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Becoming an Expert
by
Alyson Mead
One of the most coveted roles in our society is that of an
expert. Experts are not just average people. They command
respect, and get it.
People
hang on their every word, and make them their go-to source for
information. Often, experts can create wonderful new income
streams, because their information is that valuable.
Let’s face it. If we want to solve a problem, we look for an
expert. If we want advice, we seek out an expert. And if we
want to stay on track during a particularly arduous process … yep, same
person … the expert.
More than ever before, people want to be perceived as experts.
They understand that there is a willing audience for their work, and
all they have to do is package and sell that information to as wide a
market as possible.
But
there’s a lot more to being an expert than just calling yourself one.
The word expert derives from the Latin expertus, meaning, “to
try.” As this word passed from Old French to Middle English, it
was often used as a noun, to mean “a person with great skill or
knowledge of a certain subject,” or an adjective, to mean
“demonstrating great skill or knowledge of a certain subject.”
That’s
also how it survives in our present-day understanding of the word.
What’s interesting about this mini-lesson in etymology is that, at our
cores, we are all experts. We all “try” various fields, until we find
the one that make us happiest, or the one for which we show the
greatest aptitude.
When
we find something we’re good at, we start to glow. Nothing seems
outside our reach. The task seems to take shape all by
itself.
Athletes,
performers and other creative people often describe their amazing feats
as being done with very little conscious effort.
The
classical composer Beethoven even said, “I have never thought of
writing for reputation and honor. What I have in my heart must come
out; that is the reason why I compose.”
Because of this, calling ourselves experts rarely works. We are
free do this all we want, but only when others trust us enough to come
to us for information that can help solve their most intimate problems
has this really taken shape in the world. So becoming an expert
starts with some serious internal work.
What are you good at? How do you assert your authority?
What have you mastered? In which field do you show the greatest
proficiency?
After all, we all may want to be muscle-studded athletes or gorgeous
supermodels, but is that what we’re really good at? Is our
greatest proficiency throwing a football or striding confidently down a
catwalk? Probably not.
Instead, we all have skills we’re aware of, or which may be lying
dormant inside us. The trick is to tease out your inherent
expertise, without crushing your creativity in the process.
Because
becoming an expert demands that we unleash the creative side of our
brains.
This may seem counter-intuitive to some, because most of us are taught
that creativity is analogous to finger-painting—all over the page,
without rhyme or reason. Business and making money are the
purview of the left brain, which strives to create order amidst chaos.
But if you’re a true entrepreneur, using guerilla marketing tactics,
you’re probably a little of both.
You
have a drive to create something that caters to your unique set of
skills, and betters the overall quality of life.
But
you also have the desire, along with the methodology, to generate some
serious income.
By establishing yourself as an expert in a particular area, you get to
serve both needs. Your creative, or right brain, side is fed by
constructing books, workshops and products that solve common societal
problems.
Your
rational, or left brain, side gets to see your finances improve as your
books, workshops and products help others to live richer and more
rewarding lives.
Of course, the first step to becoming an expert is to give yourself
permission to be an expert, not just call yourself one. We may
feel that we know a particular subject matter fairly well, or that
we’ve had a certain amount of experience with it.
But
how do we know when we’ve become experts? Is there a line we
suddenly cross? Does a bolt of lightning descend from the sky?
Not by a long shot. We know we have achieved expert status when
we can honestly say that we have more familiarity with a particular
subject matter than most people.
There
will always be someone that knows more than we do. There will
always be someone smarter. But there is only one you, with your
ideas and your unique and creative ability to help others.
The psychologist Erich Fromm said, “Creativity requires the courage to
let go of certainties.”
This
is definitely true for entrepreneurs and guerilla marketers. We
do not know how a particular book, workshop or product will turn out,
or if it will be widely accepted by our intended audience.
What
we do know is that we have a burning desire to exercise our creativity,
and that that need, to let go of our certainties and take the leap, is
more important, and more life-affirming, than anything else.
Experts know this feeling intimately, and that’s why we instinctively
trust them—because they have gone, quite willingly, where few would
dare to tread.
Copyright 2006 Coach My Book.com
Alyson Mead is an 18-year veteran of the publishing industry as a
ghostwriter and editor, and the author of the online coaching program
How to Write a Book, Build a Platform & Become an Expert, available
at http://www.CoachMyBook.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Alyson_Mead
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