Saturday, August 2, 2014

Awesome reply from the CEO of JP Morgan Chase to a pretty girl’s questions


Awesome reply from the CEO of JP Morgan Chase to a pretty girl’s questions
 
Title: What should I do to marry a rich guy?
I’m going to be honest of what I’m going to say here. I’m 25 this year. I’m very pretty, have style and good taste. I wish to marry a guy with $500k annual salary or above. You might say that I’m greedy, but an annual salary of $1M is considered only as middle class in New York My requirement is not high. Is there anyone in this forum who has an income of $500k annual salary? Are you all married? I wanted to ask: what should I do to marry rich persons like you? Among those I’ve dated, the richest is $250k annual income, and it seems that this is my upper limit. If someone is going to move into high cost residential area on the west of New York CityGarden(? ), $250k annual income is not enough.
I’m here humbly to ask a few questions: 1) Where do most rich bachelors hang out? (Please list down the names and addresses of bars, restaurant, gym) 2) Which age group should I target? 3) Why most wives of the riches is only average-looking? I’ve met a few girls who doesn’t have looks & are not interesting, but they are able to marry rich guys 4) How do you decide who can be your wife, & who can only be your girlfriend? (my target now is to get married) ?


Awesome reply: To 
Ms. Pretty
———————————————————————————

Dear Ms. Pretty,
I have read your post with great interest. Guess there are lots of girls out there who have similar questions like yours. Please allow me to analyse your situation as a professional investor. My annual income is more than $500k, which meets your requirement, so I hope everyone believes that I’m not wasting time here. From the standpoint of a business person, it is a bad decision to marry you. The answer is very simple, so let me explain. Put the details aside, what you’re trying to do is an exchange of “beauty” and “money”: Person A provides beauty, and Person B pays for it, fair and square. However, there’s a deadly problem here, your beauty will fade, but my money will not be gone without any good reason. The fact is, my income might increase from year to year, but you can’t be prettier year after year. Hence from the viewpoint of economics, I am an appreciation asset, and you are a depreciation asset. It’s not just normal depreciation, but exponential depreciation. If that is your only asset, your value will be much worried 10 years later.
By the terms we use in Wall Street, every trading has a position, dating with you is also a “trading position”. If the trade value dropped we will sell it and it is not a good idea to keep it for long term – same goes with the marriage that you wanted. It might be cruel to say this, but in order to make a wiser decision any assets with great depreciation value will be sold or “leased”. Anyone with over $500k annual income is not a fool; we would only date you, but will not marry you. I would advice that you forget looking for any clues to marry a rich guy. And by the way, you could make yourself to become a rich person with $500k annual income.. This has better chance than finding a rich fool.
Hope this reply helps. If you are interested in “leasing” services, do contact me…
signed,
CEO J.P. Morgan


Friday, July 25, 2014

Why Do we Shout In Anger

WHY WE SHOUT IN ANGER 

A Hindu saint who was visiting river Ganges to take bath found a group of family members on the banks, shouting in anger at each other. He turned to his disciples smiled and asked.

'Why do people shout in anger shout at each other?'

Disciples thought for a while, one of them said, 'Because we lose our calm, we shout.'

'But, why should you shout when the other person is just next to you? You can as well tell him what you have to say in a soft manner.' asked the saint

Disciples gave some other answers but none satisfied the other disciples.

Finally the saint explained, .

'When two people are angry at each other, their hearts distance a lot. To cover that distance they must shout to be able to hear each other. The angrier they are, the stronger they will have to shout to hear each other to cover that great distance.

What happens when two people fall in love? They don't shout at each other but talk softly, Because their hearts are very close. The distance between them is either nonexistent or very small...'

The saint continued, 'When they love each other even more, what happens? They do not speak, only whisper and they get even closer to each other in their love. Finally they even need not whisper, they only look at each other and that's all. That is how close two people are when they love each other.'

He looked at his disciples and said.

'So when you argue do not let your hearts get distant, Do not say words that distance each other more, Or else there will come a day when the distance is so great that you will not find the path to return.


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Saturday, July 19, 2014

17 most common ways people screw up tough interviews

17 most common ways people screw up tough interviews:
_______________________________________________

Doing well in these interviews is highly rewarding because they can lead to big salaries and careers with a lot of room for growth and responsibility. However, case study interviews are also among the toughest to master, and you might be making career-limiting mistakes without even realizing it.

