Archive for September, 2009

People should have some habits, principles etc. to win.
What are the top 5 of them?
What we do to win as the others?
I know it is not a magic, but something different.
Can you please answer?
I want answers from successful people!!!
Please share your strategies…

1. .Plan your work.
2. Do not postpone your work
3. Do not expect anything from anybody.
4. Do not get dishearten if you fail.
5. Keep trying till you achieve your goal

According to me,if we read the biography of successful persons they concentrate either in personal or career life .why they do not have time to share their Thoth’s and feelings with their spouse and kids?

hardwork


You absolutely can be successful by working your way up. However, keep in mind it is a lot harder to do so, and will take a lot longer. Over time, the college and education you received will not be as important on your resume as your work experience and your accomplishments. But getting started, you must be prepared to take a substantially lower salary and in larger companies you may be passed down for promotion because you do not have the degree. The best thing you can do is to start working and attend college at night/weekends. Earn your degree while earning your work history. Employers love to see that on a resume.

Is it financial well being, or maybe doing the best you can by your family with what means you have available to you. Or is their no real purpose in life , or any major difference individuals or collective groups can achieve. Are we all just a blip or a flash of interpretation within a never ending time ?

Happiness and the reduction of suffering. For yourself and all of those who you can have a positive influence upon.

Yes we are each just a speck of awareness on a small planet in vast universe, but that is simply distraction from what really matters.

I drove to work. As I went the angel was talking ’do this little exercise, now that exercise.’ I had fun, all the way. Time went so fast, and I felt invigorated. The next day as I went, I did the same exercises. It was boring. I wondered what I had done wrong. Then it hit me. On the first day I had listened to the angel. On the second I had copied the first day, and not listened to the angels. Now I know. Listen always and follow. That is the secret Path To Success.

Yes I agree babe.I love you more than the stars and moon.You mean the world to me.I love you so so much.

PROMPT 1

The modern world is one in which happiness is defined by the amount of money and success one has. The job you have, the size of your house, the brand of the car you drive. My experiences in this world have left me without a definition of happiness. But of one thing I am certain: happiness does not consist of money and success; at least not for me. I was born in Ukraine, just west of Russia. When my parents immigrated to the United States, my mother wasted absolutely no time in signing me up for the best of every kind of school, class, and program she could find. In her eyes, the more opportunities and experiences I had, the more successful I would become. I have had numerous experiences throughout my life that over the years have come together to ultimately define who I am as a human being.

I was born in Ukraine, and, for most people, when they think of Ukraine they think of poverty and farmland. And for the most part, they are absolutely right. It is a place with common ideals, one common religion, and common jobs. But my parents didn’t want me to have the life of a commoner, and, therefore, moved to America when I was four years old. My parents soon divorced which left me with just my mother. I was quickly enrolled in kindergarten, followed by elementary school and gymnastics. Like most kids, however, I preferred to stay home and watch television or be with my friends and would constantly beg her to let me quit. And every time I’d ask, I’d here the same answer,” no.” When it came time for middle school, my mother decided that public just wasn’t good enough. So she signed me up for Catholic School. By this time, she’d had me doing thirty hours of gymnastics a week, two hours of swimming, two hours of dance class, two hours of math class, and two hours of Russian school. I was up to my nose in activities, and I was blooming. I was turning thirteen and suddenly, I didn’t want to quit gymnastics. I began to live and breathe it. School and daily activities were now only there to kill time until practice. I had become attached to my coach, who by then I was seeing more often than my family. I was traveling at least once a month to compete, I was winning, and most importantly, I was happy. My world was finally whole, and there wasn’t a cloud on the horizon, until the San Francisco Invitationals of 2004. That’s the day I found out that my coach, my second mother and best friend in the world, was diagnosed with breast cancer. My perfect world tumbled down so fast, I didn’t get a chance to blink twice. I knew she was going to leave, and I knew I was going to quit. That notion made practice useless, and I started slacking. Something that had been defining my life for so many years was now gone. It was ruined because the greatest person I had ever known had cancer. I was angry and I took it out on everything. To me, it seemed as though I had been robbed of my identity.

