go for it institute Archives

Career Success Advice from “Desiderata”

I find inspiration for this career success blog in odd places and at odd times.  I was riding my bike the other day and found the inspiration for this post in a somewhat ugly incident that occurred at the intersection of Severn and Holly Streets here in Denver.

I was at a stop sign on Severn waiting for the car on Holly that did not have a stop to pass.  As he did, I looked and saw another car about a block away on Holly.  I had plenty of time to get across the intersection, so I did.  As I was crossing the intersection, I heard driver of the oncoming car speed up and start blaring his horn.  By this time I was safely across and he hadn’t even reached the intersection, increased speed and all.

When he reached the intersection, he honked his horn again and yelled “f***you.”

My first thought was “f***you back, you a**hole.”  My second thought was the career advice in Tweet 136 in my career success book Success Tweets.  “Be responsible for yourself.  No one can ‘make you angry.’ Choose to act in a civil, constructive manner in tense situations.”

My first thought was that the other driver made me angry.  My second thought was that anger is a choice and I can avoid it.

About a week ago, I got an email from David McMurtry, one of my friends at the Go For It! Institute.  He sent Desiderata – one of my favorite poems.  The first two stanzas speak directly to my recent unpleasant situation on my bike.  The rest of it is pretty good too.   Check it out.

Desiderata

Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.

As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.
Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even to the dull and the ignorant;
they too have their story.
Avoid loud and aggressive persons;
they are vexatious to the spirit.

If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain or bitter,
for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself.
Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your own career, however humble;
it is a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.

Exercise caution in your business affairs,
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals,
and everywhere life is full of heroism.
Be yourself. Especially do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love,
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment,
it is as perennial as the grass.

Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.

Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
You are a child of the universe
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.

With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful. Strive to be happy.

In other words, don’t let small things out of your control piss you off.  Take responsibility for yourself.

Your values are your personal guide for day-to-day living.  They are the best way to take responsibility for yourself.  They help you make decisions in your everyday life.  Values ground you – providing direction for decision making in ambiguous situations — and are important to your life and career success.

Here are my personal values…

  • Always do my best.
  • Treat all people with the respect and dignity they deserve as fellow human beings.
  • Help others wherever and whenever I can – with no strings attached.
  • Use my common sense.
  • Be a supportive and loving husband.

I use these values as a guide for my day-to-day living.  I do my best to conduct myself in a manner that is consistent with them.  Several months ago, I did a blog post in which I mentioned an argument I had with my dad.  I let myself get angry over a trivial matter.  After I calmed down, I called my dad to apologize.  I did this because one of my personal values is, “Treat all people with the respect and dignity they deserve as fellow human beings.”

By raising my voice and arguing, I was not conducting myself in accordance with one of my personal values – so I had to do something (apologize) to rectify the situation.  This value of treating people with respect and dignity is so ingrained in me that I had a feeling of unease for the two days it took me to apologize for losing my temper.

That’s the way values work.  They become so much a part of you that when you act in a manner inconsistent with them, you feel a little off and uncomfortable.  This discomfort led me to do what I needed to do to fix the problem I had created.

Just last week I had an experience that gets at what I’m talking about here.  I sent an email to a group of people with whom I have an affinity asking if they would like to join me as a joint venture partner.  Several said “yes.”  I received a response from one person that was an email with a subject line that said REMOVE.  There was no body in the text.

I sent this person a very nice email in which I apologized for bothering her, assured her that I would not contact her again and attached one of my eBooks as a sign of good will.  I received a rather condescending response to the second email – offering me coaching on email etiquette.  We traded two more emails discussing this issue.

I finally figured out that this person had a strong need to have the last word in this correspondence.  I chose to terminate the conversation – and let her have the last word.  By letting her have the last word, I was following the career advice in Tweet 136.  “Choose to act in a civil, constructive manner in tense situations.”

I think that I was the aggrieved party in this situation, but in the long run it doesn’t matter.  I took responsibility for not extending a conflict situation that was of little or no importance by letting the other person have the last word – something that seemed important to her.

