unlocking Av: Why the Hebrew Month of Destruction Holds Hope for Believers
Unlocking Av: Why the Hebrew Month of Destruction Holds Hope for Believers
Perry Stone: Are Unusual Weather Patterns Linked to Spiritual Conflicts?
Perry Stone: Are Unusual Weather Patterns Linked to Spiritual Conflicts?
How One Prophetic Word Sparked Don Dickerman’s Calling to Deliver the Masses
How One Prophetic Word Sparked Don Dickerman’s Calling to Deliver the Masses
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Latest Videos
113K Subscribers
1.3K Videos
12.6M Views

Copy link