The Real Deal by Alan Smith, Stephen White, and Robin Copland - HTML preview

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Practice Makes Almost Perfect

 

Practice pays off.

 

Rory McIlroys ride timmortality publicly entered  a new phase this week with the official announcement of his sponsorship deal with Nike, reportedly worth over £20 million, whose equipment and apparel he will exhibit beside Tiger Woods, Nikes first golfing icon.

 

To get as good as he clearly is, McIlroys commitment to the game began as a toddler. He was supported by his father and mother who took on a third job as a cleaner to enable her son to get the training as a junior which has now fabulously paid off. Applied practice has made perfect, or at least close to it.

 

Practicing anything skill based, like golf, without training is naïve. The fact that so many commercial managers are practicing the skill of negotiation without training is alarming, and potentially costly.

 

Here are three reasons why.

 

Practicing without training ingrains bad habits. My children learned to ski at early ages. I had no formal lessons till I was 48. They learned the fundamentals early and well. I did not. They didnt pick up any bad habits. I did. Instructors pushed them to move to more difficult slopes while maintaining good form. I took my bad form from slope to slope. As you would suppose, they are much better skiers than I am. While they were taught correctly, I learned my skills willy-nilly. Worse, I practiced my questionable skills over and over, ingraining them deeply.

 

Practice makes perfect only if done correctly. Practicing for hours doesnt automatically create skills. Say, for example, that, as a golfer, you go to the driving range and practice by hitting hundreds of balls. You may leave feeling youve done something to help you improve, but possibly you will only have practiced whatever swing you came with – good or bad. How about when you go to the range you