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    How to Create 'Overnight Success' in Your Business
    Copyright © 2005, Mark Silver

    A person I admire has a very successful business. He's sharp, 
    personable, funny, smart, and helpful. And, the products and 
    services he provides are top-notch. He's sold thousands of them, 
    and his business is operating at a level much higher than mine.
    
    Then he announced that he was celebrating three years in 
    business. What! Only three years? How'd he get so far, so fast?
    
    He's created for himself an overnight success. I'm doing the 
    same thing, following the same steps he did. And, you can, too.
    
    Here's the secret to his "overnight success": He spent 15 years 
    prior to starting his "overnight success" business in his 
    industry, learning, growing, making mistakes.
    
    Jim Collins, in his groundbreaking book Good to Great, wrote 
    about "the Flywheel and the Doom Loop." In the companies his 
    team studied, the ones who had outstanding results just kept 
    incrementally improving, learning, making mistakes, learning, 
    continuing. These efforts created momentum on their "flywheel."
    
    The Flywheel is an analogy Collins used- a Flywheel is a huge, 
    very heavy wheel that takes a tremendous amount of effort to get 
    it to turn even a fraction of an inch in its rotation. However, 
    by pushing steadily at it, it gradually picks up momentum. Then, 
    you hit the moment when it's moving so fast, nothing can stop it.
    
    In contrast, companies who didn't take the Flywheel approach were
    caught in the "Doom Loop." Lurching around, trying a new thing 
    every year or two (or month or two!), trying to hit the lottery. 
    Sound familiar? Unfortunately, it doesn't work.
    
    In other words, "overnight success" only looks that way from the 
    outside. When you finally hit your momentum, it won't feel like 
    overnight success to you. But it may look that way to others.
    
    I have found this to be true without exception. EVERY "overnight 
    success," when I've looked at it closely, wasn't really. My 
    mentor coach looked like an overnight success, going from $0 to 
    a full client load in 90 days... except that she had years of 
    experience in running a different practice before, and had the 
    internal confidence it takes to enroll clients.
    
    There CAN be a sudden big jump in results, and this, no doubt, 
    is what makes people think to call it an "overnight success." 
    But, it just ain't so. The sudden big jump is because the slow, 
    steady incremental pushing of the Flywheel suddenly hit the 
    tipping point. You are inching up the see-saw, and, a little bit 
    past the mid-way point, the see-saw tilts in the other direction.
    
    The real question isn't "Can you get the see-saw to tip?" The 
    real question is: "Can you keep from getting thrown off when the 
    see-saw does tip?" How many lottery winners hold on to their 
    millions? How many sudden superstar athletes or musicians are 
    overwhelmed by success, and fall into drugs and reckless 
    spending?
    
    It's strange but true that many participants in my Heart of Money 
    Transformational Journey have a bigger struggle appreciating 
    assets they already own, than they do in facing their financial 
    liabilities.
    
    The real secrets to "overnight success" are:
    
    1. It only looks like "overnight" from the outside- it took a 
       lot of incremental work over years;
    2. You have to prepare yourself internally;
    3. You should look around and find contentment in your heart 
       where you already are, so you can feel enlivened to continue 
       the journey ahead.
    
    You don't have to be afraid of success, but you do have to 
    prepare yourself spiritually in the same incremental manner as 
    you do your business. If you work on both the internal and the 
    external parts of success, then you'll be ready for the tipping 
    point when it comes, inside and out.
    
    
    Keys to Your Overnight Success
    
     * Comparison is an evil force. Seriously. Although it's great to 
       watch others in order to learn, if you are comparing yourself 
       to someone else, when each of your situations is unique, you 
       ignite havoc in your heart as you struggle to be someone you 
       aren't.
    
       Stop comparing yourself to others. You don't know their 
       story. You don't know how they did what they are doing. And, 
       you probably don't even know the full truth of how successful 
       they really are. People can look successful, and still have 
       their struggles.
    
     * Appreciate your assets. This is the third chapter of Section 
       Five: The Heart of Money, in my book, and it is surprisingly 
       challenging for most people. Try facing something you own, 
       maybe a bigger ticket item, and notice how your heart feels 
       as you face it. This item is yours, it's been given to you, 
       you have full responsibility over how to dispose of it.
    
       Don't be surprised if it's an overwhelming feeling. But take 
       time to accept what you already have into your heart. 
       Digesting like this will help make room for more.
    
     * Don't do more than one difficult thing at a time. Don't raise 
       your prices, start a new marketing campaign, and try to create
       your first DVD all at the same time. Pick one challenging 
       area, and immerse yourself in it until you feel you "own" it. 
       Then move on to the next. Don't worry if you don't have a 
       blog, or a DVD, or whatever latest and newest thing everyone 
       is touting. You'll get to them, if it's truly important.
    
       Instead focus on the most challenging thing in your business 
       that isn't working to your satisfaction, and take it on. 
       Learn about it, chew on it, integrate it into your heart, 
       and then you can move on to the next.
    
    
    My very best to you and your business,
    Mark 
    



    Writer's Resource Box:
    Mark Silver is the founder of Heart of Business, and the author 
    of the forthcoming book, Unveiling the Heart of Your Business: 
    How money, marketing and sales can deepen your heart, heal the 
    world, and still add to your bottom line. He has helped hundreds 
    of people in small business succeed without losing their heart. 
    Mark integrates 1400 years of spiritual tradition with plain, 
    no-nonsense business practices. Get his free workbook Getting to 
    the Core of Your Business, among other free resources, online: 
    http://www.heartofbusiness.com




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