|
|
|
|
Article Options |
Your Favorite Articles |
You Recently Viewed... |
|
|
Popular Articles |
Popular Authors |
This self help
article is written by Mark H Silver
------------
You've
been deepening your spirituality, and it has seeped into everything you do, or
is starting to. The thing is, will it freak your clients out if you go all
woo-woo and bizarre on them?
Even
if you're already using spirituality strongly in your business, I'm guessing
there are places you just don't want to go, things that are too blatant or
strong. You don't want to evangelize, you're not looking to convert anyone. But
something's missing.
At
a workshop, I once met a well-known marketing guru who had a cadre of teachers,
books, and a well-oiled system of effective marketing that he sold to thousands
of clients. We were talking because, as he confessed to me, "I don't
include the spiritual work I do myself in what I teach, because I'm afraid my
clients can't handle it."
He's
leaving out what he himself calls the most important ingredient, withholding it
from his clients. Quite a quandary, eh? Do you withhold, and hope your clients
somehow magically "get it"? Or do you go full-on punk rock gypsy
priestess, as one of our clients calls herself, giving 'em all four chords of
your music, letting the cards fall where they may?
The
Role of Spirituality in Your Business You know that saying, "the customer
is always right"? Well, it ain't 'zackly true. When we're talking about
spirituality, customers actually often have no idea what they really need, but
they think they do.
Let me tell you a story. Some years ago, when I was starting out, I was working with dozens of clients who came wanting to work on their business, getting their marketing in place, making it work. So, we went to work.
And
nothing got done. Arrgh!
As
I learned more about spiritual healing and came to rest more deeply in my
heart, I realized that while they were asking for business help, the real issue
needing to be addressed was depletion. They were depleted emotionally and
spiritually, and until that was remedied, fuhgeddabout the business.
Don't
get me wrong. Each and every one of them still needed the business stuff. But
they couldn't get there until the heart got what it needed.
For
your clients, they need what you're offering. But are you withholding the very
thing that will keep them from really getting your best stuff?
It
was scary for me to start using weird Sufi prayers and other energetic healing
stuff with clients, but I did. And like a charm it worked.
People
Forget Oneness All Too Easily Spirituality is ultimately about remembering that
Love, God, Oneness, the Divine is also there, wherever that point of struggle
is. However you do it, whatever your method, tradition, lineage, or modality,
it's a path to return to Oneness, where everything is possible.
With
this truth, you can add in all the practical stuff you do--the marketing, the
accounting, the real estate, the textiles, the food in your restaurant,
everything. But first, bring the love.
Of
course, it's a narrow ledge to skitter out on. If you're too strong and too
direct will you offend people? Will they get pissed off and run away? Will your
business dry up as a result?
I've
learned some lessons from this journey, so let me share them.
Keys to Amping Up Spirit in Your Business
• All Streams Lead to the Ocean
A
friend of mine who had done a lot of interfaith work once told me:
"Interfaith works best when each person participating has a strong, deep
conviction in their own path. Then they don't have to convince anyone else to
prove their own faith."
There
is a balance held between deeply trusting your own journey with Spirit and
knowing that others may have a different journey ahead of them. Whatever
language your path, lineage, journey, religion, or faith uses to express what
you're doing, it's describing a universal truth that others have different
language for, but not any real disagreement with.
Trusting
this universality and standing strongly with your own faith means that you can
speak strongly from your platform, and still allow others to find their way.
At
the yoga studio I go to, YogaShala in
Because
they stand so strongly in their tradition, I get so much help and depth out of
the yoga. I'm not changing my path from Sufism to Hinduism, but it still helps
me tremendously.
• Keep It In Context
When you are a student on a spiritual path, it's easy (at least for me it is) to just love the path so much you unload an entire dump truck of teachings and practices, or whatever, onto your customers.
Before
you share something spiritual ask this question: What's the minimum they need
in order to make progress toward the practical goal they are wanting to reach?
For
instance, there are some very profound, and to me interesting, teachings about
subsistence and poverty, entire books in fact. Yet I share just a snippet of
those teachings with our clients. Maybe a single quote, or a single process or
prayer, because I know that just a little taste will help them take the next
step.
If
someone really wants more of what you're offering, they'll ask.
• State Your Platform
I
never talk about my path in language that could be construed to mean, this is
the only way. I never want to tell someone: This is the truth about how it
works. If you do that, then the client is confronted with needing to step onto
your path in order to accept the wisdom your giving.
By
simply stating your platform, "The Sufis talk about subsistence in this
way..." alludes to the universality of the truth being discussed, while at
the same time acknowledging that there are other ways to talk about it.
Many people in this world are thirsting for a deeper connection to wholeness. If you're using your connection with Spirit to make whatever you do in your life and your business work, then don't withhold it from your clients.
If
you keep it in context and state your platform, people won't run screaming from
you. Instead, you might be surprised to see how many more people come close to
drink from your fountain.
Syndicate | Sitemap | Submit Link Directory | Other websites