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Cultivating Your Enterprising Nature
by
Jim Rohn
Everyone
has the same 24 hours in a day. Enterprising people simply do more with
their 24 hours — working not harder but smarter.
We're all aware that many people feel that we must be careful when
focusing on money or affluence or abundance … that in the pursuit of
those things, there is danger. If you pursue money and affluence to the
exclusion of other values in life, you have lost, not won.
However, let's consider this question: If you could do better
financially, should you? In the time you have allotted to labor,
economics, success, achievement, productivity, the creation of value,
the development of skills and creativity, if you could do better,
should you?
I believe one of the greatest satisfactions of living life to the
fullest is doing the best you can with whatever you have. Doing
anything less than your best has a way of eroding the psyche.
We
are creatures of enterprise. Life seems to say to us, "Here are the raw
materials — your creativity, and 24 hours to use it. What splendid
things can you produce?"
The Enterprising Person
Enterprising people are those people disciplined and dedicated enough
to seize opportunities that present themselves ... regardless of the
current situation, struggles, or obstacles.
Think
of a few people you know who are enterprising. Think of people in the
news, in your office, in your neighborhood, who manage to succeed
regardless of the obstacles. What do these people have in common?
They're
probably always on the go, developing a plan, following a plan,
reworking the plan until it fits. They're probably resourceful, never
letting anything get in the way. They probably don't understand the
word no when it applies to their visions of the future.
And,
when faced with a problem, they probably say, "Let's figure out a way
to make it work," instead of, "It won't work."
Enterprising people see the future in the present. They will always
find a way to take advantage of situations, not be burdened by them.
And enterprising people aren't lazy.
They
don't wait for opportunities to come to them; they go after the
opportunities. Enterprising means always finding a way to keep yourself
actively working toward your ambition.
However, we humans can be particularly creative at working at less than
our potential.
Work Smarter
It's an obvious — yet often overlooked — truth: Rich people have 24
hours a day. And, poor people have 24 hours a day.
The difference between the rich and the poor is in the management of
that time. Successful people often work harder and longer than most,
but they almost always work smarter.
If we get more from ourselves, if we can make an hour as valuable as 10
hours used to be, we can get as much done in a day as we used to get
done in a week. Imagine the potential compounding effect of working
smarter.
By
practicing a few simple disciplines every day, you can use time like
the rich — with focus and effectiveness.
1) Run the day, or it will run
you. Part of the key to time management is staying in charge.
Some will be masters of their time, and some will be servants.
Enterprising people become the masters of their time.
To master your time, you must have clear written goals for each day
that you keep with you at all times. It helps to create each day's list
the night before. Prioritize your goals for the day and constantly
review them.
And here's a good question to ask yourself constantly: Is this a major
activity or a minor activity? By asking that question, you will reduce
the amazingly natural tendency to spend major time on minor things.
In
sales training, we are taught that major time is the time spent in the
presence of the prospect, while minor time is the time spent on the way
to the prospect. If you are not careful, you will spend more time "on
the way to" than "in the presence of" your goals.
Before you answer an email, ask yourself if this is a major activity or
a minor activity. Before you make a phone call, ask yourself if this is
a major phone call or a minor phone call.
Enterprising
people don't let the minor activities distract them from the major
activities — the ones that hold the keys to their success.
2) Don't mistake activity for
productivity. You probably know some people who always seem to
be busy being busy. To be successful, you must be busy being
productive. Some people are going, going, going, but they're doing
figure eights.
They're
not making much progress. Don't mistake activity for productivity,
movement for achievement. Evaluate the hours in your days, and see if
there is wasted time that you could manage better.
Remember there is an opportunity cost to every single activity you do.
The time you spend doing one thing is time you could spend doing
something else. Before investing your time in anything, briefly ask
yourself if this is the highest-leverage activity you could be doing to
accomplish the most important priority on your list for the day.
And,
make sure the activities on your list for the day are the
highest-leverage opportunities to accomplish your short- and long-term
goals.
3) Focus. The third key
to time management is good concentration. You've got to zero in on the
job at hand and, like an ant, let nothing stand in your way and let
nothing distract you from the task.
Assuming
this is a major activity in pursuit of the highest-leverage opportunity
available, there should be nothing more valuable to invest your time in.
This is easier said than done. Concentration takes a lot of discipline.
It takes discipline to demand privacy, to not react to the minor
activities that try to demand your attention, such as new emails and
ringing phones.
If you have a long list of things to get done within one day, do the
toughest one while your concentration is at its peak. If you're a
morning person, get the job done in the morning.
Don't
wait until the evening when your energy is all spent. Do the jobs that
need the most concentration when your body is best able to handle them.
One of the greatest enemies of this sort of concentration is worry.
Worrying about your future can prevent you from being where you are
right now. We all have worries, and they are useful.
But,
don't let worry distract you. Stay focused on changing what you can
change — that is the only true way to overcome the source of your worry
anyhow.
Enterprise is always better than ease. Every time we choose to do less
than we possibly can, we limit our possibilities — we stifle our
potential.
You
can alter your life by doing a little more each day to work smarter, by
developing a habit of efficiency rather than the habit of activity.
The Ant Philosophy
When was the last time you saw ants reach an obstacle and give up with
their heads down and head back to the ant hole to relax? Never. If
they're headed somewhere and you try to stop them, they will look for
another way.
They'll
climb over, they'll climb under, they'll go around — regardless of the
effort involved. What a neat philosophy, to never quit looking for a
way to get where you're supposed to go.
Here's another question. How much will an ant gather during the summer
to prepare for winter? All that it possibly can.
Ants
don't have quotas or "good enough" philosophies. They don't gather a
certain amount and then head back to the hole to "hang out." If an ant
can do more, it does.
Imagine what you could accomplish if you never quit and always did all
that you could do.
To Your Success,
Jim Rohn
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more perspectives
by Jim Rohn :
"Let
others
lead small lives, but not you. Let others argue over small things, but
not you. Let others cry over small hurts, but not you. Let others leave
their future in someone else's hands, but not you."
"Earn
as much
money as you possibly can and as quickly as you can. The sooner you get
money out of the way, the sooner you will be able to get to the rest of
your problems in style."
"Some
people
have learned to earn well, but they haven't learned to live well."
"Lifestyle
is
the art of discovering ways to live uniquely."
~ ~
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