At the Olympic level, where differences between first place and middle of the pack can be razor thin, competitors are looking for anything that can give them an edge. That’s the benefit of a business approach to managing processes and supporting the training, conditioning, and preparation of individual athletes and teams.
“A synergy exists between business and athletes,” says Michael Nichols, chairman of ASQ. “Obviously, preparing Olympians certainly doesn’t require an assembly line approach, but the same types of goal-setting and measurement tracking methods used in manufacturing and other industries can help spur athletes to optimum performance.”
Dave Johnson, national rifle coach with USA Shooting and coach of the men’s and women’s United States Olympic rifle teams, understands the need for strategies like these that support athletes in their quest for Olympic glory. As a result, the teams’ Beijing preparations focus on details like fine-tuning shooting teams to prepare for the environment they will face in Beijing, such as heat, humidity, and poor air quality. The team coaches and managers are helping the athletes manage their diets so well that they become a finely-tuned machine. And they emphasize mental strategies to help competitors deal with the expected and unexpected such as pressures of internal and external expectations and distractions from the crowd, the media, and an unfamiliar environment.
Jamie Beyerle of the U.S. Olympic women’s shooting team, who fell short of making the 2004 Athens Olympics, notes that she’s done a lot more strategic planning and structured goal-setting to make the 2008 team.
“Going into this trial and these Olympic games is quite different,” Beyerle says. “Last time, I thought I could go in there and just shoot and I’d be fine. I just wanted to win a medal in the Olympic games, and so in my preparation I just skipped that whole trial thing and ended up not making the team because I didn’t have the goals that I needed.” This time around, Beyerle’s paying much more attention to preparation for each trial and each event leading up to the Olympics.
Measurements are another way that Olympic coaches like Johnson stay focused on important goals. “Our whole staff sets job markers on what we’re trying to do,” he says. This measurement system also cascades down to the athlete level to evaluate individual progress through goals on elements like scoring and timing. In combat sports like Olympic Greco-Roman wrestling, the principal measurement is the outcome, as opposed to a sport in which the athlete is competing against the clock.
Nichols notes that athletes can find a performance advantage in any event. They simply need to take some advice from the business world:
Please visit www.asq.org/quality-report/reports/200807.html to view the complete Quality Report.
For more information, visit www.asq.org/media-room/press-releases/2008/20080714-olympic-training.html.
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