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Creativity for Success
Creativity and innovation are important keys to success in today’s rapidly changing world. Process improvement, problem solving, recruiting, retaining and motivating employees, decision making, dealing with limited resources, satisfying customers,...
Five Ideas for Unique (and Cheap) Marketing
Home-based businesses generally lack the large marketing budgets of bigger companies, but a smaller budget doesn'thave to stop you from engaging in clever and effective campaigns.
© 2003 Vishal P. Rao
Home-based businesses generally lack...
How Puppy Training Can Help Your Business
As leaders we always want to improve the performance of our organization. To improve we must release the creativity in our employees, leaders must get involved in their employees’ work. Not everyone knows how to do this, but maybe it isn’t all that...
How to get a better web site ROI
How to get a better web site ROI by performing a simple and inexpensive test using Google Adwords.
Better Web Site ROI
How to increase your business profitability by hundreds of percent.
Websites are ubiquitous these days and...
Innovation Management – the Value of Being Obvious
One of the most interesting aspects of creativity and innovation is the general perception of obviousness.
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation whilst innovation can be defined as idea selection,...
Innovation Management – the value of due diligence
One consideration innovators should be wary of in the rush to market is to not forego due diligence. That is, the temptation to forego, among other things, investigation into an idea’s feasibility, adequate market analysis and the questioning of...
It Starts with the Selection Process: Prevention is the Best Cure
How many times have you heard this when talking with an experienced coach or consultant. You say: 1.My department is not making quotas. I’ve provided training. I motivate. What am I doing wrong? 2.My marketing department head does good work,...
The Only Option is to Succeed
With the end of the year fast approaching, now is a great time to take stock of 2004. It is likely that your company set specific goals at the beginning of the year. As you review the past year, the question that must be asked is, "Have I...
Warning: Do Not Start A Business Until You Read This - The Biggest Mistake Business Owners Make And How You Can Avoid It
What is the reason why you want to start your own business, to make some money, to be your own boss?
Sorry to say, but these are not good enough reasons. You got to be more specific.
If you are going into business, you got know how to get...
Will and Vision
Remember Chux? The disposable diaper that took the market by storm in 1932?
Of course you don't. Chux saw its product as a luxury item, and happily kept its little throwaway business to itself for almost forty years. Then Pampers came along in...
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SEE THE POSSIBILITIES
I have a very dear friend who is also my partner in some of my business ventures. She lives in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, and I live in Laurel, Maryland. Some business dealings need to be done face-to-face rather than by telephone or e-mail, so we take turns driving to each other's area.
When I drive down to see Sally, I have to drive through the Washington, D.C., area, head west on Route 66 in Virginia, and then head south down Route 81 through the Valley. Somewhere a little west of Manassas, Virginia, there's a definite change in scenery. The "big city" feel is gone, the 4-lane highway in each direction narrows down to two lanes each way, and there's actual land space between communities.
On one trip down to the Valley, I had a horrible time trying to get out of the Washington, D.C., area. The Beltway around D.C. was plagued with construction zones and at least one accident. By the time I made it west of Manassas, I needed to take a road break. I drove for several miles looking for a place to stop, and I finally saw an exit off the highway with a McDonald's.
I wasn't paying much attention to my surroundings as I entered McDonald's (I had other things on my mind), but I did take a look around me as I left. I saw that the McDonald's is in the middle of nowhere. As I pulled out of the parking lot, I noticed that the majority of the traffic on the two-lane road was due to McDonald's. I thought, "What a great location McDonald's picked!"
Think about it. Before McDonald's was built, I'm sure there were people who just saw a wide open space of land out in the middle of nowhere. The land probably didn't show a lot of promise. However, the person(s) who built this McDonald's saw an exit on and off a major east/west highway that was well-traveled. They saw the only means of refreshment for miles around. They saw guaranteed traffic. They saw the possibilities.
My same friend Sally and I used to teach 4 - 6 year olds in Bible class at church. She had a gift of seeing possibilities everywhere. It didn't matter if we went out to the grocery store, or browsing through the craft store, or walking around the lake. Everywhere Sally looked she saw object lessons to use to teach the kids. Sometimes I would look at the object that had caught
her attention, and even with her excited explanation of what she could do with it, I didn't see what she saw.
Over the years, however, I have developed that "possibilities" outlook. A lot of what I do is writing, and I have learned to see the "article" in almost every situation. I had to teach myself to do it, but once I got the knack of it, it's amazing what I see that others don't even notice.
To grow your business and to keep it from getting stagnant, learn to see the possibilities around you.
First, keep a pad of paper with you wherever you go. You never know when the spirit of inspiration will hit. And believe me, you WON'T remember that brilliant idea later. It will be gone. So get in the habit of writing down your ideas the moment you get them. And don't forget to put in some details when you write your note. I've looked at cryptic messages I've left for myself, fully understanding what I was doing at the time, but not making heads or tails of it later.
Second, pay attention to the details around you. Look at what's actually going on. Study the people (study, don't stare!) sitting on the bus with you. Listen to children as they play. Watch how others conduct their business and deal with customers. Look at the sign posts along the road. Some of them are quite funny.
Third, learn to look at what you are seeing with new eyes. Ask yourself, "What is the lesson to be learned here?" or "Can I use that in my business?" or "Is there an article in there somewhere?" Learn from other's mistakes so you don't make them yourself. Learn from other's successes and see how you can adapt the idea (not steal and plagiarize) for your own business.
When you develop a "possibilities" outlook, new ideas will begin to race through your mind. Your creativity will begin to flow. You'll feel a new energy about the growth of your business. And that's when things get really exciting!
About the Author
Sharon Dalton Williams is the author of "How to Succeed and Live a Full Life." Learn how to reach the goals you have set for your life and business. Surf to http://www.sdwassociates.com to order your copy. Learn how to use what is uniquely you in building your business. Subscribe to *Out From the Crowd.* mailto:oftc-subscribe@topica.com.
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