We Are RICH

Admit it.  It is Monday and you will likely not be that efficient.  Despite this possibility you will make it to Tuesday none the poorer because you are already rich.

Imagine being able to maintain your current standard of living without having to work.  Imagine just eating and drinking with no where you have to go and the whole household at your disposal…all day.  What does that sound like?  It sounds like the snow days we had during the first few weeks of February.  For those of you who are employees and got paid to stay home, you were living the lifestyles of the rich.  Even for those of us who are entrepreneurs who were  forced for the first time to just enjoy our loved ones -we too were living richly.  Being rich has little to do with money and usually a lot more to do with how you live. 

Here are a few steps to help you live that rich lifestyle:

  1. Start choosing what you do with your time (even if it is how you do what you do)
  2. Use your planner for all tasks (work and play)
  3. Take steps towards improving your health

That last one sticks out for me.  During the first week of February I injured my neck and for an entire afternoon and evening was nearly immobile.  Even laying down hurt unless I was turned the right way.  It didn’t take me long to realize that during those moments, everything that I enjoyed was impossible to accomplish without my neck getting better.  If you mess up your neck, you’re in trouble.  Maintaining your health is more than just avoiding injury: it can include improving your cardiovascular capacity, physical strength and mental strength.  Treat your body with respect and it will reward you by lasting a while. 

Taking the time to plan for the things you enjoy of course is also rewarding.  I enjoy curling up with a good business book or reading a great article on-line.  These things are free but can only be done effectively if I plan them into my day.  If I don’t plan them and just do them, those activities ruin my work tasks and then I end up feeling guilty -and that defeats the purpose of planning fun. 

I gave myself an important present when I realized that all of the time in the day is mine to do whatever I want with.  There will be cause and effect sure, but it is all my choice.  Now I want to share that gift with you.  Whether you are an entrepreneur or an employee you have the choice to do anything you want, any way that you want.

Today is Monday, just another day for you to do whatever you want.  Congratulations, you are rich.

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


Tagged with:
 

“I am not a creative person”

As a designer, I can’t tell you how many times I have heard this right before a brilliant idea. Creativity is not exclusive to sensitive artistes and jazz musicians. In any industry you will find innovators challenging the status-quo and problem-solvers trying anything to find a solution. Sometimes it’s a matter of finding the most creative way to fail, dusting yourself off, and trying again.

Even if you don’t consider yourself a ‘creative’ person, you will know what I mean when I describe the following feeling; that euphoric moment where everything just clicks, when you’ve been working for hours, but feel energized. When you’re making terrific headway with minimal exertion – this is called creative flow. Recognize it and respect it, and don’t let multitasking disrupt the flow.

(more…)

 

Last week I attended the State of Entrepreneurship Address by the #Kauffman Foundation. It made me proud to be an entrepreneur. I hope the same for you :

Tagged with:
 

No better example of “Two is company, three is a crowd” than the juxtaposition of entrepreneurs, time and loved ones. (#JasonHowellCompany) Finding enough time to build a business and spend time with loved ones is nearly impossible except for the most effective time managers (which we entrepreneurs are typically not). So how do we show love to our business and our family?

Stories of successful entrepreneurs don’t help. Usually they begin with a lonely, destitiute protagonist with nothing left but an idea. Defeating all odds said protagonist discovers a need for his/her idea and then spends an inordinate amount of time (re: \”Outliers\”) trying to sell it. The guilt associated with trying to live up to the Outliers’ “10,000 hour” rule is also not much help. Most of us started our businesses to improve our own lives and the lives of our customers.  We intended to “share the wealth” with those that our closest to us but along the way, those loved ones feel most left out. Since most of us who actually run businesses know that there is no true overnight successs, here are a few ways to express your love for your family while so busily loving your business:

  1. Communicate – nothing says lovin’ like actually saying “I love you.”  Start with that phrase every once in a while to remind those close to you that your business is a means to the ends; not the ends.
  2. Be honest – it’s not just the strict requirements of building a business that keep us busy; sometimes it’s our own inefficiency.  We’re not perfect, we’re entrepreneurs.  I probably have misspellings in this blog post and the grammar’s probably off but hopefully you still get my message.  Explain to your loved ones that you try really hard but that sometims you fail and that failure leads to encroaching on family time -you’re sorry. 
  3. Get help – reading a book is a good start but be as inquistive with other entrepreneurs and even your clients regarding how they manage time with family.  The good news is that successful people with 9 to 5 jobs typically struggle with family time also.  Always asks for ideas and try them out.

