6 Exercises to Develop Your Leadership Skills

Digging back through some notes from a recent Rich Dad seminar, I stumbled on these exercises that Robert Kiyosaki put together for developing your leadership skills. Check ‘em out:

1) Discuss people in your life who were role models. Who did you look up to? They could be people you knew personally or world leaders. Who did you look up to… and why? What did they do to inspire you to be a better person?

2) Take a look at the B-I Triangle. In which of the 8 integrities are you strong? Which areas do you need to develop?

3) If you plan on being an entrepreneur and owning your own business, how complete is your team? If you do not have a team, begin interviewing experts in all of the 8 integrities so you can better understand what they do, what is important and what words they use. Remember, each piece of the B-I Triangle has its own vocabulary.

4) How often do you speak in front of groups of five or more people? If less than once a week, begin looking for opportunities to practice.

5) How much feedback do you receive? Do you have someone who will critique your talks honestly and give you feedback? If you do not have a coach or critic, find one and give them permission to be blunt and forthright. There is no sense sugar coating feedback. Feedback should include appearance. If you look like a loser, you will only talk to other losers.

6) How do you measure your success? For example, it is OK to start with small groups who do not respond to you or your message. It’s OK to fail. It’s not OK to quit doing something that is important to you.

If you persist, practice, and keep receiving feedback, your skills, groups and success should increase.

Regardless of what business you are going into, you will only be as successful as your leadership skills allow you to be. Improving them is a never-ending process. Start with these exercises and you will see results.

This Is Your Dream Shot – What Are You Gonna Do?

What would you do if you had four days to spend at the Magnetic Sponsoring headquarters with Mike Dillard and the rest of the crew?

What questions would you ask? What information would you want to extract from them? What would you want to see? What tidbit of information would you want to bring back to your business that you think would take it to the next level?

So? What would you do? Leave a comment and I’ll do my best to get your questions on video while I am there.

BTW, here is the latest video I just posted in my 39 day Challenge series.

See the entire series here – http://johnseiferth.com/youtube

The Learning Never Stops

Rich Dad Event

One thing I learned early on at The Rich Dad Company was that in order for me to achieve success, I must first improve myself. Everything starts with me.

In fact, that is the case in every part of my life. If I want a great friendship, first I must become a great friend. If I want a great marriage, first I must become a great husband. If I want a great relationship with my kids, first I must become a great father.

Therefore, everything depends on me. I must continuously improve myself in order to have the life I want.

Remember the expression Be, Do, Have? I am not sure where that came from (could be Scientology actually…), but it is so frigging true.

First, I must BE the person I want to BE. Become the person I want to become, in all my relationships.

Next, I must DO the things I need to DO. Create the habits, actions, interactions I need to create, across my entire life.

Then, and only then, can I HAVE the things I deserve to HAVE. Each step builds on the previous. It is a package deal. In other words, I can’t have want it deserve to have without first becoming the person I need to be. It is impossible.

And for me, this all starts with continuous learning. In all areas.

For the next three days I am attending a Leadership event put on by my mentor and friend, Robert Kiyosaki. I’ll be sharing the learning as I am able, right from inside the room. I am super excited to be here as I am feeling the crunch of life, in all areas right now, and the only thing I can choose to do, is improve myself.

What are the factors that set apart 7-figure earners?

In a new video I shot with Mike Dillard a few weeks ago, we talk about the specific factors that set the big dogs in business apart from the rest of the pack.

Mike has never talked about this before on camera so I was pretty lucky to get him to open up. The stuff he divulges is straight from his own experience as well as the experience I had working for Robert Kiyosaki for seven years.

It doesn’t get any more real than this.

Check out the video clip to get a taste of the magical fairy dust Mike and I spew forth in this ultra exclusive video.

To get the FULL pre-release video, go to http://johnseiferth.net/the-7-figure-factor/

Finer and Finer Distinctions

Warrior2

My wife and I take a yoga class together every week on Wednesdays. It is a ritual that we have that allows us to do something together while keeping fit and helping us to relax and come back to our core. Now, that doesn’t always work. Like yesterday. I had been such a jerk to her that it affected our class. I am like that you know, sometimes I go over the line and wish afterward that I had done or said something differently. I am human.

But that is not the subject of this post. I want to talk about how small (sometimes extremely small) distinctions can make all the difference in the world.

In yoga, distinctions are everything. It is not just about holding a pose or getting yourself wrapped up like a pretzel. It comes down to very minute angles, pressures and areas of concentration that make all the difference in the world. For instance, yesterday we were in a pose with our hands on the ground in front of us. I was up on my finger tips during the pose when the instructor came over to me and had me switch my hands so my palms were on the floor, with my finger tips raised into the air.

