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天使投资唐 发表于 2014-7-21 20:24:44 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
初创要专一,和成长避险要多元化投资的矛盾!//@Nero初恋印象: 是啊 汇丰抛弃了中国平安,IBM能完成华丽的转身,但索尼想效仿,但没有勇气放弃,所以导致现在连年亏损,因为业务单一所以专注,以至于赢得消费者的心,相信这就是专业,有时需要学会舍弃才能走的更远,不是中国企业的今天做大,德国一个做钉子的企业会有上百年的历史,那你还不会信赖他吗 //@天使投资唐: 似乎成功的亚洲公司都有强大的综合实力?都是大集团!这些大集团的存在是否因为亚洲崛起时都缺乏配套诚信可靠的产业链?要成功就要做铁人三项!但大多欧美公司都专一//@华王投资:是的 重工 保险 汽车 通信 化工 神马的都有//@王迎波:三星还造汽车,卖保险呢,这个庞然大物在韩国无所不能


http://account-planning-confessi ... tions-vs-brand.html
Single-minded Propositions vs. Brand Sustainability


I got inspired watching a documentary about the nature of money & currencies. An economist who develops new currencies for the world quoted an insight from sustainability research:
"While efficiency is highly appreciated in our world, it's not very good for the sustainability of a system if it goes too far." In his field this means that different, only partially exchangeable currencies would make the financial systems more sustainable and crisis-resistent.
So I just transformed the diagram he has drawn to explain this into one that is rather about brands and their sustainability. So if we see brands rather as "meaning systems" and not as "meaning points" the curve goes like this:
Brand sustainability is highest when there's enough diversity in the brand's "meaning layers". Single-mindedness as an absolute goal of brands kills them in the long run.  
Well, obviously, this is merely hearsay and just a hypothesis. But it's nice to see it as a simple curve





Marcoms in the 21st Century
http://www.themarketingbureau.co ... n_the_21st_Century/


Single Minded Proposition? or Juvenile Twaddle?
Saatchi & Saatchi described the role of advertising as being “to make a single minded proposition come alive in a compelling way”. It is a powerful insight into how we, as human beings, receive, process and respond to information, something with which we are assaulted in increasing volumes, as each week goes by.
Someone else has articulated the AIDA Model of communications “cut through” – Attention. Interest. Desire. Action.
Wikipedia explains it thus:
A - Attention (Awareness): attract the attention of the customer.
I - Interest: raise customer interest by demonstrating features, advantages, and benefits.
D - Desire: convince customers that they want and desire the product or service and that it will satisfy their needs.
A - Action: lead customers towards taking action and/or purchasing.
Nowadays some have added another letter to form AIDA(S): S - Satisfaction - satisfy the customer so they become a repeat customer and give referrals to a product.
These are two powerful concepts that, together, should provide, if not a template, then at least  a series of signposts to assist in the creation of marketing communications messages and materials that have the greatest chance of achieving their objective.
OK. Now go spend a little time watching some television commercials, reading print advertisements, listening to radio spots and surfing some websites.
Can you discern these concepts in action?
No. Of course you can’t.
What, overwhelmingly, you will be subjected to is mindless twaddle. The majority of the advertising and other forms of marcoms to which we are exposed (and with which we are daily assaulted) lacks any hint of having emerged from a sound brief, a passionate, insightful and inspirational creative process or the guiding hand of a single minded, results driven, client just oozing marketing “smarts”. Which is why most of it doesn’t work.
Rather, it grates, irritates and, often, alienates customers and prospects alike.
Message to advertisers – Your advertising is increasingly having the opposite effect from that which you want it to – it is driving your customers and prospects potty. It is shouting at them – often literally. It is cluttering their minds with breathtaking amounts of mindless crap. It is failing to cut through the rest of the twaddle. Rather, it is contributing to the twaddle gene pool.
It is failing to differentiate either your brand, or your products & services, on any meaningful or sustainable dimension. It is assaulting them with price propositions – “Buy me and get 10 cents off” It is lacking in even the merest whiff of a single minded proposition, yet alone making it come alive in a compelling way.
It is being driven by short term objectives and is suffering from short term decision making.
It is completely lacking in any depth of understanding of a target market’s wants, needs, preferences, buying behaviours and the rest. It does not grab their attention (unless it does so by dint of its unadulterated awfulness) Having failed to grab their attention, it doesn’t have a hope in hell of peaking their interest. In the complete absence of interest, the stimulation of desire is a lost cause.
And the only action that results from that little bunch of marcoms accomplishments is No Action.
Questions for advertisers (answer dishonestly and the only person you’ll be kidding is yourself):
What are you selling?
Who are you selling it to?
Why the heck should they want to buy it anyway?
If you don’t have a crystal clear set of answers to these three questions, you simply are not ready to waste your time, energy and dollars on trying to communicate anything to anyone.
By contrast, get the answers right and you’ll be off to a flying start as you brief your marketing team and they, in turn, brief your ad agency and all those other talented young things whose role should be to produce marcoms that sell. Right now, however, they are falling short of the mark (and its largely your fault – you’ll always get the advertising you deserve) and the rest of us are paying the price as we are increasingly forced to try and hide from your appalling and ineffective marcoms assaults.



