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The Role of a Visual Vocabulary in Brand Identity Design vers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers.Visual elements are a major part of your business’s brand identity design. The keystone of that design is the logo, but in many cases, the logo isn’t enough to convey all of your brand attributes. A visual vocabulary is a way to reinforce and add to the messaging that is contained in your logo.A company’s visual vocabulary consists of the secondary design elements that are used in conjunction with your logo to form your brand identity. The visual vocabulary is composed of font styles, colors, shapes, layout conventions, backgrounds, photographic library, text treatments (such as taglines) and even the type of paper you choose Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it There Is No Huge Correlation Between Education and Income and Here Is Why - Part 1 Habits get a bum rap. When you think about your habits, I bet you think of the “bad” ones - the ones that you aren’t particularly proud of, like eating too much sugar, or smoking, or dwelling on your negative thoughts. According to Webster’s dictionary a habit simply is: A pattern or action that is acquired and has become so automatic that it is difficult to break.(Editor's Note: A client e-mailed me yesterday about her student loan debts that netted her 3 college degrees and a job without a commensurate income and future. She has a Bachelor of Arts Degree from New York University, a second Bachelor of Arts Degree from the London Institute and a Master of Arts Degree from the University of London. My unvarnished answers to her questions follow. I changed her name since I could not contact her in time to use her name.)Happy Holidays Ed Bagley,I had a follow-up question to your three-part series on "Six Power Secrets of Getting Hired and Promoted."If education is not a gr It’s easy to see how if you start a behavior, and continue to reinforce it, it quickly becomes a habit. The pint of Ben and Jerry’s after dinner, playing Free Cell when you should be making calls, or always leaping to a negative conclusion when something happens. Once habits are formed, they can be hard to break, correct? Get ready for a new perspective – habits can be good! What if, instead of relating to your habit as a problem, you were able to use your habits creatively to help you be more successful? Since habits are a natural part of our human experience (for better or worse), learning to capitalize on your innate ability to form positive patterns can mean a very successful life and business. Here are 5 habits that successful entrepreneurs can learn to develop. 1. Build resilience. You don’t need me to tell you - part of what goes with the territory when you’re self-employed is the incessant up and down of sales and cash flow. This is probably the number one stress producer for entrepreneurs. Building the habit of resilience will help you to elegantly weather the unavoidable ups and downs. You build resilience by building your reserves. Some examples of reserves are cash (having 6-9 months of savings in the bank), self-esteem (plenty of positive regard for yourself) or confidence (feeling like an expert in your field). What creates the most worry for you when faced with a stressor in your business? Focus on building a reserve of what ever will counter your number one stressor. 2. Become a passion junkie. Passion is an emotion – it’s a feeling of excitement and intensity. It arises when you recognize something that authentically resounds in your being, and is a result of love and affinity. You know when you feel it and you know when it’s missing. Unfortunately, many people have developed the default habit of connecting with the emotion of fear instead. Fear (unless a polar bear is chasing you) fuels negative thinking and always results in stress. How do you connect with your passion? How can you begin to disqualify the fear-based thoughts that want to hog the road (of your mind)? Once you discover your passion, or remember it, taking active steps to stay connected to it will begin a new practice and encourage the passion habit in your life. 3. Be authentic. According to psychologist, Abraham Maslow, “Authenticity is the reduction of phoniness toward the zero point.” Strive to be honest in your personal and professional dealings so your behavior and speech are a true and spontaneous expression of your inner self. Live in a way that expresses your real vision, values and characteristics. Do you know who you truly are? By knowing yourself first, you will develop the habit of authenticity. What you put into the world will begin to be congruent with what you receive back from the world. 4. Work smarter not harder. If you’re not careful, working hard can deteriorate into an exhausting habit, rather than an expression of an ethic. Often what drives and motivates entrepreneurs is the desire for success, but the pursuit of success often comes with mental baggage that can undermine it. What are the mental “tapes” that cycle through your thought stream to undermine you? “I’ve got to work hard and prove myself”; “If I don’t do it myself, it won’t get done” or perhaps, ”If I could just put in more time, I’d get it all done”. Begin to build the habit of working smarter not harder. Counter the disempowering messages with some practical actions that put your business more on autopilot. Improve your systems, take the time to plan, and delegate. 