A small adjustment in your approach can make a big difference in your results. Explore your alternatives and you'll discover a path to improved performance. Sometimes, doing a task at a different time of the day can cause a major improvement in your effectiveness. Or perhaps doing things in a slightly different sequence will make the rewards more rewarding.
If you're already getting it ninety-nine percent right, work on that other one percent. It can make all the difference in the world.
No failure is permanent and no failure is a complete failure. Learn from the portion of the effort that went wrong, change it, and recombine it with the part that went right.
Rarely is it necessary to throw out everything you're doing. Instead, look for ways to fine-tune your efforts until you get the results you desire.
Be curious, be objective, be creative and be flexible. A little bit of change can put you over the top.
-- Ralph Marston http://greatday.com/motivate/ -------------------------------------------------------- Thought of the day
"We know that a man can read Goethe or Rilke in the evening, that he can play Bach and Schubert, and go to his day's work at Auschwitz in the morning." George Steiner --------------------------------------------------------- Site of the day
The Crash of 1929 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/crash/ The Crash of 1929 offers insights into topics in American history including market mechanics, the history of Wall Street, economic forecasting, the zeitgeist of the 1920s, morality and the market, the effect of economic cycles on political trends, the lifestyles of the American elite, and more. Use the film or this Web site to learn more, either in a classroom or on your own. A PBS production. --------------------------------------------------------- Today's Devotion http://www.devotions.net Bill Turner, Publisher bill@dbusinessnews.com
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