To Become A Titan
Ten Attributes Of An Entrepreneurial Titan
by: James D. Best
“Conviction is a belief you hold… and it holds you.”
Bobby Allison


Entrepreneurial titans envision dominating an industry. Walt Disney, Howard Schultz, Bill Gates, both Watsons, Coco Channel, Bill France, Sam Walton, and Henry Ford didn’t just rise to dominate their industry — they created or unalterably changed their industries. Each suffered disappointment as fellow pioneers couldn’t or wouldn’t share their vision. Each struggled for years against enormous financial odds. Each remained steadfast, carefully putting in place one block after another until everyone could finally see their castle in the sky. Each endeavor eventually reached critical mass, exploding onto the world scene with all the appearance of an overnight success christened by luck. Each industrialist achieved their vision through audacity, perseverance, and uncommon skill. None understood the enmity or envy of those who declined to take the trip with them.
What each of these entrepreneurs had in mind was something larger and grander than anyone had previously imagined. They didn’t want to merely win; they wanted to elevate the game to a whole new level. The world is filled with dreamers, but these people had a quality that went beyond dreaming: They had the ego, skill, and determination to make their dreams a reality for the rest of us.
Entrepreneurial Titans, independent of their business, display a surprising consistency in character. We call these characteristics the Ten Traits of Entrepreneurial Titans. As you examine these extraordinary people, the similarities become striking. The titans love what they do, constantly imagine taking their empires to a higher elevation, communicate clearly, approach their business with a marketing perspective, continuously improve their products and services, stay in constant contact with every aspect of their business, think strategically and act opportunistically, relentlessly pursue their goals, take whatever risks are necessary, and surround themselves with exceptionally talented people.
Since few of us will ever try to reach their level of accomplishment, how valuable is it to study these traits? Success in any endeavor requires the same attributes. It is not a difference in kind, only in hue. The titans single-handedly change our lives, but our economy is moved along more by the cumulative effect of thousands of smaller successes. Understanding—and emulating—the traits of the titans will help you dominate your small corner of the world.

The Ten Traits of Entrepreneurial Titans

1. Love of Aspiration
2. Uncommon and Unwavering Vision
3. Skilled Communicators
4. Market Focused
5. Product Obsessed
6. Always Engaged
7. Strategic, Tactical, Opportunistic
8. Driven and Tenacious
9. Risks Takers
10. Collectors of Bright and Talented People

1. LOVE OF ASPIRATION
Bill France Sr. (NASCAR) started racing in high school, Steven Spielberg operated a film camera for years before he was eligible to apply for a drivers license, Bill Gates wrote his first program prior to the invention of personal computers, Charles Barkley practiced jumping over a backyard fence in junior high school, Walt Disney doodled as a doughboy in World War I, and Warren Buffet bought his first stock at age eleven. These examples became icons in stock car racing, film, computers, basketball, family entertainment, and investing.
We could list many more examples of people who started honing their skills extremely young. An early start, however, has less to do with their success than you might expect. The real secret is that they stayed with a profession that claimed their heart, mind, and spirit. Entrepreneurial titans get people excited about their vision. This is hard to accomplish if you’re not excited yourself. Think about it—all these people got rich doing what they liked best in the world. They didn’t go to work in the morning; they went to play at their favorite pastime.
Jealous people like to portray entrepreneurial titans as unhappy and obsessed. This may be only half true. Obsessed people are happy only when they’re engaged in their obsession. By this measure, entrepreneurial titans are a happy lot. The breed may be happy, but they are never satisfied despite their accumulated accomplishments. Titans always feel compelled to climb the next peak—one shrouded to everyone else by a misty haze.
Now look at your own professional life. Are you excited when you wake and disappointed when the day is done. If not, then ask yourself why you originally chose your profession. Most of us found our jobs exciting when everything was fresh. If you’ve gone stale, you need to find a way to rekindle your enthusiasm. On the other hand, if you became trapped by expediency, you may need to consider starting over. If you want to emulate the titans, you must enjoy your work. We all have a secret aspiration. If you have to drag yourself into work, then take your secret aspiration out of the recesses of your mind and find a way to make money doing what you love. No matter what it is—if you get creative—you can have more fun and make more money.

