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Showing posts with label 11 Choices rich people make. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 11 Choices rich people make. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 September 2017

Part 3 - WHAT SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE DO TO SUCCEED


So I decided to share three today again. Do take notes and put the knowledge to work for you. Do not get complacent about the mistakes you notice you have been indulging, while reading this article.

If you haven't been following the notes from beginning, here is how to quickly get yourself informed on what we have looked at thus far. Read Part one and two by click: PART ONE or PART TWO

1. They wake up early.

President Obama, Richard Branson, Jack Dorsey, Larry Schultz, Tim Cook and Xerox CEO Ursula Burns are known to be early risers. How has this attributed to their success? Because early risers are able to start their days ahead of everyone else by responding to others, exercising and finding some personal time, early risers also tend to be happier and are more proactive. Early risers find it easier to concentrate on tasks that are scheduled for that day. They strategize in the early hours of the day. They take charge in prayers and planning.

Monday, 14 September 2015

11 choices rich people make that you probably aren't trying out! [MUST READ]

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1. Rich people think and act differently than the rest of us. They aren't born with this "rich mentality" — they learn how and then choose to think and act this way.
It's a concept that has been in print for nearly a century — thanks to a journalist's research of more than 500 self-made millionaires in the early 20th century — and continues to gain relevance today.
In T. Harv Eker's bestselling book, "Secrets of the Millionaire Mind," the self-made millionaire identifies specific choices the wealthiest people make on a daily basis that most of us fail to emulate.
Here are 11 of them, with commentary from Eker's bestseller:

2. Rich people choose to be in control of their success.

Rich people choose to be in control of their success.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images
"Rich people believe, 'I create my life,'" "while average people think, 'Life happens to me.'" writes Eker,
You have to be in control of your financial life, he opines: "You have to believe that you are the one who creates your success, that you are the one who creates your mediocrity, and that you are the one creating your struggles around money and success. Consciously or unconsciously, it's still you."