The career success coach point here is simple common sense.  Successful people are clear about what they want out of their lives and careers.  They define what success means to them, personally.  They create a vivid mental image of their success.  And they develop a set of personal values that guides their day-to-day life.  They follow the career advice in Tweet 136 in Success Tweets.  “Be responsible for yourself.  No one can ‘make you angry.’  Choose to act in a civil, constructive manner in tense situations.”  Your values are guides to decision making in ambiguous situations.  They provide you with the guidance you need as you go through life.  Take a few minutes to think about what’s important to you.  Write it down.  Then live your life by these values.  You’ll be on your way to your life and career success.

That’s my take on the career advice I found on a recent bike ride and in the poen, Desiderata.  What do you think?  Please take a minute to share your thoughts with us in a comment.  As always, thanks for reading my daily musings on life and career success.

Bud

PS: If you haven’t already done so, you can download a free copy of my latest career success book Success Tweets Explained.  It’s a whopping 390 + pages of career advice explaining each of the common sense tweets in Success Tweets in detail.  Go to http://budurl.com/STExp to claim your free copy.  You’ll also start receiving my daily life and career success quotes.

 

Career Success — Go For It!

I received my copy of the Go For It! Family Program when I returned home last Friday.  I got it through Amazon.com.   http://amzn.to/kjA1X0/ This great little book by Judy Zerafa is based on the Seven Keys to Success Life Program she developed for use in schools.  As the cover suggests, The Seven Keys to Success are helpful when it comes to school, relationships, life and career success.

Judy Zerafa is a latter day Napoleon Hill.  She interviewed successful people in an attempt at developing a model for life and career success.  She developed the Seven Keys to Success after interviewing 35 Horatio Alger Award Winners asking them one question:

“What do you think you know that you think no one else knows that has allowed you to succeed to the degree for which you’ve been honored?”

She parsed their responses into The Seven Keys to Success…

  • A Positive Attitude
  • Belief in One’s Self
  • Positive Habits
  • Wise Choices
  • Setting and Achieving Goals
  • Using Creative Imagination
  • Persistence

She took these seven principles and developed specific guidelines for applying each of them in daily life, calling it the Go For It! program.  Schools and school districts began teaching the seven keys to success and the Go For It! Institute was born.

Judy realizes that schools cannot and should not do it all.  She believes that families play an important role in the development of children.  In the introduction to the Go For It! Family Program she says, “The family has always been – and always will be – the cornerstone of society.”  She wrote the Go For It! Family Program to help parents apply the seven keys to success in their own lives and to help their children use them to create their own bright futures.

The first key to success – a positive attitude – was mentioned by all 35 of the Horatio Alger winners who Judy interviewed.  My career success coach work and study of successful people confirms this.  Tweet 39 in my career advice book Success Tweets says…

“While other people and events have an impact on your life, they don’t shape it.  You get to choose how you react to people and events.”

If you want to create the career success you deserve, you have to have a positive attitude and make positive choices.  Don’t be afraid to fail.  You fail only if you don’t learn something from the experience.  Treat failures as opportunities to grow — the tuition you pay for career success.  Choose to react positively to failures and learn something.  Keep going in the face of difficulties.  Use problems, setbacks and failures as springboards to action and creativity.  Don’t let slow days get you down.  Get up the next day and keep working.

People with a positive attitude have a habit of focusing on the positive and putting the negative out of their minds.  As Judy Zerafa points out, positive habits like this are an important key to your career success.  Habits are like muscles.  The science of cognitive restructuring shows us how to identify our personal cycle of negative thoughts, habits, and routines and replace them with positive thoughts, habits, and routines that will provide have lifelong benefits.

When I was a kid about a million years ago, there was a popular song.  I believe it was a show tune.  A couple of the lines went like this…

You’ve got to ac – cen – tu – ate the positive, and
e — lim — in – ate the negative

I don’t know the show.  If you do, please leave a comment letting us know.  I’ll give a free copy of the eBook version of Straight Talk for Success to everybody who knows the name of the show and shares it in a comment.

Recently I read a book by Evelyn Brooks which included an acronym (S.M.A.R.T.) for managing stress — but I think it also applies to developing a positive attitude.

  • S Smash the negative.
  • M Maximize the positive.
  • A Act.
  • R Relax.
  • T Target your next action.

In the Go For It! Family Program, Judy Zerafa suggests four strategies for developing a positive attitude…

  1. Look for the good in any situation.
  2. Make a change; find the courage to make your situation better.
  3. Find a benefit in difficult situations.
  4. Find your own feeling switch – a memory, phrase, image that puts an instant smile on your face.