We spoke with Marc Cosentino, author of "Case In Point: Complete Case Interview Preparation," to find out the most common mistakes people make in their difficult case study interviews:

1. You tried to wing it.

To be truly prepared, people often do live practice of around 30 to 40 cases, and then read 30 additional cases before their actual interview. Cosentino says, " If you're not willing to put in the extra time, it means you really don't want the job." It takes around 100 hours of preparation to be a competitive candidate in the interview process. "It all boils down to confidence," he adds. "The more you practice, the more confident you feel going in."

2. You studied for it like a test.

Nothing beats live practice. Reading through cases is simply not enough to prepare for this type of interview. Cosentino recommends that you practice with real consultants, school alumni, or career services advisers. You could also try the site, Evisors, which offers consultants you can pay to practice with you.

Cosentino's advice is to keep a case journal as you practice, so you can write down the problem, solution, and what you forgot to think about. It will help you reflect on your strengths and weaknesses and also understand how you can improve.

3. You didn't stay up to date with economy and industry news.

In the weeks leading up to your interview, you should be reading the front page of the Wall Street Journal every day. Cosentino says he is also a big fan of CNBC, Satellite Radio, Business Insider alerts, McKinsey Quarterly, and any cutting edge stuff written by practitioners.

4. You didn't warm up the morning of the interview.

"No Major League Baseball player ever stepped up to the plate without batting practice," Cosentino points out. Just before you walk into the office for your interview, try practicing case questions or doing market sizing problems. "You don't want to warm up during the interview," he says.

5. You used technical jargon without understanding it.

Cosentino advises against using words if you don't completely understand their meaning - no matter how impressive they might sound. "If you use jargon in the wrong context, that's basically the end of the interview," he says. "The interviewer wouldn't be able to trust you if you got hired and actually did that in front of a client." Interviewers would much rather have you explain things in your own words than to use complicated terms and get them wrong.

6. You didn't ask for clarification.

Asking questions is a great way to show the interviewer you aren't shy about asking for information under high pressure circumstances. This can also turn your interview into a conversation, which shows you can interact well with clients. Being humble enough to ask questions is a sign of maturity, as long as you don't try to probe the answer out of the interviewer.

When you're facing a market case problem, make sure you understand exactly why the client wants to enter the market, what they're looking for, and what constitutes success for them. It's important to know what your client's expectations are so you can design a strategy around that.

One way to do this is to verify the objective. Even if the client's goals seem obvious, you should phrase your questions like: "One objective is to increase sales. Are there any other objectives I should know about?"

7. You forgot to summarize the case.

The first thing you should do is to re-state the case in your own words, so you can show your interviewer that you understand what's going on. It also helps you hear the information a second time and prevents you from answering the wrong question. To help you summarize well, make sure you circle or highlight the important aspects of the case when you're taking notes, so they jump off the page when you need them.

"Your summary is not a rehash of everything you discussed," Cosentino says. "It's simply a little bit of the backstory and then two to three key recommendations you want to remember."

8. You took messy notes.

You may not realize it, but your interviewer pays a lot of attention to your notes. "When these guys aren't looking you in the eye, they're watching what you're writing down," says Cosentino. Interviewers want to see how you write your notes, how you did your math, and if they can read your handwriting. Most firms will take your notes at the end of your interview and keep them in a file as one more data point they can look at.

Make it easier for them by turning your page toward them, drawing your notes, and walking them through your thought process. "If you turn your page toward them, the interviewer is also now leaning over the table going through it with you," he says. "You break through the imaginary plane and make the interviewer feel like a client." When you do this, you also turn your interview into a role-playing scenario, so the interviewer can see you really know how to deal with clients.

9. You didn't organize your thoughts before speaking.

The first thing to do after summarizing the case and verifying the objective is to lay out your structure. It will help you stay focused on the original question asked and not lose track of the objective or framework. If you have clean notes, they will help you recall facts of the case or your potential answers if you blank out.

Organizing your thoughts is most important when an employer asks about pros and cons. Cosentino says, "Most people try to answer off the top of their head and ping pong back and forth between the pros and cons. You want to give me all the pros and then all the cons, so you can come off well organized."

Another advantage for organizing your answer is that if you get cut off mid-thought, you'll be able to easily drop your current point and move to a new one.

