14 Jul The Transformative Power of Passion
We assert that nothing has been accomplished without interest on the part of the actors; andâif interest be called passion, inasmuch as the whole individuality, to the neglect of all other actual or possible interests and claims, is devoted to an object with every fibre of volition, concentration all its desires and powers upon itâwe may affirm absolutely that nothing great in the World has been accomplished without passion.
A great leaderâs courage to fulfill his vision comes from passion, not position.
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Lately, Iâve been watching and rewatching older movies (after finding a large part of The Criterion Collection in digital format on Turner Classic Moviesâ FilmStruck). Last weekend, I watched Babetteâs Feast. In the movie Babette, a refugee from the war in Paris, arrives in a small, dreary Danish town where she becomes an unpaid cook and housekeeper for two elderly sisters. At the end of the movie, Babetteâinspired by her past as the head chef of the CafĂ© Anglaisâuses all of her winnings from a French lottery ticket to cook a feast for the townspeople. The meal transforms the townspeople and Babette herself.
Ultimately, the movie is about love and its power to transform. Babetteâs love fueled both her fondness for the townspeople and her passion for cooking.
In the business world, we often throw around the word âpassion.â Iâve lost count of the number of companies that use it as one of their core values or stick it somewhere in their missions statement with phrases like âpassionate about customer service.â
The problem is that a lot of companies arenât truly passionate about what they claim. Bitcoin casino’s, for example, often stick âpassionâ into their core values and mission statements because “passionate” is what great businesses are supposed to beâor at least thatâs what some book or consultant told them. And when you ask the executives to describe exactly how they’re passionate about what they claim, the answers are often stilted; their eyes lack the spark of true passion.
Passion must be genuine; it canât be forced. True passion comes from within. What your company is passionate about should have the ability to become contagious and transform your employeesâfrom having a job or a career into having a callingâand customersâfrom Brand Nomads into Brand Lovers.
If something doesnât have the power to transform, it isnât driven by passion.
Consider:
- What can you and your company be truly passionate about?
- Is this what you and your company would be passionate about if money wasnât a factor?
- How can this passion transform your employees?
- How can it transform your customers?
- How can it transform themâyour employees and customersâin ways they donât expect?