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The Key to Winning

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September 18, 2013
10 Classic Personal Achievement Books

The Key to Winning
byDenis Waitley

People often ask me, what is the most critical attribute of a winner in life? Without hesitation, I answer that believing you deserve to win is the key. If you believe in your dreams when they’re all you have to hang on to, you begin to try. If you feel you have potential or talent, you’ll invest in it. If you believe you’re worth the effort, you’ll put in the time and energy. If you think you can, you’ll learn how.

Healthy self-esteem is perhaps the most important and basic quality of a winning human being.  You want to be able to say: “I like myself. Given my parents and my background, I’m glad I’m me. I realize I may not be the best-looking in the group, but I always look and do my best in every group. I’d rather be me than anyone else in the world.” This is the self-talk of a winner. Winners have developed a strong sense of self-worth, regardless of their status. They weren’t necessarily born with these good feelings, but they’ve learned to like themselves through practice.

The most successful companies in the world know that valued employees are their most precious resource. Valuable employees pass their value on to customers. The result? Excellence and quality. They are the most powerful competitors in the world marketplace. Instead of comparing ourselves to others, we should view ourselves in terms of our own abilities, interests and goals. We can begin by making a conscious effort to upgrade our lifestyle, education and personal development. You always project on the outside how you feel on the inside.

Core values radiate like rings, as when a pebble is thrown in a pond. The self-centered constantly seek approval from and power over others. They try to impress them with their worth rather than express concern for others' well-being. And their outward appearances usually involve ways to hide their real thoughts and intentions.

The value-centered give of themselves freely and graciously, constantly seeking to empower others. Open and modest, they have no need for conceit, the opposite of core value. Feeling good about who they are, and not needing to talk about their victories or line their walls with celebrity photos, people with core values spend much of their time "paying value," as I call it, to others. When praised, they share the spotlight. When they make mistakes, they view them as learning experiences and accept responsibility.

ONLY $33 for 5 Popular Books by Chris Widener

Master the skills, attitudes and disciplines necessary to separate yourself from average. Denis Waitley’s Becoming an Authentic MVP will be your personal mentor to help you become a true winner in business and in life.

Your Achievement Challenge

Speaker, entrepreneur and best-selling author Les Brown shares the secret to focusing and acting on your dream.

“Whatever dream you decide to go after, whether it is a family, or a career goal, you must consciously decide that it is your life's mission. Benjamin Disraeli said, ‘The secret of success is constancy to purpose.’ You must go at it obsessively and set high standards for yourself along the way. There is no room for compromise when you are charting a course for your life or your career.”

Save 20% on Shawn Achor's Books when you buy all three.

Shawn Achor is the winner of over a dozen distinguished teaching awards at Harvard University, where he delivered lectures on positive psychology in the most popular class at Harvard. His TED talk is one of the most popular all time with over 4 million views, and his lecture airing on PBS has been seen by millions. Pick up Shawn’s books now, including his newest, Before Happiness. SAVE 20% when you buy all three!

 
Quotes from the Experts

Communication

“The goal of effective communication should be for listeners to say, ‘Me, too!’ versus ‘So what?’”
Jim Rohn

“Never assume you understand. Ask the questions.”
Brian Tracy

“There are four ways, and only four ways, in which we have contact with the world. We are evaluated and classified by these four contacts: what we do, how we look, what we say, and how we say it.”
—Dale Carnegie

“Writing is the gold standard of communication. Learn to do it well and see more gold.”
Chris Widener

“Remember not only to say the right thing in the right place, but far more difficult still, to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment.”
— Benjamin Franklin

Special OffersMust-have items

The Compound Effect
Seeds of Greatness Treasury
Step Into Your Greatness

The Compound Effect
by Darren Hardy

The Seeds of Greatness Treasury
by Denis Waitley

Step Into Your Greatness
by Les Brown

The core principles that drive success—find out what every superachiever needs to know, practice and master to reach success. MP3

A collection of Denis Waitley’s words to remember—a gift of poetry, proverbs and prose. eBook

Stop playing it safe and discover the key to greatness through Les Brown’s insights on raising the bar and committing to higher goals. MP3

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