I was still very much in search of my identity when I stepped into High School the beginning of my Freshmen year. I didn’t know who I was, so I let other people define me. My grades were still down, and I was still lost. I was angry that my perfect world had been shattered, angry that I had been powerless against it. Happiness had suddenly lost all its meaning and I felt alone in the world. Then came two more hits to my already broken world: My coaches husband, who had traveled with us, coached me and was my second favorite person in the world, died of brain cancer. Shortly following that, my great-grandmother passed away. I was standing empty handed in the middle of a hurricane with nothing to protect myself. I felt like a zombie walking to and from school, and couldn’t understand why this was happening to me. That’s when I decided I was going to get out of there, whatever it took. My grades skyrocketed and I was determined. I finally had something to hold on to, some new goal to define my life with. This is my new dream. To get out of the city that harbors all these painful memories and to find success and finally be able to define happiness again, regardless of anyone else, even if I have to do it alone. Even a bird that flies solo has the power to soar.

PROMPT 2
Right before I entered High School, my mother gave birth to my little brother. In the second semester of tenth grade, she had to leave to Glencoe, Georgia to train for her new job. She was gone for four months, four months of which I was a mother. I had to cancel plans to stay home and change diapers, feed and wash a little baby. I was 16 and taking on more responsibility than eighty percent of my age group. And all of this responsibility resting on the shoulders of a girl who had never even done a load of her own laundry or cooked breakfast. I had to learn, fast. There was no room for mistakes, and I knew it. For four months, grades once again started dropping as my priorities shifted. This was the experience of a lifetime, the experience every Health Ed class

I agree with the first poster. It starts out strong enough, with an intriguing concept, but slides downhill from there. Every sentence, every paragraph needs to be related to the concept of what is important to you, and that isn’t the case in your essay yet.

Speaking of paragraphs, please keep the paragraphs to a few sentences, and one of them should address the specific point of the paragraph itself. This makes it easier to read and follow along.

Finally, when applying to a college or university, or even a job, it might not be a good idea to state you are not interested in success – they will have plenty of people to choose from who are.

You do sound smart and motivated, and I am sure you will be a success. So please read this as a critique, not criticism. Tighten it up, and you will be fine!

Meaning the person’s personality changes for the worst. Like you see some people who went from rags to riches, but totally dismiss others who were truly there for them in their time of need and helped them along their Path To Success.

Responsibility changes. Friendships become politically motivated. Naturally people become like the people they hang out with, then they forget how to Be around the old crowd. This happened to my buddy when he first became a cop. But me and my other pals hung in there and after a year or two we’re closer than ever and he was able to find balance between the new behavior the acadamy was teaching him and the old personality that made him great to begin with. Merry Christmas!

Hi I am Nabadittya became phycally and mentally week after looses all good chances.Recently i notice some advertisement demanding so much improvement.
I wanted to is there any reality of there demand.
Please infrom me.

Be aware of opportunities, It is good to have useful knowledges, but mainly, stay on guard, hunting and chasing the chances which are present in the life and then to have the courage to face them opportunely.

Realizing. No experience I played last year for the first time(joined about 2 games before mid-season) but one coach NEVER let me participate in practice because it was my first year I’m guessing.

At first I tried to play WR/CB but I realized at my speed it wasn’t gonna happen. So for the meanwhile I played the line/special teams. Which now I realize 157 lbs and I’m 5′9 I was too small.

Everything was a mess last year. Head JV coach not coaching, letting random coaches that he played with coach. Coaches changing every week. And the only time I did play was when we ran a 5-2 another random coach just threw me in a day before the game cuz someone didn’t show up. I got 2 sacks and a fumble recovery. and I won’t lie, it wasn’t even good hits, and even to today I have trouble hitting because I never keep my feet moving but I’m not afraid of contact. I more-so wrestled him to the ground.

Now its my second year, I can hit a bit better but still lack to keep my feet moving. I don’t feel like I’m getting better. And this year I went for LB because of the success I had last year in that one game. Then the new coaches tell me no go with the linemen when he first says I want big people with linemen.

