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Add You - Survivor Winner, Yul Kwon - $1 Million Richer... But Still Searching for His True Calling
How To Communicate Effectively With Users On A Non-Technical Level your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time.Inevitably, being a technical support contact, you are going to have to speak to a client, whether it's being the first point of contact and they have called you to report a problem, to get more information about a particular problem, or to let them know an issue has been resolved. Unfortunately, in my experience, most technicians do this the absolute wrong way.What's the wrong way, you ask? Well let me explain. For the purposes of this article, I will define a "user" as someone who has between 0 and 10 hours of total training of a particular product. Whether this means that they went to a night course on how to use Microsoft Word more effectively, or they looked at the sticker on their phone that tells them how to get their voicemail is irrelevant; they are not power users by any stretch of the imagination, just someone who knows enough to get by. Also, for our purposes the words "client" and "user" can be used interchangeably.Problem Description: User calls the helpdesk and says "I can't save my document to my network fo Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to revie How to Get What You Want Every Time! Yul Kwon, the winner of the 13th season of Survivor, is quite accomplished. He's a graduate of UC Berkeley, Stanford, and Yale Law School. He's worked as a law clerk to a federal judge and as a legislative aide to Senator Joe Lieberman. Most recently he's worked as an independent business consultant and a business strategist at Google. Quite a resume for a 31 year old!How to Get What You Want Every Time!By Nelson D. Berry www.subliminal-message.comYou know that YOU are the creator of all that occurs in all of your life experience, right?You create your physical life experience through your thoughts. Literally, every thought that you think gives birth to a creation. EVERY thought has creative power. The subconscious accepts whatever you pretend is real and will use it to create your outer reality. The thoughts that you think, regarding those things that you want, set into motion the creation, and eventual fulfillment of that which you want. And likewise, the thoughts that you think, regarding those things that you do not want, set into motion the creation, and eventual fulfillment of that which you do NOT want.Creative visualization is the technique of using your imagination to create what you want in your life. There is nothing at all new, strange or unusual about creative visualization. You are already using it every day, every minute in f And yet, according to his friends, he's still searching for his true calling...a way to make a difference. Since filming ended he's been taking time off to connect with friends and explore his interests. Although this may provide him with clues to his true calling, a random exploration of possibilities may not lead him to his dream career. Just as Yul used strategy to win Survivor, there's a strategy he can use to discover his true calling. You can also use these seven strategies to identify your future career. Strategy #1: Make sure you are striving for the right goal. When most people decide to find their dream career, they think their primary goal is to narrow the field of ideas as soon as possible. Ironically, this strategy dooms their quest to failure because they rush from one idea to the next poking holes in each one! At some point during the process they give up because they don't seem to be making any progress at all. Instead, focus your attention on creating a long list of potential career ideas based on your passions and interests. Strategy #2: Focus on the skills and interests that make you feel the way you want to feel: happy, fulfilled, challenged, etc. Although it makes practical sense at this point to focus on your most marketable skills and experience, I don't find this strategy to be very effective. As soon as you focus on practical options you cut your creativity in half and you decrease your chances of identifying your ultimate dream career. To create the list of potential career ideas mentioned in Strategy #1, you must start by creating a list of at least forty skills and interests. Don't worry about how they are all going to fit together. Don't worry about how you'll make money with them. Just focus on the heart of the matter--the skills and topics you enjoy. Finding a dream career is like going on a treasure hunt. It's only after you have all the clues in front of you (your list of favorite skills and interests) that you can find the right way to put the pieces together to solve the puzzle. (Did you ever see a Survivor Immunity Challenge or Reward where the contestants tried to solve the puzzle with just one clue? No, they always collect all the pieces they need first and then they solve the puzzle at hand.) Strategy #3: Brainstorm careers that blend your passions and interests. One of the common strategies that can kill a quest for a dream career happens when people think they have to select one of their skills or interest to focus on. This decision, and the commitment it implies, paralyzes them because they can't figure out which of their many interest to leave behind. Most dream careers are a combination of the person's unique skills and interests. If you force yourself to choose between a couple of strong interests, you are likely to loss track of the out of the box combinations that makes you