“There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure.”

~Colin Powell

Here’s some advice; as you build your business, put an equal focus on investing the proceeds of your business with the concept of ‘planting flags.’

Most people who come into their first fortune from their own business, soon lose it all.

Just because you’re great at generating cash through your business, it doesn’t mean you’re any good at protecting it, and making it work for you in the long term.

Here’s just 6 things most newly-wealthy people do which causes them to lose all their money (avoid these at all costs).

MindsetAnyway, today I want to talk to you about what you’re doing to feed your mind with the right information to maximise your chances of success in business.

At the end of the day, the main thing which separates you from the super wealthy is knowledge and the application of that knowledge.

Everything they do and have done to get where they are, can be learned.

Which biographies about successful entrepreneurs and business people are you reading right now?

If there’s one common “secret” I see over and over again in these biographies, it’s the willingness to put in hard, focused work. Everyone wants shortcuts, and there are some systems that can simplify and automate the selling process. However hard work is the real secret to success.

 Look at people like Ray Kroc, who started with very little at the age of 52 when he built McDonald’s, a tremendous global corporation that’s still thriving years after his death.McDonalds Founder Ray Kroc

Ray Kroc’s Biography – Grinding It Out: The Making of McDonalds

And there’s Bill Gates. On the day he dropped out of college, he told his father that he wasn’t going back. His father said, “Son, you’ve just thrown your whole life away.” Of course, we all know the Bill Gates story didn’t turn out that way.Microsoft Founder Bill Gates

Biography – Bill Gates: The Life and Business Lessons of Bill Gates

He worked his tail off, and you know the rest of the Microsoft story.

He was so focused at one point in 1981 that he called and told his mom that he wasn’t going to call or come over for his usual Sunday lunch for the next six months. Weeks would go by when he would barely leave his office and he wouldn’t even go home to shower for days.

There’s a book called The Secret by Rhonda Byrne that made the rounds in the self-help circle over 10 years ago. It’s main message is that you can affirm your way to success. But the truth is, success really isn’t a secret at all.

The Secret by Rhonda ByrneDownload The Secret Book Summary Here!

When you read books about people who have actually turned small sums of money into huge fortunes, you’ll find out they didn’t use The Secret to make themselves the successes they are today.

They didn’t just sit around and affirm their success, chant positive things, and get their minds right. All that has its place – attitude definitely plays a big role in success, there’s no question about that – but it’s hardly the major component in business success.

The most successful people all worked hard, focused constantly on what they wanted, and practiced dramatic self-discipline and sacrifice to get where they are today.

I encourage you to read the stories of other successful people, the ones that are mostly told in biographies (don’t just read autobiographies – they’re too unreliable), and you’ll find that it took a lot of work for that success to happen. They serve as models for the rest of us.

Record Your Personal Best

If you want to be successful at anything… business, sports, music… you do have to devote the time, energy, and effort to what you’ve chosen. One expert said it takes 10,000 hours of dedication to master something.

But here’s the thing. If you’re going to spend that much time and energy giving yourself to an endeavor, it better be something you love. Because there’s a price that has to be paid for success in anything.

That’s reality. And that’s the real secret.

If you get into it, and it’s the right thing, what you thought was work really isn’t work after all. You end up devoting a lot of hours to it, and the payoff both in financial terms and in what you become and achieve is well worth the effort that’s involved to get there.

The Online Alliance Entrepreneurs GroupGet ACCESS to our Best FREE Tools and Resources for Entrepreneurs – visit our Tips and Tools page or Subscribe to our Entrepreneurs Newsletter.

If you want any help, just Messenger us (Private Message Us) on our Facebook Messenger link – m.me/EasyOnlineBizSolution

Talk Soon,

Nicky

I finished re-reading the book ‘The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It’ by Michael E. Gerber.

This book explains why 80% of small businesses fail especially in the first 3-5 years. Also how to overcome common mistakes in business, so you can build a successful business that not only works but is also deeply rewarding for you (and your stakeholders).

Ensure your business isn’t among those by building a company that’s based on systems and not on the work of a single individual.

The MAIN key idea of the book is this – your business is really an extension of who you are. So transforming your business starts with transforming yourself.

The E-Myth Revisited Book Summary

Summary of ‘The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It’

Here’s our overview of the 3 key segments of the book – the E-Myth, the Turn-Key Revolution, and how to build a successful small business.

1. The Entrepreneurial Myth (E-Myth)

It’s a myth that small businesses are started by true-blue entrepreneurs. The truth is, most businesses are started by people who were initially working for others. They are good at what they do, decide to go into business and make the fatal assumption that their strong technical skills are enough for them to run a technical business.

We all have multi-faceted personalities, with often-conflicting traits.

Your 3 Business Personalities to BeA business owner is not just an entrepreneur, a manager or a technician. He is all 3 personalities rolled into one at the same time. Hence, he has to deal with their differing tendencies, needs and wants.

In order for businesses to grow and evolve, the business owner must be willing to change to meet the business needs. Gerber explains the 3 growth stages of businesses – Infancy, Adolescence, and Maturity.

Businesses fail due to the owners’ inability to perform the roles required of them. The key is to start your business with the expectation and plan for it to grow and work without you.

You also need a business model that will allow you to balance all 3 personalities. So the Entrepreneur drives the business, the Manager ensures it’s sustainable, and the Technician can stay in touch with the nuts and bolts of the work being done.

