Know Your Voice
Posted: Sunday, July 12, 2009
by John Graden
http://www.johngraden.com
I was the guy who created Cardio Karate in 1996, two years
before the Tae Bo craze. I told the industry this was coming and that it was
going to be big. But I never hid the fact that I would never teach a Cardio
Karate class. I am a kickboxer, not a kick dancer. I have zero interest in
kicking to an eight-beat. I created the Little Ninjas program characters with a
Marvel Comics artist. Great program, but I would never teach a Little Ninjas
class or have the program in my school. I know who I am, and that is not for
me.
When choosing from all the available programs, even mine,
you have to be sure they reflect who you are and what you stand for. I still
dont understand what an afterschool program has to do with martial arts. Not
that its a bad program. I see guys making lots of money with it, and thats
great, but there is no way on earth I would do that.
I cant imagine a black belt dreaming about the perfect
school: yeah, and then, after school, well have study hall and learn Spanish
and tae kwon do. You may love teaching kids and helping them with their
homework. Thats great for you and for the kids. I just would never get excited
about offering that program. Because I know my voice.
If you want to launch a program that reflects what you stand
for, do it sooner than later.
You are going to make mistakes, so get them behind you
quickly. This is a big step in dealing with the Control Factor. Double your
failure rate by getting things going fast. Double your failure rate doesnt
mean open and close twice as many schools. It means if you are not making
mistakes you are not trying hard enough. If your heart is not in your throat at
least once a day, you are taking it too safe. You have to try, trip, and get
back up continually to get ahead.
Too many guys put off launching a Black Belt Club or
Leadership Team because they are afraid it may not go well. Often it doesnt at
first, but you get feedback and adjust it and keep going until you get it
right. If you are in analysis paralysis, you will never launch the program. The
adage about writing is that there is no writing, just rewriting. You will never
get it perfect the first try, so make a mess and clean it up later. Just get on
with it.
When a program doesnt go well, dont let the negative
feedback define you. Know who you are, deeply and authentically. If I had let
Century and their lawsuits define me, I wouldnt have launched MATA or be
writing this book. Century has brought three personal lawsuits against me now
in addition to an earlier suit that drove NAPMA into bankruptcy. The owner of
Century says that he sues me to keep me out of mischief. Still, losing NAPMA to
Century doesnt make me a loser, because his actions dont define me. I know
who I am and what I am capable of. Im an honest person, and I have confidence
in my abilities. Sometimes the combination rubs people the wrong way, and I
regret that. I never mean to offend anyone, but at least people cant say they
dont know where they stand with me. They know.
Through this process Ive learned that the only person I can
control is myself. I have learned that I will conduct myself ethically, but I
no longer have the expectation that anyone else will. Not to imply Im the only
ethical person in the industry I deal with honest, upstanding people every
day. But I agree with Donald Trump, a guy who has been through some messes. He
said that if you expect the worst from someone, you wont get surprised.
Although Im not a negative person, the lawsuits and fallout from Centurys
assaults have taught me much about this industry and myself.