----------------------- Top 10 Posting -----------------------------
PROCRASTINATION!!!
Calling all Entrepreneurs!....why do we do this?!
Yes, it is good that we examine things.
Yes , we need to be patient and cultivate business relationships.
Yes, we need to do our due diligence with respect to weighing our options.
But what I am talking about is; when the ball is in our hand, not a defensive player is in sight, our Team is surrounding us, and yet, we are afraid to run!?
… because we might trip, fumble, or not make it to the end zone?
*** Here are 7 great quotes about procrastination.
Read them, and then read them again…and oh by the way…read them one more time.
“Things may come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle.”
Abraham Lincoln
“How soon not now, becomes never.”
Martin Luther (1483-1546) German priest and scholar.
"Procrastination is one of the most common and deadliest of diseases and its toll on success and happiness is heavy."
Wayne Gretzky
"Even if you’re on the right track-you’ll get run over if you just sit there."
Will Rogers
“One of these days, is none of these days.”
Proverb
“I remember reading somewhere about an organization called Procrastinators Anonymous. I think they had been in existence for some years but had never gotten around to having a meeting.”
Unknown Source
“By not making a decision, you have made one.”
Bob Gambone - The Pecan Pie Guy.
*** So come on entrepreneurs! Get the lead out of your butt and make a run for it!!!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now Available...My Book!
Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order!"
BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM --click on link below.
http://lnkd.in/TNNzBM
“Copyright (2-26 -2011) by Robert V Gambone Sr.”
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Saturday, February 12, 2011
The Power of Passionate Enthusiasm!
We all know great storytellers.
Whether it is a family member, friend, or a business associate… when they speak, we listen and with great anticipation.
I have always been intrigued by a great storyteller because of their ability to retell a story over and over again while sustaining the attention of their audience…I attributed that skill to a great memory.
Well....about 3 weeks ago, I had an “Oh Wow!" moment.
I was privileged to be part of a training session conducted by Ivan R. Misner, PhD. (founder of BNI, the world’s largest networking organization).
Ivan had just completed telling a story to the class, one that I know I have heard him tell at least 9 times.
After the applause quieted down, I asked Ivan;
“Ivan, how do you do it? How do you retell a story over and over again with the same passion and enthusiasm?”
Ivan looked all of us in the eye and said… “Never retell a story, RELIVE IT!”
Whether it is a family member, friend, or a business associate… when they speak, we listen and with great anticipation.
I have always been intrigued by a great storyteller because of their ability to retell a story over and over again while sustaining the attention of their audience…I attributed that skill to a great memory.
Well....about 3 weeks ago, I had an “Oh Wow!" moment.
I was privileged to be part of a training session conducted by Ivan R. Misner, PhD. (founder of BNI, the world’s largest networking organization).
Ivan had just completed telling a story to the class, one that I know I have heard him tell at least 9 times.
After the applause quieted down, I asked Ivan;
“Ivan, how do you do it? How do you retell a story over and over again with the same passion and enthusiasm?”
Ivan looked all of us in the eye and said… “Never retell a story, RELIVE IT!”
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Snow Storms and Heros
The recent blizzards and ice storms remind me of that crazy day in March 1993, when the city of Pittsburgh shut down. I was a store manager for Giant Eagle in the South Hills of Pittsburgh. We kept the store open as long as we could so that customers could stock up on necessities.
The snow continued to fall and all of a sudden we realized that the 24 employees, that were still working, were stranded.
We had no protocol for this emergency. Now I know what your are thinking…we would not starve…correct, but my team needed a place to sleep.
Not far away was a hotel, actually within walking distance, so we called to book some rooms.
SOLD OUT! ...due to the storm…wow, what to do.
I gathered my team and we brainstormed ideas for sleeping arrangements.
Shawn, a challenged employee with a very serious stutter, came up with the solution:
---We called the hotel to rent blankets, they had 30 available.
---We used full cases of paper towels for bedding.
---Men slept in the front common area of the store, the women slept in the backroom.
---The store manager, me, was assigned to make breakfast.
All went well…the store reopened at 2pm the next day.
So what is the morale of this story?
Shawn rarely spoke, he was challenged in doing so, but on that day, at that moment, he did speak.