As a career success coach, I believe that it doesn’t matter if you “accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative,” “smash the negative and maximize the positive,” or “find your personal feeling switch.”  What is important is to realize that you are in charge of your attitude; you control how you respond to people and events.  Choose to react positively to whatever life throws at you and you’ll be on your way to becoming the life and career success you deserve to be.

The career success coach point here is simple common sense.  A positive attitude will help you create the life and career success you want and deserve.  A positive attitude is the first key in Judy Zerafa’s new book the Go For It! Family Program.  This is an important book.  It can help you create the life and career success you want and deserve.  It can also help you help your children create their life success.  You can pick up a copy at Amazon.com.  Go to http://amzn.to/kjA1X0/ Get this book.  Read it.  Use it to help you create your life and career success and to help your kids create their success.

That’s the career advice I took from reading Judy Zerafa’s new book.  What do you think?  Please take a minute to share your thoughts with us in a comment.  As always, thanks for reading my daily thoughts on life and career success.

Bud

PS: If you haven’t already done so, you can download a free copy of my latest career success book Success Tweets Explained.  It’s a whopping 390 + pages of career advice explaining each of the common sense tweets in Success Tweets in detail.  Go to http://budurl.com/STExp to claim your free copy.  You’ll also start receiving my daily life and career success quotes.

 

Career Success — Go For It!

I received my copy of the Go For It! Family Program when I returned home last Friday.  I got it through Amazon.com.   http://amzn.to/kjA1X0/ This great little book by Judy Zerafa is based on the Seven Keys to Success Life Program she developed for use in schools.  As the cover suggests, The Seven Keys to Success are helpful when it comes to school, relationships, life and career success.

Judy Zerafa is a latter day Napoleon Hill.  She interviewed successful people in an attempt at developing a model for life and career success.  She developed the Seven Keys to Success after interviewing 35 Horatio Alger Award Winners asking them one question:

“What do you think you know that you think no one else knows that has allowed you to succeed to the degree for which you’ve been honored?”

She parsed their responses into The Seven Keys to Success…

  • A Positive Attitude
  • Belief in One’s Self
  • Positive Habits
  • Wise Choices
  • Setting and Achieving Goals
  • Using Creative Imagination
  • Persistence

She took these seven principles and developed specific guidelines for applying each of them in daily life, calling it the Go For It! program.  Schools and school districts began teaching the seven keys to success and the Go For It! Institute was born.

Judy realizes that schools cannot and should not do it all.  She believes that families play an important role in the development of children.  In the introduction to the Go For It! Family Program she says, “The family has always been – and always will be – the cornerstone of society.”  She wrote the Go For It! Family Program to help parents apply the seven keys to success in their own lives and to help their children use them to create their own bright futures.

The first key to success – a positive attitude – was mentioned by all 35 of the Horatio Alger winners who Judy interviewed.  My career success coach work and study of successful people confirms this.  Tweet 39 in my career advice book Success Tweets says…

“While other people and events have an impact on your life, they don’t shape it.  You get to choose how you react to people and events.”

If you want to create the career success you deserve, you have to have a positive attitude and make positive choices.  Don’t be afraid to fail.  You fail only if you don’t learn something from the experience.  Treat failures as opportunities to grow — the tuition you pay for career success.  Choose to react positively to failures and learn something.  Keep going in the face of difficulties.  Use problems, setbacks and failures as springboards to action and creativity.  Don’t let slow days get you down.  Get up the next day and keep working.

People with a positive attitude have a habit of focusing on the positive and putting the negative out of their minds.  As Judy Zerafa points out, positive habits like this are an important key to your career success.  Habits are like muscles.  The science of cognitive restructuring shows us how to identify our personal cycle of negative thoughts, habits, and routines and replace them with positive thoughts, habits, and routines that will provide have lifelong benefits.

When I was a kid about a million years ago, there was a popular song.  I believe it was a show tune.  A couple of the lines went like this…

You’ve got to ac – cen – tu – ate the positive, and
e — lim — in – ate the negative

I don’t know the show.  If you do, please leave a comment letting us know.  I’ll give a free copy of the eBook version of Straight Talk for Success to everybody who knows the name of the show and shares it in a comment.

Recently I read a book by Evelyn Brooks which included an acronym (S.M.A.R.T.) for managing stress — but I think it also applies to developing a positive attitude.

