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Accountants must change or lose their minds…

18th Oct 2015
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Yes change is tough.

But do you know how tough?

Dr. Edward Miller is the dean of the medical school and CEO of the hospital at Johns Hopkins University – considered one of the world’s top universities.

Miller knows for certain how hard change is:

"If you look at people after coronary-artery bypass grafting two years later, 90% of them have not changed their lifestyle," Miller said. "And that's been studied over and over and over again.”

“Even though they know they have a very bad disease and they know they should change their lifestyle, for whatever reason, they can't."

If only 1 in 10 heart bypass patients change their lifestyle in order to live, what chance do you have of changing your behaviour or your team’s behaviour and your firm’s results?

Can accountants and leopards really change their spots?

Unlike a leopard’s spots, which can’t physically be changed, your accountant’s brain can be changed. You can change, it’s scientific fact.

Dr. Michael Merzenich, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco, says that the brain's ability to change — its ‘plasticity’ — is lifelong.

Merzenich is saying that just like children learn, adapt and change as they grow, so can you.

For example: For highly trained specialists, such as professional musicians, the changes actually show up on MRI scans. Flute players, for instance, have especially large representations in their brains in the areas that control the fingers, tongue, and lips. Merzenich says "They've distorted their brains."

Here’s what matters most if you’re committed to change…

Unless you work on it, brain fitness often begins declining at around age 30 for men, a bit later for women. "People mistake being active for continuous learning," Merzenich says. "The machinery is only activated by learning. People think they're leading an interesting life when they haven't learned anything in 20 or 30 years. My suggestion is learn Spanish or the oboe."

What happens if you don't work at mental rejuvenation? Merzenich says that people who live to 85 have a 50-50 chance of being senile. While the issue for heart patients is "change or die," the issue for everyone is "change or lose your mind."

Mastering the ability to change isn't just a crucial strategy for business. It's a necessity for health. And it's possibly the one thing that's most worth learning.

http://www.fastcompany.com/52717/change-or-die

What are you doing to prevent your firm becoming brain dead or just plain dead?

What do you do to encourage your team to learn?

What are you learning just for the sake of learning?

Paul Shrimpling
Remarkable Practice

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By chatman
27th Oct 2015 10:58

Change for Change's Sake.

If you change just for the sake of change, you risk changing the things that shouldn't be changed, or changing things for something worse.

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By paul.gloverstanbury
27th Oct 2015 16:58

Amen, Chatman!

Well said, sir - I remember an ex-high-up-in-the-Civil Service accountant saying to a church meeting that Change for Change's sake is always totally inefficient, and with the history of changes perpetrated by each Government he presumably bore the scars....! 

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