As the director of Being Bold Coaching Academy, and one of the nationโs most respected real estate coaches and speakers, Caroline Bolderston is well-versed in the need to maintain focus on the task at hand, particularly when it comes to prospecting. Caroline addressed LJ Hookerโs Accelerate 2021 participants earlier this year to gauge their knowledge and understanding of what โfull focusโ is.
Dedicating your attention to a single task until it’s complete is easier said than done, just ask Caroline Bolderston.
Caroline says that in the context of her discussion, โfullโ means complete, and that each of the five letters that make up the word โfocusโ can be used to illustrate the effectiveness of giving a task the full attention it requires: โFollow One Course Until Successfulโ.
Five things that stop us applying full focus
โThere seems to be five key reasons that full focus doesn’t occur,โ Caroline explains.
โNumber one is the โwhatโ, meaning you don’t quite know what to focus on.โ
Caroline explains that determining the โwhoโ can also be a factor that limits peopleโs abilities to apply their full focus to a task.
โIs that sometimes the issue for you, you’re not quite sure who you should be focusing on?โ she asks.
When it comes to โwhenโ, Caroline explains that being cognisant of when itโs the right time to be in full focus can also be difficult to determine.
Caroline says โhowโ relates to: โHow do I strategically focus, and how do I minimise distractions and interruptions? How do I get the best strategies to help me with that?โ
The fifth reason that Caroline suggests could potentially limit someone from applying their full focus is โwantโ.
โThis can sometimes come as a bit of a shock,โ she says. โSome people just don’t want to focus.โ
Elaborating further, Caroline says focus can be perceived as restrictive and โnot much funโ.
โMaybe you might like to be a bit more free-flowing and you’d like to be a little bit more instinctive or you’d like to react in the moment because that’s your energy type.
โSo itโs not โI don’t want to do itโ; itโs that you don’t necessarily want the feeling of what focus gives you.โ
1. Three key elements of focus
Caroline says there are three key elements to improving your focus.
Firstly, she explains that people need to assess their beliefs to see how they might be holding them back from full focus.
Secondly, she mentions the concept of the โthought gatewayโ.
โWhat I mean is, how can you expand on what you think, and how does your thinking impact your focus,โ she says.
Thirdly, Caroline says it is vital to gain some insight into how you can โget some structure around your focusโ.
After dedicating much of her working life to human behavioural space, Caroline says she has realised assessing our own beliefs can be a key to realising our full potential.
She explains that โthinking fitnessโ is arguably as important as physical fitness.
โIf your thinking is right, then you will think the right way around your physical fitness,โ she offers by way of example.
โWhere we’re at right now is based on… our thinking, our feelings and all the actions we’ve taken.โ
2. Hierarchy of outcomes
Caroline says the hierarchy of outcomes โis a model that is at play every minute of every day and we’re not even aware of itโ.
She says that the hierarchy is a pyramid, with โexperiencesโ at its base.
โExperience is really all life is, it’s just a collection of massive experiences; it’s what happens from there that counts,โ Caroline says.
โOur experiences drive the beliefs,โ she adds, explaining that our beliefs drive actions and our actions drive results.
There is another layer to the hierarchy, which Caroline says sits in between our experiences and beliefs.
โIn between our experiences and beliefs is a process, and it’s split-second,โ she says.
Caroline explains that this split-second is a thought, which in turn drives a feeling.
โNow when we’re talking about full focus, what this is about is how you’ve got a choice point every day.โ
3. The truths of life
Caroline explains that when she first understood that there were three different types of truths in life, it helped her comprehend things differently.
She says the first truth is โthe actual truthโ, meaning there is evidence to prove it to be 100 per cent correct.
Secondly, Caroline says an “apparent truth” is a truth that one has arrived at through their observations, thoughts and feelings.
โIt becomes an apparent truth, or another word for that is ‘assumptions’,” Caroline says, explaining that assumptions – and specifically false assumptions – can lead to dangerous outcomes.
Thirdly, Caroline explains the concept of an โimagined truthโ, which she describes as โsomething that’s not even based on anything that is evidentโ.
โIt is something that is completely conjured up and fictitious, and often, it’s something that’s in the future. It’s โwhat if this happens?’ We have this imagined truth around things.โ
Caroline uses the example of trying to focus on a specific task when we see a call or SMS coming through from a familiar number.
โWe immediately come up with a little story in our head of what could be going on,โ she says.
The actual truth of what the call or SMS is really about is often completely different from the apparent or imagined truth we arrived at.
“Therefore, because of these stories that we are creating in this choice point moment… we choose to break our focus,” Caroline says.
“We choose to stop what we’re doing; we stop following one course until successful.”
Caroline shares some helpful strategies for redefining beliefs and changing structures.
4. Changing the environment
Caroline suggests implementing a โdo-not-disturb focus blockโ.
โJust don’t have (your phone) available, don’t have it with you, don’t have it on,โ she suggests.
โIf you want to follow one course until successful, then this is the ‘when’ piece, and the ‘how’ piece.โ
She explains that by setting your phone to โdo not disturb modeโ, and applying your full focus to a task until itโs completed, you are eliminating the possibility of being distracted by apparent or imagined truths.
โWe’ve got to look at where we’re shining our light, what we’re looking at in terms of our experiences and our beliefs,” Caroline says.
โYou can redefine your beliefs, you can change them, but it comes back to what you’re saying to yourself.โ
Caroline says redefining your beliefs should include analysing the expectations for yourself that you are projecting on to others.
If you have a habit of telling people, โIโm always availableโ, or โIโm always free to take your callโ, you are setting yourself up to disappoint or lose focus.
Caroline discusses how changing her own strategy, by amending her voicemail message, greatly reduced her stress and increased her ability to apply full focus.
โThey’re hearing, ‘You’ve reached Caroline Balderston, I’m either in a coaching session or delivering training right now. Please leave a message; I’ll get back to you as soon as I’m free’,” she says.
“I’m setting the expectation that I’m not always available, that I’m actually working, I’m not ignoring them, and the minute I changed that voicemail, it completely eased my stress and my fear.โ
5. Change the way you talk about yourself
Caroline stresses the importance of removing self-denigrating language from your vocabulary.
โWe need to replace that limiting language,โ she says.
โNo longer will you be talking to yourself about, ‘I am hopeless’, ‘I can’t’, ‘I am not good at’, ‘I am lost …’
โThe minute you hear that, I want you to reframe your thought right then and there, and make it an expansion piece of thinking.
โSo instead of saying, โI am not disciplinedโ, what will be different for you if you woke up every day and actually said, ‘I am highly disciplined’.โ
Caroline suggests printing out your scheduled tasks.
โThe reason I say print them – and you can PDF them if you don’t want to have paper – is you can get lost in your CRM and easily lose sight of where you’re up to,โ she says.
โThat physical visual helps you stay focused, and follow one course until successful.โ
Caroline also explains why she has thrown away her traditional to-do list.
โIf I just keep loading up things on the one list, I tend to scan that list all day every day.โ
Caroline says instead of using a written to-do list, when a thought pops up, โdefer itโ.
Instead of having a sprawling and unallocated to-do list, Caroline advises allocating thoughts for a later time in an electronic diary, and moving on.
The final piece of advice Caroline offers is to be “like a flashlight” and “narrow your beam of focus”.
“It’s a metaphorical approach, but I find it’s really powerful because when you know you’re being distracted by everything else, just interrupt it and say ‘I am the flashlight’.”