  • S Smash the negative.
  • M Maximize the positive.
  • A Act.
  • R Relax.
  • T Target your next action.

In the Go For It! Family Program, Judy Zerafa suggests four strategies for developing a positive attitude…

  1. Look for the good in any situation.
  2. Make a change; find the courage to make your situation better.
  3. Find a benefit in difficult situations.
  4. Find your own feeling switch – a memory, phrase, image that puts an instant smile on your face.

As a career success coach, I believe that it doesn’t matter if you “accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative,” “smash the negative and maximize the positive,” or “find your personal feeling switch.”  What is important is to realize that you are in charge of your attitude; you control how you respond to people and events.  Choose to react positively to whatever life throws at you and you’ll be on your way to becoming the life and career success you deserve to be.

The career success coach point here is simple common sense.  A positive attitude will help you create the life and career success you want and deserve.  A positive attitude is the first key in Judy Zerafa’s new book the Go For It! Family Program.  This is an important book.  It can help you create the life and career success you want and deserve.  It can also help you help your children create their life success.  You can pick up a copy at Amazon.com.  Go to http://amzn.to/kjA1X0/ Get this book.  Read it.  Use it to help you create your life and career success and to help your kids create their success.

That’s the career advice I took from reading Judy Zerafa’s new book.  What do you think?  Please take a minute to share your thoughts with us in a comment.  As always, thanks for reading my daily thoughts on life and career success.

Bud

PS: If you haven’t already done so, you can download a free copy of my latest career success book Success Tweets Explained.  It’s a whopping 390 + pages of career advice explaining each of the common sense tweets in Success Tweets in detail.  Go to http://budurl.com/STExp to claim your free copy.  You’ll also start receiving my daily life and career success quotes.

 

Success Tweet 130: Be Generous

My new career success coach book Success Tweets: 140 Bits of Common Sense Career Success Advice, All in 140 Characters or Less is turning out to be quite a hit.  Over 2,000 people have downloaded the free eBook version and several people have purchased multiple copies of the hard copy book.  I think it’s a great addition to my career advice writings.  Go to www.SuccessTweets.com to get a .pdf of Success Tweets for free. 

If you want to purchase a hard copy for yourself – or two or three to give to friends, associates, people you mentor, people you manage, your kids, your grandkids – go to Amazon.com or send me an email at Bud@BudBilanich.com.  I’ll send you quantity pricing information. 

Today’s career advice comes from Tweet 130…

Be generous.  By giving with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by how much comes back to you in the long run.

When my book Straight Talk for Success was first published I did a big launch campaign that resulted in it becoming an Amazon.com bestseller.  A few months before the launch, I settled on April 22 as my launch date; mostly because the timing was right.  When I looked closer at my calendar, I saw that April 22 happens to be Earth Day.  I can remember participating in teach ins at Penn State on the very first Earth Day in 1970.

I decided that there was some karma involved here.  Since I had chosen April 22 without knowing it was Earth Day, I thought it would be nice for me to donate 10% of my net proceeds from book sales that day to an organization who supports the environment.  I knew the perfect one.

I am a member of Volunteers for Outdoor Colorado, an apolitical environmental organization.  Their mission is to “motivate and enable Colorado citizens to be active stewards of Colorado’s  public lands, thereby creating enthusiastic and beneficial stewardship of Colorado’s natural and cultural resources.”   They are my favorite environment related non profit.  They do great work.  I was happy to help them out by donating a part of the money I made on books sales that Earth Day. 

I called Ann Baker Easley, VOC Executive Director, and told her what I had in mind.  I was expecting a “thank you.”  I got that, and much more.  Ann put me in touch with Piep van Heuven, VOC Deputy Director of Development and Communication.  Piep included a message about my book launch in the VOC newsletter, and sent an e mail to their membership on the day of the book launch asking them to purchase a copy of Straight Talk.

What started off as a philanthropic endeavor on my part, turned into a partnership.  And, it proved my point about giving with no expectation of return.  I approached VOC thinking that I could help them by making a small contribution.  They embraced my idea, and took it one step further.  So now, we are partners.  I think this is great.

This doesn’t always work.  Prior to my book launch, I participated in a book launch campaign for another author.  When I asked her to return the favor, I got an e mail saying “I am not participating in any book launch promotions just now. I am laser focused on building my business using Facebook.”