2. UNCOMMON AND UNWAVERING VISION
Entrepreneurial titans see things differently than the rest of us. Bill France and Walt Disney believed that if they respectively built Daytona Speedway and Disneyland, people would storm into their parks. Henry Ford saw the automobile as a ordinary family appliance, not as a toy for the well-to-do. When computers were the size of a small house, Bill Gates foresaw a computer on every desktop. Coco Channel visualized simplicity as elegance and style. Ted Turner perceived a ready audience for 24 hour a day news. Entrepreneurial titans possess vision beyond the commonplace and never waver from their view of the possible.
Their vision tends to remain constant, but they continually elevate their sights to a higher plane. Despite all his accomplishments, Walt Disney never finished making his dreams come true. He pushed sound into cartoons, made the first full-length animated movie against everyone’s advice, and built an amusement park that defied every convention of the entertainment industry. Toward the end of his life, he left the confines of fantasy with Epcot Center, intent on showing people how to build an entire city. If Disney had lived long enough, perhaps he would have reengineered the world.
Everyone has a passion. The trick is to visualize how to take your passion to a new or enlarged market. Despite the internet being around for decades, it took web browsers to make it easy for everyone to traverse the information superhighway. The human body always needed fuel, but Ray Kroc made fast food part of our culture. Automotive tires remained static for years until the radial came along to reenergize the industry. Thomas Jefferson, and the other founding fathers, even visualized redesigning government for the new world.
Entrepreneurial titans are not smarter than other people; they merely spend more time thinking about how to change the dynamics of their passion. They’re individuals who consciously look at things from different angles until they get a unique perspective. Although some people seem to have a natural knack for visualization, this skill can be further developed in anyone. It just takes practice. Take your passion and question everything about it. Sooner—but probably later—you’ll come up with a twist or completely new concept that can propel your passion into a livelihood.

3. SKILLED COMMUNICATORS
Unless you’re an artist or writer, it’s unlikely you can single-handedly make your vision come to life. When you need resources or skills beyond your personal capability, you must convincingly communicate your vision to others. People can’t follow you unless they know where you’re going. Entrepreneurs communicate their vision and sell all the time. They sell their vision, their ideas, their organizations, their products, and themselves.

Characteristics of Good Communication
1) Clear and simple,
2) repetitive,
3) illustrative.

Entrepreneurial titans explain their ideas and concepts until the uninitiated understand, they repeat their message at every opportunity, and they use illustrative examples. Their intent is to paint a picture in people’s minds—a picture that people can see and strive toward. The description is generally short, always clear, and frequently presented as an allegory or metaphor. When Bill Gates first started running around talking to everyone about a computer on every desktop, computers for individuals were the province of introverted hobbyists. Entrepreneurial titans may not hit on the best description immediately, but they keep experimenting until they find the right words and expressions to get the world to endorse their ideas—or at least enough of the world to build their dream.

4. MARKET FOCUSED
Entrepreneurial titans don’t build edifices merely to massage their egos— they also want the public to come in droves. These are not private dreams. To attract customers, they think about their business from a marketing perspective. They target a specific market segment, brand their product, ceaselessly promote their wares, and use value pricing that baffles their competitors.

Market Focused Titans
1. Target a Specific Market Segment
2. Brand Products
3. Promote Relentlessly
4. Price for Value

Market Segmentation
Entrepreneurial titans study the marketplace until they find a segment they can dominate—then they focus on this segment until they own it. Walt Disney stridently kept his enterprise focused on family entertainment. Howard Schultz restricted the amount of food sold in Starbucks. Bill France never ventured away from racing stockcars. McDonalds never branched into fine dining. Coco Channel never endorsed a Sears line of clothing. Penske stayed focused on transportation.
You seldom see a scatter-gun approach from one of the entrepreneurial titans. They constantly enlarge their customer base, but generally they accomplish this objective by extending the boundaries of their existing market.

