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    Making Lots of Money in a Certain Way
    There is a Science of Getting Rich! There's also a very powerful book that will tell you exactly how. It is VERY powerful and if you read it once, you will read it again and again. Best of all it's FREE.Wallace Wattles and this book will open your eyes and make you see things much more clearly.The first time I read The Science of Getting Rich I just knew that what it was saying was true and since putting it into practice I've become a very different person with a very different outlook on life!The book was written nearly 100 years ago but the words
    nt business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing educ

    19 Timeless Tips to Keep Meetings Short
    Thorough meeting preparation alleviates anxiety. Good planning guarantees that meetings are relevant, don’t overrun and aren’t held back by uniformed, boring or disinterested attendees. Follow these 19 timeless tips to keep your meetings on track and on time.When preparing your agenda …1. Identify the aim of your meeting2. Put the most important items first3. Establish a clear outcome for each point4. Judiciously choose meeting invitees. Ask yourself, “Who should attend?” “Should attendees be present for all or just part of the meeting?
    Entrepreneurs are a special breed of high achievers. They create things, get things started: businesses, clubs, churches, associations, even nations. Their motivations vary. Not all want to be rich. Not all want to produce a Fortune 500 company. Some are motivated by pleasure or civic pride or the desire for fame. Mary Madden, president of Information America, told me she and Burton Goldstein started their company because it gave them freedom and flexibility.

    Entrepreneurs see a world that is incomplete. It probably does not yet have what they intend to create. If it does, it needs something else they just thought of.

    They differ markedly from one another. But there are similarities. One of the most prominent similarities is the ability to perceive clearly. The ability to perceive clearly is important to many high achievers, but essential for the entrepreneur. Here is what the entrepreneur perceives:

    Voids. A college student, Frederick Wallace Smith, conceived of a dependable overnight delivery system for letters and small packages. It would require a vast network of planes, trucks, messengers and electronics that did not then exist. That perception led to Federal Express.

    Defects. A cartoonist perceived that most amusement parks of his day were shabby and boring. Why not create something that was improved – a theme part that was sparkling clean and exciting? That perception led to Disneyland.

    Opportune time. Ted Turner was watching Home Box Office one evening and realized that time had come for his small Atlanta-based station to go on satellite too. That perception led to the SuperStation and later to CNN.

    Syntheses. Parker H. Petit, CEO of Healthdyne, say his success as an entrepreneur comes from his ability to synthesize data. Petit believes he “can look at a set of circumstances, the market, a product or whatever and see order and opportunities in those variables that other people seem to see and just don’t piece together.”

    Continuing education. When Burton B. Goldstein, chairman of Information America started the company, one of his board members told him: “If you are still in business three years from now, you’ll be in a different business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing educa

    Kid Entrepreneurs - 5 Great Kid Business Opportunities That Won't Break Your Budget
    I’ve heard several successful entrepreneurs refer to themselves as serial entrepreneurs. I would have to say that I fall into that label. As a child, I was always coming up with different ideas of how to separate my Elementary School friends from their allowance…in a good way!Now, my oldest, who is in Elementary School, is following in her mother’s footsteps. She’s been begging me to put her old Easy Bake Oven on eBay in hopes of making boat loads of cash. Unfortunately, I told her it doesn’t quite work that way, but I have come up with a few ideas she, and your
    ey intend to create. If it does, it needs something else they just thought of.

    They differ markedly from one another. But there are similarities. One of the most prominent similarities is the ability to perceive clearly. The ability to perceive clearly is important to many high achievers, but essential for the entrepreneur. Here is what the entrepreneur perceives:

    Voids. A college student, Frederick Wallace Smith, conceived of a dependable overnight delivery system for letters and small packages. It would require a vast network of planes, trucks, messengers and electronics that did not then exist. That perception led to Federal Express.

    Defects. A cartoonist perceived that most amusement parks of his day were shabby and boring. Why not create something that was improved – a theme part that was sparkling clean and exciting? That perception led to Disneyland.

    Opportune time. Ted Turner was watching Home Box Office one evening and realized that time had come for his small Atlanta-based station to go on satellite too. That perception led to the SuperStation and later to CNN.

    Syntheses. Parker H. Petit, CEO of Healthdyne, say his success as an entrepreneur comes from his ability to synthesize data. Petit believes he “can look at a set of circumstances, the market, a product or whatever and see order and opportunities in those variables that other people seem to see and just don’t piece together.”

