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Posts Tagged ‘come’

Success Really Does Come in Cans

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

I wish I’d coined the phrase, “Success comes in Cans.” Its accuracy was on my mind as I spent time with two people in Can’t Mode. One of them was open to reframing thoughts and statements; the other was not.

One is currently in a funk and has been paying rent to live in Funkville for a couple of years. Ask him what he wants to do and he’ll tell you. Ask him what he might do to get started or offer to connect him with someone doing it and his response is, “No one will hire me.”

“Well, what about XYZ?”
“Nope. I just told you, no one will hire me.”
“What about…”
“Nothing I try works.
“But what about…”
“Nothing I could try will work either.”

How far will he go and how fast will he get there?

The other had a different response when she used Can’t in her regard.

“If you say you can’t, how will you ever do it?”
“I never thought about it like that.”
“Let me share a statement with you: There’s a way to do this and I’m going to find it. What might happen if you repeatedly state that to yourself?”
“I’ll probably find it and create what I want.”

Both individuals are creative and intelligent. The woman was open to brainstorming possibilities, which is what we did the rest of our conversation. As you see in the dialogue with the first, he slammed the door shut on everything.

Recently, I woke feeling fine then found myself in a funk. Did I want to stay there or feel even a little bit better? Better, of course. Were my thoughts and feelings at the time going to create more of what I wanted to expand in my life? Not those thoughts; and what they were was not what I wanted more of. When we have a dream or goal, we get excited. Then we get scared. There’s only one sure way out of fear: Action. Action sets us free.

I’m not saying it’s always easy to shift our focus to what we prefer to think and feel; but if we commit to it, we’ll do it. If we take positive action, we’ll achieve it even faster. If we have a target and keep aiming at it, eventually we’re going to hit it. After a while, we’ll start to hit it more than we miss it.

If your target is to feel great more often than not, aim for it. At the same time, remember to pay attention to what you learn about yourself in the process.

Success comes in Cans.

Just Get Three People Into Your Mlm Business And All Your Wildest Dreams Will Come True….or Not

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Two months ago, I was so excited about my MLM business. My sponsor told me that if I just got three people into my business and helped them get three, then all of my financial concerns would simply disappear. Well guess what? I got my three people and I couldn’t have been happier the day I signed up my third person. Who makes up my dream team? Let me introduce you to Mark, Sarah and Pat. Mark is a successful businessman who knows a lot about marketing and advertising. Sarah has lived in the same town for fifty something years and knows everybody, and Pat is a real estate agent with over one thousand people on her Facebook page!

I was passionate about the product line and now I had my frontline in place and we were ready for action. If I could get them moving, the sky was the limit. Sarah immediately signed up her daughter, but because she had no money, Sarah paid for her daughter to get into the business. Now Sarah was excited! Then her daughter, who didn’t really want to be in the company in the first place, got online and found nine different entries talking negatively about our company and our product line. Sarah cares very much for her daughter and values her opinion. She believes that if something is in print, it must be true. As I said, Sarah knows everyone in town, but Sarah has yet to get anyone else involved other than her daughter. So now I have four people in my downline. Two of them are going nowhere, so I need to focus my time and efforts on Mark and Pat.

As I mentioned to you, Mark is a genius and a successful businessman. For several weeks, he worked on his own set of marketing materials to market this business and paid hundreds of dollars to have them printed, even though the company has incredible marketing tools already in place. Not a good sign. He has charts and graphs and projections on his future success in this business. He’s even put together a business plan that he is excited about and said he’d be willing to share with anyone in my organization. Two months have gone by and Mark is still getting ready to get ready. Thank goodness for Pat. She is a mover and a shaker! She’s in real estate and I see her interacting on Facebook all the time. The night she went to her first meeting with me, she said that it would be like opening the flood gates once she got started. I still see her interacting daily on Facebook several times a day. I’m dumbfounded that none of this mindless chatter has anything to do with our business. Not once have I seen her even mention it on Facebook. I noticed it became harder and harder to get in touch with her until eventually, she simply stopped returning any of my calls. What now? My upline mentor’s not doing much better. He’s got a grand total of nine people in his group. I’m out of good leads. What am I going to do now?

