Sabado, Marso 29, 2014

12 Examples How Failure Became Success



"As long as we live, you do not quit in life and if you do not quit, you'll never fail."

Are you feeling down Because you have failed in your exams or did not get the promotion you want in your job or maybe rejected by prospective clients for your business? 

Just remember this ...

Not everyone who are on top today got there with success after success. More Often than not, those who are that history best remembers were faced with numerous obstacles and failures that forced them to work harder and show more determination than others. 


Next time you're feeling down about your failures in college or in a career, keep these famous people in mind and remind yourself that sometimes failure is just the first step Towards success. Make those failures as stepping stones Towards your success and not as the brick walls that blocks your way.

1Henry Ford:  While Ford is today known for His innovative assembly line and American-made cars, he was not an instant success. In fact, His early Businesses failed and left him broke five times before he Founded the successful Ford Motor Company.  





2.  Michael Jordan:  Most people would not believe that a man Often lauded as the best basketball player of all time was actually cut from His high school basketball team. Luckily, Jordan did not let this setback stop him from playing the game and he has Stated, "I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot, and I missed. I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed. " 




3.  Abraham Lincoln:  While today he is remembered as one of the greatest leaders of our nation, Lincoln's life was not so easy. In His youth he went to war a captain and returned a private (if you're not familiar with military ranks, just know that private is as low as it goes.) Lincoln did not stop failing there, However. He started numerous failed business and was defeated in numerous runs he made ​​for public office.

 



4.  Oprah Winfrey:  Most people know Oprah as one of the most iconic faces on TV as well as one of the richest and most successful women in the world. Oprah faced a hard road to get to that position, However, enduring a rough and abusive childhood Often as well as numerous career setbacks including being fired from her job as a television reporter Because she was "unfit for TV." 




5.  Isaac Newton:  Newton was undoubtedly a genius When it came to math, but he had some failings early on. He never did particularly well in school and When put in charge of running the family farm, he failed miserably , so Poorly in fact that an uncle took charge and sent him off to Cambridge where he finally blossomed into the scholar we know today.





6.  Bill Gates:  Gates did not seem like a shoe-in for success after dropping out of Harvard and starting a failed first business with Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen Called Traf-O-Data. While this early idea did not work, Gates' later work did, creating the global empire that is Microsoft.  




7.  Elvis Presley:  As one of the best-selling artists of all time, Elvis has Become a household name even years after His death. But back in 1954, Elvis was still a nobody, and Jimmy Denny, manager of the Grand Ole Opry, fired Elvis Presley after just one performance telling him, "You Is not goin 'nowhere, son. You ought to go back to drivin' a truck. " 





8.  Stephen King: The first book by this author, the iconic thriller  Carrie,  Received 30 rejections, finally causing King to give up and throw it in the trash.  His wife fished it out and Encouraged him to resubmit it, and the rest is history, with King now having hundreds of books published the distinction of being one of the best-selling authors of all time.





9.  The Beatles:  Few people can deny the lasting power of this super group, still popular with listeners around the world today. When yet They were just starting out, a recording company told them no. The were told  "we do not like THEIR sound, and guitar music is on the way out,"  two things the rest of the world could not have disagreed with more.


















10Harrison Ford:  In His first film, Ford was told by the movie execs that he simply did not have what it Takes to be a star. Today, with numerous hits under His belt, iconic portrayals of characters like Han Solo and Indiana Jones, and a career that stretches decades, Ford can proudly show that he does, in fact, have what it Takes.






11. Steven Spielberg:  While today Spielberg's name is synonymous with big budget, he was rejected from the University of Southern California School of Theater, Film and Television three times. Ugh Eventually attended school and another location, only to drop out to Become a director before finishing . Thirty-five years after starting His degree, Spielberg returned to school in 2002 to finally complete His work and earn His BA.  





12.  Albert Einstein:  Most of us take Einstein's name as synonymous with genius, but he did not always show Such promise. Einstein did not speak until he was four and did not read until he was seven, causing His teachers and parents to think he was mentally handicapped, slow and anti-social. Eventually, he was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School. It MIGHT have taken him a bit longer, but most people would agree that he caught on pretty well in the end, winning the Nobel Prize and changing the face of modern physics.  





 These are only a few examples of people who turned failure into success. In every accomplishment starts with the decision to try it.  As long as we live, you do not quit in life and if you do not quit, you'll never fail.  You are the embodiment of the information you not not choose to accept and act upon.  To change your circumstances you need to change your thinking and subsequent actions.

 If you enjoyed this post or it has help you in any way, please comment and share if you want more content like this.  Thanks for visiting!




