
The greatest ideas don’t happen after 5 hours of hard work trying to figure something out. These ideas come when you set your mind free. When you’re not thinking about work, creative juices can flow naturally. In fact, “thinking outside the box” is something that rarely happens when you’re actively trying to think of something. Big ideas are created spontaneously. So go outside, let your mind wander and see what happens.
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Working hard is always good, or is it? Sometimes you’re just stuck on something. You’re in the forest in the middle of work and all you see are trees. Walk away and take a break. Your greatest ideas and breakthroughs will come when you’re staring at the waves on the beach, looking at a mountain top, or just going outside for some fresh air. So remove your tunnel vision and see the forest from afar. Instead of seeing nothing but trees, what you’ll see is the right path.
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In life it’s usually the hard workers who get ahead, while the slackers keep performing beneath their potential. But there is still hope for procrastinators. While most people get into panic mode trying to get things done, slackers know how to fulfill their obligations, get acceptable marks and enjoy a relatively stress-free existence. Being a slacker isn’t necessarily a good thing, but it’s nice to find a balance between being laid back and being a high strung worker. Here’s a few ways how you can integrate the slacker lifestyle into your life and benefit from it.
- E-mails: you don’t need to reply to emails as soon as you get them. As long as you get to it within 24 hours, you should be okay. So handle your other tasks first and put email on the backburner for a while.
- Take a break: While others are hard at work, it’s okay to take a break and relax. You’ll come back re-energized, re-vitalized and will be more productive even though you’ll be working less.
- Don’t multi-task: Often times when you try to do too much at the same time you end up not doing any of those tasks correctly. So take your time and get things done right the first time.
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How you see yourself is likely how others will see you as well. Here’s a few examples of how you can implement this to your advantage.
- You’re unemployed. No you’re not. You’re advancing in your career, you’re an ambitious person looking to move up.
- You do freelance graphic design. No you don’t. You’re an artist.
Think of yourself as a product. You’re selling yourself to others. From your clothing to your way of speaking, you are a product to everyone you meet. Everyone from strangers to business owners subconsciously ask themselves if they want to buy you. So sell them your product. If you don’t market yourself or brand yourself in the way you want, others will most certainly do it for you.
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When you’re working on a project, it’s tempting to dream about how it will be a huge success right away. That’s usually not how it works. Like many good wines, projects need time to reach their full potential. It often takes weeks, if not months, before a site starts bringing in any money.
If you end up bringing in plenty of traffic and no sales and you see no real success at the end of the tunnel, don’t throw money at your problem. When you’re in a hole, stop digging. See what you’re doing wrong and fix it. If that doesn’t work, just start over with a fresh idea. Internet businesses are cheap and you can start a new one without going bankrupt.
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Here’s how it usually goes: You brainstorm or suddenly get an idea for a new site. You go ahead and try to implement your idea and you get all excited as you embark on a new project that is surely to be a big hit. You think or write a plan for your idea and get work. You pay the programmer and the web designer and the site finally goes live. Then you do some marketing and you’re still extremely excited about seeing your “baby” take off.
Now it’s time for reality to set in.. This site you created requires time to maintain it, it also requires money for maintenance. You end up spending your time doing the same tasks every day and pretty soon it’s not exciting anymore – its boring.
When you start a new site it’s important to realize what amount of work (both time and money) are involved to make it work. Always take upkeep and time into account or else your projects will always be incomplete.
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Why is jealousy a healthy attribute? First, what is jealousy?
Jealousy is envy, bitterness and overall unhappiness because of another’s possessions.
Human beings are built with a fear mechanism that automatically triggers when they perceive danger. Likewise, one can imagine the cavemen hundreds of thousands of years ago envious of a fellow tribesman meal or place of habitation. What does it lead to? The next morning that jealous creature goes hunting for a bigger kill, so he creates better tools. He then uses his brains and brawns to build a stronger residence.
Jealousy is one of the main components in what drives man to better himself. So remember: jealousy is healthy, jealousy has always been around, and jealousy is what will keep you motivated through thick and thin.
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Dropouts are the bosses and good students are the employees. Sounds twisted doesn’t it? But good grades in school don’t necessarily translate into becoming an entrepreneurial success. In fact, a straight-A student is more likely to be a structured type of individual who follows the rules and might not think outside the box.
Albert Einstein said: “Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.”
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