Branding
Penske does not own race teams and blaze his name all over his products just because he wants people to see his name. He understands the value of branding a product. IBM, in its heyday, became so closely associated with computers that the computer in the movie 2001 was named HAL, which is IBM lowered by one letter in the alphabet. The Golden Arches are synonymous with McDonalds. Ted Turner made CNN into a worldwide recognized brand. Despite lots of other entries, Steve Jobs got the world to view IPod as the only branded entry in the personal music market.
Branding requires more than advertising and promotion. An irrevocable law of the marketplace is that products must always be consistent with the branded image. Imagine if Apple introduced a new product with a clunky design. The product would not only flop, it would shock and disappoint Apple enthusiasts—so much that it would probably erode the market share of other Apple products. Imagine if Gucci came out with products priced for the middleclass. Oh wait, they did, and Gucci is still struggling to regain the brand cachet.
Coco Channel insisted that her designs could be identified on sight. When you went to a Disney movie—at least when Walt was alive—you knew exactly what to expect. Ray Kroc dictated that every McDonalds restaurant anywhere in the world serve food to the exact same specifications. Auto Zone operates over 1500 stores that look identical. Entrepreneurial titans find a formula, brand it into the consciousness of the world, and then strive to never harm their brand by misusing it.

Promote Products and Organization
Walt Disney insisted that every part of his entertainment enterprise promote every other part. The park promoted the movies, the films were used to leverage the television program, and television promoted everything in Walt’s kingdom. You can see the same philosophy demonstrated in Penske Enterprises, France’s multiple endeavors, and Bill Gates software strategy. Once momentum is established in one area, it is used to launch product extensions or to support weaker areas. Entrepreneurial titans sell and promote relentlessly.

Pricing
Walmart and Nordstrom use different pricing models which correspond with their chosen market. They both leverage their size, local market conditions, and customer preferences to stock merchandise that represent a value to their customers. Each department store appeals to a different economic segment, but both chains have established pricing policies to insure that customers feel like they got more for their money than if they drove down the street to another store. Rendering value in exchange for the customer’s hard earned cash generates ever-increasing sales.
Entrepreneurial titans exhibit an ever-present concern over pricing and value. Despite the expense of Coco Channel’s fashions, she made sure her customers felt like they received a timeless design for their patronage. Henry Ford’s entire business was predicated on a new pricing model. Microsoft consistently uses pricing as a competitive weapon. NASCAR allows each track to independently negotiate their own television contract so pricing stays consistent with the market appeal of a specific race. If you aspire to emulate the entrepreneurial titans, you need to personally involve yourself in pricing decisions so you can insure that you maintain your customer base and they are so pleased with your value equation that they help you lure new customers into the fold.

5. PRODUCT OBSESSED
Entrepreneurial titans are distinguished by an obsession with their products or services. Beyond enthusiastically extolling their products to everyone within earshot, they involve themselves in every aspect of the product life cycle. They love what they do and they love the products that come from their passion. Entrepreneurial titans crave growth, and growth requires producing something people want to buy. People who build empires shun cost cutting, cash cow strategies because they find running in place boring—and unacceptable. They don’t chase after money, they chase after empire, and money just follows.
Entrepreneurial titans are characteristically innovators, not inventors. Inventors tend to be inwardly focused with analytical minds, while the titans’ vision comes from being hyper-alert to the peopled world around them. Although titans may not be inventive, they see markets for new technology that the inventor never anticipated. They view products from the consumer’s perspective, constantly thinking up new ways to increase buyer appeal. They change the scale of their products, innovate around the edges, force new market segmentation, discover new applications for existing technology, and rejuvenate mature products with new designs and packaging.
Entrepreneurial titans constantly search for ever-improving products. Disney’s clean and tidy park, McDonalds’ exacting specifications for fries, Microsoft’s relentless product improvement, Walmart’s use of computers, CNN’s compulsion to be first in news worldwide, and NASCAR’s fan-friendly image all represent examples of the titan’s pursuit of exemplary products and services. The customer is never to be disappointed.

