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Showing posts from February, 2024

7 Habits for a Life Filled with Passion and Purpose

This week in class we focused on learning the seven habits of highly effective people found in the book of the same name written by Steven R. Covey. It was interesting to me to see some familiar concepts that I have learned at various workshops and conferences throughout my life.  I have never read the book itself, but the first three habits that our reading covered, be proactive, begin with the end in mind, and put first things first, were all concepts that I have been taught previously. Each of these three habits together form the basis of what Mr. Covey calls the private victory.  The private victory is, essentially, getting yourself under control first.  These three habits help us consciously choose our reactions to our circumstances, create a destination for ourselves based upon our talents, interests and strengths, and then learn how to manage our time effectively.  All three skills are critical to have in our personal tool box in order to be successful in any ...

Loyalty to God and Family

This week in our entrepreneurship class, we watched a video clip entitled, "Loyalty to God and Family" presented by Jan Newman. In this short clip he spoke about how as entrepreneurs we should always maintain our loyalty first and foremost to God and our family.  Often in the entrepreneurial world the pressures of creating a business naturally lead to putting more important but often less pressing matters to the side in order to deal with the urgent, albeit less weightier matters of the business. In the long run it is the family and our devotion to God that ends up getting short changed because we reason that God and our family will always be there after the pressing problem has resolved.  But the reality is that there will always be one pressing problem after another when running a business and if God and our families are constantly shuffled to the side, we lose our foundation that brought the business opportunity into existence in the first place. Even though the temptation...

A Hero's Journey

 This week in class we explored what allows us to gain mastery. Mastery in a skill, mastery in a situation and mastery in a life all come down to perseverance.  Talent helps, education helps, relationships help, but without perseverance, mastery falls apart.  There are many things we can do to help build our perseverance and a greater level of mastery. First, it helps to know what we are trying to master.  This week we watched a video of a speech given at BYU-Idaho called "A Hero's Journey."  Within this speech I found several golden nuggets that can help each of us on the path to mastery.   The first golden nugget that I found had to do with finding what sets of skills and talents we have that we should work towards mastering.  It was suggested to find five people that are well known to us and ask them what we do better than anyone else in the world.  Press for concrete examples and evidence that supports why we do that thing better than oth...

What was I born to do?

Throughout this course, so far we have studied creating a vision of our future self.  This has included examining our childhood dreams, the goals we have for our future, and the core values that we want to embody.  Each of these components are crucial for setting our own personal course to who we want to become. I am fully on board with this line of thinking.  It resonates with me and I embrace it whole heartedly.  But there is still a big looming question mark to this plan that I just haven't figured out yet.  What was I born to do? In the video segment, "Do What You Love," Tom Kelley talks about a time when he heard Jim Collins lecture concerning a Venn diagram that had as the three intersecting circles:  What are you good at? What were you born to do? What will people pay you for? Mr. Kelley related that people usually have a pretty good handle on knowing what they're good at and market research is really helpful to know what kinds of things people will ...