Monday, December 30, 2013

THE FIVE-STEP FOCUS (MARSHMALLOW) PLAN

CHANGE YOUR MINDSET = YOU CHANGE YOUR FUTURE




If you want more out of your life, you better off answer these question to guide your path. Are you willing for a change that might impact your life and your future? If you answered these questions, good job!!! It's not my growth but yours. 


1. What do you need to change? What strategies can you implement right now to stop eating your impulses? What will you commit to changing?

2. What are your strengths and weaknesses? What do you need to improve, and how can you best make these improvements?

3. What are your major goals? Pick at least five and write them down. Then write down what you need to do to attain those goals.

4. What is your plan? Put it in writing. If you can't see a goal, you can't achieve it.

5. What are you going to do to put your plan into action? What will you commit to doing today, tomorrow, next week, next year to help you reach your goals? How will you become willing to do what unsuccessful people are unwilling to do?

Successful people go out and find a circumstance, and if they can't find one, THEY CREATE IT.

PURPOSE + PASSION + ACTION = PEACE OF MIND

Credits to:
-Don't Eat the Marshmallow... Yet! The Secret to Sweet Success in Work and Life.
Joachim de Posada and Ellen Singer




Tuesday, December 17, 2013

The NEW generation: Struggling workers find new calling in direct sales


INFORMATION AGE: One click and the product is shipped to your door.
Peace of mind and saves you time.
There was a time when the average Mary Kay or Avon seller was a housewife, but an increasingly competitive job market has launched a new wave of faces into the industry – Generation Y.
Concerned about an aging demographic of sellers in the ’90s, the industry has worked over the past decade to change the perception of direct selling to appeal to a younger generation. A new marketing strategy, in tandem with the tough job market, means that Generation Y, born between 1981 and 2000, is approaching the direct-selling model as a viable career option, rather than simply as a side business.
“That solidarity of having a stable job just doesn’t exist any more,” said April Tu, who left university early four years ago at 21 to pursue Amway, a direct-selling giant that markets everything from cosmetics to health supplements to cleaning products. “Students are investing thousands of dollars into school. … You’ve been told to do something that was supposed to work for you, but when you went out into the economy all you were met with was pure frustration.”
Young people such as Ms. Tu are increasingly seeing direct-selling as a way out of low-paying, entry-level positions after graduation, especially in an economy where youth unemployment hovers around 14 per cent, up from around 11 per cent in 2008. The number of long-term unemployed youth has also skyrocketed to over 40,000 as of October, 2013, more than triple what it was a half-decade ago.
But for Amway, Generation Y is its fastest rising demographic. Millennials have gone from representing
just over 10 per cent of its global sales force in 2005 to nearly a third in 2012. Gen Y now makes up a third of new Canadian memberships. Mr. Johnson also says that between 2011 and 2012, Amway has seen Gen Y shoot up 21 per cent in recruiting and 19 per cent in sales generated.
The demographic trend is also reflected at cosmetics giant Mary Kay Cosmetics Inc., where just over 20 per cent of the 38,000-strong Canadian sales force is Gen Y, while half of the U.S. sales force is under 35. The company, once synonymous with shopping parties, has taken great pains in the last decade to enhance its appeal, using online showrooms, virtual makeover applications and a widening social presence to attract a new generation. Sponsoring such events as the MuchMusic Video Awards has also created a new, younger Mary Kay culture.
Direct Selling Companies invests on you to lead and win.
“They have a very strong entrepreneurial spirit,” said Lynda Rose, vice-president of marketing at Mary Kay Canada. “They’re saying, ‘We want to travel with our business and we want to have it at our fingertips.’ … Their income is reflective of the amount of effort they put into their business, and they love that.”
Ms. Tu had only completed her first year of university when a stranger at a gas station approached her with the Amway opportunity. That stranger later became her first mentor after she quit school, and since then she has gone from new recruit to team leader of about 50 people, a team so dedicated that they clear about $20,000 worth of sales a month. Her weekly team and informational meeting in Waterloo, Ont., is attended almost exclusively by millennials, with another dozen from out of town who tune in to the live webcast – one logs on every week from Calgary.
Ms. Tu, 25, and her husband Jack net roughly $45,000 a year from their part-time business, made from a combination of sales and bonuses she receives from Amway for training her team. Membership has also seen a recent surge, with over a quarter of her team having joined in the last year alone, a product of an environment that Ms. Tu says appeals to her younger crowd.
“We recognize people for everything, whether it’s ‘I started a conversation’ to ‘I made a sale.’ We understand that in the normal world, people are not recognized for their achievements,” she said. “When you plug into an environment that is so blasted with positivity and hope and belief, it becomes something that you crave because it’s literally the best part of your week.”
The direct-selling opportunity is providing Gen Y with an alternative work environment outside of the nine-to-five, says 22-year-old Alex Bakay, who has spent roughly $1,000 on his business in the six months since he joined. He earns around $100 a month. The investment, he says, is more than worth it.
“Being told what to do all day isn’t the nicest thing,” he said, “so being able to hang around business owners all day who make their own schedule and who are disciplined – it brings a new mindset.”
Roberto Artwell, 19, who has also been with the team less than a year, is so optimistic about his business that, within the next 12 months, he sees himself with his own team of 50 people.
“The first time I walked into a meeting, I thought it was going to be a bunch of old people who’d already been successful and be the awkward one out,” he said. “The first time I came, I went, ‘Oh my gosh, half these people are around my age.’ … You know that if he’s 25, he’s 20, and I’m only 19, why can’t I do what he’s already doing? The reason why so many young people are jumping at this opportunity is because our infrastructure is so simple.”
Direct selling, or multilevel marketing companies (MLM), typically follow a basic model whereby sellers are recruited to market products, but also to recruit other sellers. Originating sellers earn extra percentages of pay based on the performance and size of their team.
Sad Reality for all those on Hard-working. You were
hired to build other people's dreams.
For years, the industry has faced harsh criticism for seemingly harbouring scams and pyramid schemes, which has led executives to drastically change marketing strategies. The shift is well timed: Gen Y remains relatively unaware of any stigma that surrounds MLMs. An Ipsos study commissioned by Amway found that 79 per cent of millennials in North America were favourable or neutral to the direct-selling model.
Nowadays, “we present it in a much more common-sense, basic presentation,” said Jeff Johnson, national sales manager for Amway Canada. “What’s in it for them. What can they earn. … They want to know the bottom line, and they don’t want a PhD thesis given to them.”
Mary Kay does not post earnings, though Amway parent Alticor Inc. has reported consecutive years of growth, having hit $11.3-billion (U.S.) worth of sales in 2012. The performance of other publicly listed MLMs also shows a slowly expanding industry. Both Herbalife Ltd. and Tupperware Brands Corp. announced record third-quarter earnings in October. Avon Products Inc. saw another dip in earnings, but the company is struggling with more than just sales, having changed leadership last year.
For many in Generation Y, the industry’s accomplishments suggest a future where the young can achieve entrepreneurial success, with or without a degree.
“They want financial independence,” Ms. Rose said. “… They almost see work and fun time as mixed. Maybe my generation you have work and home. Our lives were separate. But a Gen Y person looks at their life and goes, ‘My work has to be fun, my life has to be fun and I want to do a job that’s fun.’ ”

