Even though we hear often about the importance of good education, in fact, it's not the lack of it that causes most failure. There are many people with little to no formal education who have in fact become millionaires, while many people with Ivy League degrees muddle along in dead-end jobs, or worse. In fact, it's willpower, not a degree per se, that can determine your chances for success.
Of course, basic education is important; simply because it helps you get along in society. However, just as important and perhaps more important is the fact that you see yourself succeeding and will pick yourself up and try again to matter how many times you fail in the first place. It's a proven fact that both Henry Ford and Harry Truman had failed in everything they had done before they established their particular places in history: Ford with his invention of the assembly line and subsequent mass-produced and cheaply built car, and Harry Truman first as a senator and with a brief stint as Vice President, finally becoming President of the United States.
Just as with any type of skill, willpower and determination take time and practice to develop. Just as you train the physical body for a marathon, so, too, you see yourself succeeding in your mind. As you continue these visualizations, reality meets imagination halfway. Providing you've laid the groundwork before as well, success is almost inevitable.
In essence, self-mastery of your mind must become a habit. Practice daily and gradually build up confidence and resistance to failure, even as you keep your eyes open and maintain common sense so as not to be foolhardy. With self-mastery comes accomplishment, and ultimately, success.
In fact, you don't need to be a genius to succeed. Most people are not born Albert Einstein or Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Most people have ordinary IQs, but what they have that the next person doesn't is determination and the willingness to practice until perfect. Keep trying, even if drudgery sets in short-term. It's the practice that makes the difference.
In fact, Henry Ward Beecher was a master of accomplishment, and when asked what his secret was, he said, "I don't do more, but less than others. They do all their work three times. Once in anticipation, once in actuality, and once in rumination. I do mine in actuality alone, so I end up doing things just once."
Basically, Beecher could concentrate perfectly on what he was doing at any given moment without distraction. Most of us, try though we might, are at least distracted somewhat with random thoughts, worry about another project other than the one we're working on, or other mind distractions we would better do without in a given moment. If you put those aside until such time as you can take care of them with similar singular focus, it's much more efficient and your success is much more guaranteed. Therefore, one of the biggest secrets to being successful is the ability to focus all of your attention on one thing at a time.
A note about worry: Even though worry seems like it's inevitable, in fact, it's mostly a habit. Most things you worry about will never happen, which makes this a wasted practice; and if, in fact, a worry does in fact manifest in reality, there's usually nothing you could have done about it before hand. If you simply can't put your worries to rest, them down on a piece of paper, tuck it away, and promise yourself that you will focus on those worries with your full attention in their own time. With this done, you can free yourself of the worries that would normally plague you and focus on the task at hand. If you don't do this, worry will only drain you, for no good effect. It can suck your energy away for no good reason, reduce your chances of success and make you and those around you miserable.
By focusing on a given task at a time, you exponentially increase your chances of success and what you can achieve. As soon as you can learn this, the better, because it's a sure way to overcome one very big hurdle that can slow you down and prevent you from attaining the success you deserve.
Finally, choose your activities carefully and don't juggle too many things at once. It's much more efficient than to focus on one important task at a time than it is to focus on several relatively unimportant ones. In fact, multitasking does not make you more efficient, in most cases. It makes you less efficient. The more you focus, the more you can get done. Most importantly, persistence is what will keep you moving forward and get you to the goals you so desire. Again, focus is the key.
However, the past few decades have seen the rise of highly successful companies founded and led by college dropouts. These men and women are constantly in the business news and they're examples of how it's possible to succeed in life without getting a college diploma. You don't even have to look in the business news for these kinds of people. All around us, there are self-made millionaires who made their fortune from entrepreneurial ventures. These people often claim to be self-educated from the most difficult school of all, the School of Life's Hard Knocks.
So which is the key to success in life? Who will make it farther: the book smart business school graduate or the self-made, street smart entrepreneur?
Book Smarts Top the List
In Forbes 2008 listing of the world's 100 richest men, 8 of the top 10 richest men graduated with college degrees. Going down the list, there are really only a handful of people who did not get a college diploma. Quite a few of these billionaires continued their education in business school or in a Masters or Doctorate program to earn a post-graduate degree. Obviously, education has been an important tool in the initial and continuing success of these individuals. Running a large corporation or multinational company is not something that comes naturally to a lot of people. And yet, a lot of these individuals will tell you that they probably learned a lot more on the job than in the classroom, especially when it comes to handling people and real-world situations.
Street Smarts Make the News
However, more than a handful of the people on the list actually inherited their wealth from family holdings. It certainly doesn't require any sort of educational attainment to inherit money, although it might require a degree to learn how to hold on to it. Also, if you look up the people who didn't obtain a college degree, they're names that are instantly familiar. Bill Gates (3rd richest) and Paul Allen of Microsoft, Michael Dell of Dell Corporation, and Lawrence Ellison of Oracle are the most notable. But beyond their business acumen, charisma and vision, these are obviously naturally intelligent people with enough gray matter to know how to put together their talents to come up with the one big successful idea.
The Keys to Success
It seems that there is no one key to success in life. Academic knowledge and intellectual ability certainly play a big part in the foundation of a successful career. But it also requires vision, charisma, a good work ethic, and not a bit of intuition to pull everything together. Success is not behind just one door. It's behind several doors, and series of doors, so you're going to need more than one key.
Both Kevin Sinclair & Althea Tan are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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