In other words, “kiss off, Bud.”  But that’s OK.  I helped her with her successful launch, and many other people — some very unexpected — helped me with mine.  In my experience, for every experience where my help is not reciprocated, there are two or three more like my experience with Volunteer for Outdoor Colorado.

Recently, I have partnered with a new non profit: the Go For It! Institute.  Go For It! teaches kids seven keys to life success…

  • KEY 1: I Have a Positive Attitude! Learn what attitude is; what aspects of your life are controlled or directed by your attitude; how to determine your attitude at any given moment; specific strategies to make a positive attitude a permanent habit in your life.
  • KEY 2: I Believe in Myself! Understand the nature of human potential through a simple process of identifying your personal talents and abilities; developing academic strengths and personal interests to create personal fulfillment and economic opportunities for your future.
  • KEY 3: I Build Positive Habits! Understand the process of how habits are created; learn to identify and remove self-defeating habits; create habits that will make all aspects of your life easier and more successful.
  • KEY 4: I Make Wise Choices! Learn the dramatic relationship between any current circumstances in your life and the choices that created these; develop a personal proactive plan for desired outcomes through conscious, wise choices.
  • KEY 5: I Set and Achieve Goals! Recognize the difference between a wish and a goal; make a commitment, plan and take action; recognize completion.
  • KEY 6: I Use My Creative Imagination! Learn to adapt a technique professional athletes use to extend their physical ability, to accelerate problem solving and goal achievement in all areas of your life.
  • KEY 7: I Am Persistent! Track progress; develop the focus and determination required to succeed; create an attitude of gratitude as the access to fulfilling your dreams, link the Seven Keys to Success together in everyday life.

I like these seven keys.  They are great career success advice. And I like the people at Go For It! who are spreading the word to young people, parents and teachers all across the USA.  These are smart people who give generously of themselves to help kids – our future.  I am proud to be one of their partners.  Check them out by logging on to http://www.goforitinstitute.org.

I am in the process of launching a new website on which I will sell career advice books and other life and career success materials I have developed.  I will donate a percentage of my profits to the Go For It Institute.  In this way, when you purchase my products you’ll be able to help them by helping yourself.

The common sense career success coach point here is clear.  Successful people build and nurture strong relationships with the people in their lives.  One way they do this is by giving with no expectation of return.  Follow the career advice in Tweet 130 in Success Tweets.  “Be generous.  By giving with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by how much comes back to you in the long run.”   When you give with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by what comes back to you.  But that’s not the important career advice here.  Give with no expectation of return to help others and to build strong, mutually beneficial relationships with the important people in your life.

That’s my take on the career advice in Success Tweet 130.  What’s yours?  Do you give with no expectation of return?  Please leave a comment sharing your thoughts and experiences with us.  As always, thanks for reading.

Bud

Success Tweet 130: Be Generous

My new career success coach book Success Tweets: 140 Bits of Common Sense Career Success Advice, All in 140 Characters or Less is turning out to be quite a hit.  Over 2,000 people have downloaded the free eBook version and several people have purchased multiple copies of the hard copy book.  I think it’s a great addition to my career advice writings.  Go to www.SuccessTweets.com to get a .pdf of Success Tweets for free. 

If you want to purchase a hard copy for yourself – or two or three to give to friends, associates, people you mentor, people you manage, your kids, your grandkids – go to Amazon.com or send me an email at Bud@BudBilanich.com.  I’ll send you quantity pricing information. 

Today’s career advice comes from Tweet 130…

Be generous.  By giving with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by how much comes back to you in the long run.

When my book Straight Talk for Success was first published I did a big launch campaign that resulted in it becoming an Amazon.com bestseller.  A few months before the launch, I settled on April 22 as my launch date; mostly because the timing was right.  When I looked closer at my calendar, I saw that April 22 happens to be Earth Day.  I can remember participating in teach ins at Penn State on the very first Earth Day in 1970.

I decided that there was some karma involved here.  Since I had chosen April 22 without knowing it was Earth Day, I thought it would be nice for me to donate 10% of my net proceeds from book sales that day to an organization who supports the environment.  I knew the perfect one.

I am a member of Volunteers for Outdoor Colorado, an apolitical environmental organization.  Their mission is to “motivate and enable Colorado citizens to be active stewards of Colorado’s  public lands, thereby creating enthusiastic and beneficial stewardship of Colorado’s natural and cultural resources.”   They are my favorite environment related non profit.  They do great work.  I was happy to help them out by donating a part of the money I made on books sales that Earth Day. 

