Sunday, 11 November 2012

November 9, 2012 - A Pleasing Personality



A Pleasing Personality....

I was listening to Napoleon Hill today and he was taking about the importance of developing a pleasing personality. I took sales training many years ago and the thing the leader said you needed to get the prospect, “liking you and listening to you”. Napoleon was saying the same thing, just better.

A pleasing personality will up your market power – whatever your market is. Think about that – if people like being with you, they will listen to what you say, they will buy what you are selling – whether you are selling knowledge (teacher) or goods, or health care (doctor),....

I would like to summarize what Napoleon taught me today. I am paraphrasing and quoting him. Please do not think these are my original ideas!

Some things you need to develop in order to have a Pleasing Personality:
#1 – Attitude – Your attitude will either attract or repel people. Therefore you need to be positive in all of your expressions and thoughts. People can tune into you, even if you are silent, and will feed positively off your positive attitude.

I think I have a fairly positive attitude although I sometimes fall off. I know I can maintain a positive attitude by focusing on it. I need to work on keeping my attitude positive.

#2 – Be Flexible – You cannot control what other do or say to you, no matter what their intentions. You cannot control their actions but you can control your reaction to what they do or say. They cannot make you angry or annoyed without your consent AND cooperation.

My mother used to tell me I had a temper but never gave me any tools to deal with it. I realize that when I get angry, it is my response to something that happened in the past, and I have no power to change it.  Or it is my reaction to what someone has said to me.

Its funny, I also realize that my association with some people also leaves me in a state such that when something is said, I am more likely to rise to anger. I ALSO realize that when I get angry, I feed those particular people’s energy. I have been working at controlling myself so when something is said I neither consent to the feeling nor do I give consent to them. THEN I notice their energy is sucked from them and nothing further is said.

Anger is an evil feeling, it saps positive energy, it feels negative energy, it feeds negative people. Not getting angry negates all of those things!

I am working at adjusting my feelings without loosing composure. It takes work, but it is worth it.

#3 – Control the Emotion of Enthusiasm – It is very important to be enthusiastic but you must be able to control your enthusiasm. If all you ever do is be enthusiastic, people will bore of you. Also, when you are constantly enthusiastic, you leave yourself open for someone to burst your balloon and feed your mind with negative thoughts.

I know when I am over-enthusiastic about something, I leave myself vulnerable to “lunch bag letdown”. I think that ties directly into #2.

#4 – Sincerity of Purpose – Be truthful about what you are doing. Do not be deceitful. People can sense when you are not being sincere and that builds a sense of unease with you. Being deceitful carries warning signs to people who meet you.

Duh! Do not lie!

There are some things that you MUST avoid. These things will DESTROY a Pleasing Personality.
#1 – Do not run away with the conversation – No one likes someone who just interrupts and directs the conversation wherever they like it. Do not interrupt.

I need to work on the interrupting part.

#2 – Sarcasm – What do I need to say about this? A sarcastic remark can be as destroying to someone as many other nasty things. Remember – the person you are being sarcastic to may not have a Pleasing Personality and not have the flexibility over their negative emotions!

Sarcasm is me. I need to change that......

Wisecracks are seldom wise!

#3 – Avoid Vanity in Words or Actions – Do not be a know it all. Do not assume you know more than the person you are speaking to. 

#4 – Avoid indifference in listening – PAY ATTENTION!!!!!! Someone once told me that 80% of selling was listening. Pay rapt attention to what the person is saying, make them the centre of your listening universe for that moment. Napoleon says most of the profit in sales is from listening.

#5 – Attempt to flatter – but ONLY when it is deserved. People KNOW when you are blowing wind. Nothing annoys me more than when someone flatters me and I KNOW they are not sincere.

#6 – Finding Fault – Do NOT lament and find fault with the world at large and people in general. Avoid that negativity! Turn it around and find the good things!

#7 – Avoid openly challenging someone – People do not like people who oppose someone just for the purpose of being on the opposite side of an issue.

#8 – Do not volunteer unsolicited advice – Free advice is worth what we paid for it, perhaps the time we take to listen to it – that’s all.

#9 – Do not take the habit of speaking of one’s physical ailments and problems – no one wants to be around a whiner.

#10 – Do not covey superiority – Do not use your actions or words to seem superior to the other person.

#11 – Do not express envy of other’s success – be happy for those who succeed.

#12 – Avoid slovenliness in body, posture and appearance – be neat and tidy, stand up straight, wash your hands.

If you find you are not liked it is always for a reason. You can detect why people do not like you, and then correct your actions.  

If people like you, they will listen to you.

Thursday, 23 August 2012

August 24, 2012 - Sailing AWAY!


Darren Hardy says that we are 100% in control of our lives and that until we accept that and live our life in control, we will never be the same. In fact he says we are 100% to blame for our lives – good or bad.

I believe him.

Let me elaborate a wee bit. Many people know my wife Linda had cancer about a decade and a half ago. I lost my job over it. My “career” life seemed quite dismal for a long time. Then I re-discovered a magazine called SUCCESS while developing my new ACN business. Darren Hardy has made me re-evaluate my life and look at it in another light.

(The “odd”  thing is – Linda and I worked very hard on our family and have two WONDERFUL kids. At least we took control of that area.)

You see, I’ve always blamed “something” for my life. Linda being sick, my mom dying, my dad dying, my grandpa dying, all were to blame for my life. My lack of money. My poor career. 

