Are you feeling lucky? If you aren’t (or alternatively if you simply want to be luckier) then Professor Richard Wiseman has developed four simple principles to help you along your way.
His book, called The Luck Factor, was sent to me as pre reading for a business conference. What do luck and business have in common? The habits that create what we might view as lucky outcomes are the same habits that can be successfully applied to growing a business.
Luck is generally a thing of superstition. Rabbits feet, broken mirrors, four leaf clovers, not walking under ladders and the number 13 all fit into that category. What Richard Wiseman, a psychologist, has been able to demonstrate is that luck can be the outcome of specific behaviours.
He has simplified luck into four principles. Maximise your chance opportunities, listening to your intuition, expecting good fortune and turning your bad luck into good by seeing the positives. Lucky people tend to do these things better than those who feel they are unlucky. Within each of the four principles are a number of sub principles.
A feeling from reading the book is that lucky behaviour is not rocket science. There is a logic to it. But the book did remind me that it is easy to get out of the good habits that worked for us in the past – be that in our personal or business lives. The book is an opportunity to be reminded that we can seek to control our outcomes and provides a framework for doing so. And for the doubters – Wiseman’s book backs up his principles with hard research. It’s not a superficial motivational book.
His first principle (maximise your chance opportunities) is a good example of logical outcomes. Lucky people tend to have good networks, they tend to have a relaxed attitude to life, they’re open to new experiences. People who might view themselves as not lucky, or unlucky, are not as strong in each of those areas. Logically people who make the effort to stay in contact with other people are more likely to have opportunities present themselves. Their more relaxed attitude to life increases the likelihood that they will see an opportunity and be encouraged to act on it. Others might see the positive outcomes that arise from this behaviour as luck. But it’s a natural outcome.
This same topic was the theme of a movie late last year – Yes Man. Jim Carrey stars as Carl Allen, a guy whose life is going nowhere-the operative word being “no”-until he signs up for a self-help program based on one simple covenant: say yes to everything. Unleashing the power of “Yes” begins to transform Carl’s life getting him promoted at work and opening the door to a new romance. I think we can all imagine the outcomes of saying yes more often.
The Luck Factor will never be a core business text. But if only one good idea is needed to make reading this book valuable then it’s worth a read.
By Stephen McFarlane