Daring To Be Different Is The Key
Bill Blades, Speaker and consultant, William Blades, LLC
How To Find More Joy In Your Work
David Kubes, Lawyer, Kubes Passeyrer Attorneys
To-Do List Got You Stressed?
David Maxfield, Co-Author & VP of Research and Ryan Trimble, Writer and Editor, VitalSmarts
It’s Not What You Say, It’s How You Say It
Greg Zlevor, CEO, President and Founder, Westwood International
Stay one step ahead of emerging trends in the human resources field!
Do you have an area of expertise or an article you would like to share?
A goal without a plan is just a wish. How many of you have set clear goals for the life ahead? The reason people experience disappointment is not because they’ve failed at some endeavor, but because they’ve never formulated clear goals for themselves.
You wouldn’t think of starting out on a long journey without a map to get you from where you are to your destination. Yet how many people go through life without a clear destination, much less a roadmap for getting there?
How many salespeople do you know who acted on just 6 new skills this past year? Many get stuck in a comfort zone achieving some success and they then become content and stop growing. But, success and peak performance are not the same things.
The answer to this question is easy – you can´t. Joy isn´t something you can find or something that someone else can provide. Joy is something you have to be. So, let us talk about how to “be” more joy in your work.
Seems like sage insight. Saying yes leads to opportunities and outcomes. It involves action and activity, and invites engagement. ‘Yes’ is the affirmation that signals birth and beginning, a portent of possibility.
We’ve all heard those words since we were in elementary school. Sincerity, enthusiasm, compassion, attention, concern, warmth, self-confidence, and authority cannot be feigned; your listener will be affected by your tone, whether they (or you!) are aware of it or not.
In a world of rapidly changing technologies, job markets, and economic unpredictability, finding a career you love over the long term may seem a progressively challenging endeavor.
We all understand and appreciate the need for sound financial planning during the years preceding retirement. Who among us hasn’t gone online to calculate our retirement “nest-egg” needs and then panicked because accumulating that much wealth seemed inconceivable..
My frequent flyer statements tell me I have flown well over two million miles. For the most part, airline travel is just a routine part of my business, but a handful of flights are memorable.