| Casual Articles |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Self Improvement > Success > Lessons from Greatness |
|
Casual Articles - Lessons from Greatness
Really the Best Buy ’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough.As the holiday shopping season is days upon us, investors are trying to locate the perfect gift for themselves in the form of rewarding shares. With the launch of the next generation of video games upon us as well as the continued advancements in technology for the consumer, there may be no better stock to invest some capital in than Best Buy (BBY). However as the economy is not in a stable position, and could be turning for the worst in terms of growth, how long should you hold on to this near perfect equity?To first bring in the fundamentals, Best Buy really uses its name with conviction not only for its products but for its shares as well. Supporting tremendous growth percentage wise in terms of margins relative to revenue and operating income, while much can be attributed to strong economic growth, such deduction does not deviate from the fact that Best Buy is an excellently managed and run company. Producing more total assets than liabilities year over year, Best Buy, with a P/E ratio of near 22, is impressiv If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. The Importance Of OSHA And UL Certification For Telephone Headsets “Great work is done by people who are not afraid to be great.”
- Fernando FloresAs corporations realize greater productivity savings by providing headsets to their employees, it is vital to choose products that achieve greater efficiency and ergonomic benefits to both telephone-dependant and telephone-intensive workers as well as meet or exceed the benchmarks for safety as defined by government and private organizations. Guaranteeing that all headsets in use are compliant with these standards insure an organization is not liable for any headset related injury arising from technological or environmental situations out of your control.The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA), Part 1910, Subpart S, governs the safe limits of noise exposure employees can be subjected to within their work environment. These regulations have a direct impact on telephone headset products because the telephone headset is worn by the user and is directly coupled to the human ear.In call centers or telephone-intensive job functions, most employees are on the telephone for up to eight hours per day I use to be envious of great people. By “great”, I mean people who have achieved things so noteworthy they become famous for it. Some do it early in life, like athletes. Tiger Woods is a great example. Others take more time reach their success through business. Warren Buffet and Bill Gates have both risen to the top with their business achievements. Still others achieve their prominence through service to others. The Reverend Billy Graham and Mother Teresa are living legends for their service to people. Our world is full of people who have accomplished greatness with their lives. It’s easy for any of us to name five or ten great people we admire. Like I said, I used to regard them with envy. But, the older I get, the more I realize why we have great people in our world. They exist to teach us. Here are things I’ve learned from these teachers. Sacrifice Great people make sacrifices to achieve their greatness. Too often we consider sacrifice bad. It’s not. We make sacrifices with every decision. Even if we do not decide we still make a sacrifice. It’s a basic law of reality; you can’t do or be everything. You need to choose. When you choose one course of action, you automatically sacrifice the opportunity to choose any other course of action. That’s all right. It’s better to make a bad choice than to never choose. When you fail to choose, you’re saying nothing is important enough for you to make it a priority. If nothing in your life is important, what kind of life is that? You risk an empty life if you spend too much time failing to choose. Faith Great people make choices because they believe they are the right choices. They have unyielding faith in the path they choose. Don’t think they’re always right, though. Great people are probably wrong more often than the rest of us. This is because they take risks without fear of failing. They know failure is not bad. It’s simply a way to learn. So, they take more risks. Faith that you’re making the right choice will help you make the choice. That’s the first step. Persistence Once you choose a course of action, you will face obstacles. You will face resistance. Whether you’re learning a new skill, developing a new relationship, building a business, starting a new job, you will always face “speed bumps” on your journey. Willie Jollie likes to say “Murphy has a piece of paper with your name and address on it and he WILL be paying you a visit!” Willie is right and that’s okay because that’s simply how life works. Persistence is what keeps you on task. It reminds you that you made a choice for the right reasons so a few obstacles shouldn’t stop you. Persistence helps you keep doing what you’re supposed to do so you accomplish what you want. It keeps you motivated and energized every day so the speed bumps don’t knock you off course. Great people understand the power of persistence. They use it every day. Courage When you choose a course of action and you follow it, you often are doing something new. Maybe it’s new and strange to you. Because