About Richard

In the 1970's I finished my training in clinical psychology and began my career as a group therapist and administrator of two community mental health programs in the San Francisco Bay Area. After five years I did what many of my peers did. I went into private practice. I opened an office in Palo Alto close enough to where I lived that I could walk to work. I was thrilled to be my own boss.

Because I liked eating regularly I thought I ought to do something to announce my presence in the community so people would come to see me. After a visit to the self-help section of a couple of book stores around town, I decided to specialize in "executive stress management" as that was a popular topic back then.

Without really knowing anything about marketing I typed up a flier announcing the opening of my office (and my specialty in executive stress management) and at night I shoved these "announcements" under the doors of the occupants in my building and in a few other buildings near by to see what would happen. It was an experiment. Amazingly my phone began to ring. Business people who had read my flier began calling and complaining about their stress. Wonderful, I now had people coming to see me and could eat regularly.    

My new clients were small business owners and professionals who according to their stories were stressed to the max by the demands of their work. Some were at the brink of burnout.

Immediately, I had an important choice to make. I could, as advertised, help my new clients learn executive stress management techniques - or I could go another way. I could try to help them uncover the causes of their stress and deal with root problem instead of just working on the surface with the symptoms. Well, I made the right choice. Not a single person who came to see me wanted simple symptom management if there was even a remote possibility of getting rid of the situations that were causing the stress in the first place.

These were smart people. Because of their experience in business they knew that quick fixes never solve real problems. They understood that making things better might be hard work and might take a fair amount of time. And they viewed the alternative, learning to relax so they could put up with their stress, as unacceptable.

Of course most of the stress I heard about was work-related. And since I was in the same building or very near by, I could go to work with my clients and observe first-hand what was so stressful. So that's what I did. I went to work with my clients, watched them work, and saw what was driving them up the wall. Then we'd go to lunch or dinner and talk about strategies they could implement to change the situation. The strategies might be about better ways to communicate, better ways to prioritize or manage time, new sales and marketing ideas, leadership tactics, or many other strategies with which to modify their behavior so they could be productive but without the bone crushing stress. 

In the course of finding my life's work I made a transition from the role of psychologist to the role of a business consultant and coach. Along the way I learned how businesses ought to work and how to gently but firmly nudge them in the right direction.

The idea is simple. Help people who run businesses re-structure their operation and re-invent how they work, so they can accelerate their performance and overcome any behaviors (or high stress factors) that may be undermining their personal and professional success. The work is achievement psychology in a business setting - helping business owners, managers, and professionals create a Done Business.

For me everyday is just the way I want it to be - interesting, challenging, and rewarding.   




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