9
Signs You Will Be Exceptionally
Successful
Why
are some people not just successful but incredibly successful?
They don't focus primarily on money.
It's
not that hard to be successful. But it is hard to be incredibly successful.
Yet
we all hope to achieve exceptional success (something we all define
differently--and should define differently.)
Unfortunately,
there is no magic bullet. There is no one-size-fits-all prescription. But there
are certain qualities that incredibly successful people share...especially
those who make a significant impact on the lives of other people in the
process.
See
how many apply to you:
1.
You find happiness in the success of others.
Great
business teams win because their most talented members are willing to sacrifice
to make others happy. Great teams are made up of employees who help each other,
know their roles, set aside personal goals, and value team success over
everything else.
Where
does that attitude come from?
You.
Every
successful person answers the question, "Can you make the choice that your
happiness will come from the success of others?" with a resounding
"Yes!"
2.
You relentlessly seek new experiences.
Novelty
seeking--getting bored easily and throwing yourself into new pursuits or
activities--is often linked to gambling, drug abuse, attention deficit
disorder, and leaping out of perfectly good
airplanes without a parachute.
But according to Dr. Robert Cloninger, "Novelty seeking is
one of the traits that keeps you healthy and happy and fosters personality
growth as you age.... If you combine adventurousness and curiosity with
persistence and a sense that it's not all about you, then you get the
creativity that benefits society as a whole."
As
Cloninger says, "To succeed, you want to be able to regulate your impulses
while also having the imagination to see what the future would be like if you
tried something new."
Sounds
like every successful person I know.
So
go ahead. Embrace your inner novelty seeker. You'll be healthier, you'll have
more friends, and you'll be generally more satisfied with life.
3. You don't think work/life
balance, you just think life.
Symbolic
work/life boundaries are almost impossible to maintain. Why? You are your
business. Your business is your life, just like your life is your
business--which is also true for family, friends, and interests--so there is no
separation because all those things make you who you are.
Incredibly
successful people find ways to include family instead of ways to exclude work.
They find ways to include interests, hobbies, passions, and personal values in
their daily business lives.
If
you can't, you're not living--you're just working.
4.
You're incredibly empathetic.
Unless
you create something entirely new--which is really hard to do--your business or
profession is based on fulfilling an existing need or solving a problem.
It's
impossible to identify a need or a problem without the ability to put yourself
in another person's shoes. That's the mark of a successful businessperson.
But
exceptionally successful leaders go a step further, regularly putting
themselves in the shoes of their employees.
Success
isn't a line trending upwards. Success is a circle, because no matter how high
your business--and your ego--soars, success still comes back to your employees.
5.
You have something to prove--to yourself.
Many
people have a burning desire to prove other people wrong. That's a great
motivator.
Incredibly
successful people are driven by something deeper and more personal. True drive,
commitment, and dedication spring from a desire to prove something to the
most important person of all.
You.
6.
You ignore the 40-hour workweek hype.
Studies
show that working more than 40 hours a week decreases productivity.
OK...
Successful
people work smarter, sure, but they also outwork their competition. (Every
successful entrepreneur I know who reads those stories probably thinks,
"Cool. Hopefully my competitors will believe that crap.")
The
author Richard North Patterson tells a great story about Robert Kennedy.
Kennedy was seeking to indict Teamsters head Jimmy Hoffa (who some still
believe is hanging out in Argentina with Elvis and Jim Morrison). One night,
Kennedy worked on the Hoffa case until about 2 a.m. On his way home, he
passed the Teamsters building and saw the lights were still on in Hoffa's
office, so he turned around and went back to work.
There
will always be people who are smarter and more talented than we are. Successful
people simply want it more. They're ruthless--especially with themselves.
In
short, they work smarter...and they also work harder. That's the real secret of their success.
7.
You see money as a responsibility, not a reward.
Many
entrepreneurial cautionary tales involve buying 17 cars, loading up on pricey
antiques, importing Christmas trees, and spending $40,000 a year for a personal
masseuse.
Successful
people don't see money solely as a personal reward; they see money as a way to
grow a business, reward and develop employees, give back to the community...in
short, not just to make their own lives better but to improve the lives of
other people, too.
And
most importantly, they do so without fanfare, because the true reward is always
in the act, not the recognition.
8.
You don't think you're remarkable.
In
a world of social media, everyone can be their own PR agent. It's incredibly
easy for anyone to blow their own horn and bask in the glow of their insight
and accomplishments.
Truly
successful people don't. They accept their success is based on ambition,
persistence, and execution...but they also recognize that key mentors, remarkable employees, and a huge dose of luck also played a part.
Exceptionally
successful people reap the rewards of humility, asking questions, seeking
advice, and especially recognizing and praising others because...
9.
You know that success is fleeting, but dignity and respect last forever.
Providing
employees with higher pay, better benefits, and greater opportunities is
certainly important. But no level of pay and benefits can overcome damage to self-esteem and self-worth.
The most important
thing successful people provide their employees, customers, vendors--everyone
they meet--is dignity.
And so should
you...because when you do, everything else follows.
BY JEFF
HADEN
http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/the-9-inner-qualities-of-exceptionally-successful-people.html?cid=em01016week13e
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