6. ALWAYS ENGAGED
Entrepreneurial titans stay engaged in every aspect of their business. Genuine titans never put their companies on cruise control. In return, the titans receive unflagging loyalty from their customer. From product development, pricing, packaging, staffing, brick and mortar, strategy, publicity, financing, and myriad other details, the titans tend to hold tight reins. This doesn’t mean they don’t delegate, but they tend to restrict subordinates’ freedom until they demonstrate a consistent application of the titan’s vision.
Today, most people speak reverently of Walt Disney, but a few ol’ timers criticize his omnipresent enforcement of his personal vision. Bill Gates is notorious for digging into the intricate details of Microsoft’s products. Henry Ford intimately involved himself in both product design and production processes. Bill France Sr. shared a fetish with Walt Disney for a neat and tidy park.
Many titans invent shortcuts to keep a watchful eye on everything. Disney required his animators to post their work outside their offices. Then in the evening, after they went home, he would wander around sticking colored-coded pins in work he either liked or felt needed further development.
Entrepreneurial titans possess a vision that is larger than they can deliver on their own. They must employ people, so the titans spend the majority of their time tuning other people’s work so it stays consistent with their vision. Walt Disney described his management style as being like a bee, flitting from point to point pollinating ideas. People with a vision of their own tend to learn the ropes from the titans, then move on to a venue where they have more personal freedom of expression. Entrepreneurial titans run entrepreneurial schools, where graduates frequently build related businesses in close proximity to their mentors. In the long run, however, entrepreneurs do not work for entrepreneurs.

7. STRATEGIC, TACTICAL, AND OPPORTUNISTIC
Entrepreneurial titans think strategically. Their strategy tends to remain consistent over a long period—frequently for their entire life. They know exactly where they want to go and chart a course to get there. Because their vision doesn’t waver, their strategy can remain relatively constant. No annual strategic planning exercises for them, the vision and strategy are so imbued within their entire organization that they concentrate on tactical plans.
The titans adjust their tactics depending on competition, finances, the economy, and industry trends. Bill Gates originally underestimated the importance of Internet technology, but quickly redirected resources when his mistake became obvious. Despite the reallocation of resources, his strategy of desktop dominance never wavered. In fact, his strategic imperative of controlling the desktop accelerated his awareness that a threat existed from another technology. Once refocused, Microsoft used the same business strategy to vanquish competitors in the browser wars. That is the advantage of a consistent, well-thought-out strategy, the whole organization can change directions in lock-step without detailed instructions.
The titans are uniformly strategic and tactical, but their real secret is an ingrained ability to seize opportunity. A strategic consistency educates everyone in the organization so that when an unexpected opportunity arises, people recognize and leverage it immediately. Entrepreneurial titans understand that a clear vision and consistent strategy enable opportunism.

8. DRIVEN AND TENACIOUS
Titans approach life with a single-mindedness that scares mere mortals. These highly goal-oriented people feel compelled to take their dream to the next level and make it a reality. To accomplish any huge undertaking requires endurance, tenacity and a strong force of will and will to achieve far outweighs any other talent or asset. These are driven people.
We may not share the strength of their compulsion, but we all understand that our smaller dreams also require a concerted and sustained effort. The lesson here is that if you don’t really want it bad enough, luck will seldom present it as a gift. You need to get out there and earn it the ol’ fashioned way. Henry Ford once said, “Nobody is proud of what they intend to do.”

9. RISK TAKERS
What separates dreamers from doers is a willingness to take enormous risks. The titans always retain supreme confidence in their vision, so even when they’re unsure about their abilities, this faith gives them the confidence to repeatedly risk their accomplishments-to-date to reach for the next plateau. Once you become content to ride your previous accomplishments, growth stops, and entrepreneurial titans never stop. Nothing comes free, and continued success requires assuming ever-increasing risk.
In 1988, General Motors wanted to rid itself of moribund Detroit Diesel. Solomon Brothers couldn’t find a buyer for an engine supplier that could claim only a 3% market share. Desperate, GM finally cut a deal with Roger Penske for $35 million. Penske quickly reversed the downward spiral, cut costs, introduced new products, and established strategic relationships with his other operations. By 1991, market share had increased to 26%, sales doubled, and the number of hours-per-engine dropped from 72 to 13. Penske sold 25% of Detroit Diesel to the public in 1993 for $95 million, $60 million more than he paid for the entire company. How did he do it? Penske says, “We took more risks.”
An ability to realistically appraise the potential reward against the required risk separates the foolish from the astute businessperson. Bill Gates worked in partnership with IBM until he calculated that the potential rewards of going on alone compensated for the risk. Disney felt comfortable with his repeated bet-your-company ventures because he had a longer time horizon than his bankers. The titans take risks—but their multi-dimensional thinking finds an edge that the more conventional overlook.

