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Animal Farm

Animal Farm

My German Shepherd can reach 32 miles-per-hour, for short bursts, and maintain 15 MPH for about an hour. A cheetah can reach 75 MPH (the fastest land animal) but only for about 30 seconds (that is not a typo). They need about 20 minutes to recover after a chase like that. A horse can reach about 30 MPH for for a few minutes (a racehorse about 40 but for two minutes or less). Over an extended time they can do about 12 MPH. An average, healthy human might run for short durations at 10 miles per hour (an athlete around 20+), and walk at 3.

My advice is to know when to sprint, know when to trot, and know when to rest. If you go “full speed” all the time, you'll exhaust yourself and quality suffers (think of people on vacation trying to squeeze  every site and experience into a brief trip with little appreciation or comprehension). If you simply “amble along” consistently  you'd better stay to the right because a lot of people will be passing you.

Your speed should vary, depending on whether you're “on the hunt” (pursuing a prospect with a proposal), in it for the long-term (writing a book which can't be hurried), or investing in yourself (seeking growth experiences which you can schedule sometimes or which suddenly appear at others).

I can't outrun my dog, Royce, but he calmly waits for me because I can rapidly operate a can opener.

 

 

Written by

Alan Weiss is a consultant, speaker, and author of over 60 books. His consulting firm, Summit Consulting Group, Inc., has attracted clients from over 500 leading organizations around the world.

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