4 Tips For The Successful Businessman

Written by Joop Liefaard


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3. Enough is enough When Bald Eagles catch prey, they will catch only one fish at a time. It is not possible for them to catch more. But they know precisely how to catch this one fish. Their flying skills, their strong talons and their eyesight are extremely well developed and fit forrepparttar job. Almost every attempt to catch a prey is successful. This phenomenom also holds a wise lesson forrepparttar 106140 businessman. He has to restrict himself to a number of products he can handle and products that matches his skills and abilities. To stay inrepparttar 106141 animal world: if you are a cow don't try to jump fences like a horse. People will only laugh at you. It is better to sell one product very well than ten without a satisfying result. 4. Courage Bald eagles mate for life and they are absolutely loyal to each other. From high altitudesrepparttar 106142 two birds tumble down in a dangerous free fall. Mockingrepparttar 106143 laws of gravity they unite. Only just aboverepparttar 106144 tree tops they separate and fly wing by wing torepparttar 106145 nest. This spectacular show requires great courage. A businessman also needs courage to be successful. He has to make decisions about difficult and uncertain subjects. And he also needs to know when to stop his free fall. Having courage to make difficult decisions is not synonymous for being reckless. A decision that leads to disaster is not a decision, but a wild guess. You see....the businessman can learn a great deal from this majestic bird that embodies not only beauty, strength and freedom but that possesses alsorepparttar 106146 essential conditions and abilities to survive. The beginning businessman as well, who is maybe starting his business in great uncertainty aboutrepparttar 106147 future, can learn fromrepparttar 106148 bald eagle: Flying high starts with spreading your wings!

Joop Liefaard is Human Resources Manager and started an online business in 2002. He applies his experience and knowledge about organizing businesses in his new online one and found striking similarities and agreeable differences. Joop invites you to take a look at his web site, www.eagleye.info, where you can find information about three successful programs and where you also can subscribe to his weekly newsletter.


First Aid For Writer's Block

Written by Marcia Yudkin


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7. Repeat prior successes. Remember how you successfully started or completed something earlier in your life, and reuse that strategy.

8. Do it wrongly. Try writing your piece very badly. You may find you've created a halfway decent version with hardly any effort.

9. Start typing any old thing. Someone in one of my seminars got started every morning by typingrepparttar Gettysburg Address ("Four score and seven years ago..."). Beforerepparttar 106139 end, she'd always segue into what she really wanted to write.

10. Visualize. Close your eyes and imagine your book or report completed, with a beautiful cover. In your mind's eye, open it and begin reading. Write down what it says.

The above is excerpted from "No More Writer's Block! Become a Prolific Writer," a special report by Marcia Yudkin that details ten ways to balance discipline with inspiration and introduces you to five techniques that allow you to get a lot of writing done in a short amount of time. More information: http://www.yudkin.com/reports.htm


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