We all have tremendous potential waiting to be unleashed. Some people utilize their potential to achieve amazing feats, while others never realize what they’re capable of as they let their self-limiting beliefs get in the way of their growth.
When you consider talent as the only measure of success and don’t give enough credit to effort, attitude, and practice, you construct an artificial wall in your mind that limits your visibility and makes you believe you don’t have what it takes to reach the other side.
It’s not your natural ability but your attitude to learning that determines where you end up. Talent can give you the direction to take, but it can’t keep you on the path. To achieve greater things, you need to break down walls, build the right skills, and open new doors to reach the other side.
You can’t tell where people will land from where they begin. With the right opportunity and motivation to learn, anyone can build the skills to achieve greater things. Potential is not a matter of where you start, but of how far you travel. We need to focus less on starting points and more on distance traveled.
— Adam Grant
With the right techniques, motivation, and strategy, you can build an extraordinary path to success and achieve greater things than you ever dreamt to be possible.
Here are the 5 practices that Adam Grant lays out in his book Hidden Potential that can help you reach for your potential and perform at your peak:
You may give up on opportunities when you don’t feel prepared to take on the challenge—it’s uncomfortable to plunge into something you haven’t mastered yet.
But waiting to feel ready, trying to be certain, and rejecting anything with ambiguity prevents you from reaching for your potential.
How can you explore what you’re capable of if you never take the uncomfortable path?
\Becoming a creature of discomfort can unlock hidden potential in many different types of learning. Summoning the nerve to face discomfort is a character skill—an especially important form of determination. It takes three kinds of courage: to abandon your tried-and-true methods, to put yourself in the ring before you feel ready, and to make more mistakes than others make attempts. The best way to accelerate growth is to embrace, seek, and amplify discomfort.
— Adam Grant
Common ways you may tend to avoid discomfort:
Some things come easy to you, and others don’t. It’s your unwillingness to lean into the discomfort, pushing those hard things away and denying them your time and attention that limits your growth.
You have to be comfortable being uncomfortable because your growth is one step outside your comfort zone.
To embrace discomfort:
Stepping outside your comfort zone will become a habit when you consciously seek it in everything you do.
People who actively seek information and find creative ways to put it to use outperform those who ignore information or filter it to match their expectations and beliefs.
Curiosity gives you access to information that’s otherwise hard to reach. Seeking constructive criticism, focusing on improving instead of proving and challenging your beliefs and assumptions, helps you filter out signals from noise.
Adam Grant puts it as “absorptive capacity—the ability to recognize, value, assimilate, and apply new information.”
He explains that building absorptive capacity requires two key habits:
\To build absorptive capacity:
You become unstoppable once you learn to navigate information, filter the unnecessary, and adapt the rest to your needs.
We assume that people who are at the top of their fields are perfectionists—that they don’t ever settle for good enough.
\But this isn’t true. What makes them stand out isn’t perfection but knowing which flaws to accept and which to let go. Their work may appear to be impeccable, choices extraordinary and they may come across as supremely confident, but behind that perfectionist outlook are hidden many imperfections that others tend to overlook.
There’s a fine line between healthy striving and setting goals that make you and others miserable. The drive to excel is not the same as the drive to perfect. They are two very different things. Excellence is about utilizing your and others’ potential to seek a great outcome. Perfectionism is about obsession to the point of being self-destructive.
Unlocking hidden potential is not about the pursuit of perfection. Tolerating flaws isn’t just something novices need to do—it’s part of becoming an expert and continuing to gain mastery. The more you grow, the better you know which flaws are acceptable.
— Adam Grant
Adam says there are three things that perfectionists tend to get wrong:
To let go of perfectionist tendencies:
Make excellence, not perfectionism, your goal, and you will have more success along the way.
Unknowns, obstacles, and uncertainties show up on the path to reaching great heights. They can disappoint us, demotivate us, and prevent us from even trying.
In some such moments, we can’t do it alone, and having the right support structures in place can help us overcome obstacles that stand in the way of our growth.
Adam Grant calls these support structures as scaffolding. He explains, “Many new skills don’t come with a manual, and steeper hills often require a lift. That lift comes in the form of scaffolding: a temporary support structure that enables us to scale heights we couldn’t reach on our own. It helps us build the resilience to overcome obstacles that threaten to overwhelm us and limit our growth.”
Scaffolding works because “it unleashes hidden potential by helping us forge paths we couldn’t otherwise see. It enables us to find motivation in the daily grind, gain momentum in the face of stagnation, and turn difficulties and doubts into sources of strength.”
To put scaffolding to use:
Acknowledge your limitations. Seek the right support. Don’t let temporary setbacks get in the way of your growth.
Mastering any skill requires hours and hours of practice.
Malcolm Gladwell popularized the idea that 10000 hours of deliberate practice—structured practice based on clear goals and immediate feedback—is the key to achieving true expertise in any skill.
Deliberate practice is important to achieve mastery in anything, but all practice and no play can make the daily grind exhausting, boring and can even lead to burnout.
This is where the idea of deliberate play comes into the picture—combining elements of deliberate practice and free play to make skill development more fun and less taxing.
Deliberate play often involves introducing novelty and variety into practice. That can be in the ways you learn, the tools you use, the goals you set, and the people with whom you interact. Depending on the skill you’re trying to build, deliberate play might take the form of a game, a role-play, or an improvisational exercise.
— Adam Grant
To make practice more fun:
Your great potential will remain hidden unless you make practice appear more enjoyable and less of a burden.