Before writing this post I couldn’t help but read a couple articles on AOL.com that caught my interest.  Today is MLK Day and though it’s a day of service, it’s a holiday and I felt I was “owed” some repreive before working.  These are the mental gymnastics of an entrepreneur. Communicate and be honest about them with your family and be courageous enough to ask for help.  I will start.  

Do you have any other ideas for making time with loved ones?
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


Tagged with:
 

It is the first Tuesday of 2010, a significant day for any new year.   #JasonHowellCompany has a singular purpose of helping other small businesses grow as they enrich the community.  For employees seeking to manage their careers like a small business we can assist with that as well.

Tuesday is typically the most challenging day of the week because it is neither as quick as Monday or as inspiring as Friday.  It is the day when New Year’s resolutions begin to fade as we march towards the “normalcy” of the post-holiday season.  Today being Tuesday, I choose to renew my resolution of living “Frankly and boldly,” as President Franklin Roosevelt describes in the speech below (1 minute in).  It is also the “Only thing we have to fear is fear itself” speech.  This is your year, this is my year, this can be the year of resurgence for our country.  The time is upon us.  The vision of Jason Howell Company is outlined here.   

If you have made a committment to make twenty-ten the year of positive growth for yourself, your family, your company and your country, then Contact me. 



Tagged with:
 

#JasonHowellCompany All of this social media and we still have trouble keeping in touch with friends, family and business prospects.  Here’s a response I gave to a friend minutes ago that I’ll share with you:
 
QUICK ANSWER: 
 
I put everyone I meet on my newsletter list so everytime I send one out, they get an update.  That’s why it’s a mix of personal and professional updates.  I am starting to maximize the use Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn to keep in touch for me. 
 
LONGER ANSWER:
 
To keep up with everyone you meet you’ll have to set aside times throughout the year that you will intentionally be in touch.  Unfortunately, most people are not good at this so the responsibility falls on you.  For example, I recommend e-mailing people you meet at a networking event within 24 hrs of meeting them.  Why?  So that (1) You remember who the person behind the business card you collected is and because (2) It’s 90% likely that they won’t e-mail you.  I could add a (3) here and that reason would be that e-mailing them quickly increases the likelyhood of them remembering you in the future by (insert random made up percentage here) percent. 
 
It’s New Year’s Eve and the holiday season is winding down.  Most people who attempt to stay in touch with others, send out holiday cards.  The trouble is, holiday cards can be incredibly impersonal when all most people do is sign them.  Of course if you took the time to write a personal note to say, 300 people, you would need to start writing holiday cards in October.  Even before I was in sales, I knew about 400 people and instead of sending them holiday cards, starting the first week of January, I picked up the phone and called/left messages for each of them.  Yes, this takes a while but if you notice, people wish others a happy new year well into January; so you’ve got 30 days to call people.  That’s plenty of time.
 
Keith Ferrazzi of Never Eat Alone fame recommends “pinging” people all of the time.  With texting and now Twitter, that’s not too difficult to do in a checkout line or any of the hundred times throughout the week you are stuck waiting.  Not everyone you meet is going to fall into the same category so you’ll need to deliniate to whom you ping for what.  Casual friends perhaps you send a text for weekend plans, but future employers or business partners perhaps you’ll “ping” at the end of the fiscal quarter.  I recommend Keith’s book and if you only want to skim it at the bookstore, start with page 181.  I also recommend using some sort of tool for keeping track of who you pinged.
 
If you are truly serious about staying in touch with everyone you meet on a regular basis, much like a sales person, you will need to invest a contact management tool.  Most people use software.  I’ll recommend Jason Alba’s Jibber Jobber because I e-mailed him a few times with questions about his product and he promptly responded (I appreciate that).  He designed the software to keep track of his job search but it can be used for all kinds of relationship management.
 
I hope this helps!  Start tomorrow with organizing a spreadsheet (I’ve done this) with everyone you want to keep in touch with and include phone numbers, e-mail addresses and birthdays if you have them; then tomorrow, start making phone calls.  You’ll be able to upload that spreadsheet into any well designed contact management software when you’re ready.


Tagged with:
 

Smile!