Not true.

It was my inability to make sound and reasoned decisions that caused my troubles. When I lost my job I did not approach it and say to myself, “Well that sucks. I had better plan my next move!”. Nope. I wallowed.

When important people in my life died, instead of grasping those feelings, and letting time and thought heal them, I let them drag me into a place where the blame for my misfortune was placed on dead people. Not true.

Jim Rohn says, “The same wind blows on us all”. By “wind” he means, the economy, the government, people dying, aging, change.  He goes on to say, “Its not the wind that determines our life’s fortune but rather the SET OF OUR SAIL.”

What does that mean to me? I have to learn how to sail. And fast. How can I learn how to sail? I have to change the way I think. I have to sculpt my personal philosophies in order to better handle these rough seas. Equally important, I want to be able to sail through calm seas without becoming complacent. I want to learn how to scan the horizon and choose the best channels to sail through. I want to teach my kids and everyone on my team to do the same.

So what school am I going to in order to gain these skills? The Matt Robertson School of Self Help. I am listening to many great thought leaders. I have my IPOD filling with thoughtful and educational material. I subscribe to SUCCESS magazine. I read lots of books, magazine articles, blogs and more. Instead of listening to drivel on the radio, I listen to thoughtful material.

I am growing. I am learning. I am becoming a sailor!

August 23, 2012 - My Anger Issues

I have been living with what I describe as an angry temper for 48 years now. I have been listening to George Zalucki and John Maxwell a lot lately. If I can paraphrase what they say – anger is an intense feeling of extreme displeasure over something that happened in the past and cannot be changed.

So what does that all mean to me? I have been struggling to not “control” my anger but recognize the feeling and get rid of it and replace it with something else. Its very difficult for me – almost half a century of conditioning. I should also say that as far as my emotional upbringing is concerned, my mother led that training. She had a wicked temper and held a grudge for what seemed like forever.

My dad was the calm one. His was not a strong personality so it was hard to learn from him. That and I don’t think my mother really wanted us to learn from him. Being the youngest of 4 kids with a 15 year difference between the eldest and youngest, I’ve also had the opportunity to observe my siblings. They have carried a lot of that anger around with them too in various forms.

Enough of the past. I am really trying to do my best to “count to 10” before reacting. In that time, I am asking myself some questions AND forcing myself to answer them.
  • EXACTLY what am I angry about?
  • Can the “thing” be re-worked or fixed?
  • Does it REALLY matter? (Will anyone die or be physically hurt?)
  • Am I really angry with myself?

I suppose there are a lot of other questions that can get spawned from those but I usually end up calming down after the first one. Anger is such a wasted emotion. I am amazing myself with my new-found ability to keep calm.

I am sure my family doesn’t think so YET! I see myself having difficulty managing my emotions when I am in certain situations. These situations or conditions can be:
  • Having had too much to drink.
  • Being too tired.
  • Being ill.
  • Allowing outside influences to change my mood or emotional condition. THIS IS THE WORST ONE!!!!

So although it sounds easy, it is not for me. I must constantly run through those questions and thoughts about what is triggering those feelings.

It is a real challenge for me as I have to spend time alone with a person who does her best to trigger those feelings of anger in me. I have realized this person actually thrives when she sees people in emotional distress. She tries to instigate conflict amongst other people.

I have to keep repeating John Maxwell’s thought – “Hurting people, hurt people. And hurting people are hurt by people.”

Wish me more skills!


Thursday, 19 July 2012

July 19, 2012


Here I am once again sitting in Ottawa with my son, Morgan. It is my daughter`s 18th birthday today and although I am somewhat sad I didn`t see her today, I know she is out with her boyfriend. I am sure she will have a special time.

I am working at learning as much as I can to help me get started with my business. One thing I am afraid of is spending all of my time learning and no time “doing”. I have very poor organizational habits. I am reading “The Best Year Ever” by Darren Hardy and oe thing I have taken from it RIGHT now is I am sorting all of my bad habits out and tackling them one at a time. Change a habit that is holding me back each and every day for 21 days and then start the next.

Tonight, I am going to prioritize the list and start tackling them all - one at a time - tomorrow morning. 

I will let you know tomorrow how it is all working out!

Thursday, 28 June 2012

June 27, 2012


I work for a brewery called Trafalgar Ales and Meads. I left for my 2 day delivery trip this morning at 5. Last week I had the alternator fail on my van. That of itself is insignificant, but what was significant was the service at Canadian Tire. I have mentioned John Maxwell’s book “Everyone Communicates Few Connect”. This was a classic example as everyone just answered me with a standard Canadian Tire answer rather than answering the questions I was asking. Interesting.

I enjoy my days delivering as I can listen to developmental recordings. I think I overloaded yesterday as I can’t remember any of them! I am trying to follow some of Darren Hardy’s direction though. I’ve recorded in my journal (I’ve had a “green book” for a long time – now I am calling it my journal!) my WHY, my STRENGTHS, my WEAKNESSES, my GOALS. By the way, a goal is a dream with a deadline.

When I get back to Milton, I am going to start a “book of Matt”. I’m working through an exercise right now called “The Best Year Every” – Darren Hardy. Rather than mar that book with my thoughts, I am sharing it with Linda, Morgan and Ainsley.

Short entry today. On Thursday, during my drive home, I am going to listen to more philosophy.