Sunday, December 15, 2013

A DREAMER'S STRUGGLE


DREAM BIG, DON`T LIMIT YOURSELF!
DREAMERS` NEVER JUST DREAM, THEY FIND A VEHICLE FOR THEIR DREAMS. 


Continue to expand your dreams and desires in life, many people want more out of life but are not motivated enough to go out and get the job done no matter how long it takes and how tough it is. You may be lost how, where and why start something you don't even know yet.  The world never sleeps, so don't limit your dreams, and don't settle for less. You are selfish if you think your family, wife and kids wanted a lesser simple life. So, go out there, go all out, you may lose dollars but win by experience. You might fail and learn,  but use these failures to grow until you reached your desires for YOURSELF and your FAMILY.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Building My TIME MACHINE

TIME MACHINE PROJECT 

You would wonder if time machines do really exists and possible just like in the movies. For me its a YES and a NO.

Having one lets you control of your time. You could probably go to the past or the future, and I think it's a "Yes,"and possible to build in  the form of  Assets, building assets is building up your own time machine that lets you control of your future. Assets will give you residual income that will let you spend your time with your love ones that a job can`t offer. You won't have to work each day if you have accumulated a lot. It may sound greedy but I'd rather spend my time for my family and family to be rather than my job and profession, and of course not worrying any liabilities/expenses/bills at the end of the day.
And "No", because its science fiction and just my hyper thinking.