#JasonHowellCompany.  Way #3 of becoming super powerful in your profession as excerpted from my audiobook  AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity..\”  is taking stock of your mental disposition by identifying what you enjoy: 

  1. Carry Yourself With Confidence
  2. Dress Like a Super Power
  3. Identify What You Enjoy
  4. Lead Your “Category”

Your mental disposition, determined by your outlook on life in general, will swiftly determine how others respond to you.  How you carry yourself mentally will either be a help or a hindrance to your progress.  Your customers, including your boss, your co-workers, or external customers will read you and will react to what they read immediately upon seeing you that day. 
The subject of posture came up earlier.  I mentioned how people who were taller often reduced their size by crouching below to the level of those with average height.  I compared that with the story of the eagle who group up with chickens and at first did not know that he could fly.  What these anecdotes highlight is an unfortunate habit we sometimes have to bring ourselves down to the mean; to play to the level of the crowd.  When that occurs, you not only distract from the greatness that you are, you detract from the perception your crowd, could have, of you: the perception that you are, amazing.
There is something that you do, or can do better, than anyone else; it is the thing that makes you an “expert.”  What is that thing? It is what you discover through self awareness when you truly recognize a passion and that sense of patriotism about your life.  This is the thing that you want to be identified for.  

Perhaps you are considered an expert because of your unique point of view, or perhaps because of your propensity for innovation or solving problems.  You cultivate this expertise by spending time on it and you are known for your expertise by sharing it with others.  Spending time on your expertise will not be too difficult because it will likely be something, you enjoy. 
What do you enjoy?  Through my years in the accounting profession, I found that I enjoyed talking with people, building relationships and even doing a little professional development (though I admit to not knowing that term years ago).  My first job out of school was not my first professional position, but becoming a consultant for accounting software was still a stretch  for my level of experience.  It was my job to train new clients of the software we sold.  Most of my day was spent preparing my lectures including the use of an overhead projector that showed screenshots and real-time use of the software, by projecting the image of my computer’s screen.  I answered the questions of Accounting Clerks and Controllers though I had yet to hold any of those positions myself.  I bit off slightly more than I could chew but I somehow made it through 8 hour sessions as if I had been training my entire life.  I liked it.

This propensity for training foreshadowed my future career and should have been an early indicator that my talents would eventually steer me away from the arithmetic of accounting. 
Unfortunately that consulting company fell on hard times and still a recent grad, I relied on a recruiter to find a position more attuned to my accounting major.  In future accounting jobs, I still enjoyed it when a colleague would walk into my office to discuss a career related issue.  Unfortunately this often lead to me working late nights in the office so I could complete my accounting work; still, I always knew the consequences of my little, career coaching sessions and was willing to sacrifice seeing the light of day for them.  I did not quite know that professional development would be the hallmark of my career but eventually I was hired by the recruiting firm that placed me in accounting jobs to do the same for others.  It took me many years to succumb to what most could see as an obvious interest. 

Ask around.  Typically it is pretty tough to stifle your talents and your interests, and whether you already work in the profession you desire, you may already be exhibiting the skills and talents that would make you a great Accountant, Project Manager, Firefighter or even Politician!


Tagged with:
 

biz attireYesterday I wrote about Carrying Yourself with Confidence as Way #1 to maintaining super power status. Today the excerpt from AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave will focus on Way #2:

  1. Carry Yourself With Confidence
  2. Dress Like a Super Power
  3. Identify What You Enjoy
  4. Lead Your “Category”
Way #2 to identify yourself as a superpower that you are is to dress as professionally as you possibly can, while maintaining the corporate social norms.  Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.  Have you ever noticed that the executives at your firm tend to have the ability to dress casually but with a professional flair that maintains their hierarchical status?  A pair of cuffed khakis with polished dress shoes for example.  A button down dressed shirt without a tie, but dry cleaned with starched creases. Take your dress cues from management or executive management if that’s where your goals are.  If you are in business for yourself or in any kind of sales field, take notice of what your competitors and your customers wear, and do them one better.  I once met someone who told me how well his lawn mowing business grew not because he had the largest staff but in large part because his crew wore clean uniforms rather than the random casual dress of his competitors.  He went to gross over $1 million while in business. $1 million isn’t necessarily a lot of money in the 2nd millennium, except this was a story he told me, about his days in high school.
Regardless of price, your sense of fashion is the easiest and quickest way to make an impression.  Aside from proper hygiene, your fashion will be the most impactful element of your first, second and third impressions.  I do not expect my mechanic to wear a suit  - or even have clean hands for that matter – but I do expect an executive to appear “executive” even if that executive is currently an Accounting Clerk.  Just wearing a suit is not always the answer.  Working in staffing, I had the opportunity to rate hundreds of people on their appearance and though they did not always wear a suit to come see me, I could tell by the way their “business casual” clothes fit, whether they were current, or future executive material.  Clean shoes fit the part of a professional, not necessarily new ones.  Expensive versus inexpensive made no real difference.  A button down shirt is nice, but only if it is clean, pressed, and tucked neatly into the waist of your pants (even in the back).  Wearing a tie is great if you know how to tie one, including the difference between a double and single Windsor knot (and have experimented with which looks best on you).  And wearing that tie around the neck of a buttoned up dress shirt only adds executive flair if the neck size on that shirt isn’t too big or too small (or if your pant length hangs all the way past the ankle but not all the way to the floor).  It is not the cost of clothes that matters nor in some cases is it even the age of clothes if they have been properly maintained.  It is their level of cleanliness, style and fit that make the difference.
A person who cares about their appearance shows they care about the impression they make and because appearance is not always easy to maintain, people associate good appearance with power.  Customers want to be associated with companies that are well regarded in their communities; they will flock to these people.  Because employers want to be considered among the best in the world, they will hire these people, promote them and ask them to represent the firm to their clients personally.  They will also compensate them just a little better and put off, a lay off in their favor.
A couple tricks for keeping your shirt tucked in by the way is 1) wearing a long undershirt and 2) keeping good posture (while sitting or standing).  The undershirt is typically the first thing that gets “untucked” and it starts by puckering your clothing around the waist.  Once that happens it is pretty easy for the top shirt to follow suit.  If  however your undershirt is a little longer, it will likely be more difficult for it to come undone, making it less likely that your top shirt will.  This is dependent on whether your good posture is maintained throughout the day.    Maintain your posture and your clothes will better maintain themselves.
As it is with most mysteries of life, it is the little things that make all of the difference.  How you carry yourself and the close you wear of course are just the start of the overall impression and how your internal and/or external customers identify you.

Way #2 to identify yourself as a superpower that you are is to dress as professionally as you possibly can, while maintaining the corporate social norms.  Dress for the job you want, not the job you have.  Have you ever noticed that the executives at your firm tend to have the ability to dress casually but with a professional flair that maintains their hierarchical status?  A pair of cuffed khakis with polished dress shoes for example.  A button down dressed shirt without a tie, but dry cleaned with starched creases. Take your dress cues from management or executive management if that’s where your goals are.  If you are in business for yourself or in any kind of sales field, take notice of what your competitors and your customers wear, and do them one better.  I once met someone who told me how well his lawn mowing business grew not because he had the largest staff but in large part because his crew wore clean uniforms rather than the random casual dress of his competitors.  He went to gross over $1 million while in business. $1 million isn’t necessarily a lot of money in the 2nd millennium, except this was a story he told me, about his days in high school.

Regardless of price, your sense of fashion is the easiest and quickest way to make an impression.  Aside from proper hygiene, your fashion will be the most impactful element of your first, second and third impressions.  I do not expect my mechanic to wear a suit  - or even have clean hands for that matter – but I do expect an executive to appear “executive” even if that executive is currently an Accounting Clerk.  Just wearing a suit is not always the answer.  Working in staffing, I had the opportunity to rate hundreds of people on their appearance and though they did not always wear a suit to come see me, I could tell by the way their “business casual” clothes fit, whether they were current, or future executive material.  Clean shoes fit the part of a professional, not necessarily new ones.  Expensive versus inexpensive made no real difference.  A button down shirt is nice, but only if it is clean, pressed, and tucked neatly into the waist of your pants (even in the back).  Wearing a tie is great if you know how to tie one, including the difference between a double and single Windsor knot (and have experimented with which looks best on you).  And wearing that tie around the neck of a buttoned up dress shirt only adds executive flair if the neck size on that shirt isn’t too big or too small (or if your pant length hangs all the way past the ankle but not all the way to the floor).  It is not the cost of clothes that matters nor in some cases is it even the age of clothes if they have been properly maintained.  It is their level of cleanliness, style and fit that make the difference.

A person who cares about their appearance shows they care about the impression they make and because appearance is not always easy to maintain, people associate good appearance with power.  Customers want to be associated with companies that are well regarded in their communities; they will flock to these people.  Because employers want to be considered among the best in the world, they will hire these people, promote them and ask them to represent the firm to their clients personally.  They will also compensate them just a little better and put off, a lay off in their favor.

