Posts Tagged ‘success’

Discover, Follow, Pursue

Finally, I am able to make time to start blogging again. Sorry for the brief hiatus.

In light of giving a quick closure to my previous topic, “Do you fit the profile of a billionaire?” that is long overdue, I would like to conclude my thoughts in this single post! Since it was my fault for being MIA, I will try to spare your long-term memory. :) Hopefully, by starting with the profile trivia would help!

Let’s start by rolling with the 1st profile…

  • Breaking away from a successful family tradition

    Born to a prosperous family farm in Dearborn, Michigan, Henry Ford was groomed to continue his family business as a farmer. At that time, agriculture was the main crop of the economy and being a successful farmer sounded like a secure future. However, Ford disliked farm work, instead preferring to tinker with machinery. Not letting his comfort zone to deter him from pursuing his passion, at the age of 18, he left for Detroit to become an apprentice machinist. After working his way up to become a chief engineer at Thomas Edison’s Edison Illuminating Company, Ford decided to setup his own company. Despite his innate engineering talents, Ford failed twice. On his third try, he finally managed to establish what is now known as Ford Motor Company.
    (more…)

Posted by ieming.com on March 28th, 2009 1 Comment

ABC of Success

  • Aspire to win
  • Begin with an end in mind
  • Challenge yourself beyond your limits
  • Differentiate thyself from the crowd
  • Empower your peers by sharing your success. One way or another, they have a hand in yours too.
  • Foster winning relationships with people from all walks of life
  • Give more than you can take
  • Have a little faith
  • Identify your strengths and weaknesses
  • Just do it! Believe in yourself
  • Keep your dreams alive
  • Love yourself
  • Maximize your potential
  • Never give up
  • Orchestrate yourself towards your destiny
  • Prioritize and prepare for opportunities
  • Quit procrastinating
  • Respect yourself and others
  • Sow good seeds, reap better fruits
  • Transform yourself continuously
  • Utilize your talents
  • Visualize your big dreams
  • Work smart, play hard
  • Xplore, Xperiment, Xecute
  • Young at heart
  • Zealous with what you believe in

Posted by ieming.com on June 12th, 2008 2 Comments

Simple Life?

Are you convinced yet that “Life is simple”? If you don’t, don’t worry because you are not alone; in fact, many people are still oblivious about it.

The big fallacy behind the idea “life is not simple” is because we are still part of the system. As with all systems, there are always some guiding principles that determine what work and what don’t. If you sway from them, you will be “punished” or you have to ask for forgiveness to rejoin the system.

A great example of a system is our educational system. Every child born in the 21st century is now expected to go through nursery school, primary school, secondary school and college (hopefully an Ivy League). During childhood, the popular belief is that you need to excel academically to be successful in life; society judges how far in life you can advance by what schools you attended or how well you performed in your examinations. Every child is implicitly measured either by a grade or what school brand he or she belongs to.

Yes, there is a positive correlation between academic performance and success. On one hand, you notice numerous well-educated people spearheading many of the Fortune 500 or Forbes Global 2000 companies. On the other hand, you can also witness many high school dropouts or so-called failures in that list too. So how are they able to make it into the list? Sheer luck? Or maybe the more appropriate question to ask is whether our current educational system that is designed during the industrial revolution is pervasive enough to be used as a metric? Fortunately, I would argue it is not.

Upon graduation of the educational system, you are now expected to work in corporations and climb up the corporate ladder. As time progresses, hopefully you can climb up the ladder and become the top chief of the company. Or at least, you can make enough good money to join the millionaire or even billionaire club. Society, as it being fickle-minded, shifts its definition of success from academic excellence to how much you make and what is your job title in the company. As long as you are not within the reach of the status quo of a management role in the corporate world, you feel that you have to “live to work” instead of “working to live”. This is where I believe our simple life definition gets muddled.

With more than 6 billion people on earth, no system exists today that can compute the different variations of human capacity to determine a person’s future. Human beings by nature of their creativity and multitude of talents, the first step to succeed is to discover thyself. From that initial step, you would gain self-confidence to use your innate talents to fight for what you are destined for.

To wrap it up, I think we should all take heed the advice from one of the greatest leaders of the 21st century, Steve Jobs of Apple Inc. “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma — which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”

Posted by ieming.com on June 10th, 2008 1 Comment