5. Practice generosity. The international business networking organization BNI’s motto is “Givers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers. Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it I'm a Businessperson, I Don't Need To Be Creative - Or Do I? atterns can mean a very successful life and business.You may think you don't need to be creative. But creativity can help you do a better job of what you do. Just look at the military. Who would think that stand-up-straight-and-stick-the-gut-in military needed to be creative? All they do is follow orders - or so we think. But the US military was one of the first modern organizations to realize that innovation could help them. They organized an elite team to investigate innovative giants as well as all creative problem solving methods and techniques. They then applied these creativity techniques to "NATO military, intelligence and political problems," getting inventive solutions to new as well Here are 5 habits that successful entrepreneurs can learn to develop. 1. Build resilience. You don’t need me to tell you - part of what goes with the territory when you’re self-employed is the incessant up and down of sales and cash flow. This is probably the number one stress producer for entrepreneurs. Building the habit of resilience will help you to elegantly weather the unavoidable ups and downs. You build resilience by building your reserves. Some examples of reserves are cash (having 6-9 months of savings in the bank), self-esteem (plenty of positive regard for yourself) or confidence (feeling like an expert in your field). What creates the most worry for you when faced with a stressor in your business? Focus on building a reserve of what ever will counter your number one stressor. 2. Become a passion junkie. Passion is an emotion – it’s a feeling of excitement and intensity. It arises when you recognize something that authentically resounds in your being, and is a result of love and affinity. You know when you feel it and you know when it’s missing. Unfortunately, many people have developed the default habit of connecting with the emotion of fear instead. Fear (unless a polar bear is chasing you) fuels negative thinking and always results in stress. How do you connect with your passion? How can you begin to disqualify the fear-based thoughts that want to hog the road (of your mind)? Once you discover your passion, or remember it, taking active steps to stay connected to it will begin a new practice and encourage the passion habit in your life. 3. Be authentic. According to psychologist, Abraham Maslow, “Authenticity is the reduction of phoniness toward the zero point.” Strive to be honest in your personal and professional dealings so your behavior and speech are a true and spontaneous expression of your inner self. Live in a way that expresses your real vision, values and characteristics. Do you know who you truly are? By knowing yourself first, you will develop the habit of authenticity. What you put into the world will begin to be congruent with what you receive back from the world. 4. Work smarter not harder. If you’re not careful, working hard can deteriorate into an exhausting habit, rather than an expression of an ethic. Often what drives and motivates entrepreneurs is the desire for success, but the pursuit of success often comes with mental baggage that can undermine it. What are the mental “tapes” that cycle through your thought stream to undermine you? “I’ve got to work hard and prove myself”; “If I don’t do it myself, it won’t get done” or perhaps, ”If I could just put in more time, I’d get it all done”. Begin to build the habit of working smarter not harder. Counter the disempowering messages with some practical actions that put your business more on autopilot. Improve your systems, take the time to plan, and delegate. 5. Practice generosity. The international business networking organization BNI’s motto is “Givers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers. Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it Making Lemonade: Starting a Business After Ending a Career cally resounds in your being, and is a result of love and affinity. You know when you feel it and you know when it’s missing.What do you do when the money tree starts sprouting lemons?It’s increasingly common these days to find middle-aged, mid-level managers suddenly faced with huge shifts of circumstance. Down-sizing, bubble-bursting, plant-closing, and consolidating are just some of the forces creating a class of sudden solo-preneurs.At 50-something you face particularly difficult job-hunting challenges. Your salary range is high. Your network is decent after so many years, but jobs at your level are few. You’ve been there, done that, and thought you were finished with all that new trick-learning.A big upset like job loss can provide a shi Unfortunately, many people have developed the default habit of connecting with the emotion of fear instead. Fear (unless a polar bear is chasing you) fuels negative thinking and always results in stress. How do you connect with your