it’s new and strange it seem dangerous. It might cause you fear. One of the biggest reasons we don’t try new things is our fear of the unknown and fear of failure. We have fear, which is good because it causes us to examine and evaluate before we jump in. Diving headfirst into shallow water might be a life-threatening decision. Fear of splitting our head open keeps us from jumping in without checking first to make sure it’s safe. But fear can be an obstacle too. Fear is the foot that applies the brakes. Courage is the foot that presses down on the accelerator. It keeps us moving in the right direction. In great people, the foot with courage is much stronger than the foot with fear. Focus Many people get criticized for not multi-tasking. “You have to learn to do several things at once” they’re told (usually by a supervisor or manager). Too often we fall into this trap. We think we can accomplish more by doing two, three or more unrelated tasks at the same time. So, we talk on the phone while we drive to work. We eat lunch at our desks while we work on an important project. We watch TV while we chat with our spouse or kids. Great people understand the flaw in this. When you try to do too many unrelated things at once you do none well. Your attention is split among many tasks. The power of your focus is watered down because it’s spread over too many things that demand your attention. Think of focus as a ray of sunshine through a magnifying glass. On a sunny summer day it’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough. If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. SEO-What The Weasels Won't Tell You sacrifice. It’s a basic law of reality; you can’t do or be everything. You need to choose.In my experience as a non- techie, there's a ton of misinformation out there about search engine optimization and how it can help your website. The basics fact sound great: Pick out key words and phrases that people will type into search engines and then have your website show up in the top ten results on said search engine. That's sound wonderful, right? Being in the top ten search results for given phrases would be great, the problem is that it's not as simple and easy as paying someone fifty bucks a month to 'submit' your site. Many companies make it seem as if you give them your ten search words or phrases, along with fifty bucks a month or more, and bam your wonderful website will be in the top ten results for those phrases. This is not true. Unless of course your search phrases are so unique that no one would search for them anyway. For example, if you have a product that’s brand new to the marketplace and the phrase used to describe that product are unique. In that case your phrase will climb ran When you choose one course of action, you automatically sacrifice the opportunity to choose any other course of action. That’s all right. It’s better to make a bad choice than to never choose. When you fail to choose, you’re saying nothing is important enough for you to make it a priority. If nothing in your life is important, what kind of life is that? You risk an empty life if you spend too much time failing to choose. Faith Great people make choices because they believe they are the right choices. They have unyielding faith in the path they choose. Don’t think they’re always right, though. Great people are probably wrong more often than the rest of us. This is because they take risks without fear of failing. They know failure is not bad. It’s simply a way to learn. So, they take more risks. Faith that you’re making the right choice will help you make the choice. That’s the first step. Persistence Once you choose a course of action, you will face obstacles. You will face resistance. Whether you’re learning a new skill, developing a new relationship, building a business, starting a new job, you will always face “speed bumps” on your journey. Willie Jollie likes to say “Murphy has a piece of paper with your name and address on it and he WILL be paying you a visit!” Willie is right and that’s okay because that’s simply how life works. Persistence is what keeps you on task. It reminds you that you made a choice for the right reasons so a few obstacles shouldn’t stop you. Persistence helps you keep doing what you’re supposed to do so you accomplish what you want. It keeps you motivated and energized every day so the speed bumps don’t knock you off course. Great people understand the power of persistence. They use it every day. Courage When you choose a course of action and you follow it, you often are doing something new. Maybe it’s new and strange to you. Because it’s new and strange it seem dangerous. It might cause you fear. One of the biggest reasons we don’t try new things is our fear of the unknown and fear of failure. We have fear, which is good because it causes us to examine and evaluate before we jump in. Diving headfirst into shallow water might be a life-threatening decision. Fear of splitting our head open keeps us from jumping in without checking first to make sure it’s safe. But fear can be an obstacle too. Fear is the foot that applies the brakes. Courage is the foot that presses down on the accelerator. It keeps us moving in the right direction. In great people, the foot with courage is much stronger than the foot with fear. Focus Many people get criticized for not multi-tasking. “You have to learn to do several things at once” they’re told (usually by a supervisor or manager). Too often we fall into this trap. We think