To demonstrate the difference, put your hands on your desk right now with only your finger tips touching the surface. Good. Now, lower your palms to the desk and raise your finger tips so they are not touching the desk at all. See the difference? In comparison to the entire pose, a minor piece of the puzzle. But important nontheless. That one shift changed the dynamics of the entire exercise. It fire up different muscles that I had not been using. It changed the way my hands, arms, shoulders, chest, hips, legs and feet all worked together. Amazing.

The same is true for most any sport. Think about the tiny, tiny variations between my golf swing and Tiger Woods’ swing. We both have a club. We both rotate our hips to bring the club behind our heads, then reverse the rotation to swing the club down and forward toward the ball and finally end up with the club behind our backs. Basically the same thing.

But because of tiny, tiny variations in grip, hip rotation, arm position, head position, shoulders, legs, feet, back, speed, force, angle and direction, Tiger makes $200 million a year and I don’t. ;-)

The same goes for football, basketball, baseball, billiards, bowling, archery, track and field, etc, etc, etc. Hell, the difference between the good and the great is often microseconds, or millimetres.

The same goes for business. The difference between a business that is wildly successful and a competitor that fails is typically something extremely small. Timing, location, a key decision, perception, a single meeting, one connection, a hunch.

When I was training with one of the premier athletic training facilities in the Southwest US, the time and effort it took me to get 95% of the way to my goal was drastically eclipsed by the amount of time and energy it took me to achieve that last 5%. Finer distinctions in weight, tempo, reps, sets, nutrition and supplements were what got me to my goal.

By the way, you can see the entire 12 week process on YouTube. Go here to watch – http://www.youtube.com/user/IkeiUnderground#play/user/BA60F937B0D2F965. The videos are in the right-hand column.

So, my point in all of this is that the difference between success and failure or between good and great, are often the finest of distinctions. Keep refining. Keep testing. Keep trying. That is how the masters perfect their trade.

The Holy Grail Of Success

Tony Robbins gives us the holy grail of success

Tony Robbins gives us the holy grail of success

I just watched probably the BEST video I have seen in a loooong time and I wanted to pass it along to you. This is one of those “Ah ha!” moments that you will NOT want to pass up.

Now, the video is about 38 minutes long, but PLEASE stick with it. It is truly THAT awesome. Check it out…

http://tonyrobbinstraining.com/320/interview-with-frank-kern-and-john-reese/

Ten Important Things To Think About When Writing A Business Plan

I was looking through some old binders and stumbled across some notes I had taken years ago while at a Rich Dad event. Below is a “fleshed out” (I think that’s how you say it) list of things that are a must do when creating a business plan. Garrett Sutton, Robert Kiyosaki’s advisor on legal and business entity matters (and author of The ABCs of Writing Winning Business Plans) is one of the smartest (and funniest) guys I know. These notes were taken during his time on stage at the event. I hope they help if you are starting or are in the middle of writing a business plan.

1. Whether you are raising money, borrowing it, or financing a new business yourself, you should force yourself to put into writing a detailed business plan for what you have in mind. Without one, you most likely will be unsuccessful at obtaining money. With one you can guide yourself and your management team through the entire start-up process in an organized and successful manner. That being said, having a written business plan is a must.

2. If you are raising money for your business, you should first carefully think about who potentially will be providing the funds to start the business. For example, if you are hoping to borrow from a bank, your plan should clearly address the risks involved in the business with emphasis on the new business’s ability to pay back any loans obtained. If you are soliciting funds from investors or venture capitalists, your plan should emphasize the business’s growth potential and it’s subsequent return on invested capital. At every step of the way, you should be conscious of writing FOR and TO the targeted reader of your business plan.

3. Making a detailed outline of what you have in mind is probably the most important thing you can do before you actually start writing your plan. Take your time and give your outline a lot of thought. Organize your thoughts in simple phrases or sentences and number and letter each phrase or sentence. Break down big topics into smaller, detailed lists of specific things that must be researched or said. Composing a detailed outline can be tedious, but don’t slack off on this crucial part of the process. Writing from a carefully written outline will give your business plan a definite beginning, middle, and end.