passion? How can you begin to disqualify the fear-based thoughts that want to hog the road (of your mind)? Once you discover your passion, or remember it, taking active steps to stay connected to it will begin a new practice and encourage the passion habit in your life. 3. Be authentic. According to psychologist, Abraham Maslow, “Authenticity is the reduction of phoniness toward the zero point.” Strive to be honest in your personal and professional dealings so your behavior and speech are a true and spontaneous expression of your inner self. Live in a way that expresses your real vision, values and characteristics. Do you know who you truly are? By knowing yourself first, you will develop the habit of authenticity. What you put into the world will begin to be congruent with what you receive back from the world. 4. Work smarter not harder. If you’re not careful, working hard can deteriorate into an exhausting habit, rather than an expression of an ethic. Often what drives and motivates entrepreneurs is the desire for success, but the pursuit of success often comes with mental baggage that can undermine it. What are the mental “tapes” that cycle through your thought stream to undermine you? “I’ve got to work hard and prove myself”; “If I don’t do it myself, it won’t get done” or perhaps, ”If I could just put in more time, I’d get it all done”. Begin to build the habit of working smarter not harder. Counter the disempowering messages with some practical actions that put your business more on autopilot. Improve your systems, take the time to plan, and delegate. 5. Practice generosity. The international business networking organization BNI’s motto is “Givers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers. Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it Live Chat Support and Non-profit Organizations wing yourself first, you will develop the habit of authenticity. What you put into the world will begin to be congruent with what you receive back from the world.Non-profit organizations have probably established web-presence to present the goals of the organization, to provide information about current and finished projects and probably attract more people to join you. These institutions can include educational facilities (schools, faculties, and research institutes), embassies, organizations supporting businesses or even government bodies.If you are a non-profit website owner, you must also have goals identified which you are trying to achieve through web-presence. For example: bloggers, independent journalists or experts in any field.In the both cases, when profit is not in question 4. Work smarter not harder. If you’re not careful, working hard can deteriorate into an exhausting habit, rather than an expression of an ethic. Often what drives and motivates entrepreneurs is the desire for success, but the pursuit of success often comes with mental baggage that can undermine it. What are the mental “tapes” that cycle through your thought stream to undermine you? “I’ve got to work hard and prove myself”; “If I don’t do it myself, it won’t get done” or perhaps, ”If I could just put in more time, I’d get it all done”. Begin to build the habit of working smarter not harder. Counter the disempowering messages with some practical actions that put your business more on autopilot. Improve your systems, take the time to plan, and delegate. 5. Practice generosity. The international business networking organization BNI’s motto is “Givers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers. Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it Your'e Fired! vers Gain”. The premise is – more will come back to you if you focus on generously giving to your business network, and your customers.One-day you’re minding your own business and your boss comes in and says "You’re Fired", perhaps he was a bit more polite than that but the end result was the same, you’re now out of work!!Now what do you do?Well get over the initial shock and look at the whole experience as a positive, this maybe the break you have been waiting for, no more excuses for not doing what you’ve always wanted to do, that is too work for yourself and if that's not what you always wanted to do, it is now, because you may not have any other choice.Okay, just got the sack and now suddenly thrust into the world of the entrepreneur! What next? Fi Giving, providing value, or offering superlative customer service is an attractive attribute and positive habit to develop. Tim Sanders, author of “Love Is The Killer App” articulates this business idea as, “the act of intelligently and sensibly sharing your intangibles with your business partners”. This value can drive your business and your life up as far as you want it to go. What intangibles do you have to offer your world? What shift in your success and happiness do you see possible by focusing on giving rather than gaining? If creating a habit is as easy as starting a behavior, and then repeating it (practice), consider the positive and powerful habits you could begin to form in your life and business, starting today! Going back to Webster’s definition, a positive habit would be equally hard to break. Wouldn’t that be nice for a change? It’s YOUR life... live it completely!
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