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From Motivation to Motive-Action by Dr. Denis Waitley With the passing of every new
year, each of us needs to understand the magnitude of social and
economic change in the world. In the past, change in business and
social life was incremental and a set of personal strategies for
achieving excellence was not required. Today, in the knowledge-based
world, where change is the rule, a set of personal strategies is
essential for success, even survival. Never again will you be able to
go to your place of business on autopilot, comfortable and secure that
the organization, state or government will provide for and look after
you. The
power brokers in the new global arena will be the knowledge
facilitators. Ignorance will be even more the tyrant and enslaver than
in the past. As you look in the mirror to see the 21st Century you,
there will also be another image standing beside you. It is your
competition. Hungry for
knowledge. Smart, quick thinking, skilled and willing to do anything
necessary to be competitive in the world marketplace. Working long
hours and Saturdays, staying open later, serving customers better and
more cheerfully. To be a player in the 21st
Century you have to be
willing to give more in service than you receive in payment. What this means is that you are
your own Chief Executive Officer of
your future. Start thinking of yourself as a service company with a
single employee. You're a small company that puts your services to work
for a larger company. Tomorrow you may sell those
services to a
different organization, but that doesn't mean you're any less loyal to
your current employer. Taking responsibility for yourself in this way
does mean that you never equate your personal long-term interests with
your employer's. Today's typical employees are no
longer one-career people. Most will have five separate careers in their
lifetimes. Remember, your competition is a hungry immigrant with a
laptop. Action Step Number One is to consider yourself to be
self-employed, but be a team player. We live in a time-starved,
overstressed, violent society. Much of our
over-reaction to what happens to us every day is a result of our
self-indulgent value system, where we blame others for our problems,
look to organizations or the government for our solutions, thirst for
immediate sensual gratification and believe we should have privileges
without responsibilities. This condition is manifested in
the high
crime rate and in the increase in violence in the work place where
employees blame their managers for threatening their security. I rarely, if ever, get upset
with what
people say, do or don't do, even if it inconveniences me. I do react
emotionally when I see someone physically or emotionally abusing or
victimizing another. But I've learned not to sweat the small stuff. ~ ~ ~
Denis Waitley, PhD has created leadership programs for the U.S. Navy, participated in conventions with Bell South and DuPont and delivered keynote speeches for multinational financial service companies, healthcare providers, and universities. He delivered his legendary mental training for Olympians during the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. In addition to his popularity in the United
States, Denis
Waitley is one of the most prominent high performance coaches in
Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Latin America, Malaysia, Singapore,
Taiwan, and China. Denis Waitley titles include
Seeds of Greatness; The Seven Sacred Truths; More writings, programs available from
Nightingale-Conant ~ ~ ~ |
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