How To Create Your Million Dollar Moment
I
was listening to a skill-set video by a gentleman named Jerry Clark this
morning who had a wonderful insight on life actually and how to “arrive” at
whatever it is you want to accomplish in life.
Jerry
Clark first spoke about how you, because no one can do it for you, but you have
to first attract your million dollar moment. Jerry spoke about how he was born
in a garage, and grew up very poor, and he remembers asking his mother for new
shoes, pants and things of that nature, and his mother’s reply was always “We
don’t have enough money…” But it wasn’t until Jerry wanted to take Karate
lessons that hearing his mother’s excuse was just the last straw for Jerry and
so he decided to take matters into his own hands, and got himself a paper
route. Just so that he could pay for the Karate classes he so desperately
wanted to do at $40/month.
That’s
what we must do with ourselves. At some point we have to say, you know what,
the same ole excuse of not having enough money or whatever it is that you are
hindering yourself from, you have to kind of get upset with yourself, and say
hey, I’m a take action on this thing and just get it done.
So
at a young age of 11 years old, that was Jerry’s first “monumental moment.” And
from there it can only grow. From there Jerry saw the Mercedes Benz car, homes
with movie theatres inside them, and it drove his hunger. Jerry realized at 19
that trading time for dollars, like what most of us do in a job setting is not
what’s happening. Entrepreneurs get paid for trading results for
dollars. So there is a shift that needs to take place there in order to
understand that key concept. Because in a job setting, you can have the
crappiest day and not be as effective as you could, and still get paid, but in
the entrepreneur world, that’s not the case.
So
you must surround yourself with successful people, other entrepreneurs, people
who have already produced results.
Jerry
describes what is called a Success Triangle. Now picture a triangle,
having the three points, and now lets look at the base on the left, Jerry calls
that Internal Communication.
Internal
Communication is how you communicate with yourself. Your expectation. Your
beliefs, philosophies. We must master this.
The
next base to the right is the External Communication. This is how you
communicate with others. The direct marketing, copy-writing skills. However and
whenever possible, you want to study influence. This will help you understand
about what makes people tick.
Jerry
describes how there are four things that you are going to go through when
mastering anything.
One,
is time, just like it took and takes time to learn that “thing” on the job, this
is going to take time as well. Something like a year or so.
The
second is energy, and energy is nothing more than action. You must, must, must
take action. Confuscion the greek philospoher once said “To know and not do is
yet not to know.” Meaning you might think you know something, but you really
don’t know cuz you’re not doing it. So we must take action.
The
third is Frustration. No matter how calm or relaxed of a person you are, you
will get frustrated, but its important to stay in your lane. That’s my own
personal philosophy of frustration. I have lived and have visited several
cities, and because I like to drive I find myself in tons and tons of traffic.
Now I like to think of myself as a pretty calm and relaxed person, but sitting
traffic is the most infuriating thing to me. But my motto is to just stay in
your lane, Steer the course, because slow motion is better than no motion, and
although its frustrating, you still want to get there. I have seen where cars
will pull over and take a break on the shoulder, pull off all together and get
a bite to eat, and that’s cool for them. But for me, unless I was already
planning to pull over for a bite, or to check my vehicles coolant levels and so
forth, I’m not gonna let anything veer me from my course. And my thinking is
because you never know how far you have to go before you break through. You
could only have ten more yards to go ’til traffic is going to break and you
will be right where you want be, smooth sailing. You can’t find that out on the
shoulder. There’s an old proverb that says “The darkest hour of the night comes
just before dawn.” So we must not give up!
The
fourth concept to mastering anything is change. You must always be changing and
growing. Its sounds so simple, but its oh so true, but if nothing changes,
nothing changes.
So
lets get back to the triangle, and the last piece of the triangle at the top is
Technical Knowledge. This is the know how, the coaching. The piece that will
actually make you money. Sometimes people skip the other two parts and get
straight to this piece, the money aspect. Which can work, but without the
internal knowledge, what will keep you motivated, how will you react when you
become frustrated. You need those internal skills. How will you be able to
create a good copywritten sales letter, or how will your conduct be when you
are speaking with folks in seminars, meetings, webinars, you need those
external communication skills. It all fits together.
The
last thing Jerry spoke about and ended the call with was what he called The
Slight Edge Concept. Which simply stated that “Everyday in every way you are
either performing simple disciplines or simple errors of judgement.”
See
discipline is the key. Excellence is not achieved overnight. It is a lifelong
journey that we should be working on daily. And we are always working on
something whether we know it or not. Just like the saying if you aren’t
planning your work, you’re planning to fail. By you not taking interest in your
work, you are ensuring your own failure. So The Slight Edge Concept is pretty
much saying that everyday we are either making good choices or bad. The
disciplines we create in our lives are the determining factor. Just repeat
simple disciplines in our lives daily and over time you will see tremendous results.