perseverance

How Can You Use the Compounding Effect to Achieve What You Want?

If you’re like me, you have plenty of improvement goals. I have personal, professional, and office-cleanup goals. (Since my office appears to be a perennial mess, I count that as a separate and very subsidiary goal.) I often use the compounding effect to make those improvements. The compounding effect works very well for money. Put

How Can You Use the Compounding Effect to Achieve What You Want? Read More »

​Three Ways to Show Others the Value of Your Adaptability and Resilience​

Despite all the uncertainty we see these days, some people still value predictions and certainty over adaptability and resilience. Then, when their predictions and certainty don’t work, these folks suddenly value adaptability. When we show others the value of our flexibility, we don’t surprise ourselves with fake certainty. We can, especially if we show others

​Three Ways to Show Others the Value of Your Adaptability and Resilience​ Read More »

Are You Competing With Others or Modeling Yourself After Their Accomplishments?

I’ve been speaking a ton this year, primarily around the Modern Management Made Easy books. Some meeting facilitators have a little trouble with the idea I wrote 18 books. Some people can’t believe it. (Literally. They say, “I can’t believe it!” I laugh.) Some facilitators ask how many more I plan to write. (Many!) One

Are You Competing With Others or Modeling Yourself After Their Accomplishments? Read More »

What Do You Want to Accomplish so You Don’t Create Regrets?

Do you ever reflect and realize you didn’t accomplish something you wanted to? I don’t regret much in my life. I have one big exception to that—when my mouth says something before my brain realizes I’ve even said anything. (Some of us extroverts have the mouth-engage-before-brain problem. Infrequently, introverts also have this problem.) If I realize what

What Do You Want to Accomplish so You Don’t Create Regrets? Read More »