10. You didn't look at the big picture.

Let's say your client was an online toy store who wanted to outsource product distribution and they only had one warehouse outside of Boston. Most people would rush into the question, without thinking about the fact that their client is a toy store that does 80% of its business in the last few months of the year. They should take a step back and think about the fact that for the other nine months of the year, the warehouse sits three quarters empty, so they would need to bring in seasonal balance to make the warehouse worth holding onto.

11. You didn't bring graph paper.

"Firms like it when you use graph paper because of the big squares and light backgrounds," Cosentino explains. "They also love it when you graph things." Since you will be dealing with numbers, graph paper can help you present them in a visual way. "Saying your thoughts out loud is a minimum," he adds. "Visually drawing what you are doing is even better." Of course, you should still bring white paper to the interview, so your other notes can stay clean and linear.

12. You tried to give an exact numerical answer.

Case interviewers often like to ask estimation questions, such as, "How many smartphones were sold in the U.S. last year?" Keep in mind that you don't need to give an exact answer and that getting bogged down in the details will waste your time.

The purpose of these questions is to look for your thought process, and how you articulate under pressure, not for your ability to conjure up a magical number. "A case interview is basically a business problem," Cosentino says. "There's no right or wrong answer - just make sure your answer makes good business sense and common sense."

13. You underestimated the importance of your voice and body language.

During your interview, you need to sound enthusiastic and confident in order to show that you really thrive on the challenge of the case. Even if you aren't sure about your answer, Cosentino advises you to never convey that you might be wrong. You should also keep a positive attitude to show that you're not intimidated.

"It's not what you say, it's how you say it," Cosentino explains. "That really carries most of the weight, since your answers are going to be fairly similar to everyone else's." The interviewer is looking for your maturity, poise, communication skills, and whether they would be comfortable bringing you in front of a client.

14. You used a cookie cutter framework for your answer.

According to Cosentino, if you're using the five Cs or the four Ps or the seven S's, you're making a huge mistake, as consultants view all of those as cookie cutter frameworks or simple checklists.

Be careful of using formulas, too. "A lot of people use the 'profits = revenues - cost' formula as a framework for every single case. To me, that's just as bad as using a framework, because you're not showing me any intellectual curiosity or insight," says Cosentino.

A better way to answer the various assortment of case interview questions is by categorizing them in your mind. Before your interview, take the time to learn the most popular case questions and how you would approach them.

15. You were afraid to brainstorm.

"Students are reluctant to brainstorm, because they are afraid that if they say something ridiculous, they won't get the job," Cosentino says. "In reality, if they don't brainstorm, it shows they can't work as part of a team or generate new ideas, which makes it more likely for them not to get the job." Consultants actually have a term called "brainstorming without commitment," where they toss out uninhibited suggestions without fear of judgment. They like people who can think outside the box and offer an interesting perspective.

16. You didn't think out loud.

Interviewers are not mind readers, so it's important to explain what you are doing and why you're doing it. Walk them through your thought process, even if it seems obvious to you. However, always make sure to think before you speak, so you can appear significantly more poised and confident.

17. You didn't go beyond the expected answer.

Cosentino spent a lot of time at various schools helping students practice their interviews. Oftentimes, he gave the same case to four or five students and they would all answer exactly the same way. As a result, it was hard for him to differentiate one from the other.

If you really want to exceed your interviewer's expectations, don't just say, "I determined they shouldn't," when asked whether a hypothetical client should enter a new market. Go one step further and offer an alternative plan, Cosentino suggests. "Someone who excels would say, 'We shouldn't enter the market for these reasons, but we could look at entering this other market or try this new plan I came up with.'"

