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Eileen on A Christmas Story - Dec 08
Thanks Dr Mike, love this story, so true! cheers
Eil on Pike River
Thanks for intersting posting. My great grand father was william patrick butler, his son william daniel butler I believe went over to new zealand to work in the mines. I was wondering if your william
Chris on Pike River
William Maher was my Grandfather, my mum was Kath Borkin. So thanks Mike for the information and yes it certainly hit home and our thoughts are with all the people these disasters have effected
Catherine on Pike River
I found this beautiful posting while searching for info on my grandfather - William Maher. Like you in times of disasters like this Pike one you think about your own family. I worked out while reading
Jesse on Pike River
That was really moving Mike. Thank you for giving me a detailed insight into where I'm from, and even though I'm 12000 miles away I'm in the middle of coal-mining country on my mothers side.
Annmaree on Pike River
Beautiful Mike. A great friend of mine, Gary Knowles, is heading up the most recent mine disaster situation and felt the full weight of in some way playing part of the modern day role of William
Gabrielle on Pike River
Mike what a very moving recollection of our history. Beautifully written.
Steve on Pike River
Mike, thanks for providing a vehicle for long dormant feeling of identity and belonging to surface. every time i meet a new person who asks me what part of NZ are you from, I ALWAYS say - I grew up on
Bede on Pike River
...'In a concert of silence' -Lovely turn of phrase Mike. Spoke to a guy last night who stood in Midland park to observe the silence. He said it lasted 5 minutes and was very moving.
John on Pike River
thanks mike. beautifully written. Amazing to see it in black and white becuase over the years its become a part of who we are..our DNA. Coal mining has always been a dangerous occupation.

Self-respecting business owners

I have a business associate who has been very successful in business. What often strikes me is how seriously he takes himself, and I don't mean that in a negative way. He just has himself fairly squarely at the centre of things. The other day we were discussing our children's ages, and I mentioned my eldest's upcoming 21st. He surprised me by saying I must have started young.  At first I thought he was complimenting me on my youthful looks (!) when I told him I was 28 when Lucy was born, so I was a tad deflated when he said, "Gee, that's young". Of course it isn't young, it's about average. But it is young compared to when he started, which is his reference point for everything.

I thought about the connection between his success and his view of himself. Success in business requires something of that attitude. One of the reasons we do not achieve the heights we know we're capable of is a lack of self-belief masquerading as modesty. What I've seen in working with business owners over these last 6 years is how their progress and success has been linked to growth in their confidence and their self-belief.

How seriously do you have to take yourself?  Most of us probably don't like the idea of being thought of as that self-focused, but I really don't think there's much risk of that. My observation is that most business owners don't take themselves seriously enough or treat themselves with enough respect. For example, they will waste their time on trifling tasks because they are too trivial to waste anyone else's time on. They will allow poor performers to continue to operate in the business because they don't feel they have the authority to deal with it. More seriously, they consistently sell themselves short when it comes to their vision for the business.  Most people's failure to achieve their potential lies in the massive daily discount they apply to their dreams.

In the world of your business, you are the most important person because you represent the interests of the company. Regard yourself that way. Show yourself the respect your position deserves. Take yourself a little more seriously.

17 August 2009

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