It’s not 1978 anymore, but almost every distributor in almost every MLM organization is going about growing their business as though Happy New Year 1979 is just around the corner. It’s 2009, folks and there is a better way to do this business. Stop chasing your leads. Have them come to you. Stop bugging your friends and family. Tear up your list, or what’s left of it and stop working harder; work smarter. There’s a way for you to generate quality leads for your business on the internet. It works, it’s credible and you can do it just as successfully as I have. My story and my approach are worthy of review. I hope that you dig a little deeper and do your due diligence. Start generating quality leads for your MLM business today. Get Contentment First. Greg Tucker

The shape of things to come

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

The next big thing is… handwriting. And it should only set you back a couple of grand to rescue this dying art.

On November 7 next, the computer industry will unveil its next great technological breakthrough. It’s called handwriting. Apparently you take a small, pointed stick-like object, called a stylus (from ‘style’, which Chambers defines as ‘a pointed instrument for writing on wax tablets’) and make squiggle-like movements with it on a screen (called a ‘tablet’ – ‘a slab or stiff sheet for making notes on’). These squiggles are then pondered by a powerful computer which concludes, after much calculation, that they constitute the message ‘Tge big brownn fqx jumpz over tge lasy doge’ and prints same on the aforementioned screen.

We do not yet know how much we will have to pay for this miracle, but the New York Times (from which nothing is hidden) thinks the new Tablet PCs will ‘probably cost slightly more than a good notebook computer’. Which being translated means anything from UKP1,500 to UKP 2,500.

There are some rich ironies here, are there not? This is an industry which, in the last two decades, has more or less wiped out the art of handwriting in the industrialised world. Most intensive keyboard users – and that nowadays includes every white collar worker – have effectively lost the ability to make marks on paper that are legible, never mind attractive. I was reminded of this the other day in a cafè when I watched one of my colleagues take a phone call and scribble down a note as he spoke. The following day I came upon him frowning at the marks he had made, unable to decipher them. If he had taken the call in his office, he would have typed the notes into his word-processor and they would have been preserved, clear as a bell, for posterity. But because he had used pen and paper, they were lost for ever.

Interestingly, the higher up the occupational ladder one goes, the worse it gets. It’s the lawyers and accountants and stock-market analysts – the professionals whose time is most expensive, in other words – who have become most addicted to keyboards as tools for efficient working, and whose handwriting has atrophied as a result. Plumbers and electricians and bricklayers, in contrast – folks who have never touched a keyboard in their working lives – are still able to write a note capable of being read by another human being.

You think I jest? Well ponder this: in the US, where many children are taught touch-typing at school, the National Cursive Handwriting Contest for elementary school students will not be held this year for the first time in its century-old history. Good handwriting ‘has died on the vine for lack of use’, says Robert Hurford, editor of the newsletter for the International Association of Master Penmen, Engrossers and Teachers of Handwriting. ‘If you don’t practice it, if you don’t use it, it goes away.’

But all is not lost, because the computer industry – led by the nose, as always, by Microsoft – is riding to the rescue of the dying art of handwriting. It has decreed that the next generation of computer users will interact with their Tablet PCs by writing on them. And because handwriting recognition is difficult at the best of times, the tablets will prove irritatingly obtuse unless their users begin to write legibly. The fact that good handwriting will thus be rewarded by faster and more accurate recognition will set off one of those stimulus-reward conditioning cycles beloved of behavioural psychologists, and lead to a rapid improvement in the nation’s stylusmanship.

It is a heartwarming prospect, is it not? Instead of having to type ‘The big brown fox jumps over the lazy dog’ on a boring old steam keyboard, we will be able to scribble them on a Tablet, which will then interpret and – hopefully – convert them to semi-accurate print. And all for only UKP 1,500. The only snag is that you will still have to write the cheque with an old-fashioned pen. If you can.