Wednesday, 13 June 2018

14 Questions to Help Clarify Your Steps After A Flash of Inspiration (Part 1)


We all get a flash of inspiration or an idea to do or run with something from time to time. If you don’t get on it right there and then, some of these ideas thaw in intensity and later disappear into oblivion, some remain subdued at our sub-consciousness, while some are nagging and clamouring for immediate treatment.
It seems there are more cases of the first two categories above than there are the third. And even in the event of the persistent third, it takes some process to transport an idea from the realm of intangibility to the sphere of concrete reality. A course of action is required to transform an inspiration into an expression, a move into a movement.
Below are 14 questions that will help you to clarify your thoughts and define your steps on what to do after a bout of inspiration:
  1. What is the assignment?
Answering this question will help you to clearly define and have an insight on what exactly you are required to do.
  1. What are the tasks?
This will help you to identify the tasks that are involved in the assignment. The tasks are the bits and pieces of things you will have to do to ensure that you are on track of executing the assignment.
  1. What is the purpose?
Knowing the purpose of your assignment will give you a sense of location and direction. It is soothing to the mind to know that one’s actions are premised on a motive that is considered noble or charitable. Knowing the purpose of your assignment gives you a sense of significance for being a contributor to the advancement of the mankind. And when the chips are down, it also gives you reasons to go on.
  1. Who are the targets?
You must be able to define your audience, your market or the class of people whom your assignment (campaign, products, and services) will benefit. This is a very critical aspect because the success/failure of your offering, nay your fulfilment/frustration as a pioneer, are largely dependent on identifying the group of people who need your idea or would benefit from your assignment, and then taking your campaign to them.
  1. What is the scope?
Knowing the scope of your assignment will also save you a lot of stress and frustration. The scope of your offering may the within your locality, it may also be within your state, region, nation, or continent. Knowing this will help you to plan your move and your scale of operations.

Tuesday, 12 June 2018

Types of Fear

1. Fear of Failure
2. Fear of Making Mistakes
3. Fear of rejection
4. Fear of change
5. Fear of confrontation
6. Fear of loss
7. Fear of success!
8. Fear of the Unknown

The biggest barrier that most people have to overcome is fear. It is this fear (and all of its cousins like worry, anxiety, and self-doubt) that paralyses you, and keeps you from succeeding. 

Monday, 11 June 2018

The Entrepreneurial Questions


1. What do I have the resources, ability, interest and contacts to do?
2. Do I have the necessary commitment needed to succeed in a business undertaking?
3. Am I prepared to work extremely hard, to devote long hours of labour to my business?
 4. Do I have the mental stamina and concentration to meet the demands my project will impose on me?
5. Do I accept new ideas easily? Do I treat other people with respect? Am I able to make decisions right away?
6. How do I deal with problem solving: Am I prepared to spend time analyzing a problem and find a solution? Or am I the type who just closes his eyes and hope for the best?
7. Am I ready to commit to the long term, knowing that a company’s success is never an overnight miracle?
8. What back-up resources do I have? Will my family members or friends invest in my company or tide me over during a rough patch?
9. Am I good at concentrating on details?
10. Am I ready to sit down and write a careful analysis of my business prospects?
11. Am I by nature an optimist? Knowing that mistakes and setbacks are bound to occur, am I able to learn from my mistakes without getting derailed or discouraged?


Friday, 8 June 2018

Wrong Concepts Of Success


  • Having money, riches and wealth
  • Having many properties and assets
  • Being popular and in the news at all times
  • Having fleet of cars
  • Having many children
  • Marrying many wives
  • Having many admirers
  • Being a public figure
  • Being the envy of everyone around etc

Thursday, 7 June 2018

What Is The Character Of Success?


Success is fulfilling an identified personal life purpose with:
  • The fear of God
  • Integrity
  • Sound Ethical Values
  • A Sense of Mission
  • Compassion
  • Character
Success is nothing more than a few simple disciplines, practiced every day; while failure is simply a few errors in judgment, repeated every day. It is the accumulative weight of our disciplines and our judgments that leads us to either fortune or failure. - Jim Rohn
If you develop the habits of success, you will make success a habit. - Michael E. Angier
The common denominator of success lies in forming the habit of doing things that failure don’t like to do. - Albert Gray


Wednesday, 6 June 2018

About Ideas


No one can replicate your original idea as uniquely as you, because a lot of intangible personal mix goes into the execution of ideas that the other person cannot grasp. In most cases, the idea thief will struggle to express it. It's only in rare cases that s/he would execute it better than you; and s/he must be a super intelligent person to do that.

So, don't just sit and bemoan the theft of your idea, get up and pursue it. And let's believe your personal mix would prove superior to your counterparts in process, execution and package.

To your success!

- Babatunde Oladele

Tuesday, 5 June 2018

FEAR IS UNIVERSAL: EXAMPLES OF HISTORICAL FIGURES WITH FEARS


We all have fears. 9 out of 10 people are terrified by the thought of speaking before groups. Some don’t like insects. Others fear heights, deep water, financial problems, aging, or loneliness. 
  • Julius Caesar, a powerful military general and Roman emperor, feared thunder. 
  • Peter the Great, the czar of Russia and an imposing figure at six five feet tall, was afraid of bridges. He crossed them only when there was no other alternative, and when he did, he trembled and cried like a child. 
  • Dr. Samuel Johnson, a British writer and literary critic, had a phobia about entering a room with any foot other than his left foot. Anytime he accidentally entered a room wrong-footed, he backed out and entered again with his right foot. He took wanting to put his best foot forward to a ridiculous extreme!