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Build Your Skills

May 19, 2010 by

Competence is the ability to “do something good, (technology) capacity. Skills are typically acquired or learned in order skills that are often innate ideas contrary.

Think about what you learned since you were a child learning to sit, walk for food. Tie your shoes, read and write, and learn to play with others. And we have new skills you’ve got more. How do I add a curve ball, perhaps throw, and to summarize a story or set a budget for food and household changes, or run a meeting. They have many skills that you just take for granted.

What skills did you need to acquire to build the life you want? Where do you even begin to try to get them? Here are some simple steps to get you started (Get crayons and a large sheet of paper must close, them) are:

Test – Look at your long life and where you want now in a year. This type of analysis requires the following:

* Review what you have – your current situation and skill sets. Your life is the sum of your decisions and events beyond your control should not everything you pretty things do not just control your own decisions either. The past, you learn from your mistakes, the better decision you can.
* Check to see where you want to go – what you really want and why you want to. Then draw an appointment for them and take care of the responsibility for producing the desired changes.
* Constructing things down into manageable segments: small things, over time, and over time, large projects can be achieved in small steps

Think about what you must do to achieve your goals: Make a list of steps, resources, materials and support you need. Go crazy: Using all the ballpoint pens and highlighter colors you need and connect with each other ideas. Then when you’ve managed to organize so much of them, how to get the first pass, your thoughts and plans in a clean, easily understandable master file – the one you can see quickly if necessary. But keep the first draft, it can still inspire.

Implementation – Action is where it all happened (no pun intended). Rather than be stuck in the planning phase, things in motion. Do not freeze on paper (or bytes forgotten). Give them a fighting chance in the real world (and die on the field when they). To see what works and what cannot quickly get rid of. Do not fall in love with the plan to proceed according to the results. If an action does not pay for what, then try another. Rinse and repeat.

Continuous correction – Kaizen is the Japanese philosophy of Continuous Improvement. A bit like “ready, fire, fire, so the best!” Kaizen improvement on the fly to keep the pace of change is the time that is all around us, and you need to keep the pace, if you want to achieve something.

Keep learning to improve constantly stay in motion.

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