January 13, 2011

Some great advice

More to come!



Go well

Amplify’d from www.viperchill.com


Written by Glen, this post has
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self-employed-onlineFebruary 1st, 2009, was a very memorable day for me. It was the day I arrived back at my family home in Newcastle, England, to start working for myself full-time. I had just left a job which for the previous two years saw me working with companies like Nissan, Hewlett Packard and Land Rover as their social media manager. My position in the rat race was actually an awesome one, but it was nothing compared to being my own boss.

As some people here don’t care about making their living from the internet, I understand that this post will not be for everybody. However, if you’ve just made the leap to working for yourself, currently run your own business, or you’re looking to make your money online in the future, this article may be just what you need.

13 Lessons from 18 Months of Self-Employment

Over the last 18 months of working for myself, I’ve learned a ton of things on my journey. Not every piece of advice I took on board has helped, with many ideas quickly being discarded. From reading dozens of books, speaking with hundreds of entrepreneurs, and living this life myself for a year and a half, there are a few lessons I would like to share.

Write a Mission Statement (But Keep It Private)

If you go to the website of any large company, you’ll usually find a detailed mission statement which cites the main aim of their business operations. They’re usually long, boring, and ignored. THe type of mission statement I’m talking about here is more of an elevator pitch: A sentence or two about why you’re doing what you’re doing, and what you hope to achieve.

This isn’t an elevator pitch you need to tell anyone, or a mission statement you need to share. Instead, the aim of these sentences is to help you stay on track. If someone offers you a partnership in a large project, you simply have to look towards your mission statement to decide whether it’s a good use of your time. If you’ve heard about a new way of doing things, you simply have to look at your mission statement to see if it might be right for you.

“If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there” – Lewis Carroll

Decide what you want your core focus to be, and write it down somewhere. Internalise it. Anytime a situation arises where you’re not sure what to do, look to your statement to help you with the answer.

Focus On Your Glow

Jerry Sternin, who worked for Save the Children, was sent to Vietnam and asked to “make a difference” with the malnutrition issues the country faced. He was just given just six months to fulfil his task. With problems in the water supply, ignorance towards nutrition, and a countrywide dilemma, he had a big job ahead of him.

Instead of looking to fix one thing, like providing clean water to the country – something he didn’t have the time nor resources to do – he decided instead to look at what was working. Why are there healthy children in areas that are full of children who are starving, who have the same finances and living conditions available to them, and what are they doing differently?

Sternin found some common factors between the healthy children in these rural villages, one being that they spread their food intake throughout the day, rather than just having two large meals like the children who were struggling with health issues. Their bodies couldn’t absorb the nutrients from such a lot of food each meal.

The advice Sternin gave to struggling families from his findings was simple, but he certainly made a big difference.

Instead of just looking to your mistakes and hoping to learn from them or tackling a huge project you want to overcome. Why not look at what is working for you in other areas of life or on other projects, and see how you can apply those factors to other endeavours?

You’re far more likely to have great results.

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