If money isn't a  problem, how would you feel and envision yourself - especially for hardworking dads, if you have ALL the time in the world to do everything you want, and spend the time to your family, and your kids everyday.

What`s the peace of mind and happiness you could get being with your family in a week, spending the days like Six Saturdays and a Sunday and not for your job? Go to where you wanna go, when you want to, and you love to. Sounds laziness for workaholics but isn't that more fun? You spend most of your TIME w/ your love ones rather for your boss who earns 10x off of you and still you aren't compensated.
 

"99% think that money is the root of all evil."- yet they have a job to have money.

"1% think that poverty is the root of all evil. "- because of poverty you will need money to buy your necessities (food/water).

In a family man's perspective, would you leave your family during the nights, or even go on  distant job sites to work and earn the highest salary you could, but in exchange, you have to leave your family, let's say your working 80hours a week. Would it be nice if that 80 hours of your time be spent with your families and love ones, not worrying of  money if you only have that asset that will cover the daily necessities?

I don`t despise the job world because we all need a job, in order to pay bills and our needs that keeps on piling up at the end of the month. But have a job especially during day around 9am-5pm then start building assets at 5-11pm. 5 years after that compare: What would you think your assets do for you that your job can't? You might lose more money but it will gonna be worthwhile in experience, success and time for your love ones.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

I AM A DREAMER

DREAMING GARGANTUAN




Continue to expand your dreams and desires in life, many people want more out of life but are not motivated enough to go out and get the job done no matter how long it takes and how tough it is. 

You may be lost how, where and why start something you don't even know yet.  Find a mentor on the field that you're into, ask them to lead you, to guide you, to make the BEST VERSION OF YOU.


The World never sleeps, so don't limit your dreams, and don't settle for less. You are selfish to think your family, wife and kids would wanted a lesser simple LIFE. 


So, go out there, go all out, you may lose dollars but win by experience. Go out there Fail and learn, fail and learn until you reached your desires for yourself and your FAMILY.


My CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS AND WISHES BELOW...




HOW I WANTED TO LIVE WHEN I GROW UP?


"I myself wanted TIME, for myself, for my family, for my bride and kids to be. I wanted the TIME to spend on my terms. Right now I'm in Canada, working my ass off sacrificing the time, distance and love I left in the Philippines because I needed to. I need to feed myself, my family, and how will I feed my family to be if I did stayed, earning minimum paycheck not even enough for my needs. Worst comes when you do have kids that are sick, then because you're so called "professional" and you needed money for expenses, you chose to work instead of watching over them. I wanted that TIME that I could watch my kids grow from Day 1 and not work everyday because I got bills and expenses to survive." 


"I wanted that time to travel with my family not worrying anything, like someone would travel putting all expenses on their credit cards, enjoying now then work their ass off after." 


How would your family feel if , "you chose to be away from family because there is a $100/hr job offered to you." "Not having a longer time spent with them." '"You'll really sacrifice a lot of TIME away from your loveones to earn money." -Guy's obligation


"Successful Business owners always have that extra time on their terms for their family and employees don't."  


"Build your own legacy now, that in this generation, the information age takes over, we need to adapt, learn and grow, that being an employee limits you that. Give or take 5 years from now do whatever it takes even being an employee throughout the day and during the night around 5pm-11pm, start creating your own LIFE, WEALTH and TIME. BE A LEADER!" YOU'LL SEE A CHANGE IN LIFESTYLE, TIME by the EFFORT you exerted 5years from now.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Good Read: How Rich People Think Differently

Steve, the author, concluded that being rich has little to do with the money itself. Instead, it had everything to do with mentality and how you think about money. The book is a pretty good read, and I recommend you get a copy. In the book, Steve divides people between “World Class” and “Middle Class”. In the interest of better SEO, I will call the groups the 99% and the 1%. :)
Be open & Change your mentality. You might be against the author but try to understand the facts and reality why there is 99% and 1% thinkers.
Read more.