He said it was my speed. My 40 was a 5.1 which was the first 40 I ever ran in my life. no stance no nothin. I felt I coulda ran it in 4.8

Meh now I think I should quit. Its not that im being a pus*sy about it. I can handle the intense sprints and workouts. Its just I feel I really have no talent but the other part of me wants to stay because I love the sport. And I’ve went through so much bs already why quit but now? I wonder if I’m wasting my time. All I do is work hard, I never half assed. Even at home now or during the off season I ran, did shuttle runs, and jump rope to work on my foot work to play LB and it doesn’t seem to pay off.

And whats worse is he has a kid smaller, slower and less aggressive, has no stance, and doesn’t attempt to make much contact or is even in the right place on a simple blast right. I mean the first day we started hitting he wasn’t even tryin to get smacked he went on the sled with the linemen for no reason? wtf? I went hit, coach said im good but i need to keep my feet moving and I’m too high so of course I got ran over a few times.

Which I don’t understand. Or maybe I should play for another school. I dunno anymore. Its not because I didn’t get the position I wanted, its because I’m tired of being thrown around so much between positions. I don’t mind playin D-line at all if I’m put there, O-line on the other hand I don’t wanna play.(I can’t stand offense)

But mostly I think I don’t have any talent. I I thought hard work, dedication and love for the sport would be enough and everything would fall into place but I guess its nothing unless you have talent anymore.

Or maybe im bit*ching too much and I need to suck it up like last year, get faster and stronger and try again. I don’t know I understand no one reading this has seen me play or might misunderstand what I wrote and they really can’t help me but I’m in a corner and I don’t know what to do. I’m thinkin after another week I’ma turn in my gear and quit all sports. Football, wrestling, and lacrosse. which i played to improve for football.

STICK WITH IT DONT GIVE UP~!

if anyone knows where to find a "world map" which shows the yahoo researchcenters, etc..
i need information for a project at uni.
the main subject is:
international marketing strategies of google and yahoo.
i would be thankful for any information.
:)

The way a startup makes money is to offer people better technology. Google’s plan, for example, was simply to create a search site that didn’t suck. They had three new ideas: index more of the Web, use links to rank search results, and have clean, simple web pages with unintrusive keyword-based ads. Above all, they were determined to make a site that was good to use. No doubt there are great technical tricks within Google, but the overall plan was straightforward. And while they probably have bigger ambitions now this alone brings them a billion dollars a year. Google understands a few other things most Web companies still don’t. The most important is they put users before advertisers, even though the advertisers pay and users do not. One bumper stickers reads "if the people lead, the leaders will follow." Paraphrased for the Web, this becomes "get all the users, and the advertisers will follow." One reason Google will maintain its market share lead over its competitors is its spending on research and development. This investment in the future will hit $866 million this year, and its annual growth rate for R&D spending is higher than its two main rivals, Yahoo! and MSN. The bottom line is that Google’s worldwide gross revenues will reach more than $11.8 billion by the end of 2007, according to eMarketer estimates. Other researchers, such as Bear Stearns and Piper Jaffray, see even higher figures.

Yahoo hired Wenda Millard in late 2001, and she went on to instill a new sense of humility and customer service in the sales force. She was well connected to the pooh-bahs of branding and advertising and set out to help them understand and embrace the new medium and realize its potential. (Around the same time, MSN also hired an experienced magazine executive to reach out to ad agencies.) The new cooperative attitude between Silicon Valley and Madison Avenue is a big reason Internet advertising is booming once again: from $6 billion in 2002, it rose to around $9.4 billion in 2004. Yahoo, MSN, and AOL add up to 30% of the market, and Yahoo is the leader with around a 13% share. It’s also the number-one brand on the Internet, according to Nielsen NetRatings, with 89 million unique visitors a month in the United States.

Some of Yahoo’s ad revenue — the company won’t say how much — comes from the paid links that appear when you do an online search, an idea pioneered by its rival Google. But more and more is coming from branded advertisers. Yahoo’s ad buyers now include more than 70 of America’s top 100 advertisers. Ads are now by far the biggest source of Yahoo’s revenues.