The starting point of great success and
achievement has always been the same. It is for you to dream big dreams. There
is nothing more important, and nothing that works faster than for you to cast
off your own limitations than for you to begin dreaming and fantasizing about
the wonderful things that you can become, have, and do.
As a wise man once said, “You must
dream big dreams, for only big dreams have the power to move the minds of men.”
When you begin to dream big dreams, your levels of self-esteem and
self-confidence will go up immediately. You will feel more powerful about yourself
and your ability to deal with what happens to you. The reason so many people
accomplish so little is because they never allow themselves to lean back and
imagine the kind of life that is possible for them.
A powerful principle that you can use
to dream big dreams and live without limits is contained in what Elihu Goldratt
calls the “Theory of Constraints.” This is one of the greatest breakthroughs in
modern thinking. What Goldratt has found is that in every process, in
accomplishing any goal, there is a bottleneck or choke cord that serves as a
constraint on the process. This constraint then sets the speed at which you
achieve any particular goal.
What Goldratt found is that if you
concentrate all of your creative energies and attention on alleviating the
constraint, you can speed up the process faster than by doing any other single
thing.
Let me give you an example. Let us say
that you want to double your income. What is the critical constraint or the
limiting factor that holds you back? Well, you know that your income is a
direct reward for the quality and quantity of the services you render to your
world. Whatever field you are in, if you want to double your income, you simply
have to double the quality and quantity of what you do for that income. Or you
have to change activities and occupations so that what you are doing is worth
twice as much. But you must always ask yourself, “What is the critical
constraint that holds me back or sets the speed on how fast I double my
income?”
A friend of mine is one of the
highest-paid commission professionals in the United States. One of his goals
was to double his income over the next three to five years.
He applied the 80/20 rule to his client
base. He found that 20 percent of his clients contributed 80 percent of his
profits, and that the amount of time spent on a high-profit client was pretty
much the same amount of time spent on a low-profit client. In other words, he
was dividing his time equally over the number of tasks that he does while only
20 percent of those items contributes 80 percent of his results.
So he drew a line on his list of
clients under those who represented the top 20 percent and then called in other
professionals in his industry and very carefully, politely, and strategically
handed off the 80 percent of his clients that only represented 20 percent of
his business. He then put together a profile of his top clients and began
looking in the marketplace exclusively for the type of client who fit the
profile; in other words, one who could become a major profit contributor to his
organization, and whom he in turn could serve with the level of excellence that
his clients were accustomed to. And instead of doubling his income in three to
five years, he doubled it in the first year!
So what is holding you back? Is it your
level of education or skill? Is it your current occupation or job? Is it your
current environment or level of health? Is it the situations that you are in
today? What is setting the speed for you achieving your goal?
Remember, whatever you have learned,
you can unlearn. Whatever situation you have gotten yourself into, you can
probably get yourself out of. If your real goal is to dream big dreams and to
live without limits, you can set this as your standard and compare everything that
you do against it.
The three keys to living without limits
have always been the same. They are clarity, competence, and concentration.
Clarity means that you are absolutely
clear about who you are, what you want, and where you’re going. You write down
your goals and you make plans to accomplish them. You set very careful
priorities and you do something every day to move you toward your goals. And
the more progress you make toward accomplishing things that are important to
you, the greater self-confidence and self-belief you have, and the more
convinced you become that there are no limits on what you can achieve.
Competence means that you begin to
become very, very good in the key result areas of your chosen field. You apply
the 80/20 rule to everything you do and you focus on becoming outstanding in
the 20 percent of tasks that contribute to 80 percent of your results. You
dedicate yourself to continuous learning. You never stop growing. You realize
that excellence is a moving target. And you commit yourself to doing something
every day that enables you to become better and better at doing the most
important things in your field. Concentration is having the self-discipline to
force yourself to concentrate single-mindedly on one thing, the most important
thing, and stay with it until it’s complete.
The two key words for success have
always been focus and concentration. Focus is knowing exactly what you want to
be, have, and do. Concentration is persevering, without diversion or
distraction, in a straight line toward accomplishing the things that can make a
real difference in your life.
When you allow yourself to begin to
dream big dreams, creatively abandon the activities that are taking up too much
of your time, and focus your inward energies on alleviating your main
constraints, you start to feel an incredible sense of power and confidence. As
you focus on doing what you love to do and becoming excellent in those few
areas that can make a real difference in your life, you begin to think in terms
of possibilities rather than impossibilities, and you move ever closer toward
the realization of your full potential.
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