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

How to turn your weakness into strengths


Sometimes our biggest weakness can become our biggest strength. Take, for example, the story of one 10-year-old boy who decided to study Judo despite the fact that he had lost his left arm in a devastating car accident.
The boy began lessons with an old Japanese Judo master. The boy was doing well, so he couldn’t understand why, after three months of training the master had taught him only one move.
“Sensei,” the boy finally said, “Shouldn’t I be learning more moves?”
“This is the only move you know, but this is the only move you’ll ever need to know.” – the sensei replied.
Not quite understanding, but believing in his teacher, the boy kept training.
Several months later, the sensei took the boy to his first tournament. Surprising himself, the boy easily won his first two matches. The third match proved to be more difficult, but after some time, his opponent became impatient and charged; the boy deftly used his one move to win the match. Still amazed by his success, the boy was now in the finals.
This time, his opponent was bigger, stronger, and more experienced. For a while, the boy appeared to be overmatched. Concerned that the boy might get hurt, the referee called a time-out. He was about to stop the match when the sensei intervened.
“No,” the sensei insisted, “Let him continue.”
Soon after the match resumed, his opponent made a critical mistake: he dropped his guard. Instantly, the boy used his move to pin him. The boy had won the match and the tournament. He was the champion.
On the way home, the boy and sensei reviewed every move in each and every match. Then the boy summoned the courage to ask what was really on his mind.
“Sensei, how did I win the tournament with only one move?”
“You won for two reasons,” the sensei answered. “First, you’ve almost mastered one of the most difficult throws in all of judo. And second, the only known defense for that move is for your opponent to grap your left arm.”

The boy’s biggest weakness had become his biggest strength.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Effective Telecalling Tips


 
Some of the points which should always keep in mind while doing telecalling:-
1.     Always be polite
2.     Sometimes it happens when we call a person he/she might be in meeting always ask for there availability otherwise they get irritated.Never irritate them, instead involve them,
3.     Contact the right person,If you are in HR consultancy try to contact HR manager or in charge of HR. Avoid contacting VP or CEO directly as if they reject you will have to forget the company. Rule of thumb, Start from bottom Up.
4.     Studies showed that  12:00 to 1:00 is the best time to contact new prospective clients,
5.     Whether they are interested in your service or not always ask for there email id so that you can forward your proposal to them. Sending a proposal to the person works, most of the time it has been seen that the proposal recahes the right person and you can get a call from them. Of course you have to make your proposal interesting.
6.     Be patience and be Positive.
7.     Try to make at least 150 calls everyday 


You never get a second chance to make a good first impression
At the beginning of a call, you have to introduce yourself and the company on behalf of which you are calling. Below you can find a few examples of opening sentences.
“Good morning, my name is _____________ and I am calling you on behalf of _____________.”
“Good afternoon, I’m ___________ from ___________.”
“Hello, this is ____________ and I am calling you from _______________.”
The first sentence should be said in an enthusiastic and friendly tone of voice.

The direct value statement
Whenever you make a telesales call, you must take into account the fact that people never requested to be called. So, at the time you get through to them, they don’t know any reason for talking to you. Every customer answering a telesales call implicitly asks himself the question: “Why should talk to this guy? What’s in it for me?” Catching the prospect’s interest depends on how well you can answer those questions. You can answer them by using both language and tone of voice. It is best that you use a direct value statement which synthesizes the most important advantage of the offer and how the customer can benefit from it. Here are some examples of direct value statements:
“I am calling to let you know how you can decrease your travelling costs.”
“I’d like to tell you about a solution to keeping your finances safe at all times.”
“I am calling to tell you how you can get more value from the money you’re spending on your internet subscription.”
It is advisable not to use the name of the product or any of its features, at this stage. The direct value statement should be formulated so as to trigger the prospect’s curiosity and make him want to hear more.

Permission to proceed to the next stage
After the direct value statement, you must ask the customer whether he is available to continue the conversation. You should do this because you might have called the right customer, but at a wrong moment. He might be doing something else at the moment of your call and might not be able to pay attention to what you have to say. If it is not a right moment, ask when you can call back.
“Can we talk for a few moments?”
“Is this a good time to talk?”
“Do you have a few moments?”
“Would you like to hear more details?”
You should avoid formulating the question in a negative way such as:
“May I take a few moments of your time?”
“May I disturb you for a few moments?”
This kind of formulation implies that you are keeping the prospect from doing something more important, or that he is doing you a favor by talking to you.


Essential Soft Skills to Sell yourself .


Improve your soft skills for better networking

The idea of networking fills some people with fear while others think they're great at working a room. But what are the skills you need to be a good networker? And how can you improve your performance? 

To be a successful networker, you need to have highly developed soft skills, or inter-personal skills, as well as a strategic perspective. Assessing your own abilities can be hard. But it helps to understand your own strengths and weaknesses before you try and improve your networking skills.

Below is a list of the soft skills you need to be able to network effectively. What I want you to do is score yourself on how well you think you do on each front.
Before you assess yourself, let me also point out that you should not take each of the following statements to extremes, as the overriding skill is to act appropriately in the situation you find yourself in.