    Continuing education. When Burton B. Goldstein, chairman of Information America started the company, one of his board members told him: “If you are still in business three years from now, you’ll be in a different business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing educ

    A Sure Fire Method to Avoid Getting Counterfeit Check Scams
    The Fake money order scams are a variation on the old Bank Auditor Con seen in some of those all time movies. The scam has now gone high tech using the internet and the global economy. It takes on many variations but you can protect yourself if you know what to watch for.It is a common misconception that just because your bank makes the funds become available to you from a check that the check is good. In actuality just because your bank makes the funds available to you does not mean the bank has actually received the funds from the other party’s bank. You are a
    s, trucks, messengers and electronics that did not then exist. That perception led to Federal Express.

    Defects. A cartoonist perceived that most amusement parks of his day were shabby and boring. Why not create something that was improved – a theme part that was sparkling clean and exciting? That perception led to Disneyland.

    Opportune time. Ted Turner was watching Home Box Office one evening and realized that time had come for his small Atlanta-based station to go on satellite too. That perception led to the SuperStation and later to CNN.

    Syntheses. Parker H. Petit, CEO of Healthdyne, say his success as an entrepreneur comes from his ability to synthesize data. Petit believes he “can look at a set of circumstances, the market, a product or whatever and see order and opportunities in those variables that other people seem to see and just don’t piece together.”

    Continuing education. When Burton B. Goldstein, chairman of Information America started the company, one of his board members told him: “If you are still in business three years from now, you’ll be in a different business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing educ

    Top 7 Mastery Principles To Building A $1,000,000+ Enterprise
    Are you aware of the single most powerful asset in your business? Is it money? Is it employees? Is it your credentials or intellectual knowledge? Is it your products or services?No, actually, it is none of these. Your single most important business asset is your MIND ... more specifically, your mindset.Your business only grows as quickly as you, your mind and your thinking do. If you want to create a $1,000,000+ business, you must think like a $1,000,000+ business owner. You must in your mind’s eye already BE a $1,000,000 business owner.The seven minds
    CNN.

    Syntheses. Parker H. Petit, CEO of Healthdyne, say his success as an entrepreneur comes from his ability to synthesize data. Petit believes he “can look at a set of circumstances, the market, a product or whatever and see order and opportunities in those variables that other people seem to see and just don’t piece together.”

    Continuing education. When Burton B. Goldstein, chairman of Information America started the company, one of his board members told him: “If you are still in business three years from now, you’ll be in a different business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing educ

    Unemployment Blues: Life Changing Events
    If we are unlucky enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time, we experience a personal tsunami - a misfortune of devastating proportions that sweeps away our routine lifestyle and forever changes the world we know.Yet despite the frequency of such events - the tidal waves of Asia, the hurricanes of the Gulf Coast, the loss of life in the Middle East, the wildfires and mudslides of California - most of us are only indirectly affected. We bleed for those who have lost everything, give what we can out of our pocketbooks and our hearts, but our world is essential
    nt business.” Goldstein says that observation has turned out to be true. “You have to be comfortable with the fact that you are on a road, a learning curve and you are going to learn stuff and you are going to change.”

    Continuing education is really is an extension of the process that brought about the entrepreneurial venture in the first place. That first vision may be 20/20, but it is more likely that the first vision is only a rough approximation or the “shape of the answer,” as author Horace Freeland Judson puts it.

    Continuing education is essential because of changing technology. A group of managers recently told me that the technological competence of the average college graduate today will be obsolete within three years or less. What they said is true in most fields because of the pervasive impact of the information revolution. If you don’t keep on learning, somebody else will, and put you out of business.

    Continuing education is essential because the target audience is changing. No creative activity is more audience-driven than entrepreneurship. If people do not buy the new product or patronize the new store or join the new organization, the venture dies. The target may be a moving one or a fickle one. Tastes may change. People may move physically. So, the entrepreneur must keep on learning about the target audience.

    Still another similarity: the ability to do mundane tasks well.

    What separates entrepreneurial activity from other creative acts is its emphasis on the practical. Entrepreneurial activity is a creative act, and, as such, is cerebral. It may even grow out of pure research. But entrepreneurs must do the thousand-and-one tasks involved in transforming an insight into something tangible.

    Xavier Roberts of Cabbage Patch fame told me that people continually approach him with ideas they believe will make a fortune. “I don’t need more ideas,” he said. “I need people who can implement ideas.” He knows from experience, Roberts was selling his loveably ugly little creatures at flea markets and financing his business on credit cards long before the idea became a national craze.

    “Think small,” an entrepreneur by the name of Fred P. Burke once told me, “Many people who have these grand visions never can take their eyes from the sky and put them down to the little-bitty takes that have to be done right here, right now, this minute.”

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