  1. The 99% focus on saving. The 1% focus on earning.
  2. The 99% thinks about money in linear terms. The 1% think about money in non-linear terms.
  3. The 99% believes hard work creates wealth. The 1% believes leverage creates wealth.
  4. The 99% believes money is the root of all evil. The 1% believes poverty is the root of all evil.
  5. The 99% believes being rich is a privilege. The 1% believes being rich is a right.
  6. The 99% believes money is complicated. The 1% believes money is simple.
  7. The 99% believes rich people are crooks. The 1% believes rich people are ambitious.
  8. The 99% believes building wealth is a solitary effort. The 1% believes building wealth is a team effort.
  9. The 99% worry about money. The 1% dreams about money.
  10. The 99% believes money is negative. The 1% believes money is positive.
  11. The 99% believes rich people are shallow. The 1% believe rich people are strategic.
  12. The 99% believes the road to riches is paved with formal education. The 1% believes the road to riches is paved with specific knowledge.
  13. The 99% believes money is earned through labor. The 1% believes money is earned through thought.
  14. The 99% worries about running out of money. The 1% thinks about how to make more money.
  15. The 99% thinks about spending. The 1% thinks about investing.
  16. The 99% sees money through the eyes of emotion. The 1% sees money through the eyes of logic.
  17. The 99% underestimate the wealth building power of referral marketing. The 1% knows referral marketing creates millionaires.
  18. The 99% focuses on pleasurable activities. The 1% focuses on money making activities.
  19. The 99% sees money as a finite resource. The 1% see money as an infinite resource.
  20. The 99% earns money doing things they don’t like to do. The 1% get rich doing what they love.
  21. The 99% believes rich people are ruthless. The 1% believes rich people are generous.
  22. The 99% has a lottery mentality. The 1% has an action mentality.
  23. The 99% is waiting to be rescued from financial mediocrity. The 1% knows no one is coming to the rescue.
  24. The 99% believes rich people are smarter. The 1% believes rich people are more savvy.
  25. The 99% sees money as controlling. The 1% sees money as liberating.
  26. The 99% believes money changes people. The 1% believes money reveals people.
  27. The 99% believes in working for money. The 1% believes in working for fulfillment.
  28. The 99% believes you have to do something to get rich. The 1% believes you have to be something to get rich.
  29. The 99% plays it safe with money. The 1% takes calculated risks.
  30. The 99% believes you have to have money to make money. The 1% believes in using other people’s money.
  31. The 99% believes jobs are the safest way to earn money. The 1% believes outstanding performance is the safest way to earn money.
  32. The 99% believes in financial scarcity. The 1% believes in financial abundance.
  33. The 99% sees money as a weapon. The 1% sees money as a tool.
  34. The 99% believes they aren’t worthy of great wealth. The 1% believes they deserve to be rich.
  35. The 99% denies the importance of money. The 1% knows money is a critical component of life.
  36. The 99% believes money is their enemy. The 1% believes money is their friend.
  37. The 99% waits for their ship to come in. The 1% builds their own ship.
  38. The 99% believes financial markets are driven by logic an strategy. The 1% believes financial markets are driven by emotion and greed.
  39. The 99% believes money is about status. The 1% believes money is about freedom.
  40. The 99% lives beyond their means. The 1% lives below their means.
  41. The 99% equates money with stress. The 1% equates money with piece of mind.
  42. The 99% thinks small. The 1% thinks big.
  43. The 99% believes people are out to get them. The 1% believes the universe is conspiring to help them.
  44. The 99% believes their thinking is unrelated to their net worth. The 1% knows thinking is the catalyst of all results.
  45. The 99% experiences good fortune and can’t believe it. The 1% experiences good fortune and wonders what took so long.
  46. The 99% believes the more money you earn, the more stress you experience. The 1% believes the more money you earn, the less stress you experience.
  47. The 99% believes the more money you make, the more problems you will have. The 1% believes the more money you make, the fewer problems you will have.
  48. The 99% believes the rich are obsessed with money. The 1% believes the rich are obsessed with success.
  49. The 99% believes the rich are selfish and self-absorbed. The 1% believes the rich are selfish and self-absorbed.
  50. The 99% dreams of having enough money to retire. The 1% dreams of having enough money to impact the world.
  51. The 99% believes it’s shrewd to be cynical. The 1% believes it’s shrewd to be optimistic.
  52. The 99% believes the rich should support the poor. The 1% believes in self-reliance.
  53. The 99% sees the wealthy as oppressors. The 1% sees the wealthy as liberators.