unique and marketable. The other common strategy that backfires is using logic, and logic alone, to find your dream career. If you don't like what you are doing now, it's highly unlikely that a logical extension of your current career is going to be your answer. This is where brainstorming comes in. Brainstorming is a process that steps out of the box to record any and all ideas that come to mind. In this case, your goal is to randomly select 3 or 4 words from your list of favorite skills and interests to see what careers, jobs, projects, businesses, or tasks you can think of that combine as many of the words as possible. For example: If you selected graphic design, writing, organization, and teaching from your list, you might brainstorm the following career ideas: teacher, web designer, creating a publication, teaching writing, teaching web design, developing written materials to teach a topic. Don't limit yourself. Don't think about the money. Don't think about training you'll need. You don't even need to want to do the ideas you come up with. For now, just generate up to 10 ideas for each combination of four words. Keep going until you get a total of 40-50 career ideas. Sometimes the best ideas come when you have to push your mind to think in a new direction, so when you feel stuck, stick with it to see what you can discover. Strategy #4: Pinpoint your top two or three career ideas. After you have created a pool of viable ideas to work with, you can safely narrow your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time. Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to review Essential Six Sigma Software poking holes in each one! At some point during the process they give up because they don't seem to be making any progress at all.Managing Six Sigma right from data collection through to final success is a long walk of sifting through loads of raw statistical data collected from various aspects. Six Sigma software tools are basically statistical interpretation tools while a small number of them are also available for data collection itself.On top of the Six Sigma software hierarchy is the comprehensive tool of reference designed with participants including business leaders in mind. This comprehensive reference tool is helpful in providing the users with vital data essential for deign efforts and/or for making successful improvements to processes.Comprehensive Six Sigma Software ToolsIt is essential for us to concentrate on these types of comprehensive tools when discussing software tools in general. Let us see how these all-encompassing software tools act as data repositories, which can be accessed at an appropriate time for further work and interpretation. The user interfaces are excellent which guide you through maze complex tools and sub pr Instead, focus your attention on creating a long list of potential career ideas based on your passions and interests. Strategy #2: Focus on the skills and interests that make you feel the way you want to feel: happy, fulfilled, challenged, etc. Although it makes practical sense at this point to focus on your most marketable skills and experience, I don't find this strategy to be very effective. As soon as you focus on practical options you cut your creativity in half and you decrease your chances of identifying your ultimate dream career. To create the list of potential career ideas mentioned in Strategy #1, you must start by creating a list of at least forty skills and interests. Don't worry about how they are all going to fit together. Don't worry about how you'll make money with them. Just focus on the heart of the matter--the skills and topics you enjoy. Finding a dream career is like going on a treasure hunt. It's only after you have all the clues in front of you (your list of favorite skills and interests) that you can find the right way to put the pieces together to solve the puzzle. (Did you ever see a Survivor Immunity Challenge or Reward where the contestants tried to solve the puzzle with just one clue? No, they always collect all the pieces they need first and then they solve the puzzle at hand.) Strategy #3: Brainstorm careers that blend your passions and interests. One of the common strategies that can kill a quest for a dream career happens when people think they have to select one of their skills or interest to focus on. This decision, and the commitment it implies, paralyzes them because they can't figure out which of their many interest to leave behind. Most dream careers are a combination of the person's unique skills and interests. If you force yourself to choose between a couple of strong interests, you are likely to loss track of the out of the box combinations that makes you unique and marketable. The other common strategy that backfires is using logic, and logic alone, to find your dream career. If you don't like what you are doing now, it's highly unlikely that a logical extension of your current career is going to be your answer. This is where brainstorming comes in. Brainstorming is a process that steps out of the box to record any and all ideas that come to mind. In this case, your goal is to randomly select 3 or 4 words from your list of favorite skills and interests to see what careers, jobs, projects, businesses, or tasks you can think of that combine as many of the words as possible. For example: If you selected graphic design, writing, organization, and teaching from your list, you might brainstorm the following career ideas: teacher, web designer, creating a publication, teaching writing, teaching web design, developing written materials to teach a topic. Don't limit yourself. Don't think about the money. Don't think about training you'll need. You don't even need to want to do the ideas you come up with. For now, just generate up to 10 ideas for each combination of four words. Keep going until you get a total of 40-50 career ideas. Sometimes the best ideas come when you have to push your mind to think in a new direction, so when you feel stuck, stick with it to see what you can discover. Strategy #4: Pinpoint your top two or three career ideas. After you have created a pool of viable ideas to work with, you can safely narrow your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time. Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to revie Is Golf Tournament Sponsorship an Effective Form of Advertising? ight way to put the pieces together to solve the puzzle. (Did you ever see a Survivor Immunity Challenge or Reward where the contestants tried to solve the puzzle with just one clue? No, they always collect all the pieces they need first and then they solve the puzzle at hand.)Golf tournaments have become a very popular way for charity to raise money. Probably the number one reason why most companies support a tournament is an affinity for the cause. But in addition to supporting a worthy cause, golf tournament sponsorship represents an opportunity for effective advertising. This article contains some anecdotal evidence to support this theory.At a golf tournament a while ago, I happened to be on the same foursome and share a cart with one of that tournament’s major sponsors. This fellow was a marketing manager for a car dealership. His rather enviable job description included playing in tournaments that the company sponsored, which through the summer months amounted to about two or three a week. Of course, he had some other responsibilities like making sure the cars from the dealership were displayed properly and the gift bags his company sponsored got to every golfer. So it was a long day for him, showing up well before the tournament started and leaving long after the last after dinner speech was ma Strategy #3: Brainstorm careers that blend your passions and interests. One of the common strategies that can kill a quest for a dream career happens when people think they have to select one of their skills or interest to focus on. This decision, and the commitment it implies, paralyzes them because they can't figure out which of their many interest to leave behind. Most dream careers are a combination of the person's unique skills and interests. If you force yourself to choose between a couple of strong interests, you are likely to loss track of the out of the box combinations that makes you unique and marketable. The other common strategy that backfires is using logic, and logic alone, to find your dream career. If you don't like what you are doing now, it's highly unlikely that a logical extension of your current career is going to be your answer. This is where brainstorming comes in. Brainstorming is a process that steps out of the box to record any and all ideas that come to mind. In this case, your goal is to randomly select 3 or 4 words from your list of favorite skills and interests to see what careers, jobs, projects, businesses, or tasks you can think of that combine as many of the words as possible. For example: If you selected graphic design, writing, organization, and teaching from your list, you might brainstorm the following career ideas: teacher, web designer, creating a publication, teaching writing, teaching web design, developing written materials to teach a topic. Don't limit yourself. Don't think about the money. Don't think about training you'll need. You don't even need to want to do the ideas you come up with. For now, just generate up to 10 ideas for each combination of four words. Keep going until you get a total of 40-50 career ideas. Sometimes the best ideas come when you have to push your mind to think in a new direction, so when you feel stuck, stick with it to see what you can discover. Strategy #4: Pinpoint your top two or three career ideas. After you have created a pool of viable ideas to work with, you can safely narrow your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time. Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to revie The Key To Marketing New Ideas! ainstorming is a process that steps out of the box to record any and all ideas that come to mind. In this case, your goal is to randomly select 3 or 4 words from your list of favorite skills and interests to see what careers, jobs, projects, businesses, or tasks you can think of that combine as many of the words as possible.Imagine tossing a pebble into a crystal clear pond on a still day, & watching the ripples make their way to the shore. A tiny cause has a massive effect.But on a windswept stormy day? You could hurl the largest boulder into the same pool, and the effect would be felt for no more than a few feet.So it is with marketing new ideas.Your prospects are in a trance that is like a still pool of awareness. They are in an “I’m worried about money” trance. They are in an “I wish I could finally find that somebody special” trance. They are in an “I’m sick of my dead end job” trance, & so on.If you enter that trance with your words, your prospects will follow you. They will accept your suggestions. They will give those suggestions power, like the pebble that makes its presence felt on the shore, because receiving your message is effortless.On the other hand, any striving on the part of your prospect to maintain their attention on your message, because it fails to harmonize with their