10. COLLECT BRIGHT AND TALENTED PEOPLE
Talent does not intimidate true leaders. They know they need highly capable people with many different skills to build their dream. The entrepreneurial titans recognize talent in an eye blink and immediately pull these people into their organization. Smarter, more capable, and experienced people give the titans a distinct advantage over their average competitors.
NASCAR racing is a pure meritocracy. Competition weeds out mediocre drivers, crew chiefs, pit and garage mechanics, spotters, and general managers. People in racing carry this competitive, merit philosophy into their business ventures—it’s the biggest single reason why so many racers succeed in business. Talk to a racer about business and you’ll soon discover that they employ the best talent they can find, whether it’s their own staff or professional services. Racing has conditioned them to search for the best in any field and pay commensurate with ability and dedication.
Microsoft has been criticized for its policy of annually dismissing people whose performance puts them in the bottom ten percent. Since Microsoft’s average skill level exceeds the industry, a low performing Microsoftie probably would be a high performer in another company. Gates objective is not to punish the bottom ten percent, but to make sure that Microsoft doesn’t get complacent and allow performance to drop closer to their competition.
As you examine your staff, continuously work to raise the average performance level. You can do this by making sure every new hire exceeds the capability of your average performer. If you want to build something great, you need a continuous upward spiral in organizational performance.

PRACTICE THE TRAITS
Detractors of the enormously successful often portray these same ten traits as obsessive, dogmatic, glib, monopolistic, hypercritical, tyrannical, lucky, stubborn, foolish, and as weak players who exploit the skills of others. Taken to an extreme, this characterization might hold some validity. But we are not talking about Al Capone or Adolf Hitler. Entrepreneurial titans play by the rules. True, they continuously test the perimeter, and may even venture a little over the line to probe the limits, but the people we discussed in this chapter are competitive creatures who want to win accolades as victors in a hard fought, honest game. If you want to do something monumental, you cannot go about it the same way as everyone else.
Review these ten traits and ask yourself which ones you need to practice to hone your own skills. To emulate the giants of industry, you need to break from the herd, commit yourself to bringing your best to work every morning, and think creatively. Dream big, challenge existing norms, investigate new methods, leverage technology, and use existing channels to deliver something fresh and useful. But stay in bounds.



31 Days to a Dream: Have single-minded determination
by Nancy Sathre-Vogel on May 15, 2013 in 31 Days to a Dream
http://familyonbikes.org/blog/20 ... nded-determination/


Welcome to our blog! Here you'll find bits and pieces of wisdom learned from cycling 17,000 miles from Alaska to Argentina together as a family. Hope it inspires you to live your dream!
My book about our journey, Changing Gears, is now released! Read a preview here
Single-minded determination. Or bull-headedness. It’s a double-edged sword.
I know I’ve been called stubborn a time or two. Or thirty five.  And not in a good way, either.
And yet good things can come from that quality if you use it right. In order to make your dream happen, you’ll need to be single-minded. Stubborn. Bull-headed. Whatever you want to call it, that’s the ticket to living your dream.
determination
The ability to focus on something is what is called single-mindedness. Concentrate your energy on it till you’re there. This is the key to successfully making that dream of yours come true.
It’s diversion from that single-mindedness that often causes us to give up on our dreams.
determination definitionEven if you aren’t naturally stubborn like me, your ability to focus on your goal can be improved by establishing a few habits like:
1. Become organized: – Make a list. Figure out what has to happen, then write it all down. Set your goals and figure out a way of achieving them.
2. Focus on your dream:- visualize yourself in your dream life. Keep that picture in your head as you’re working through the hard bits. You might even want to draw a picture of you there and keep it visible. Do what you can to remain focused on that goal.
3. Find your tribe: – Surround yourself with like-minded people who will support your efforts. People who believe in you and in your dream.
4. Take baby steps: – breaking your major goal into several short term goals will help you not lose focus. It will keep you from feeling overwhelmed. Achieving the short term goals will encourage you to carry on; seeing progress feeds the dream even more.
It is only with single-minded determination that you’ll find yourself in the middle of your dream. Focus on what you want, visualize it, live with it daily, and keep taking baby steps. One day you’ll look back and see how all those baby steps added together. You’ll be there!
when you want to succeed as badly as you want to breathe, then you will be successful


*************
Here are the other posts in this series:
Day 1: Define your dream
Day 2: Believe in yourself
Day 3: Believe in your dream
Day 4: Break out of the rut
Day 5: Go public with your idea
Day 6: Don’t fear failure
Day 7: Change your mindset
Day 8: Commit to your dream
Day 9: Celebrate small successes
Day 10: Stop making excuses
Day 11: Face your fear




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