One
of the best clues to whether someone understands the
art of being successful is their reaction to the important
challenges that come at them.
Those
who will succeed have a characteristic way of reacting
to great challenges, which may present themselves as
opportunities, problems, or dangers. The succeeders
set everything else aside when they believe that the
right time to cope with a major challenge has arrived.
Then they put all their energy into dealing with that
challenge. They face it squarely, although this
doesn't always mean they will make a frontal assault
on it. Succeeders look at problems and opportunities
realistically, but their solutions often involve slipping
through the side door. They go with what works,
knowing that frontal attacks are beaten off more often
than they succeed.
Those
who have chosen failure, disaster, and mediocrity do
the opposite. They ignore the problem or opportunity
as long and thoroughly as they can. Instead of
facing the difficulty squarely when they finally can't
ignore it any more, they moan and groan, run to and
fro, and waste time trying to get help where no help
will be forthcoming. Rather than taking action,
they worry. When they finally make their move,
they hit the danger with too little too late, or chase
after an already lost opportunity in a futile effort
to come from behind.
The
key element in dealing with all challenges, whether
they are problems or opportunities, is timing.
When you're faced with a challenge, take fast and effective
action that has a good chance of winning, or sit that
one out. Make your decision early and then live
with it. No move at all is better than a late move.
You
can receive more information about Tom Hopkins as well as receive
20% off his audio and book products by going to www.yoursuccessstore.com
or calling 877-929-0439. |