18 Feb 2008 04:37:51 | Nan S. Russell
Most people are looking for the secret to success; the secret to
being a millionaire; the secret to winning at working. To help
them find it, Amazon.com currently inventories 1,797 books
promising success secrets, everything from "Mustang Sallies:
Success Secrets of Women Who Refuse to Run With the Herd" to
"The 21 Secrets of Self-Made Millionaires."
So, if you're one of those looking, I'll save you some time. The
bottom line is this - there is no secret. There's no magical
formula to follow; no short-cuts to take or lottery tickets you
can purchase. People who are winning at working know it takes
persistence, determination, commitment, passion, practice, focus
and hard work. There are no secrets to any of that. Just look
around.
Take Chester Carlson. Chester became a rich man as the
successful inventor of an electrostatic paper-copying process
that later became the Xerox Corporation, even though twenty
corporations rejected his idea. It took Chester seven years of
persistence and determination before he found one tiny company
willing to purchase his invention.
Or take Julia Child. After receiving a contract for a French
cookbook, Julia worked five years, with two collaborators, only
to produce a manuscript that was rejected by the publisher. A
year of revisions produced another rejected manuscript. But
Julia refused to give up. It took eight years and a second
publisher for Julia's cookbook, which sold more than a million
copies, to find a bookshelf.
If you want to be winning at working, stop looking for some
secret "out there" to bring you success. Instead, turn your
sights inward and you'll find everything you need. You see,
you're the secret to your success. But if you think you don't
have what it takes, think again.
Visit any craft fair, hobbyist, volunteer organization or
internet blog. Note poets, musicians, artists, athletes,
hackers, spammers and graffiti artists. Determination,
persistence, initiative and hard work manifests itself in many
ways and places, some positive endeavors and some not so
positive. But it's the same ingredients. And they're inside you
waiting to be tapped.
People work on novels after a full day's work. They develop
products in their garages, then figure out how to manufacture
and market them. They volunteer to coach their daughter's soccer
team or organize food drives for their community. They put
energy into their interests and passions. They persist against
hardships, set-backs and disappointments, demonstrating with
their actions they have what it takes.
Stop looking for success secrets and start realizing you're the
best kept secret you have. Like Moliere puts it, "The heart can
do anything." Find your heart in your work and you can do
anything, too.
(c) 2005 Nan S. Russell. All rights reserved.
About Author :
Sign up to receive Nan's free eColumn, Winning at Working, at
http://www.winningatworking.com. Nan Russell has spent over
twenty years in management, most recently with QVC as a Vice
President. Currently working on her first book, Nan is a writer,
columnist, small business owner, and instructor.