So You Wanna Succeed….

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I watched a good friend’s business die this year.  It only took a few months.  And it was all very avoidable. She has good luck; she’s smart, experienced, hard-working, good at what she does, has excellent credibility, and is canny about people–well, most people, anyway.  Her Achilles heel is her spouse–a flake and lame loser.  And that’s what crumbled her business along with her personal finances.  She depended on a flake and the flake brought her down.

Biggest critical key to success? Depend on yourself. Only.

Let’s go through the whole short course, though.  Let’s look at the actual process of success.  It isn’t rocket science. In fact, it’s downright simple.

The first key to success is realizing that, yes, your success depends on you. You cannot depend on someone else to succeed for you…or even with you.  It just doesn’t work that way.  Oh, sure.  People can and will help when you engage them, but, ultimately, it’s you who has to check their work and make sure that work is going to move you along your road to success.   If it isn’t, then forget them, and DO IT YOURSELF.

Success isn’t easy for most people.  Though the process of success is easy, it is a fact that succeeding can require downright tedious work–which is where most people fail.  But let’s start at the beginning, rather than get muddled with “middle stuff.”

First off, know what you want to succeed at.  That’s important–very.

Next, learn what it’s going to take for you to achieve success in what you want to do…which means learning everything from the bureaucratic necessities to the most menial tasks, and learn them inside and out.

Now, marshal your assets and organize.  Organization–setting things up so they run as smoothly and seamlessly as possible with potential and even unlikely problems factored in–is the biggest and most important part of your entire enterprise, and that organization scheme is in a constant state of dynamics, because, as external conditions change, so do your organizational procedures have to change to accommodate those external forces.

Establish your routine, including within that routine a daily check on all critical functions from the administrative on down to the most insignificant. This is where organization is there to help you.  At any given moment you should be able to know when any filings are due to whatever agencies your enterprise must answer to, when any payments are due and how much they are, what your bank balance is, what your cash flow projections are, what tasks are scheduled for when, etc., etc., etc.  And, by the way, yes, you should always be running at least three full months ahead on your cash reserves.  More is even better.

Most importantly, never depend on someone to do things for you.  Oh, sure.  You can hire an office aide.  You can hire a bookkeeper.  You can task anyone you want with whatever job you want.  But YOU have to check to make sure they did it, and that they did it right, before it’s due–before they send off the quarterly report to the state and federal governments, before they screw up a payment, before they fail to file the appropriate form, before….  Do not blindly depend on others to do it on time or to do it right, because that will come back to bite you, and bite you badly.

And that’s pretty much it.  Honest.  Do the work–all the work–making sure that every ‘t’ is crossed and ‘i’ is dotted, holding yourself and only yourself accountable for that work getting done right and on time, and you will succeed.

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Site Update Almost Complete for DLKeur.com

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So, knowing I had to move to SSL encryption since last year (2015), I finally got around to actually doing it. (This site is almost done. Still running the broken link checker, but, chances are, that won’t affect you much.) Now for the ‘why’ and a tinyeducation on owning a real website.

A) It’s expensive to own and run a website. Yes. Honestly, it is.
B) If you own and run your own website…and even if you just use a freebie, you are going to need to go SSL. SSL uses useless encryption, but it’s becoming the web standard necessity if you want folks to be able to visit your website. Mozilla Firefox and other top line browsers will soon be disallowing visits to non-encrypted sites. It’s the difference between http: and https: in the address (for those of you who can actually see that). And you will need a legitimate, rather than self-signed, certificate.

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Can Walk Like a Human

Two weeks back, I was sprinting. On concrete. Didn’t see a rock, as eyes were looking ahead, not down. Shod foot landed off-square on stray rock. Something gave. Bad.

I didn’t go down, but I definitely dropped instantly to ‘walk’. Walk was hobble, though. Knew there was trouble. It was the same leg that got injured two years back by being banged into sideways by a very large, happily exuberant boar.  Same leg my Aussie shepherd banged into an re-injured it, mid-way healed, the same year.

“Yup.” Mumbled jargon. Typing. “It’s gonna take a good six weeks to heal. Ice, elevate, rest. No work for two weeks. None. Then gentle walking. Only.  Wear a support when upright. You have crutches, I see.  Okay. See you in two weeks.”

Sigh.  For me, that meant begging and hiring in help.

And I hate sitting on my ass, except to write or create artwork.

And, now, two and a half weeks later, I’m walking like a human, again. Oh, it’s not all the way healed, but it’s healed enough that I impressed everyone when I walked in for a recheck.

“Mild work, no heavy chores.”

Of course, I nod.  Then grin.

He grins back. He knows me. Shakes his head. Types on the keyboard. “See you next time.”

At least I can get rid of the temporary help and stop sitting around in front of the computer for most of the day.  There’s work to do and winter’s coming.

 

EVENING UPDATE: Well, bum knee and all, I made my walk tonight, me and Laddie. I managed 3 mph. Usually, I do a mile in 12 minutes walking, but, for a first time out since I tweaked that knee, I figure doing a mile in 20 minutes is pretty good, since it’s over 4 inch rocks that are tricky to navigate with both legs sound. But, yeah, I did wear a leg brace and, yeah, I did feel it grumble a few times.