God With You



Martes, Marso 25, 2014

3 Secrets Of Bill Gates To Extraordinary Success

The popular myth is that Bill Gates is a visionary. He foresaw His MS-DOS operating system as a goldmine, and he tricked IBM, the biggest computer company on earth, into letting him retain the copyright. Microsoft still dominates the desktop software more than 30 years after Gates helped launch the personal computer revolution. 
This story fits with the widely-held notion that coming up with a "big idea" is what It takes to accomplish a lot, and Become very wealthy.
Though most people I surveyed for my forthcoming book,  Brilliant Business  also hold this belief, an important subset do not. The most successful, the ones who have Become enormously wealthy, know better. They say that success Requires extraordinary execution on an ordinary idea.
Indeed, if you look more closely at the details of Bill Gates' entrepreneurial life, you'll find it supports the latter point, too.
Gates took Microsoft to the top by executing brilliantly, and always in the service of other people's visions, never His own. By parlaying His way through a series of ever-bigger business deals - all with fairly ordinary products - he went from zero to billions in less than a decade.
Here are the three critical ways Bill Gates aced execution:
Acting Strategic
Rather than merely innovating or dreaming, Gates took a disciplined approach as a software Toward source of potential business opportunities.
He and His partner Paul Allen wrote the first version of Microsoft BASIC just to get in on the ground floor with a pioneer maker of home-built computer kits. Gates quit Harvard and moved to New Mexico to work with the company, named MITS, hoping to make an industry standard Microsoft BASIC. A few years later, Gates and Allen made similar moves to get close to Digital Research, then the's leading maker of the most popular PC operating system. They even marketed a translator that allowed Digital Research software to work on Apple computers, as a strategic move to ride on Digital Research's coattails.
Microsoft's ties to Digital Research led Directly to its big opportunity, with IBM. When IBM could not get Digital Research to provide an operating system for IBM's new PC project, Gates was there to volunteer for the job. It did not matter that Microsoft had no expertise in operating systems.
Strategic positioning, as well as a little luck - not some "big idea" - gave Gates the opportunity to make billions with MS-DOS for IBM.
Powerful Partnerships
Gates was never too proud to be the second banana. Like a true entrepreneur, Gates saw the "structural holes" in the personal computing marketplace and moved in to occupy them, always in a subordinate spot to the big players.
First Gates positioned Microsoft as the junior partner to the pioneering MITS, and then served in a similar role with junior-partner industry leader Digital Research. The little-known version of Microsoft's marriage to IBM is that Gates started out as an ardent matchmaker Between Digital Research and IBM. Gates eagerly tried to bring the two giants together, content to be the second-class software in a marriage Between big players. But When Digital Research and IBM could not tie the knot, Gates stepped into the void, fearing that the IBM PC project MIGHT quit altogether. No matter what, Gates respected IBM's potential power in the PC market and wanted to be a part of it.
The irony is that by the time Gates had gone on to Become the richest man on earth, the first two of His "senior" partners were long gone and forgotten. The third, IBM, stopped making PCs in 2004.
And, by the way, Gates never duped His partner IBM into letting him keep the licensing rights to MS-DOS. IBM's policy was to not hold the rights for any product outside its doors Developed, for fear of legal liability. Gates got the same deal on licensing that would have given IBM to Digital Research or anyone else.
Ferocious Tenacity
Gates always helped His partners succeed on THEIR terms, not His own. With MS-DOS, IBM's timing was paramount concern. Missed deadlines IBM MIGHT cause higher-ups to pull the plug on the PC project, but Microsoft had only a few months to Produce the software. So Microsoft took a quick-and-dirty shortcut. It Bought the rights to a PC operating system software made by another Seattle company, and MS-DOS built on top of it. Gates later ADMITTED it would have taken a year for Microsoft to Create MS-DOS from scratch.
IBM was notoriously hard on its vendors. During the development phase of MS-DOS, buttoned-down IBM executives hounded Microsoft employees on security breaches and procedural little details. It drove Gates' team members They compared nuts and working with IBM to "riding the bear." But Gates persisted and told His team to suck it up. MS-DOS was delivered on time.
At first, the software was so buggy that IBM engineers had to rewrite the entire thing. But the point is that Gates did what the partner needed. It did not matter if MS-DOS was a shoddy operating system based on someone else's design. It came in on time and preserved the project. Rather than vision, and certainly not pride of workmanship, Gates was all about execution.
That's the Gates method: Act Strategically, partner powerfully, and "ride the bear."
You too can look for the structural holes in your industry, work with the strongest partners that will have you, and do everything you can to help those stronger partners succeed.