Shawn became a hero that day and was never afraid to speak up again.
We all learn something new everyday, and sometimes from those we least expect.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***This is just a sample!... if you would like a full-slice of "Pecans of Wisdom",
be sure to indulge yourself in my new book:
"Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order
"BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM --click on link below.http://lnkd.in/TNNzBM
“Copyright (2-1 -2011) by Robert V Gambone Sr.”
The snow continued to fall and all of a sudden we realized that the 24 employees, that were still working, were stranded.
We had no protocol for this emergency. Now I know what your are thinking…we would not starve…correct, but my team needed a place to sleep.
Not far away was a hotel, actually within walking distance, so we called to book some rooms.
SOLD OUT! ...due to the storm…wow, what to do.
I gathered my team and we brainstormed ideas for sleeping arrangements.
Shawn, a challenged employee with a very serious stutter, came up with the solution:
---We called the hotel to rent blankets, they had 30 available.
---We used full cases of paper towels for bedding.
---Men slept in the front common area of the store, the women slept in the backroom.
---The store manager, me, was assigned to make breakfast.
All went well…the store reopened at 2pm the next day.
So what is the morale of this story?
Shawn rarely spoke, he was challenged in doing so, but on that day, at that moment, he did speak.
Shawn became a hero that day and was never afraid to speak up again.
We all learn something new everyday, and sometimes from those we least expect.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***This is just a sample!... if you would like a full-slice of "Pecans of Wisdom",
be sure to indulge yourself in my new book:
"Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order
"BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM --click on link below.http://lnkd.in/TNNzBM
“Copyright (2-1 -2011) by Robert V Gambone Sr.”
Friday, January 21, 2011
You! Can Make It Happen.
They Did Not Give Up ...
Thomas Edison's teachers said he was "too stupid to learn anything." He was fired from his first two jobs for being "non-productive." As an inventor, Edison made 1,000 unsuccessful attempts at inventing the light bulb. When a reporter asked, "How did it feel to fail 1,000 times?" Edison replied, "I didn’t fail 1,000 times. The light bulb was an invention with 1,000 steps."
Albert Einstein did not speak until he was 4-years-old and did not read until he was 7. His parents thought he was "sub-normal," and one of his teachers described him as "mentally slow, unsociable, and adrift forever in foolish dreams." He was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the world reknown Zurich Polytechnic School.
Well...he did eventually learn to speak and read, and oh bye the way, he even learned to do a little math. :-)
A young man went to war a captain and returned a private. Afterwards, he was a failure as a businessman. As a lawyer he was too impractical and temperamental to be a success. He turned to politics and was defeated in his first try for the legislature, again defeated in his first attempt to be nominated for congress, defeated in his application to be commissioner of the General Land Office, defeated in the senatorial election of 1854, defeated in his efforts for the vice-presidency in 1856, and defeated in the senatorial election of 1858. On November 6, 1860, this man was elected as the sixteenth president of the United States. This man was Abraham Lincoln.
In the true spirit of American Entrepenurism, Robert F. Kennedy said it best:
"Only those who dare to fail greatly can achieve greatly."
Thomas Edison's teachers said he was "too stupid to learn anything." He was fired from his first two jobs for being "non-productive." As an inventor, Edison made 1,000 unsuccessful attempts at inventing the light bulb. When a reporter asked, "How did it feel to fail 1,000 times?" Edison replied, "I didn’t fail 1,000 times. The light bulb was an invention with 1,000 steps."
Albert Einstein did not speak until he was 4-years-old and did not read until he was 7. His parents thought he was "sub-normal," and one of his teachers described him as "mentally slow, unsociable, and adrift forever in foolish dreams." He was expelled from school and was refused admittance to the world reknown Zurich Polytechnic School.
Well...he did eventually learn to speak and read, and oh bye the way, he even learned to do a little math. :-)
A young man went to war a captain and returned a private. Afterwards, he was a failure as a businessman. As a lawyer he was too impractical and temperamental to be a success. He turned to politics and was defeated in his first try for the legislature, again defeated in his first attempt to be nominated for congress, defeated in his application to be commissioner of the General Land Office, defeated in the senatorial election of 1854, defeated in his efforts for the vice-presidency in 1856, and defeated in the senatorial election of 1858. On November 6, 1860, this man was elected as the sixteenth president of the United States. This man was Abraham Lincoln.
