Thursday, 7 August 2014
Characteristics of successful people
What makes a person successful? What makes them motivated, prosperous,
a great leader? The following is only a brief and partial list, but it
may whet your appetite to discover for yourself some of the principles
of success.
Optimism
Optimism is power. This is a secret discovered by all who succeed
against great odds. Nelson Mandela, Ernest Shackleton, Eleanor
Roosevelt—all admitted that what got them through tough times was
an ability to focus on the positive. They understood what Claude
Bristol called “the magic of believing.” Yet great leaders also have an
unusual ability to face up to stark reality, so creating a single powerful
attribute: tough-minded optimism.
Optimistic people tend to succeed not simply because they believe
that everything will turn out right, but because the expectation of success
makes them work harder. If you expect little, you will not be motivated
even to try.
A definite aim, purpose, or vision
Success requires a concentration of effort. Most people disperse their
energies over too many things and so fail to be outstanding in anything.
In the words of Orison Swett Marden:
“The world does not demand that you be a lawyer, minister, doctor,
farmer, scientist, or merchant; it does not dictate what you shall do, but
it does require that you be a master in whatever you undertake.”
So to be successful, you must have higher aims and goals and doggedly
pursue their realization.
Willingness to work
Successful people are willing to engage in drudgery in the cause of something
marvelous. The greater part of genius is the years of effort invested
to solve a problem or find the perfect expression of an idea. With hard
work you acquire knowledge about yourself that idleness never reveals.
A law of success is that, once first achieved, it can create a momentum
that makes it easier to sustain. As the saying goes, “Nothing succeeds
like success.”
Discipline
Enduring success is built on discipline, an appreciation that you must
give yourself orders and obey them. Like compound interest, this subject
may be boring, but its results in the long term can be spectacular.
Great achievers know that while the universe is built by atoms, success
is built by minutes; they are masters when it comes to their use of time.
An integrated mind
Successful people have a good relationship with their unconscious or
subconscious mind. They trust their intuition, and because intuitions
are usually right, they seem to enjoy more luck than others. They have
discovered one of the great success secrets: When trusted to do so, the
nonrational mind solves problems and creates solutions.
Prolific reading
Look into the habits of the successful and you will find that they are
usually great readers. Many of the leaders and authors covered here
attribute the turning point in their lives to picking up a certain book. If
you can read about the accomplishments of those you admire, you cannot
help but lift your own sights. Anthony Robbins remarked that
“success leaves clues,” and reading is one of the best means of absorbing
such clues.
Curiosity and the capacity to learn are vital for achievement, thus
the saying “leaders are readers.” The person who seeks growth, Dale
Carnegie said, “must soak and tan his mind constantly in the vats of
literature.”
Risk taking
The greater the risk, the greater the potential success. Nothing ventured,
nothing gained. Be action oriented.
Realizing the power of expectation
Successful people expect the best and they generally get it, because
expectations have a way of attracting to you their material
equivalent.
Since your life corresponds pretty much to the expectations you
have of it, the achiever will argue, why not think big instead of small?
Mastery
Advanced beings can turn any situation to their advantage. They are
“masters of their souls, captains of their fate.”
When other parties are involved, they will seek solutions in which
gains are maximized for all. In the words of Catherine Ponder:
“You do not have to compromise in life, if you are willing to let go of
the idea of compromise.”
Well-roundedness
Achievements mean little if we are not a success as a person. The
capacities to love, listen, and learn are vital for our own well-being,
and without them it is difficult to have the fulfilling relationships that
we need to both renew us and inspire achievement.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment