Strengthen the Body, Strengthen the Mind, Strengthen the Outcome

I’ve been a hard core fitness enthusiast ever since I was 15, when I saw Linda Hamilton in The Terminator. I learned then that physical strength is not only beautiful; it is also essential to feeling confident and capable in all aspects of your life.Executing on a dream or vision to build a business is one of the most mentally challenging endeavors a person will ever pursue. Every day, we are faced with nonbelievers, seemingly insurmountable challenges, and 101 reasons to quit. But still we persevere.

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Driving an Intrapreneurial Spirit and Mindset

I'm working with a great company who's committed to moving to the next level of growth. The owner/founder has done a very good job of establishing himself as a highly dependable and reputable subcontractor, but wants to triple the company size, and evolve into a prime contractor over the next 3 years. We have a lot of work to do. To make this pivot, we have to build his infrastructure, implement required processes, and align with the right people.One of our most immediate tasks is to evaluate and shift the mindset and commitment of his current team. Growth can't happen alone. It takes a village to build a business.

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The Three Things Companies Need to Thrive

I've had a slew of podcast interviews over the last few weeks, and virtually all of the hosts have asked me what I think is the necessary ingredient for continued business growth. I speak from a place of making mistakes, and from getting things right over the last 20 years.The three things I believe companies need to survive are a market niche, relevancy, and a mindset of greatness. I've named them in order of difficulty.

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A Higher-Level Leadership Framework & Inspiring Through Adversity

As one who sees leadership and spirituality as two sides of the same coin, I often refer to Deepak's 7-Step Framework for LEADERS. Deepak describes a leader as "the symbolic soul of a group of consciousness." He says that group consciousness could be a family, an organization, a community, a country or the whole world. He explains that the leader represents the longings, the aspirations, the deepest desires of the group, so in a sense, "the soul." This is exactly why the CEO owns the culture of an organization, which is the organizational DNA.

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Personal Development IS The Goal

Personal development is not a tool for reaching a bigger goal. Instead, becoming a "complete human being is already the biggest and most noble goal you can aspire to." Most of us are on a quest of continuous self-improvement, with the goal of attaining greater success. "If I attend this school, if I obtain this certification, if I achieve this milestone, then I will be able to attain another level of achievement." The personal development is often tied to a desired outcome that moves us from one level to another.

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Personal Development IS The Goal

Personal development is not a tool for reaching a bigger goal. Instead, becoming a “complete human being is already the biggest and most noble goal you can aspire to.” Most of us are on a quest of continuous self-improvement, with the goal of attaining greater success. “If I attend this school, if I obtain this certification, if I achieve this milestone, then I will be able to attain another level of achievement.” The personal development is often tied to a desired outcome that moves us from one level to another.

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Starting 2014 Right With A Strong Marketing Strategy (That Won't Break The Bank)

I came across a compilation of 19 shoestring-budget strategies that will help you connect with your target audience without going broke - exactly what a small business needs to expand their presence and stay financially healthy.Here are my suggestions to move these ideas to implementation.1: Pick three out of the list and focus on them. If you try to tackle the entire list, you will do a mediocre or poor job for all of them. Then, once those are done, move to the next three. The greatest ideas fail at implementation because we bite off more than we chew.2: Determine what you can outsource, and what you need to manage yourself. For example, if you decide to join a Chamber, you personally need to cultivate those relationships, so ensure you have enough time to be present in the organization. If you decide to write a blog, you need to build your editorial calendar and write your blogs, but can outsource the mechanics of posting and sharing.As a small business owner, deciding how and where you will dedicate your very limited time is essential to your success.3: Finally, if an idea isn't working for you, pivot quickly. Drop the tactic and move on. It's all about figuring out what works best for you at this point in time.Here is the link to the complete presentation.Here are the tips:

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Why Am I Here? Finding Your Path to Authentic Leadership

How do we define our deepest desire? And if we don't know it, how can we get to where we are supposed to be? How do we reach our destiny? It's so easy to lose sight of the "why" behind our daily deeds. When we lose connection to the "why," weariness and hopelessness creeps in. We often work in a reactive mode, answering phone calls, emails, and the needs of others. We envelop ourselves in deadlines. Every day that we go to work, we are slaves to checklists. What is our larger purpose behind it all?

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Monday Mindfulness: Appreciating The Pause

As much of the country is blanketed in snow and ice, this is a perfect time to pause... to take a deep breath, notice the beauty of our surroundings, and slow down. Yes, the snow wreaks havoc on our well-assembled plans. School is canceled, day-care is closed, meetings and appointments are pushed aside, our travel plans are either rescheduled or delayed.Fortunately for most of us, however, the winter weather is nothing more than an inconvenience.Two of my favorite things about the snow (besides snow angels) are the way it falls in solitude, and the visual effect it has on our landscape. Both of these gifts are actually deceptive, for beneath the snow lies Spring. While we are in the moment of the winter solstice, we shift focus away from the fact that just beneath our feet, and also just above our heads is growing grass and budding trees & flowers. Even in the stillness and solitude of a snowstorm, Spring life continues to push forward.

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Eight Lessons for Success (And Some Other Insights) by Barbara Corcoran

I had the privilege of speaking at the National Women Business Owners Corporation (NWBOC - www.nwboc.org) conference last week in Palm Beach, Florida. One of the highlights of the conference (where 200 women business owners came together to learn, share, and connect) was keynote Barbara Corcoran. Barbara is one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the country. She took a $1,000 loan to start her real estate company, The Corcoran Group, which she grew into a $5 billion business. She sold the firm for $66 million in 2001.Barbara is also a host and investor on ABC's Shark Tank. During the last three seasons, she has bought 11 new businesses. She is also the author of three best-selling books, and is a regular small business and real estate contributor on all of the major networks.Like all great entrepreneurs, Barbara's journey to success has been filled with wonderful lessons. I have summarized them here for you.

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Rejected by TED... No Problem! "No" Means "Not Yet"

February was a month of wins - and losses. Everyone talks about their wins, so I'm going to move right past those, and get to the topic that that leaders rarely glorify: the losses.I was rejected in February by TED. TED stands for Technology, Engineering and Design. There are TED events all over the world that feature speakers that have ideas worth spreading. The TED website (www.ted.com) is my all-time favorite site because it opens our minds to so many ways of thinking about things we've never even thought about! It spotlights our greatest potential in any topic you can imagine.

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Recognizing the Positive Leadership of Carnival Cruise Lines CEO Gerry Cahill

The disaster of the failed Carnival Triumph cruise ship has captivated all of us over the last week.As a frequent cruiser who has cruised Carnival and other lines, I cringed upon seeing the pictures and videos of the squalor and disgusting conditions aboard ship. I sympathized with the passengers who entrusted their safety to Carnival, yet found themselves living a week-long, potentially life-endangering nightmare. Throughout the course of the week, I kept asking myself how well I would cope with being trapped on board with my family.Fortunately, the nightmare has ended, now that the ship has docked in Mobile Alabama, with all passengers and crew members safe (albeit hungry and dirty).Throughout this disaster, I've been watching how CEO Gerry Cahill has conducted himself. Personally, I think he has done an exceptional job - especially compared to Former BP CEO Tony Hayward during the 2010 oil spill disaster that claimed 11 lives and has spewed 100 million gallons of toxic oil into the Gulf of Mexico. - and here's why:

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When Your Bedroom Becomes Your Boardroom: (Happily) Working With Your Spouse

Spouses that choose to work together embark on a very unique journey. This arrangement is not a conventional marriage. Two of the hardest things a person can attempt is to build a successful business and a successful marriage. 90 percent of all businesses fail within the first 5 years. The divorce rate (in the U.S.) is now higher than 50 percent. Combine these two endeavors, and you face a lot of risk. There is a lot at stake at home and at work if things get rocky. The levels of expectations for one another are much higher than in a typical business partnership or typical marriage. Consideration must extend much further than, "I have this great business idea, can you help me?"As a follow up to my January 10, 2013 segment on Washington Business Report (http://www.wjla.com/articles/2013/02/washington-business-report-feb-10-2013-85006.html) on working with your spouse, I've interviewed several other business owners who have braved this model to learn what makes it work, and how to avoid trouble in paradise. Rather than giving a simple bulleted list of strategies such as "schedule a date night" or "agree not to talk about marriage at home," I'm sharing a more detailed behind-the-scenes glimpse of the complexities of this arrangement. If you are currently working with your spouse, or thinking about it, this is an important column for you.

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Feeding Your 4 Food Groups in 2013: Mind, Body, Heart/Soul, Spirit

Forget the USDA Food Pyramid (at least for the next few minutes). The four food groups that truly nourish us are our Mind, Body, Heart/Soul, and Spirit. When we feed these every day, the rest of life takes care of itself.Here are specific ways you can feed these four food groups in 2013.

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Five Ways To Make The Most of Your Holiday Downtime

How we can make the most of our holiday downtime - you know those pockets of time when office productivity is low, laziness is high, and we're all pressing the reset button to move into the new year? I came across an article by Kevin Daum (http://www.kevindaum.com), a best-selling author, Inc columnist, Inc 500 entrepreneur, and fellow Entrepreneurs Organization (http://www.eonetwork.org) member that answered this question.I've taken 2 of his suggestions and mixed them with 3 of mine. Whether you're the reflective, spiritual, meditative type, the hyper-focused Type-A type, or somewhere in between, there should be something for everyone on this list.

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Growing Into the Title of CEO Starts Today - Four Reasons Why It Must.

As a small business owner, nothing communicates confidence to prospective customers, employees, and partners more than your title as CEO.In just three letters, the title communicates self-confidence, leadership, vision, strategy, and credibility.

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