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Passion, Perseverance, and a Limitless FutureMay 2007 We’ve been discussing passion as it relates to success in business in the last few months. How would you define passion and how does passion relate to the persevering attitude necessary for lasting success? The key question: What motivates us as businesspeople? If we are working only for money, we are working for the wrong reason. Money may flow and it should be the result of our work, but our motivation has to be other than money, or we are not really passionate. My experience has been that money does not by itself bring on a passionate devotion to work. And money, in and of itself, will not provide the staying power needed to develop a persevering attitude. True passion is found in those businesspeople who are motivated by the inner satisfaction that they get from their work. Earlier in our discussion, we might have given the
impression that work is always about money. To clarify, money plays a huge part
in the description of success, but success is not really about money. Success is
about self-satisfaction. Some passionate entrepreneurs grow their business, gain lots of positive peer recognition, and work hard, but don’t attain the significant success that I am promoting because they don’t add the planning, measuring and adjustments necessary. For sure, proper motivation, passion, and a persevering attitude are prerequisites, but so are an attention to the details, intelligent selection of metrics, and diligence in measuring results and making adjustments. Everyone runs into roadblocks. Everyone bumps into
surprises. Everyone has difficulty. Everyone in the position of ownership runs
low on revenue at one time or another. It’s having a persevering attitude that
pulls businesspeople through. One of my competitors, Walter Williams, shed light on
this one day when he said, “Ron, the reason you are successful is because you
keep shooting the gun. Everybody else shoots the gun and then they lay it down
and take off for a month or two.” He was alluding to the fact that I work as if
there are no limits to what I can do in my business. My motivation comes from
the inner satisfaction I get from a job well done. The choice to be an
entrepreneur can be a lonely one, but it is also one where we choose to see the
world as having no limits and to work at what we are most passionate about. Don’t forget to go the web site for my new book, www.greenweenies.com, to learn all the backroom business terms. There are 1,200+ terms in over 300 pages, with hilarious illustrations by world famous Gahan Wilson. You can register there for your free weekly “green weenie.” If you want to know what a three fingered booger is, or what’s in a train wreck envelope, it’s the only place to go! Please email if you would like me to send previous articles. AutoSalvageconsultant.com was formed in 2001 to help recyclers improve their businesses. With over fifty years of experience in three staff members, the group is THE definitive source for recyclers’ management and training needs. The founder, Ron Sturgeon is past owner of AAA Small Car World. You can review his resume, with skills and experience at our web site. In 2002, his book How to Salvage Millions From Your Small Business was published to help small business owners achieve significant success, and was recently reprinted in the U.S., and published in China, Korea and the Czech Republic. You can learn more about how to help your business at www.autosalvageconsultant.com. You can reach us at:
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