we can accomplish more by doing two, three or more unrelated tasks at the same time. So, we talk on the phone while we drive to work. We eat lunch at our desks while we work on an important project. We watch TV while we chat with our spouse or kids. Great people understand the flaw in this. When you try to do too many unrelated things at once you do none well. Your attention is split among many tasks. The power of your focus is watered down because it’s spread over too many things that demand your attention. Think of focus as a ray of sunshine through a magnifying glass. On a sunny summer day it’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough. If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. My #1 Free One Way Link Building Method lationship, building a business, starting a new job, you will always face “speed bumps” on your journey.If all you had to do to get a top ranking on the search engines was acquire thousands of inbound links to your site then it would be a simple case of popping over to eBay and buying a whole stack of sitewide links. Back in the old days (like a couple of years ago) this technique actually worked. These days those clever search engine people have worked out a way of combating this clumsy method.When you are in the market for purchasing a link or two then please do not be fooled by those who offer you thousands of links on the same site. In the very best case scenario you only receive credit in the search engines for around 20 to 50 of those links. Only a small percentage of those will give you any real value.People who sell sitewide links are either ignorant to the fact that the search engines have cottoned on, or they are actively trying to scam you out of your hard earned cash. Unfortunately you will usually find that it is the latter.Some of the more effective ways of promoting your site via a link Willie Jollie likes to say “Murphy has a piece of paper with your name and address on it and he WILL be paying you a visit!” Willie is right and that’s okay because that’s simply how life works. Persistence is what keeps you on task. It reminds you that you made a choice for the right reasons so a few obstacles shouldn’t stop you. Persistence helps you keep doing what you’re supposed to do so you accomplish what you want. It keeps you motivated and energized every day so the speed bumps don’t knock you off course. Great people understand the power of persistence. They use it every day. Courage When you choose a course of action and you follow it, you often are doing something new. Maybe it’s new and strange to you. Because it’s new and strange it seem dangerous. It might cause you fear. One of the biggest reasons we don’t try new things is our fear of the unknown and fear of failure. We have fear, which is good because it causes us to examine and evaluate before we jump in. Diving headfirst into shallow water might be a life-threatening decision. Fear of splitting our head open keeps us from jumping in without checking first to make sure it’s safe. But fear can be an obstacle too. Fear is the foot that applies the brakes. Courage is the foot that presses down on the accelerator. It keeps us moving in the right direction. In great people, the foot with courage is much stronger than the foot with fear. Focus Many people get criticized for not multi-tasking. “You have to learn to do several things at once” they’re told (usually by a supervisor or manager). Too often we fall into this trap. We think we can accomplish more by doing two, three or more unrelated tasks at the same time. So, we talk on the phone while we drive to work. We eat lunch at our desks while we work on an important project. We watch TV while we chat with our spouse or kids. Great people understand the flaw in this. When you try to do too many unrelated things at once you do none well. Your attention is split among many tasks. The power of your focus is watered down because it’s spread over too many things that demand your attention. Think of focus as a ray of sunshine through a magnifying glass. On a sunny summer day it’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough. If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. Business Internet Marketing Network Recruiting The Easy Way f splitting our head open keeps us from jumping in without checking first to make sure it’s safe.Business internet marketing network recruiting speaks for itself. The big question here is how do you recruit new reps on a daily basis? You must have a system in place that allows you to recruit new reps daily to supplement the attrition rate in your business.In other words the reps that fall off need to be replaced. The object here is to be constantly sponsoring new reps in to your system to maintain the success level you can potentially reach.business internet marketing network recruiting must be done steadily over the long term of your business. At the same time if you want to get people to stick in your business you must create a large amount of activity in a short period of time. If you generate on average 10 leads a day for your business every day of the month for 3 months straight you would have about 900 leads.When I say leads I am talking about leads you generate from advertising your lead capture page to your target market not opportunity leads you buy from lead companies.Now you h But fear can be an obstacle too. Fear is the foot that applies the brakes. Courage is the foot that presses down on the accelerator. It keeps us moving