 Soft skill
 Self rating - between 1 (low) and 10 (high)
 I am trustworthy

 I am respectable and respected

 I am an active listener

 I am a good conversationalist

 I am an influencer

 I am confident

 I am a negotiator

 I am a problem solver

 I'm willing to engage

 I'm willing to share

 I can read others and respond accordingly

 I am a good observer

 I am good at including others

 I can keep confidences


Where you have scored yourself low, you now know what you have to work on to improve your networking performance. If you have rated yourself highly, go and test this out with your contacts to make sure you are reading the situation correctly. If everything stacks up, do more of what is working.
Building trust and rapport
People buy from people they like and trust first. In effect, they are buying trust, professionalism, expertise and like-mindedness.
  • Remember the golden rules of networking: being likeable, building trust and rapport, planting seeds about your expertise.
  • Build the conversation, basing it on common ground.
  • Show genuine curiosity.
  • Learn how to read body language.
  • Listen and learn how the particular person you are talking to prefers to communicate.
  • Stay engaged throughout the conversation.
  • Develop the conversation.
  • Become the observer of others; notice their approach to things, and take this into consideration.
  • Work on your people skills and treat others as they would want to be treated.
Questioning and listening
  • Ask more questions, rather than just talking about yourself.
  • Talk about what you do only if invited. Don't force your information on others.
  • People only listen when they are ready to, so create that opportunity. If someone else is talking, let them finish their point. Make sure you hear them out totally, and do completely engage. After all, if you don't hear them out, why would they want to listen to you?
  • It is OK for a conversation to finish without you having contributed information about yourself.
  • Memorize at least ten good generic questions, remembering that quality questions help to stimulate the conversation.
  • Be genuine and fresh each time you ask a question - even if you have asked this a thousand times over.
  • Listen carefully and frame your next question out of the response.
  • Be careful not to make the process sound like an inquisition.
  • Your face, voice, eyes and body language should express real interest, not a learned technique.
Getting a 'glazed look'
  • If you see the 'glazed look', take stock of what you are talking about in relation to the person concerned.
  • Very quickly bring the conversation to a stop and ask a question to re-engage them.
  • To increase the energy again, you can use humour and even some cheekiness!
  • Sometimes, the glazed look is simply because the other person is thinking about what you have said, so you can allow silences (serious people do this a lot!).
  • If you believe this person is not interested, thank them for their time and let them move on.
  • All conversations have a natural rise and fall, so has your time come up? If so don't hang onto them.
The biggest tip I can offer you is when you are next at a networking event stand back for while and just people watch. Watch for how people respond to others and see who is getting it wrong and spot those who are getting it right. Listening and observing can be the best way to learn.

Monday, June 2, 2014

8 KEY POINTS FOR A SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEW


8 KEY POINTS FOR A SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEW 

1. SMILE :-
This is the essential prerequisite to any communication in the professional world as in everyday life.

2. BE SHORT :-
All recruiters will ask you to summarize your profile and experiences. Present your point briefly and in relation to the proposed position.

3. START FROM THE BEGINNING :-
Speak about your initial education, it is a small but important point. Then talk about your experience from past to present.

4. EXPLAIN YOUR CHOICES :-
Why you chose your university education, your first job. For each change, explain "why you left" and "why you chose your new employer".

5. SPEAK OPENLY :-
About what you have gained from each experience, project, … both personally and professionally.

6. BE SPECIFIC :-
About what motivates you. The situations, products, environments, personalities, etc. And explain why.

7. UNDERSTAND :-
About the position that is to be filled. Ask the key questions in the first interview. Ask the more detailed questions in the following interviews.

8. BE NATURAL AND SINCERE :-
And Smile again, this is the end of the interview..!


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Monday, May 26, 2014

How to Find your Passion


27TH May 2014
Unlimited Josh

UNLIMITED JOSH IS BEING STARTED WITH THE ONLY MOTIVE TO INSTILL JOSH & MOTIVATION IN YOU. I BELIEVE THAT EVERY PERSON IS CAPABLE OF CREATING MIRACLES BUT DUE TO VARIOUS CIRUMSTANCES IT GETS DELAYED. FROM TODAY I WILL PUT MY SINCEREST EFFORT TO HELP YOU BRING OUT YOUR PASSION AND HELP YOU LIVE YOUR LIFE TO FULLEST.
BECAUSE THERE IS NO OTHER WORK OTHER THAN DOING THE WORK THAT YOU ENJOY.