A couple tricks for keeping your shirt tucked in by the way is 1) wearing a long undershirt and 2) keeping good posture (while sitting or standing).  The undershirt is typically the first thing that gets “untucked” and it starts by puckering your clothing around the waist.  Once that happens it is pretty easy for the top shirt to follow suit.  If  however your undershirt is a little longer, it will likely be more difficult for it to come undone, making it less likely that your top shirt will.  This is dependent on whether your good posture is maintained throughout the day.    Maintain your posture and your clothes will better maintain themselves.

As it is with most mysteries of life, it is the little things that make all of the difference.  How you carry yourself and the close you wear of course are just the start of the overall impression and how your internal and/or external customers identify you.


Tagged with:
 

eagle1In the United States of America, we’re used to being known as the world’s superpower. With our economy having slipped and the world catching up, we will have to be more aggressive in our business practice to maintain that title. Below is an excerpt from AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave highlighting the top 4 ways to remain recognized as “super-powerful” in business.

  1. Carry yourself with confidence
  2. Dress like a super power
  3. Identify what you enjoy
  4. Lead your “category”

Way #1: Carrying yourself with confidence is one of the best ways to start standing out in business and at work. Let’s focus on that word “stand.” I grew up a relatively tall and skinny kid, but noticed a flaw in others before I noticed it in myself –their posture was terrible and often hunched over. Like the eagle who did not know that he was not a chicken, my genetically awkward friends curved their spines and shoulders down to the lower height of their peers. Depending on the version of the eagle/chicken story you read, it either ends sadly or leaves you with a great feeling of inspiration. I will share the story briefly here. An eagle’s egg once rolled down a hill, and into a chicken coup. A hen, feeling sorry for the lonely egg, after its hatching, saw fit to raise the bird as though it was one of her own. After some time, the eagle began to question his existence and developed his natural desire to fly. After voicing his opinion – in most versions of the tale, the birds can talk – the other chickens listened quietly, and then laughed. How many of your dreams to fly in this world have been laughed at by your best friends or even family? In time, the eagle grew weary of sharing his dreams with others, and one night walked up to the highest hill, the same hill he rolled down years ago in an egg shell, and decided to jump. He had reasoned that if he were wrong about his ability to fly, then it would be better to die quickly, then live a life fading away without knowing. He jumped, popped open his wings ferociously, then flapped them easily. It turned out our little friend the bird was made to fly, and all he had to do was try. He flew off made lots of money and came back to laugh at his old friends. At least that’s how my version ends.

There are not many people, bold enough to follow their dreams. Those who do follow their dreams typically, for a time, appear to be failures in the eyes of society – until they miraculously succeed. And then everyone crowds around to celebrate how amazing and lucky they are to succeed so quickly in life. Tiger Woods is probably the most recognized champion golfer ever, but he started playing when he was 4 years old.Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Michael Dell and more recently Mark Zuckerberg: all titans of the tech industry and all college drop outs. In fact, I could create a long list of successful college drop outs but my point is society doesn’t always push you towards excellence. In fact it often pushes you no further than the norm. Sometimes taking a risk is dropping out of school and sometimes it is just standing up straight, and being willing to accept how tall you are.

Tomorrow I’ll discuss Way #2.


Tagged with:
 
In my Audiobook, there was only one name that I took the time to spell out, just to make sure my listeners understood it:  “R-O-H-N.”  I didn’t know very well the “Idaho Farm Boy”  as he was once called many years ago.  Out of all the quotes in my book however, I was struck most by this one:
 
“We only get paid to bring value to the marketplace.” ~ Jim Rohn

The simplicity of that quote combined with its significance is perhaps why “Dr” Rohn was known as a business philosopher and admired by even the likes of the much more recognized Tony Robbins.  On the road to self-improvement, Jim Rohn’s outlook on life is an excellent stop along the way.  Below is a tribute and perhaps an introduction of a man who has been teaching for nearly 50 years.

"Dr." Jim Rohn, Business Philosopher

"Dr." Jim Rohn, Business Philosopher

The Passing of a Legend

 

With great sadness we share that Jim Rohn, our mentor and friend, left us December 5, 2009 for a better place.
Over the past 18 months, in his battle with Pulmonary Fibrosis, Jim assured us with a smile that all is good, that he would fight until the last breath, yet he had no fear as to what would be next. Jim’s faith was as much a part of his life as his desire to inspire and challenge us all to be the best we could be and to live our dreams.   More..


Tagged with: