Credit: Bud Caddell
Related post:
In a previous post entitled “Great Idea: The One Week Job Project“, I shared the brilliant idea that a college graduate named Sean Aiken had, when in order to find out what he wanted to do with his life, he took 52 jobs in 52 weeks across North America.
Recently Sean shared what he learn from this project in an excellent TEDx Talk at TEDx Vancouver.
Enjoy!
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Related Post:
Posted in Career Design, Great Idea, Videos
Tagged Career, Great Idea, TED, TEDx, Videos
Bill Gross, Founder & CEO of Idealab, gave a remarkable presentation at LeWeb 2011 in which he shared 20 years of entrepreneurial lessons in 20 minutes. Brilliant stuff!
Enjoy!
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So … here you have Bill Gross’ 12 lessons:
1. Market power rules
2. Master the demo
3. Pursue your passion
4. Focus, Focus, Focus
5. Recognize your strengths
6. Don’t overbuild
7. Survive until the market is ready
8. Test, Test, Test
9. Stick with it
10. Find essential partners
11. Harness your users’ passion
12. All truth passes through 3 stages
Related posts:
1. Priceless business advice by Derek Sivers
2. Why you need to fail
3. A conversation with Jay-Z and Warren Buffett
4. Raising Kids To Be Entrepreneurs
Posted in Business Development, Career Design, Entrepreneurship, Get Inspired!, Videos
Tagged Advice, Business Development, Career, Entrepreneurship, Get Inspired!, LeWeb, Videos
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
Albert Einstein
Posted in Career Design, Get Inspired!, Quote of the week
Tagged Career, Get Inspired!, Quote of the week
“If you can’t fly, run. If you can’t run, walk. If you can’t walk, crawl. But by all means, keep moving.”
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Every now and then I find myself telling my kids “be careful!“. They run around, they climb, they jump, they play all over the place and of course, as I do not want them to get hurt, the first words that often come out of my mouth are … “be careful“.
My wife recently helped me realized that by doing this I am actually doing more harm that good. Basically all I am doing is telling my kids that they should “play it safe“, that the shouldn’t do anything too “edgy“, that is better to avoid taking risks and in other words that they should just “follow the rules“.
But what I have also realized is that one of the reasons why I have reached most of my accomplishments in life, is not because I was “being careful“! I mean … I used to be a circus arts performer! Yes! I used to be a flying trapeze artist! You do not get to perform “double-back somersaults” or “passing leaps” or “single trapeze” acts just by “being careful“
I had the opportunity to work in many different countries, meet the love of my life, work with remarkable people, work on designing and building a successful career in a wide variety of industries (work in progress), take part in exciting projects… not because I was “being careful”, but because I was adventurous, because I took chances and was on the edge, because I took action when other people just stayed still “being careful“.
Of course I am not saying that you should take stupid risks or to simply go out and try something dangerous if you have no clue what you are doing. What I am saying is that if you want to do exciting work and accomplish exciting goals, the last thing you should focus on is on “being careful“.
As George Lois once said:
“Better to be reckless than careful. Better to be bold than safe. Better to have your work seen and remembered. Your work must be seen and remembered or you’ve struck out. There is no middle ground.”
“The path of least resistance is what makes rivers run crooked”
Elbert Hubbard
“In order to get to the next level of whatever you’re doing, you must think and act in a wildly different way than you previously have been“
Grant Cardone
“Do not sell yourself. Inspire people to buy you“
Sir John Hegarty