Over time, their voices become familiar. You come to like them, listen to and believe them. They may even slip beneath your skin and become your friends. The point is that you trust them, look to them, believe them, and on the strength of that, they ascend into the lofty realm of ‘experts.’
These are the gurus, the thought-leaders, the technical wizards. When the big names are in need of guidance; when the media need insights; when the leaders need a way forward, they are the go-to people. 

But experts are never experts by accident. They are the men and women who understand how to manage perceptions within their industry. And while it is true that they often possess a great many of the answers, and have built up a huge body of knowledge, there is also a significant Public Relations element to their perceived stature. They are what they are because they have built up that reputation, and they have done so on purpose.
The good news is that their techniques are specific and can be emulated.

In my book on the topic, I have identified 50 ways in which you can position yourself as an industry expert. Here's the first one:

Don’t decide to be an Expert. Make the decision to be the Very Best

Performance experts; from the sports to the business arena; will tell you that deciding to be ‘good’ is not nearly as psychologically effective as deciding to be ‘the very best.’ If you plan to take your career seriously, and truly be recognised as the guru in your particular game, you would do well to make this decision early on. Deciding to be ‘good’ allows you a great deal of leeway, but deciding to the very best inspires more obsessive behaviour, and that’s a recipe for much higher level thinking and much more intense levels of research, practice and performance.

Let the Feel-Good speakers and trainers tell you about all things in moderation...but the reality is that if you want to be an expert, you actually do need to obsess about what you do. You do need to demand perfection of yourself.

Obsession is a powerful thing.

If you would like to see what this sort of obsession looks like in practice, and what it can achieve, take a look at a man who was arguably the greatest performer of the last century: Michael Jackson. It’s no coincidence that people still use terms like ‘legendary,’ ‘greatest,’ ‘king of...’ and ‘one of a kind’ when they talk about him.

In the video ‘This is It!’, which features footage from the rehearsals prior to what would have been Jackson’s final tour, we get to see the incredible level of demand that he placed upon himself, and the kind of exacting standards he expected from his co-performers. There is absolutely no sense of ‘It will do,’ in his approach. Not even in the small details. Michael Jackson wanted absolutely everything to be done in the absolute best way possible.

He had no intention of being ‘reasonably good.’ In everything he did, it was clear that his own expectations of himself were ‘the very best or nothing at all.’

Obsession. There are few things more powerful.

Douglas Kruger is a professional speaker, trainer and author of ‘50 Ways to Become a Better Speaker.’ Watch him in action at: www.douglaskruger.co.za, or email: kruger@compute.co.za, or follow him on Twitter: @Douglaskruger  


 

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Douglas’s articles are always free for use in your magazines, newspapers or e-zines. Many have been previously published in magazines like Entrepreneur or online forums like Bizcommunity.com. They focus on entrepreneurship, public speaking, expert positioning and innovation. Please attribute any articles used, and drop Douglas an email so that he can also publicise your title.