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Career Planning Starts with Self-Assessment One of the biggest mistakes that individuals make in their careers is to go aimlessly through school or work in an entry-level position with no clear direction (goals). They wait until the homestretch graduation, layoff, or departure before taking a ...
Planning To Get Rich With Your Internet Business? The web is a great opportunities. Imagine millions of customer. Its a huge cybermarket ! It's a trillion millions dollars market waiting for you ! Let's face it everyone wants to succeed with their internet business ? Iv been in business since 1995 ive ...
The Fastest List Growing Secret Are you running ads and marketing with tag lines that send people to your website? Then you're missing the point of internet marketing and losing out on your best money making opportunity. First a little history. The guys who started internet marketing ...
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If it is your goal to accumulate wealth, believing the fallacy that money makes money, will hinder your progress to no end. This belief stifles many to a life of failure, and misery.
The goal setting theory of motivation means that you need to be positive - and realistic - to be able to reach your goal, especially if that goal is to make money.
How many times do we hear that "money makes money." Money can make money just as easily as Ferrari can win the Grand Prix without Schumaker in the driver's seat.
"Ferrari is the Grand Prix world champion." Do we say that? "Microsoft invented Windows." Do we say that? Or do we say, "Schumaker is the world champion." And "Gates invented Windows."? Of course we give credit to the person, or people. And that's because that is the reality.
Money is an innate, lifeless thing.
To illustrate...
Let's say we want to make our money grow, then we place a $100 note in a tin and bury it, and a year later we return and dig it up. How much money will there be? Only our $100 note we placed in the tin. There is no way, on God's green earth that there can be one cent more than the original $100.
People make money! And people lose money!
Certainly, money can earn interest, but the person (or rather the person's intelligence) is required to invest the money to earn that interest. In this regard, a person can make a bad investment, and not earn as much interest, or can lose money.
On the other side of the coin (no pun intended), a person can indulge in a business venture, and this way make money. Or lose it!
Whichever route is taken, it is the intelligence of the PERSON that either makes money, or makes more money. This is the way it has always worked, and always will.
Even in the event where someone has a big windfall, like winning the lottery, this money can be squandered, or made to multiply. Whichever it is, it is up to the person, to either invest wisely, or to spend endlessly. The history books are full of tales where enormous fortunes were won, and then lost.
Therefore, if it is your goal to make money, don't fall into the trap of believing that "money makes money"; it is a lifeless object, that cannot possible multiply without the intelligence of a human being. Rather...
Make it your goal to...
... learn about money, and how to invest and use it to multiply.
Colin Dunbar has researched all aspects of goal setting for more than 25 years. He is now making his system available to everyone. Comprehensive manual with worksheets PLUS companion software.
www.eaziGOAL.com
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Slow economy prompts wave of liberal booksCBS NewsNEW YORK — With a Democrat in the White House, a wave of books is coming out this year lamenting the slow economy and calling for substantial change. And those books are by liberals. "It's the story of the moment right now," says Patricia Bostelman, ...and more » |
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Huntington's exhibit hall for books to get $2.5-million makeoverLos Angeles TimesBy Mike Boehm A change is in store for the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens' main display of its rare books, manuscripts, drawings, photography and other literary and historical holdings -- including a Gutenberg Bible from the ... |
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McEntee: Books for young readers can be gritty, but rarely damagingSalt Lake TribuneBy peg mcenteE Evidently, swearing in books for adolescents is on the rise, particularly among characters who are rich, attractive and popular. That's the conclusion of a Brigham Young University professor who scoured the content of 40 bestsellers and ... |
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