Out of Nowhere
Tapping your inner deal-maker
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2003/february/58890.html
When Conrad Hilton was bidding for the Stevens Hotel, a number
popped into his head. He put that number on the table and bought
the world's largest hotel for just $200 more than the next
offer!
Our scientific age devalues intuition. Of course, deal-makers
obsess about numbers, payments and logistics. But there is also
magic in negotiation, and when you tune into your inner voice and
feelings, it will manifest. So what about those brilliant flashes
of insight? Where do they come from? And, more important, how can
we have more of them?
Intuition works best when you're relaxed. Define your
problem, study it and then forget about it for a while. Take a
walk, run an errand, do something else. Just let your subconscious
take over. There's a reason getting a brilliant idea in the
shower is a cliché. Breakthroughs may come when you least
expect them.
Pay attention to dreams. Descartes' philosophy, Robert Louis
Stevenson's novels, Einstein's theory of relativity,
Michael Jackson's music, Mendeleev's periodic table and
Jack Nicklaus' golf grip all came out of dreams.
Socrates had a spirit guide or daemon. Douglas MacArthur
discussed strategy with an imaginary hero father figure. Do you
have any heroes? If not, conjure some up. Ask yourself what they
would do. Consider this from James M. Benham, founder of the
Capital Preservation Fund: "Whenever I have heavy problems, I
simply introduce the problem to my mind. And in time, I always get
an answer. I think I have spiritual friends. I believe they will
have me pick up a book or a magazine or read something somewhere,
or have someone say something to me to give me the input to help me
with questions that I have to deal with."
But if your subconscious doesn't throw you pearls on a
regular basis, encourage it:
- Toss a coin. Ask yourself,
how do you feel about the outcome? Why?
- Scribble. Leonardo Da Vinci
used this one. Go crazy. What do you get?
- Force comparison. Open the
dictionary and pick a word. How is your problem like an apple or a
porcupine?
- Write with your nondominant
hand. Psychologists say it helps access the creative
part of your personality.
- Ask an object. Close your
eyes and think of your question. When you open your eyes, let the
first object you look at tell you the answer.
To some degree, everyone is intuitive. Just because you
can't explain your hunches doesn't mean you shouldn't
profit from them.
A speaker and attorney in Los Angeles, Marc Diener is the author of
Deal Power.
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