I called Ann Baker Easley, VOC Executive Director, and told her what I had in mind.  I was expecting a “thank you.”  I got that, and much more.  Ann put me in touch with Piep van Heuven, VOC Deputy Director of Development and Communication.  Piep included a message about my book launch in the VOC newsletter, and sent an e mail to their membership on the day of the book launch asking them to purchase a copy of Straight Talk.

What started off as a philanthropic endeavor on my part, turned into a partnership.  And, it proved my point about giving with no expectation of return.  I approached VOC thinking that I could help them by making a small contribution.  They embraced my idea, and took it one step further.  So now, we are partners.  I think this is great.

This doesn’t always work.  Prior to my book launch, I participated in a book launch campaign for another author.  When I asked her to return the favor, I got an e mail saying “I am not participating in any book launch promotions just now. I am laser focused on building my business using Facebook.”

In other words, “kiss off, Bud.”  But that’s OK.  I helped her with her successful launch, and many other people — some very unexpected — helped me with mine.  In my experience, for every experience where my help is not reciprocated, there are two or three more like my experience with Volunteer for Outdoor Colorado.

Recently, I have partnered with a new non profit: the Go For It! Institute.  Go For It! teaches kids seven keys to life success…

  • KEY 1: I Have a Positive Attitude! Learn what attitude is; what aspects of your life are controlled or directed by your attitude; how to determine your attitude at any given moment; specific strategies to make a positive attitude a permanent habit in your life.
  • KEY 2: I Believe in Myself! Understand the nature of human potential through a simple process of identifying your personal talents and abilities; developing academic strengths and personal interests to create personal fulfillment and economic opportunities for your future.
  • KEY 3: I Build Positive Habits! Understand the process of how habits are created; learn to identify and remove self-defeating habits; create habits that will make all aspects of your life easier and more successful.
  • KEY 4: I Make Wise Choices! Learn the dramatic relationship between any current circumstances in your life and the choices that created these; develop a personal proactive plan for desired outcomes through conscious, wise choices.
  • KEY 5: I Set and Achieve Goals! Recognize the difference between a wish and a goal; make a commitment, plan and take action; recognize completion.
  • KEY 6: I Use My Creative Imagination! Learn to adapt a technique professional athletes use to extend their physical ability, to accelerate problem solving and goal achievement in all areas of your life.
  • KEY 7: I Am Persistent! Track progress; develop the focus and determination required to succeed; create an attitude of gratitude as the access to fulfilling your dreams, link the Seven Keys to Success together in everyday life.

I like these seven keys.  They are great career success advice. And I like the people at Go For It! who are spreading the word to young people, parents and teachers all across the USA.  These are smart people who give generously of themselves to help kids – our future.  I am proud to be one of their partners.  Check them out by logging on to http://www.goforitinstitute.org.

I am in the process of launching a new website on which I will sell career advice books and other life and career success materials I have developed.  I will donate a percentage of my profits to the Go For It Institute.  In this way, when you purchase my products you’ll be able to help them by helping yourself.

The common sense career success coach point here is clear.  Successful people build and nurture strong relationships with the people in their lives.  One way they do this is by giving with no expectation of return.  Follow the career advice in Tweet 130 in Success Tweets.  “Be generous.  By giving with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by how much comes back to you in the long run.”   When you give with no expectation of return, you’ll be surprised by what comes back to you.  But that’s not the important career advice here.  Give with no expectation of return to help others and to build strong, mutually beneficial relationships with the important people in your life.

That’s my take on the career advice in Success Tweet 130.  What’s yours?  Do you give with no expectation of return?  Please leave a comment sharing your thoughts and experiences with us.  As always, thanks for reading.

Bud

Success Tweet 40

My latest career success coach book, Success Tweets: 140 Bits of Common Sense Career Success Advice, All in 140 Characters or Less is now available on Amazon.com and in bookstores.  I am in the process of blogging about each of the tweets in it. You can get a free copy of Success Tweets at www.SuccessTweets.com.  If you like it, I’d appreciate a positive review on Amazon.com.

Today’s career success coach post is about Tweet 40 — the last in a series on committing to taking personal responsibility for your life and career success…

Vision without action is a daydream.  No matter how big your plans and dreams, they’ll never become reality until you act on them.