2. The Turn-Key Revolution

Your business is not your life, and it is imperative that you work on the business and not in it. You should build your business such that you can duplicate it.

Regardless of whether you actually sell or franchise it in the future, this is the best way to ensure your business is successful and is not dependent on you.

To do that, the concept of the “Business Format Franchise” comes into play. It’s where the franchisee is not only given the right to market a known product, but also an entire system for doing business.

Unlike the high failure rates of conventional business, Business Format Franchises have a 95% success rate.

Get a copy of the book now for more mojo and powerful examples!

The “Franchise Prototype” is where ideas are incubated, tested and perfected until they work predictably before they are deployed in business.

Using the example of McDonald’s, Gerber explains how every detail (from how long french fries are left in the warming bin) is tested and standardized. Which is done with the goal of leaving nothing to chance and operational discretion.

Your goal is to create such a prototype for your business, so it can be successfully cloned into thousands more like it. Just like a successful franchise. But, it must fulfill 6 criteria or rules:

Get the 6 Rules for a Successful Duplicable Business1. Provide consistent value to your stakeholders, beyond expectations.
2. Be operable by people with the lowest possible level of skill.
3. Demonstrate precision and order.
4. Capture all the work to be done in operations manuals.
5. Provide a consistent and predictable service to the customer.
6. Use consistent systems/ codes to create a duplicatable business with same or similar Brand(e.g. colour, dress, facilities).

These criteria are covered in more detail in the book.

3. Building a Small Business that Works

Your Prototype will constantly evolve as part of your business development process. What it means you need to constantly refine your business with the Innovation-Quantification-Orchestration loop (more details in the book).

This is more than just a habit or process. When you fully immerse yourself in continuous improvement, you feel a deeper connection with your work and enjoy a deeper level of fulfillment.

Your Business Development Program

Your business should support your life goals, not be your life goals. That way, you can work on your business and not in it.

To do that one must follow…

7 Step Business Development Program

In a nutshell, the 7 parts of the process are:
• Determine your Primary Aim (your life goals);
• State your Strategic Objective, i.e. how your business  will look like when it’s “done”, and how it will help you to achieve your Primary Aim;
• Develop your Organizational Strategy, so you can start testing, documenting and building roles today, toward your ideal future organization;
• Establish your Management Strategy, so a predictable experience can be replicated by anyone you hire;
• Identify your People Strategy, i.e. get your team to do what you want them to do;
• Develop your Marketing Strategy. By understanding your customers’ perceived needs and then constructing and testing a Prototype that meets those needs.
• Put in place your Systems Strategy, including your hard systems, soft systems, and information systems to deliver your customer promise.

Read the book for more details! This is a must-read for any business owner or aspiring entrepreneur.

The Online Alliance Entrepreneurs GroupGet ACCESS  to our Best FREE Tools and Resources for Entrepreneurs by visiting our Tips and Tools page or
subscribe to the Newsletter for Entrepreneurs button
If you want any help, just Messenger us (Private Message Us) on our Facebook Messenger link – m.me/EasyOnlineBizSolution

Talk Soon,

Nicky

This list is not organized in order of importance since that depends on the needs of the reader. Also, this is not my “top 6″ lessons from the book overall either. It’s just 6 nuggets of wisdom that I picked up about social media marketing.

If you’re not getting the most out of your social media game yet (trust me, you aren’t), then this is for you.

“The most delightful surprise in life is to suddenly recognize your own worth.” – Dr Maxwell Maltz

I just finished reading Psycho-Cybernetics which was recommended to me from Drew Innes who is the Founder of the Online Alliance. I found the book to be quite excellent.

Motivational and self-help experts in personal development, including Zig Ziglar, Tony Robbins, Brian Tracy have based their techniques on this book.

Read more

As promised in my last article; How Being A Perfectionist Can Hinder Your Business & Life, I will be telling you the Strategies for Coping with Perfectionism. These come from the book “When Perfect Isn’t Good Enough” written by Martin M. Antony PhD and Richard P. Swinson MD.

In this book, you discover – the root cause of your perfectionism, explore the impact of perfectionism on your life, and find new, proven-effective coping skills to help you overcome your anxiety about making mistakes.

Also includes tips for dealing with other perfectionists and discussions about how perfectionism is linked to worry, depression, anger, social anxiety, and body image. Read more

This week I read for the first time 100 Ways to Motivate Yourself:
Change Your Life Forever.
The Author of 100 Ways to Motivate Others Steve Chandler, again proves that sometimes the simplest ideas make the most sense.

The world has led you to believe that financial freedom is not something you can willfully create in your life.

The TRUTH is that creating excessive financial wealth does not come down to luck or talent. It comes down simply to your beliefs, understanding, and the “pillars” that reinforce your every action.

I finished reading The 10 Pillars of Wealth book last night where…

Read more

I believe, to live a good life, you need to commit to lifelong learning…

And that includes reading better books.

Doing so helps you understand why you do what you do, make better, rational choices in life and work, and develop life’s most important life skills.

This week I read for the first time Work the System: The Simple Mechanics of Making More and Working Less by Sam Carpenter. This book is a reality check for business owners and department managers who are struggling. In order to design your ideal life, this book is should be on your reading list. Read more