Positive Thoughts


November 29, 2008

Unlock Your Hidden Potential: The Case for Self Improvement

By Ray Subs

  If you are looking for a way to tap your hidden potential, look into the topic of self-improvement. It is theorized that people only use two percent of their brain. That extra 98% is just sitting there waiting to be unlocked. One such method that you can use is the ARS process: Activation Reconditioning Stimulus process. This process can help you in whatever way you want to improve yourself: from becoming rich to getting skinny, unlocking your learning potential to finding true love.

The ARS process (or any self-improvement process) is designed to help the reader recondition themselves to do things in such a way they that meet their potential regardless of what that potential is. This particular self-improvement series presents takes 90 days to complete the learning aspect and the actions you must take. At the end of the 90 days, you will have everything you need to change your life around for the better. What is good about a 90 day program is that you can build strong new habits so that you are unlocking your hidden potential.

Any self improvement process will work on remaking your inner world. To be more specific to the ARS process, the concept behind the ARS process is that everyone has the potential to be more than they are by changing their inner mind to create your outer world. By changing the way you think and do things all around, you can affect the way things in your life turn out. You will become more successful than you have been before in everything you do once you have studied and mastered a self-improvement process such as the ARS process.

As with every type of self-help process it is up to the individual to use the materials in such a way that they receive the maximum benefits the series will provide and not everyone will have the same results. It comes down to how much effort you are willing to exert will have a strong effect on the kind of outcome you can expect to see. Anyone who follows the 90 day method may find that the techniques taught in one can help them in other aspects of their lives simply by applying the techniques all around their lives. Self improvement can work within any part of your life as long as you have an open mind and are willing to put the effort in.

Article Source : Article King Pro - Free Reprints and Distribution

Ray Subs is a public relations specialist working with Dr. Imagine That. For more advice about unlimited realities visitdrimaginethat.com.

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November 27, 2008

Do You Have An Entrepreneurial Personality

By michelle simms

  For years, researchers have debated over whether the entrepreneurial personality is an innate or learned behavior.

Economists, sociologist, and psychologists have all weighed in on the issue in hopes of ascertaining whether successful startup businessmen and women can be made, or whether they are simply born with the skills to create innovative and thriving companies.

However, as scientists have found with so many other aspects of human personalities, tendencies, and even diseases, the answer in the great debate between nature and nurture often lies somewhere in the middle.

Although some entrepreneurial traits are inborn and some people have the predisposition to become entrepreneurs, other traits can be taught and even those without the initial inclination toward business success can flourish with dedication, practice and hard work.

What are the central aspects of an entrepreneurial personality?

Whether entrepreneurial characteristics are inherited or learned, most experts agree on what these traits consist of. Generally, those with the entrepreneurial personality are:

- Independent. Entrepreneurs enjoy working on their own and being in charge of their own projects. They have difficult working for others or executing others’ ideas without adding their individual spin.

They would rather work for themselves and chance failure than work for a regular paycheck and feel security.

- Willing to take calculated risks. While most people enjoy the safety and comfort that comes with regular work and a patterned lifestyle, entrepreneurs are willing to put themselves on the line for their ideas.

However, they also understand how to calculate these risks and protect what they have worked so hard to create.

- Creative. Simply said, entrepreneurs think outside the box. They are constantly looking at the world in a new light and considering how a product or service could be improved.

They often take fresh angles on old problems or harness new technology for novel uses.

- Hard to satisfy. Entrepreneurs are not satisfied with moderate success. They often think many steps ahead of where they are now and often quickly invest profits into new projects, businesses, marketing campaigns, and ideas.

Even when their business is going well, they are constantly striving to improve and innovate it.

- Energetic, driven and passionate. Even if you have all of the other traits of an entrepreneur, it is almost impossible to succeed through the long hours and hard work needed to create a successful business with out energy, drive, and passion.

Not only do these traits help businesses get off the ground, but they also improve the energy, drive, and passion of those working for him or her.

- Self-Confident. In business, being hesitant or unsure can quickly lead to failure and often prevent business deals and opportunities.

The ability to convince others to believe in your product is sometimes as simple as sincerely believing in your product yourself. If you think you can succeed, you improve your chances of success significantly.

- Able to learn as they go. You often hear of this or that entrepreneur who never attended high school or who dropped out of college. However, this does not mean that they are not educated or that they cannot learn.

It simply means that they often have the ability to learn through experience and extract practical lessons from real-life situations and ventures.

How can one hone the skills and traits of successful entrepreneurs?

While some of the above traits, such as a passion for what you do, have large intrinsic and innate aspects that we can’t altogether change in ourselves, many of the facets of the entrepreneurial personality can be practiced, improved upon, and learned.

For example, although some put forth that creativity is something you are simply born with, the truth is that you can hone and sharpen your creative mind.

Many agree that the simple act of sitting down and brainstorming will improve your ability to think critically about the world around you - that is, even though some might be born with the gift of being creative without a concerted effort, all of us can learn the skills and steps that creative people take when developing ideas and detailing the particulars of a new venture.

The ability to learn as you go is another skill that, while it can be a natural ability, can also be perfected by those born without the inclination. Step back from a recent business transaction or plan that you were recently involved with.

How could it have been executed more smoothly next time? How did the other person act, and what aspects of their business could be remodeled and molded to help your own enterprise? How could you have saved time and money?

Another step that you can take toward becoming a more successful entrepreneur is to simply become comfortable with aspects of the entrepreneurial personality that may seem uncomfortable, difficult, or awkward to you.

Perhaps you want to act independently and take more calculated risks, but find that you are stopped by your fears or by other conflicting personality traits that you might have. In this case, you need to ease yourself into the idea of becoming more independent by taking small steps in that direction and by completing small tasks that familiarize yourself with these thoughts and actions.

In the end, the key to becoming a successful entrepreneur may lie in the ability to self-reflect and learn to emulate those successful entrepreneurs that have come before us.

Copyright 2009 Michelle P Simms, personal development coach. My ideal client is not defined by a specific profession, but by the passion she has to grow personally and professionally. Michelle works with women around the globe. You can find her at http://www.SimmsInternational.com

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