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  • Hub You - Ocean in View – O the Joy! A Freelance Writer Gets Giddy

    Motivational Humorous Speakers Can Help Motivate Meeting Attendees!
    Motivational humorous speakers can help to motivate meeting attendees at your next event. Motivation has been defined as the deployment of physical, mental and emotional energy toward a specific task or goal. In pure psychological terms motivation is often referred to initiation, intensity and persistence of a specific behavior and by employing a motivational humorous speaker you can tap into true motiv
    writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jens

    How to Make 5S Work - Part 2
    Even if most of your employees want to adopt the principles of 5S, active participation and total involvement in the program is the key to its successful implementation.If you do it right, you will not just benefit from smooth-running business operations, but also having highly-motivated employees eager to continue on with the change process.So how could 5S be effectively implemented?
    The quote – though originally badly misspelled – is from Meriwether Lewis, upon finally seeing the Pacific Ocean. Through a long and twisty branch of our family tree, I get to claim this brave explorer as a relative.

    What do we have in common? Frankly – not a whole lot. Captain Lewis was unbelievably brave to set out to explore the western two-thirds of our nation. I thought I was pretty brave last month to take off alone for San Francisco for a Klemmer & Associates seminar. Lewis was appointed the governor of the Louisiana Territory. Me – I share the governorship of our home with my wonderful husband of seventeen years.

    But I have done something pretty brave. I started a business of my own. After becoming essentially unemployable, because I’m not willing to grovel for a day off to take care of sick kids, to eat lunch at a time specified by a boss, or to work like crazy… for someone else – I went looking for a better way to contribute to our family financially.

    Yes. I know about the statistic that says one-third of all new businesses fail in the first year. Yes. I remember how my prior entrepreneurial attempts crashed and burned – the custom knitting business, the cigar box purses on ebay, the mystery shopping (I could do this all day, but you probably get the idea). And yes, I was scared that this one would fail, too. What is that quote?

    “Courage is not the absence of fear; it is taking action in fear’s presence.”

    So, I read a book by Loral Langemeier, called The Millionaire Maker, hired a coach through Live Out Loud, and started the hunt for the perfect business. It had to be something based on my existing skill set. Something that people would pay for. Something with relatively low start-up costs.

    I felt a lot like George Costanza on that episode of Seinfeld when he’s out of work and contemplating various careers. "I'd love to be a Civil War buff. What do you have to do to be a buff?" The homework went something like this: make a list of 100 things you do well. Have three people who know you well make similar lists, but with only 50 skills each. Compare the lists. Do any skills appear on all of the lists? How could you earn money with these skills? And by a unanimous vote….. I became a writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jense

    Greater Confidence: A Critical Factor Of Success In Important Interviews
    Job interviews can be quite nerve racking at times but to be successful you must face your interviewer with confidence. Your demeanor will determine how your interviewer views you. A confident person is always an asset to the company, as they will project a strong image of the business to prospective customers and clients. You can build up confidence in several ways.Be knowledgeable about the fie
    overnorship of our home with my wonderful husband of seventeen years.

    But I have done something pretty brave. I started a business of my own. After becoming essentially unemployable, because I’m not willing to grovel for a day off to take care of sick kids, to eat lunch at a time specified by a boss, or to work like crazy… for someone else – I went looking for a better way to contribute to our family financially.

    Yes. I know about the statistic that says one-third of all new businesses fail in the first year. Yes. I remember how my prior entrepreneurial attempts crashed and burned – the custom knitting business, the cigar box purses on ebay, the mystery shopping (I could do this all day, but you probably get the idea). And yes, I was scared that this one would fail, too. What is that quote?

    “Courage is not the absence of fear; it is taking action in fear’s presence.”

    So, I read a book by Loral Langemeier, called The Millionaire Maker, hired a coach through Live Out Loud, and started the hunt for the perfect business. It had to be something based on my existing skill set. Something that people would pay for. Something with relatively low start-up costs.

    I felt a lot like George Costanza on that episode of Seinfeld when he’s out of work and contemplating various careers. "I'd love to be a Civil War buff. What do you have to do to be a buff?" The homework went something like this: make a list of 100 things you do well. Have three people who know you well make similar lists, but with only 50 skills each. Compare the lists. Do any skills appear on all of the lists? How could you earn money with these skills? And by a unanimous vote….. I became a writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jens

    How To Quit Your Job
    Why should you take my advice on how to quit your job? Because I'm a job-quitting expert, and my expertise has been gained through experience. I've quit many jobs in many industries. In fact, I can think of fifteen jobs that I've quit off the top of my head.The most recent job I quit was at the Post Office. Don't let anyone tell you that you'll get used to the schedule of a vampire - you won't. N
    urial attempts crashed and burned – the custom knitting business, the cigar box purses on ebay, the mystery shopping (I could do this all day, but you probably get the idea). And yes, I was scared that this one would fail, too. What is that quote?

    “Courage is not the absence of fear; it is taking action in fear’s presence.”

    So, I read a book by Loral Langemeier, called The Millionaire Maker, hired a coach through Live Out Loud, and started the hunt for the perfect business. It had to be something based on my existing skill set. Something that people would pay for. Something with relatively low start-up costs.

    I felt a lot like George Costanza on that episode of Seinfeld when he’s out of work and contemplating various careers. "I'd love to be a Civil War buff. What do you have to do to be a buff?" The homework went something like this: make a list of 100 things you do well. Have three people who know you well make similar lists, but with only 50 skills each. Compare the lists. Do any skills appear on all of the lists? How could you earn money with these skills? And by a unanimous vote….. I became a writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jens

    Gear Up for Your First Job Interview
    You have probably become fairly accustomed to dressing casually for school with a wardrobe consisting of jeans, shirts, and tennis shoes. And why not? Jeans are way more comfortable than slacks and dress shoes don’t hold a candle to a comfy pair of sandals. Unfortunately, these items are best left to the back of the closet when it comes to dressing appropriately for a job interview.The first s
    e would pay for. Something with relatively low start-up costs.

    I felt a lot like George Costanza on that episode of Seinfeld when he’s out of work and contemplating various careers. "I'd love to be a Civil War buff. What do you have to do to be a buff?" The homework went something like this: make a list of 100 things you do well. Have three people who know you well make similar lists, but with only 50 skills each. Compare the lists. Do any skills appear on all of the lists? How could you earn money with these skills? And by a unanimous vote….. I became a writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jens

    10 Crucial Exit Strategies Leading to a Successful Sale of Your Business
    Five years after helping a client to sell his business, I received my final check and placed a call to the person who represented the buyer. In discussing the history of the transaction and tying up loose ends, we came to the conclusion that a sale isn’t complete until you have survived the negotiations and the closing, cashed the final check, confirmed that the statute of limitations has run out for a
    writer.

    Great. So, how do you make money with that? Where does the giddy freelance writer from this article’s title come in? Don’t writers pretty much starve to death? Don’t they get all unkempt, lock themselves away to type and crumple, and slowly go insane? At least, unless they’re Stephen King or JK Rowling?

    Nope. Not if they do it the right way. With some good advice, the right books, a bit of talent, and a team, they do just fine. In fact, one year after launching a writing business, they joyride down the beautiful Indian River Drive in Jensen Beach, FL (a winding road next to the river, flanked by palm trees swaying in the breeze) – listening to Norah Jones (still can’t beat those vocals, guitar, and piano), while enjoying the smooth-as-butter ride of a brand new company car… all with a big, giddy grin from ear to ear.

    What would make this joy complete? Teaching others how to do it, too. That’s why I launched my new site, WorkingWriterHappyWriter.com.

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