As a career success coach, I’m always looking for new and different ways to get across my common sense ideas on life and career success.  I found some great career advice in a Denver elementary school a couple of months ago.  I was invited to see the Go For It! Institute’s program in action at a school in Denver.  If you don’t know about the Go For It! Institute, you should.  The Institute teaches kids the value of things like positive attitude, believing in themselves, positive habits, goal setting and persistence.

Their work is based on ideas created by Judy Zerafa.  Judy has created seven keys to success for young students.  Check them out…

KEY 1: I Have a Positive Attitude! Learn what attitude is; what aspects of your life are controlled or directed by your attitude; how to determine your attitude at any given moment; specific strategies to make a positive attitude a permanent habit in your life.  I wrote about the importance of attitude in yesterday’s post.

KEY 2: I Believe in Myself! Understand the nature of human potential through a simple process of identifying your personal talents and abilities; developing academic strengths and personal interests to create personal fulfillment and economic opportunities for your future.

KEY 3: I Build Positive Habits! Understand the process of how habits are created; learn to identify and remove self-defeating habits; create habits that will make all aspects of your life easier and more successful.  I wrote about the power of positive habits in a recent post.

KEY 4: I Make Wise Choices! Learn the dramatic relationship between any current circumstances in your life and the choices that created these; develop a personal proactive plan for desired outcomes through conscious, wise choices.

KEY 5: I Set and Achieve Goals! Recognize the difference between a wish and a goal; make a commitment, plan and take action; recognize completion.

KEY 6: I Use My Creative Imagination! Extend your physical ability to accelerate problem solving and goal achievement in all areas of your life.

KEY 7: I Am Persistent! Track progress; develop the focus and determination required to succeed; create an attitude of gratitude as the access to fulfilling your dreams, link the Seven Keys to Success together in everyday life.

The Go For It! Institute is in business to bring these keys to young people and their parents.  But as a career success coach, I think they are important ideas for anyone interested in creating life and career success.  The Go For It! Institute’s Seven Keys to Success bare a remarkable similarity to the ideas behind one of my Four Cs for Career Success; commitment to taking personal responsibility for your life and career success.  Tweets 21 — 40 in Success Tweets focus on commitment to personal responsibility.

Since we’re at Tweet 40, it makes sense to do a quick overview of the 4Cs for Career Success:  Clarity, Commitment, Confidence and Competence.

Here they are in a little more detail…

  1. Clarity of purpose and direction.
  2. A sincere commitment to taking personal responsibility for your life and career.
  3. Unshakeable self confidence.
  4. Competence in four key areas: Creating positive personal impact; Outstanding performance; Dynamic communication; Relationship building.

When I visited the school, I watched a class of fourth graders work with the Go For It! Seven Keys to Success.  It was great to see these little guys and gals put their own spin on things like having a positive attitude, setting and achieving goals and being persistent.   I wish I had someone work with me on these principles when I was that young.

Judy Zerafa developed the Seven Keys to Success on which the Go For It! Institute’s program is based after interviewing 35 Horatio Alger Award winners.  I think they are a brilliantly simple success formula.  She is taking her positive message to kids and parents in an attempt at starting the success cycle early in life.

The common sense career success coach point here is simple.  Successful people commit to taking personal responsibility for their life and career success.  They follow the career advice in Tweet 40 in Success Tweets.  “Vision without action is a daydream.  No matter how big your plans and dreams, they’ll never become reality until you act on them.”  The Go For It! Institute’s Seven Keys to Success are all about taking personal responsibility for acting on your plans and dreams.  They apply to adults as well as kids.  You will succeed if you have a positive attitude, believe in yourself, build positive habits, make wise choices, set and achieve goals, use your imagination and persist.  The last of these seven keys is the important one here.  Persist.  Keep working toward your goals and dreams, and you will become a career success.  It’s only common sense.  I’m glad I was introduced to the Go For It! Institute and the great work they are doing with kids.  I think their message applies to all of us.  If you incorporate their seven keys into your life, you’ll be well on your way to creating the life and career success you want and deserve.

That’s my take on the career advice in Tweet 40 in Success Tweets.  What’s yours?  Please take a minute to leave a comment sharing your thoughts with us.  As always, thanks for reading.

Bud

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