Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Do You Love it Madly, or Is It the Money?

Hi everybody! I'm printing this free-reprint article on my blog because I really like what this lady has to say. She's absolutely right -- you DO have to love what you're doing to be really successful. Enjoy!

Do You Love It Madly Or Is It The Money?

By Kim Klaver

Those who have made fortunes suggest that first, you must love it madly. The thing you are doing, that is. For you may be doing it much longer than you first anticipated...

According to the wildly successful Bill Joy, co-creator of Sun Microsystems in 1982, if you want to start a company, "You should do it because it's an idea that you're very passionate about, without any financial expectations. You're not anticipating failure, but you have to accept that if it's worth doing, and it's hard, you can't be guaranteed of success. You have to be doing it for the right reason." 60 Seconds with Bill Joy, Fast Company, 11/05

If you don't love your product or the idea of your business madly to begin with, how will you keep the attitude you will need during the hard times?

Check your love it madly quotient for your product and business.

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~ "Almost no one" might be enough ~

There are some 300 million people in the U.S.

Network marketers are constantly being sold on how their company's product is for everyone. You know, that EVERYONE will want it, it sells itself, and blah blah blah.

So of course everyone's out there trying their hardest to convert everyone they see, until she too, "sees" or "gets" how great the product or business is. Or until she stops taking any more calls and blocks your emails.

However, how about if you think really really small instead?

Like .000001 of a percent. That teensie weensie fraction of a percent represents 300 people out of the 300 million who live in the U.S. (I think I did that right.)

What if you "just" aimed for say, THAT number?

Set out to find 300 people (of the total 300 million out there) who share your views about something that is important to you, say nutrition. And who agree about the importance of supplements in their diets. How about starting there?

That's a smaller chunk to be sure. But it's like going to a tennis club to find tennis players. Isn't that easier than asking every passer-by if they play tennis?

Ask for people who share something important to you. They're out there. You have to ask for them, though. Not everyone. But someone who...

What would you earn if you had 300 front line customers who spent what you do on products each month?

Almost no one might be enough to earn several thousand dollars per month. A start, yes?

About the Author: Kim Klaver is Harvard & Stanford educated. Her 20 years experience in network marketing have resulted in a popular blog, http://KimKlaverBlogs.com, a podcast, http://YourGreatThing.com and a giant resource site, http://BananaMarketing.com and now a new online community for MLMers http://NetworkMarketingCentral.com

Source: www.isnare.com