When we were child we all had dreams. Some of us wanted to become Prime Minister or President of India. Some would like to go to moon. Some wanted to become a big film star; we all had imaginations the wildest of all, but as we grow our all dreams just remain dreams only. Very few people dare to fulfill their dreams and they have conquered the world.

                Shakespeare, Mozart, Einstein, Michael Faraday, Isaac Newton, Dhirubhai Ambani, Rahul Bajaj, Vivekananda, Sachin Tendulkar, Michael Schumacher, Amitabh Bachchan, all are human beings. They all have it. They all have followed their dreams. The men who rise highest in the world are those who can both think and do.
               
                This course is for those individuals who dare to dream BIG, and then they have the audacity to go out and turn that dream into a reality. Believing in your own ideas, abilities, and decision making ability is the first step to achieve success in life.

                Just believe in your passion and make it happen and all the essential tools that you require for a rapid success, we will give you. So be ready to explore the wonderful world of UNLIMITED SUCCESS.

Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which one has overcome while trying to succeed.

If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you, what you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.


Two men look out through the same bars: One sees the mud, other sees stars.


Finding your mission
Many people go through life working and living without knowing what is important to them, trudging along in a life of other’s expectations. They have unconsciously accepted what they have learned from family and from society as to what they should be doing. There is no consideration of whether the roles they took on are really what give them joy and inner peace. They do not look inside for the answers even when they sense something unfulfilling about their lives. They go through life waiting for something or somebody to tell them why they exist. Others are so busy ‘doing’ what they do not take the time to reflect on why they do what they do. They do not pause to question why they don’t feel joyful and fulfilled as they forge ahead day after day. They go through their whole lives, never asking defining questions like these:-“what is in me?, what is my passion?, “my reason for being”? Without answering those questions, people will never discover the reason for their existence.

It is not the task, but how we feel about the task that makes it meaningful. Knowing your mission and following it means that you enjoy what you do.

We create our own world by our own thoughts and thus we make our own heaven and our own hell.-Swami Mukta Nanda.

If you keep waiting for just the right time, you may never begin. Begin NOW! Begin where you are with what you are.

Plan your career far ahead. Concentrate on a single Goal. Keep your eye on the winning post. Be the man who made it not the man who almost made it.

Great opportunities await those who give more than what is asked. I encourage you to put uncommon touch on even the most common task. We may never have the opportunities to do great things in a great way, but we all have the chance to do small things in a great way.

Instead of waiting for someone to bring you flowers, why not plant your own garden.

I know you have an impressive wardrobe. But of all the things you wear, your expression is the most important. If someone remembers your suite and not your smile you didn’t smile enough.

Think you can, think you can’t either way you are right.

There is vitality, a life force, energy, a quickening that is translated through your action and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and it will be lost.

You are here for a reason. You have a unique gift to offer the world. Once you find your special talents and pursue them, whether it is to be the best carpenter, accountant, singer, mother, or nuclear physicist that you can be, you will have a sense of inner peace. You will feel that you have found your reason for being. You may have several talents and you have the choice to follow one or a combination of them.

You know what your passions are. Sometimes they are buried deep because someone you trusted told you that they weren’t practical or you weren’t good enough. But if you tap into your inner resources and listen to what your heart really calls you to do, you can find ways of making it happen. You’ve already got what it takes. What you’ve got is all you need. So just follow your passion.



Once you find your passion, follow it.
But be alert to the feedback you are getting. LINUS TORVALDS the creator of LINUX the phenomenally successful operating system started Linux as a personal   passion to improve on the existing operating systems. He offered his work free on internet so that others would add their input and modify what he was creating. What resulted was a system which is used by millions of people in the world. Today Linux is still growing and developing and Linus is a legend in the computer world. Remember the business world is full of people who are searching for something-the next great idea, the surefire marketing plan, the toy every kid has to have, the gadget no adult can live without. They’re looking so hard for the gold at the end of the rainbow that they often don’t see the diamonds glittering in their hands.

Make a rule of life never to regret and never look back. Regret is an appalling waste of energy. You cannot build on it. It’s only good for wallowing in.