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wartime hero Tagged Articles
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In Praise Of Failure
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| Eileen McDargh shares the wisdom of what can and should be learned from our failures and mistakes as she urges us to move forward focusing on creating something stronger and more lasting. |
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Other wartime hero Related Articles
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Lesson #5: Your Conscience is Your Chicest Business Accessory
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| “We children didn’t have many chances to daydream,” recalls Armani. “It was wartime. There were very real, everyday problems. I didn’t have time to think about my dreams for the future. We were concerned with certain, very basic things: eating, getting cheap schoolbooks, and being able to go to the cinema on Sundays.” |
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Catching Flies with Chopsticks
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| One of the best scenes in martial arts cinema features the hero, Mr. Miyagi, practicing with chopsticks to catch a house fly. Of course, he’s never actually caught one, but he keep trying! (If you think Daniel is the hero of this movie, don’t read any further!) |
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Leadership: Now More than Ever!
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| Winston Churchill is a hero of mine. Partly, I think, because he wasn't perfect. He was neither an obvious hero nor someone acknowledged early on to be the leader that he eventually became. He just put his head down, plowed through and never gave up. He was honest and hard-working, pragmatic and passionate. Sound like any small business owners you know?
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Your Hero’s Journey: A metaphor for life and business coaching
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| Did you know you are on a Hero’s Journey? If you are undergoing significant change in your life, you have been called to embark on a journey of transformation, which Joseph Campbell identified as The Hero’s Journey. No hero undergoes transformation alone, and this article describes how coaching can help you navigate the future with more ease, confidence and resilience. |
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Leaders Invent Themselves
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| Look at the mess we're in. Why doesn't somebody do something? When was the last time you heard or even thought that? Look! Up in the air, it's Superman! We're saved. What a hero. If only I had his powers I could be a hero. If only I was born a leader.
Wrong! The big myth is that leaders are born. The reality, in the words of Warren Bennis, author of On Becoming a Leader, is "Leaders Invent Themselves".
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Leadership Lessons from Charlie Sheen, John Edwards and Tiger Woods
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| What constitutes character? Who's your hero? Are you a hero in someone else's eyes? Are you a person of good character? How do you recognize one? Read on to see how you can change your behavior patterns to forever change and enrich your life. |
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Leadership Lessons: What is Success at Work
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| There is a play that made the rounds decades ago called "How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying" in which the hero knew he had "made it" when he got the key to the executive washroom. The young hero was naive on his journey to the top. Yet the pattern handed to him from prior generations is that money is the key to success.
Then decades later there is the film "Wall Street" where money is still the key to success. Yet now the hero is not naive, merely ruthless. It doesn't matter how you get it, so long as you get it. Ethics be damned. Lie, cheat, marry the bosses daughter, marry the boss, just get the money. It seems as a culture this pattern of money as the measure of success continues to be handed from generation to generation with little discussion or redefinition.
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How Powerful Are You? Become Your Own Super Hero.
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| There isn't a super hero "out there" who can save you from your situation, fix your problems, or take away your fears. You have to tap into your own super hero; to identify the fears that are holding you back and to make a decision not to reclaim the power they have wielded. |
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How To Be A Hero With Presentation Skills Training
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| Are you the hero when you present in front of people? Are you consistently chosen as the person to open minds and close deals? If you want to be the hero in your business, these 5 tips show you how. |
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StorySelling “How to Write Mini User Stories”
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| Why: Use mini user stories, with the right sales message, so that your salespeople are able to sell value and differentiate your offering instead of pitching product and reducing price.
Mini User Stories: Make the stories short. Use only one constraint per story otherwise you risk flooding the Buyer with too much information.
Make the Buyer the Hero of the Story: Many Customer Stories make the company out to be the hero who rode in on their white shinny horse to save the Buyer.
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