  54. The 99% believes getting rich is outside their control. The 1% knows getting rich is an inside job.
  55. The 99% thinks the rich believe they are more intelligent. The 1% knows intelligence has little to do with getting rich.
  56. The 99% associates with anyone. The 1% carefully monitors their associations.
  57. The 99% embraces advanced degrees. The 1% embraces any form of education that makes them wealthier.
  58. The 99% have loosely defined goals with flexible deadlines. The 1% have highly defined goals with do or die deadlines.
  59. The 99% works as little as possible. The 1% works as smart as possible.
  60. The 99% loves to be comfortable. The 1% is comfortable being uncomfortable.
  61. The 99% is timid and scared. The 1% is aggressive and bold.
  62. The 99% longs for the gold old days. The 1% dreams of the future.
  63. The 99% plays not to lose. The 1% swings for the fences.
  64. The 99% sets their financial expectation low so they’re never disappointed. The 1% sets their financial expectations high so they’re always excited.
  65. The 99% has a financial windfall and worries about losing it. The 1% has a windfall and figures out how to leverage it.
  66. The 99% is externally motivated to make money. The 1% internally motivated to make money.
  67. The 99% suffers from lack consciousness. The 1% enjoy prosperity.
  68. The 99% believes money will make them happier. The 1% knows that money has little to do with happiness.
  69. The 99% believes people seek money for power. The 1% believes people seek money for control.
  70. The 99% never makes the connection between money and health. The 1% knows money can save your life.
  71. The 99% believes ambition is a sin. The 1% believes ambition is a virtue.
  72. The 99% believes rich people are snobs. The 1% believes rich people are guarding their consciousness.
  73. The 99% believes rich people are arrogant. The 1% believes rich people are confident.
  74. The 99% believes self-made millionaires ha an unfair advantage. The 1% knows their advantage was hard work.
  75. The 99% bases their beliefs about the rich on the minority. The 1% bases their beliefs about the rich on the majority.
  76. The 99% believes they’re missing something. The 1% knows it’s beliefs that make the difference.
  77. The 99% believes they lack desire. The 1% knows we all have everything we need to be rich.
  78. The 99% believes they must choose between a great family life and being rich. The 1% knows they can have it all.
  79. The 99% believes having a job gives them security. The 1% knows there’s no such thing.
  80. The 99% believes starting a business is risky. The 1% believes starting a business is the fastest road to wealth.
  81. The 99% believes it’s wrong for a small group of people to possess most of the money. The 1% welcomes the masses to join them.
  82. The 99% believes wealth creates dysfunctional families. The 1% believes unearned wealth creates dysfunctional families.
  83. The 99% believes money creates corruption. The 1% believes the lack of money creates corruption.
  84. The 99% believes the rich are spiritually bankrupt. The 1% believes the rich are among the most spiritual people in society.
  85. The 99% believes if they become wealthy, they will lose their friends. The 1% believes being wealthy will expand your network.
  86. The 99% believes you have to sacrifice your health to get rich. The 1% believes being rich will make you healthier.
  87. The 99% hands down their limited beliefs about money to their children. The 1% hands down their unlimited beliefs about money to their children.
  88. The 99% teaches their children how to survive. The 1% teaches their children how to get rich.
  89. The 99% teaches their kids about money by example. The 1% does the same thing.
  90. The 99% teaches their kids how to save their pennies. The 1% teaches their kids how to invest their pennies.
  91. The 99% encourages their kids to be nice and make friends. The 1% encourages their kids to be smart and build a network.
  92. The 99% teaches their kids to be happy with what they have. The 1% teaches their kids how to go for their dreams.
  93. The 99% minimizes the importance of money with their kids. The 1% teaches their kids the importance of money.
  94. The 99% teaches their children the games of the masses. The 1% teaches their children the games of the wealthy.
  95. The 99% doesn’t believe in personal development of self help. The 1% believes they’re the secret to getting rich.
  96. The 99% doesn’t connect travel with wealth. The 1% knows travel connects them with the wealthy.
  97. The 99% has access to the social skills of the masses. The 1% has access to the social skills of the most refined among us.
  98. The 99% would rather be entertained than educated. The 1% would rather be educated than entertained.
  99. The 99% believes rich people are workaholics. The 1% knows millionaires have a ton of fun.
  100. The 99% only focuses on money when they need it. The 1% focuses on money all the time.
It's okay to be part of the 1%.