In the true spirit of American Entrepenurism, Robert F. Kennedy said it best:
"Only those who dare to fail greatly can achieve greatly."
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Jack, The Meat Guy
********** TOP RATED POSTING **********
Customers loved Jack and trusted him to solve their daily dilemma of “what’s for dinner tonight?”
I remember one day walking up to a customer, after Jack had served her, and I said…
“Thank you for your business ma’am, I see Jack has taken care of you… so what did he suggest?"
“Oh," she said so confidently, “I'm not sure what cut of meat this is, but it sounds delicious and Jack gave me all the cooking instructions, he is such a sweetie pie!"
And to top it off, after further inquiry, I found out she never even asked about the price!
This phenomenon happened repeatedly for months with thousands of customers!
I was amazed!
Customers were actually buying Jack, and not the products. He had branded himself and created a point of difference as “The Meat Guy”....Jack literally had customers buying whatever he wanted them to buy.
A few months later, Jack was transferred to a store about 5 miles down the road... sales in my meat department dropped 18%!
Why?
Customers followed Jack to the other store, because he was their ...“Jack, The Meat Guy.”
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
***This is just a sample!... if you would like a full-slice of "Pecans of Wisdom", be sure to indulge yourself in my new book:
"Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order"
BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM --click on link below.
http://lnkd.in/TNNzBM
“Copyright (1-16 -2011) by Robert V Gambone Sr.”
Customers loved Jack and trusted him to solve their daily dilemma of “what’s for dinner tonight?”
I remember one day walking up to a customer, after Jack had served her, and I said…
“Thank you for your business ma’am, I see Jack has taken care of you… so what did he suggest?"
“Oh," she said so confidently, “I'm not sure what cut of meat this is, but it sounds delicious and Jack gave me all the cooking instructions, he is such a sweetie pie!"
And to top it off, after further inquiry, I found out she never even asked about the price!
This phenomenon happened repeatedly for months with thousands of customers!
I was amazed!
Customers were actually buying Jack, and not the products. He had branded himself and created a point of difference as “The Meat Guy”....Jack literally had customers buying whatever he wanted them to buy.
A few months later, Jack was transferred to a store about 5 miles down the road... sales in my meat department dropped 18%!
Why?
Customers followed Jack to the other store, because he was their ...“Jack, The Meat Guy.”
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
***This is just a sample!... if you would like a full-slice of "Pecans of Wisdom", be sure to indulge yourself in my new book:
"Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order"
BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM --click on link below.
http://lnkd.in/TNNzBM
“Copyright (1-16 -2011) by Robert V Gambone Sr.”
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Kennywood Practice - by guest blogger Tim Hayes
Tim's new book "Jackass in a Hailstorm: Adventures in Leadership Communication" is now available for sale on Amazon.com!
Kennywood Practice
At least once each winter, as the cold and the slush and the snow seep into our bones around here, I find myself driving past Kennywood Park – a grand old Pittsburgh amusement park with some of the best roller coasters anywhere.
Of course, in the dead of winter, nobody’s enjoying the rides when they’re covered with white. But there are ways to stay in training for a lightning-fast ride on a great coaster, even when the thermometer dips into the single digits.
On a narrow strip of two-lane blacktop near our house, the road swerves and rolls around a series of hills and curves, but there’s one point where – if you gun the gas just right – as you come over the crest of a little hilltop, the road drops out from under the car suddenly, your stomach does a flip and you feel a quick moment of zero gravity, just like on a roller coaster.
Needless to say, I have perfected this little stunt over the years when I have the kids in the car. We call it “Kennywood Practice.”
We did it again just this morning, New Year’s Day, and it got me thinking about a fresh way of thinking for 2011. Why not make Kennywood Practice a habit all year round? I don’t mean swooshing over roadways to simulate riding a roller coaster, but more of a basic resetting of assumptions and attitudes.
A willingness to try things out of context.
An embracing of difficult behaviors that can lead to real excitement.
An acceptance that there is indeed a higher power, and that welcoming its grace and direction into our lives can indeed be the best strategy of all.
An admission that trying to solve everything yourself can be a fool’s errand.
A positive step into transitory discomfort with the promise of ultimate growth.
The last thing I want to do is characterize all of this as some kind of New Year’s resolution. Those are “pie-crust promises, easily made and easily broken,” to quote Mary Poppins. Instead, I’m thinking of this as a fundamentally new framework in which to think, live, and act.
Last year introduced me to some wonderful new people and some challenging new ideas about growing business relationships. Maybe it all added up to too much information to process all at once, and I felt like I didn’t make the most of these new concepts and strategies. But it’s a new day today. I’m getting back in the game with a renewed vigor and focus.
Why not you, too? The status quo may be working for you, or it may be holding you back. Either way, things can always improve. Step out, step up, step forward. Keep learning, keep trying, keep growing. With just the right touch on the accelerator, you can feel like you’re on a really exciting ride.
Let’s each take that ride in 2011. There’s a more positive vibe in the air, can you feel it? Let’s gun the gas a little. It’s time for some Kennywood Practice.
Copyright 2011 Transverse Park Productions LLC
Tim Hayes
Writer - Trainer - Speaker
The Leadership Communications Expert TM
http://www.timhayesconsulting.com/ http://www.totalprotraining.com/
412-963-0794 Desk 412-963-0795 Fax 412-708-3501 24-Hour
Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order!
"A must read!" Ivan Misner New York Times Bestselling author
BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM click on link below
Click here to purchase Bob's Book
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kennywood Practice
At least once each winter, as the cold and the slush and the snow seep into our bones around here, I find myself driving past Kennywood Park – a grand old Pittsburgh amusement park with some of the best roller coasters anywhere.
Of course, in the dead of winter, nobody’s enjoying the rides when they’re covered with white. But there are ways to stay in training for a lightning-fast ride on a great coaster, even when the thermometer dips into the single digits.
On a narrow strip of two-lane blacktop near our house, the road swerves and rolls around a series of hills and curves, but there’s one point where – if you gun the gas just right – as you come over the crest of a little hilltop, the road drops out from under the car suddenly, your stomach does a flip and you feel a quick moment of zero gravity, just like on a roller coaster.
Needless to say, I have perfected this little stunt over the years when I have the kids in the car. We call it “Kennywood Practice.”
We did it again just this morning, New Year’s Day, and it got me thinking about a fresh way of thinking for 2011. Why not make Kennywood Practice a habit all year round? I don’t mean swooshing over roadways to simulate riding a roller coaster, but more of a basic resetting of assumptions and attitudes.
A willingness to try things out of context.
An embracing of difficult behaviors that can lead to real excitement.
An acceptance that there is indeed a higher power, and that welcoming its grace and direction into our lives can indeed be the best strategy of all.
An admission that trying to solve everything yourself can be a fool’s errand.
A positive step into transitory discomfort with the promise of ultimate growth.
The last thing I want to do is characterize all of this as some kind of New Year’s resolution. Those are “pie-crust promises, easily made and easily broken,” to quote Mary Poppins. Instead, I’m thinking of this as a fundamentally new framework in which to think, live, and act.
Last year introduced me to some wonderful new people and some challenging new ideas about growing business relationships. Maybe it all added up to too much information to process all at once, and I felt like I didn’t make the most of these new concepts and strategies. But it’s a new day today. I’m getting back in the game with a renewed vigor and focus.
Why not you, too? The status quo may be working for you, or it may be holding you back. Either way, things can always improve. Step out, step up, step forward. Keep learning, keep trying, keep growing. With just the right touch on the accelerator, you can feel like you’re on a really exciting ride.
Let’s each take that ride in 2011. There’s a more positive vibe in the air, can you feel it? Let’s gun the gas a little. It’s time for some Kennywood Practice.
Copyright 2011 Transverse Park Productions LLC
Tim Hayes
Writer - Trainer - Speaker
The Leadership Communications Expert TM
http://www.timhayesconsulting.com/ http://www.totalprotraining.com/
412-963-0794 Desk 412-963-0795 Fax 412-708-3501 24-Hour
Pecan Pie: 32 Business Success Strategies Passionately Baked To Order!
"A must read!" Ivan Misner New York Times Bestselling author
BY IT NOW on AMAZON.COM click on link below
Click here to purchase Bob's Book
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thursday, December 23, 2010
A Christmas Story
It was 5:00 pm Christmas Eve 1989, and I was locking the front door of the supermarket where I was Store Manager.
Over the years, I made it a tradition for me to close the store on Christmas Eve.
Inside the store, my employees where rushing around counting their register tills, sweeping the floor, and generally preparing the store for closing down, so they all could rush home to their families for Christmas.
At approximately 5:30pm, I heard someone tapping on the front door.
“I just got off work and I need to shop for my family", the gentleman on the other side of the glass door shouted.
“Sorry, we are closed.” I answered.
“Please, I really need to shop and you are the only grocery store open.”
In the background several of my employees yelled out to me… “Mr. Gambone, I hope you don’t let him in, we all want to go home.”
I turned to my office manager and said , “Cindy, I feel bad for this guy…will you stick around with me until we get him checked out.”
She looked at me with a frown, “Well, I hope he only needs a few things, OK.”
We let him in…he was very gracious, grabbed a buggy and started to shop.
“I’ll only take a few minutes,” he said.
Then all of a sudden, he turned around and looked at Cindy and me in desperation… “Shit!..I’m sorry for swearing, but I left my wallet in my overalls at work….I can’t believe this!!!”
He abandoned the buggy and started walking towards the front door to leave.
Cindy looked at me and said… “Well, I guess we can leave now.”
“Hold on!” I said… “Sir, you pick up what you need and come back the day after Christmas and pay us.”
Cindy looked at me as if I was crazy. The gentleman was overjoyed and continued to shop.
When he completed his shopping, Cindy and I checked him out and bagged his groceries. He purchased lots of milk, cereal, bread and basic groceries along with some gift-wrap and children’s toys.
We wished him a Merry Christmas as he left and Cindy and I locked up and went home to our families.
...............the gentleman never returned...................
Yes, I took some heat from my boss when he found out…but that’s okay. I knew in my heart that it was right thing to do at the time.
“The good you do, will come back to you.”.... Lou Z.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and may you and your family have a glorious New Year.
Bob Gambone, The Pecan Pie Guy!
Over the years, I made it a tradition for me to close the store on Christmas Eve.
Inside the store, my employees where rushing around counting their register tills, sweeping the floor, and generally preparing the store for closing down, so they all could rush home to their families for Christmas.
At approximately 5:30pm, I heard someone tapping on the front door.
“I just got off work and I need to shop for my family", the gentleman on the other side of the glass door shouted.
“Sorry, we are closed.” I answered.
“Please, I really need to shop and you are the only grocery store open.”
In the background several of my employees yelled out to me… “Mr. Gambone, I hope you don’t let him in, we all want to go home.”
I turned to my office manager and said , “Cindy, I feel bad for this guy…will you stick around with me until we get him checked out.”
She looked at me with a frown, “Well, I hope he only needs a few things, OK.”
We let him in…he was very gracious, grabbed a buggy and started to shop.
“I’ll only take a few minutes,” he said.
Then all of a sudden, he turned around and looked at Cindy and me in desperation… “Shit!..I’m sorry for swearing, but I left my wallet in my overalls at work….I can’t believe this!!!”
He abandoned the buggy and started walking towards the front door to leave.
Cindy looked at me and said… “Well, I guess we can leave now.”
“Hold on!” I said… “Sir, you pick up what you need and come back the day after Christmas and pay us.”
Cindy looked at me as if I was crazy. The gentleman was overjoyed and continued to shop.
When he completed his shopping, Cindy and I checked him out and bagged his groceries. He purchased lots of milk, cereal, bread and basic groceries along with some gift-wrap and children’s toys.
We wished him a Merry Christmas as he left and Cindy and I locked up and went home to our families.
...............the gentleman never returned...................
Yes, I took some heat from my boss when he found out…but that’s okay. I knew in my heart that it was right thing to do at the time.
“The good you do, will come back to you.”.... Lou Z.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and may you and your family have a glorious New Year.
Bob Gambone, The Pecan Pie Guy!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)