4. A business plan will achieve its objectives only if it is credible. Credibility is established by the people who will be involved in the venture and how various verifiable facts and statistics are used to support the proposed business idea. The industry or market niche in which the business will compete must be extensively researched. So too must the targeted customers of the business be analysed and discussed. Much effort should be expended to thoroughly research these subjects by using information found in libraries, on the Internet, and from companies with pertinent databases for sale. Another source of credible information can be obtained by interviewing industry experts, suppliers, competitors, and even potential customers themselves. The depth of knowledge and insight that can be conveyed in the business plan as a result of thorough research will go far to solidify the needed aura of credibility. Remember to keep track of where you sourced your information so that it can be properly footnoted in your business plan. Footnotes add to credibility.

5. Be organized from the start. You will be surprised at how much information you can collect in a very short period of time. It is imperative that you collect and organize your information in a manner that conforms with your outline. Set up labeled files at the onset. Have a separate, secure place to store them. Plan up front how you will collect and organize information gathered from the Internet on your computer. And don’t just copy information from the Internet. Keep track of the addresses from where the information came, in the likely event that you may want to revisit some sites for clarification or additional information. It sounds old fashioned, but keep paper and pen on your person and on your nightstand at all times. Write down every fleeting thought that comes into your head. In the busy pursuit of information, it’s easy to forget an idea that popped into your head the day before or in the middle of the night.

6. The body of the business plan must contain the usual descriptive elements such as a clear statement of the business, the planned marketing strategies, a thorough analysis of the competition, a description of operational procedures, an honest list of perceived risks, and other written sections pertinent to the business idea. But what will set your business plan apart from others will be the insertion of a “compelling reason” why your business idea is unique. To just say “this business is different and therefore it will be successful” probably will be ignored or discounted by a sophisticated reader. But if you build a story through the presentation of your researched facts and take the reader to a logical point where the uniqueness or cleverness of you business idea becomes apparent, he will be more than receptive to your idea when you state the “compelling reason” why your business idea is truly unique and will work. You will have drawn him in and captured his imagination. The “compelling reason” will make him receptive to all the other positive attributes your business idea represents.

7. The financial statements you include in your business plan should span three years with Year 1 broken down into 12 months and Years 2 & 3 broken down into quarters. They should contain both profit and loss and cash flow statements. Two important elements you should include in the financial section of your business plan is a clear statement of the assumptions that underlay your projected numbers and the obvious use of a conservative approach in projecting those numbers. Be thoughtful in your assumptions. Make them easy for your reader to understand. Base them on facts gleaned from your research that appear elsewhere in your business plan. Always take the lower side of any range of figures. The important thing is for the numbers to work ie. payoff the loans or give a reasonable return on investment. Bankers and investors are not impressed by big, optimistic numbers. They see them all the time. They are usually persuaded by that “compelling reason” why the business has a good chance of succeeding and reassured that the projected numbers are achievable because they are obviously conservative. Let their imaginations take your financial projections to higher, exciting levels on their own time.

8. Your business plan should contain detailed resumes of the principal people who will be involved in and/or running the new business. The resume section is often the second place venture capitalists go when they pick up a business plan. They first read the executive summary to get a general idea of what the business is all about, and then they go to the resume section to see who the players are. If they don’t see competent, proven people with direct, related industry experience, they often discard the business plan right then and there. So be thoughtful on who you bring into the business and carefully design their resumes to highlight past experience and accomplishments that directly relate to your proposed business idea.

9. The Executive Summary should appear as the first section of your business plan and should be the last section you write. It is a synopsis of the business idea you have already carefully organized and written. It should give a broad overview of what the idea is, and should, in a page or two, give the reader a clear understanding of what the proposed business specifically does, into what industry it falls, what broad economic climate and competitive conditions exist within that industry, and what general elements of the business idea give the proposed business a chance of being successful. It should contain summary figures on the return on investment or the loan payback. The Executive Summary is the first section the reader will examine so take your time with it, be concise and comprehensive, and consider it to be almost like an advertisement for your business idea. It should have a ton of optimism as opposed to the factual and objective tone you want the rest of your business plan sections to have. The Executive Summary is often the only shot you have at capturing the reader’s attention, so be thoughtful when writing it. Remember, most venture capitalists and bankers have stacks of business plans filling their offices waiting to be read. Often junior members of the firm are given the task of doing the initial sort before a plan will reach the eyes of a decision making partner or officer. The person who first reads your Executive Summary thus has the power to reject your proposal but usually not the power to approve it. He only passes it on, and if the Executive Summary can catch his eye and make him read further, it’s done its job.