in the right direction. In great people, the foot with courage is much stronger than the foot with fear. Focus Many people get criticized for not multi-tasking. “You have to learn to do several things at once” they’re told (usually by a supervisor or manager). Too often we fall into this trap. We think we can accomplish more by doing two, three or more unrelated tasks at the same time. So, we talk on the phone while we drive to work. We eat lunch at our desks while we work on an important project. We watch TV while we chat with our spouse or kids. Great people understand the flaw in this. When you try to do too many unrelated things at once you do none well. Your attention is split among many tasks. The power of your focus is watered down because it’s spread over too many things that demand your attention. Think of focus as a ray of sunshine through a magnifying glass. On a sunny summer day it’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough. If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. A Lasting Relationship ’s easy to burn a piece of paper with a magnifying glass if you hold it close enough. By focusing the light on a tiny area, you intensify the amount of energy applied to the paper. This increases the heat and can cause the paper to smolder if you hold it there long enough.We all want a relationship that lasts; whether they be employer-employee, mentor-protege, parent-child, friend-friend, husband-wife or boyfriend-girlfriend relationships. What seems to be common among all these types of relationships is the commitment of time. The relationship where time seems to become less important would be husband-wife relationships. The current statistics on divorce in America proves this point. Time is spent attending seminars, conferences, workshops, Parent-Teacher meetings, and lectures for job promotions and personal success but few will take the time, effort and money required to invest in and enjoy a peaceful, loving and lasting relationship while married.Time is valuable. Marriages have value. Time used to communicate openly is paramount to making the relationship work. When you fail to spend time together and share your most intimate thoughts, deepest fears, highest hopes and most cherished desires, you fail to allow that person to become your most trusted friend and soulmate. One sho If you pull the magnifying glass away, the focal point spreads out. It becomes less intense. It never produces enough heat to burn the paper because the light is spread too thin. When you focus on one task instead of many, your energy is just like the sunlight passing through the magnifying glass. It intensifies and has a greater effect on whatever you’re doing. Great people understand this. They focus. And it works. Purpose People who accomplish great things have found their purpose in life. We all have a unique set of skills and talents. Part of our purpose is to use our talents and skills the best we can. Our challenge is to discover what our talents are and how we should use them. Great people have a knack for discovering this. They figure out what they’re good at and they do it. I think most come to this discovery naturally and without much thought. It’s instinctive. This is the most important lesson for anyone to learn. We need to find and follow our purpose. A man whose intellect is far superior to mine once said: “You gain points by following your unique purpose. You lose points if you follow some else’s purpose.” Proof The above lessons are helpful. With them, we can understand better how great people are able to accomplish so much. They give us a roadmap to help us on our own journey. So, one reason we have great people, who become famous, is to help the rest of us understand some of these “lessons of greatness”. They help us understand how they accomplish great things. But there is another, more important reason. Great people show us what is possible. They show the power of human potential. They give us real life examples of the potential our world has to offer. They are flesh and blood just like us, yet they have done things most people don’t even dare to dream of. Here’s an example: For centuries, people assumed the four-minute mile was impossible. The “experts” believed humans simply did not have the physical ability to run that fast. Then in 1954, Roger Bannister did the impossible. He ran a mile in less than four minutes. Six weeks later, another person broke the four-minute barrier. Since then dozens of runners have done the same thing. Once one person broke through the magical barrier, it was easier for others to do the same thing. They knew it was possible because another person had already done it. We put great people on pedestals. We do this so they can remind us we can all be great. They are real-life examples that we all have a purpose. We all have unique talents and skills. We all have the ability to accomplish great things in our lives. They help us see what does not yet exist for us. They help us see our dreams by achieving theirs. They help us have the faith and courage and persistence and focus we need to make our dreams happen. The great people in our world do a great service to the rest of us. So, next time you meet someone famous who has accomplished great things, shake their hand and thank them. I know I will.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Google Alerts - A Cure For 'Blogger's Block' Lance Rants on Iranian Leadership Bluffing for War Seven Strength Training Tips for Mature Adults
|