trance, & no power will be gran For example: If you selected graphic design, writing, organization, and teaching from your list, you might brainstorm the following career ideas: teacher, web designer, creating a publication, teaching writing, teaching web design, developing written materials to teach a topic. Don't limit yourself. Don't think about the money. Don't think about training you'll need. You don't even need to want to do the ideas you come up with. For now, just generate up to 10 ideas for each combination of four words. Keep going until you get a total of 40-50 career ideas. Sometimes the best ideas come when you have to push your mind to think in a new direction, so when you feel stuck, stick with it to see what you can discover. Strategy #4: Pinpoint your top two or three career ideas. After you have created a pool of viable ideas to work with, you can safely narrow your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time. Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to revie Career Success Is 75 Percent Confidence And 25 Percent Ability your focus to your top two or three career ideas. Begin by reviewing your list and pulling out the ten ideas you like most. Then start to look for your top two or three ideas. Do you see any themes, trends, overlap? It may be that your favorite ideas are a combination of a few of your original ideas. That's fine. You just want to make sure your top two or three ideas are indeed your favorite contenders at this point in time.I'm a great people watcher and I've been observing other people's careers for the past 25 years. OK, maybe I should have spent more time concentrating on my own career and then perhaps I would have been more successful at work myself. But, hey, I'm happy, so what the hell!Based on this long and interesting period of observation, I feel confident in saying that the most important factor when it comes to being successful in the workplace is how much confidence you have. If you're the type of guy who wants to quietly sit in the corner working away, you'll probably never get anywhere no matter how good you are. If, on the other hand, you have tons of confidence, the amount of ability you have doesn't really matter too much - you'll probably be successful. Especially if you know who to direct that confidence at. There's no point in wasting too much time talking to other workers if they have no influence on your progression up the corporate ladder. No, your time will be much better spent only talking to influential people - the ones wh Strategy #5: Verify your ideas will work for you. The riskiest action at this point is to jump into action with one of your ideas ...without verifying that it will work for you. Before you initiate your job search or start your own business, invest the time to confirm that your ideas are in fact a good fit for you and your life. Do some online research, talk to people in the jobs, connect with others in the profession. This due diligence at the front end means that you are comfortable with your career ideas before you start trying to implement your plans. In many cases this investigation will also open up possibilities you didn't even know existed. Keep a record of the websites you visit and the people you talk to so you can come back later to review everything and synthesize what you've learned. If your ideal career idea seems like too big a leap at the moment, look for possible stepping stone jobs or opportunities to help you prepare for your ultimate dream career. Strategy #6: Take the first action in front of you. Don't expect to have 100% clarity about your future at this point. If you wait for that moment before you make a move, you'll have a long wait. Each step you take in the direction of your goal will open up new connections, possibilities, and opportunities. Take the steps one by one and let your career unfold as you go. Talk to a contact, go to a professional meeting, take a class, accept a volunteer assignment that helps you build key skills. Keep your vision of what you want in your mind and let the pieces fall into place as you start walking in that direction. Strategy #7: Realize that dream careers evolve. It is highly unlikely you will land your dream career and stay there for the rest of your life. Our economy is such that most people will have 8-12 careers in their lifetime...not jobs, but careers. Your career is not a static event, it is an evolving one. Keep your eyes and ears open to changes in your industry, changes in your life, and changes in who you are. Just as a kaleidoscope changes as you rotate the viewer, your career is likely to change form and continue to evolve as you grow and your life changes. Don't be afraid of the fluid nature of your dream career. By always staying in touch with your needs and dreams you can continue to move your career in the direction that will be most meaningful to you. Understanding these seven strategies for finding your true calling can give you the edge you need to succeed. Don't try to investigate every possible career idea; focus instead on the career ideas that reflect your favorite skills and interests. In investigating these ideas other opportunities may come into view. Searching for your true calling is a journey and an adventure similar to Survivor. Just as Yul and all the players needed strategy, passion, perseverance, and patience to succeed, you will do well to incorporate these elements into your quest for your dream career. Good luck on your journey of discovery. Copyright (c) 2006 Transition Dynamics Enterprises, Inc.
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