10. Subconscious impressions are very important to the success of a business plan document. How the document is organized, what type style is selected, the sparing use of italics or bold type, how varying paragraph indentations are used all make for either a positive or negative impression. Misspelled words are death as are serious violations of the proper use of grammar. Short concise sentences will communicate better than long rambling ones. Your objective is produce a professional looking and reading document that clearly communicates that you and your team are professionals and thus know what you are talking about. Pass your draft business plan by people you respect and have them proof read it and critique it. Determine if they clearly understand the points described in it. If they don’t, go back to the drawing board and rewrite the sections in question. Take a lot of time on this final review and edit process. It is the last and probably most important step you can take for creating a successful business plan.

New CarbonCopyPro Video Underscores The Importance Of Events

I’m Baaaaack

Seiferth Clan Road Trip

“Holy road trips Batman!”

My family and I just returned from the road trip to end all road trips. 21 days and 4000+ miles of fun, the most amazing scenery in the US and Canada and that smell that comes from the back seat. You know the one I am talking about. ;)

We started off in Flagstaff, Arizona, the home base of the Seiferth clan. At 5:00am on a Tuesday, we made a beeline to the West Coast. By sundown, we were in Santa Cruz, CA. From there we made our way up the coast hitting San Francisco, Petaluma, Eureka, Eugene, Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Victoria, Friday Harbor, Orcas Island, Vancouver and Whistler!

We camped, stayed in a few hotels and invaded the homes of a few friends along the way. We never knew where we were going to be, so we couldn’t really make plans. It was a liberating feeling not knowing where you were going to sleep each night.

I know, I know. Teaching our kids how to be vagabonds at such a young age. They learned amazingly fast. Not sure if that is a good thing. ;)

Now here is something to think about…

We took over 1500 pictures on the trip. I was adding it up in my head and realized that if we had taken this trip back in the 80’s, before digital cameras, that would have been about 42 rolls of film. Each roll costs what, $3? And processing was about $4 per roll.

So, about $500 opposed to $0. Technology isn’t so bad.

Anyway, I was just reflecting on the circumstances that allowed us to take that trip. If I was still working 80 hours a week at the Rich Dad Company as the IT Guy, could I have taken 21 days off in a row to travel with my family?

Don’t think so.

THE BEST part about being a successful online marketer and entrepreneur is the freedom. The freedom to create my own hours, to do what I want, when I want. To take trips with my family and have the confidence that the business will continue to run, pulling in tons of cash, automatically.

That is worth every hour, every phone call, every email, every blog post, every tweet, every video, every podcast I’ve created to build this business. Without a doubt. That is why I do what I do.

If you want me to teach you how to do the exact same thing, click the banner on the right with me in front of the “Book Wall” at the Rich Dad company. Let’s talk.

Sometimes You Get What You Aren’t Expecting

So, I just returned from a trip to the Dominican Republic (never been there before) where I attended a week-long, private wealth group meeting with 185 of my closest friends.

The hotel was awesome. The beach was awesome. The people were awesome. The education was awesome. The food was not awesome, but I survived (I basically became a “fruititarian” for a week).

On the trip home, I realized that what I found valuable about the event was completely different than what I had expected. It usually ends up that way. What I get is not what I expected to get. And most times, what I get is 100 times more valuable than what I expected.

Its actually cool that way. It adds a bit of mystery. An unexpected outcome.

Here is what I got:

1) Two hours alone with David Schwind, a close friend of mine that is THE most lazy, arrogant, brilliant online marketer I have ever met (I told him this to his face). David is an amazing copyrighter and a master of understanding what people want, then giving it to them. As we sat outside the meeting room at the resort, he proceeded to rip my landing pages to shreds. It was awesome. Most people are so uptight about their stuff, that they hate getting feedback, especially negative feedback. I LOVE it. I know the more feedback I get, the better I get. This two hours alone was worth ten times what I spent on the trip.

2) An hour with my good friend Mike Dillard. He and I have been friends for a couple of years and he has never had a problem giving me feedback on what I am doing. It was great to see him (and his beautiful bride-to-be Michelle). I am fortunate to have Mike as a mentor and coach. Again, this was worth much more than the cost of the trip.

3) Personal contact with the top internet marketers in the business. These people are all about getting the job done and doing whatever it takes to be successful. I love the fact that they are there always pulling me up to their level.

In addition, there were great speakers with some excellent investing and wealth building information that will help shape my financial foundation from this point forward.

The bottom line though, were the personal connections I made and the time I spent with the people I look up to and aspire to be. Just knowing that they are there to support me and do anything in their power to help me is more valuable than anything else.

If you want to find out how you can be the one in my place, learning from the best of the best, building an online business that can give you the freedom I am able to enjoy now, then I can show you how. And don’t take my word for it, let my friend and mentor Robert Kiyosaki tell you. Just go here and listen: http://johnseiferth.com.