Track Your Results by Jim Rohn
Three key words to remember: weigh, count, and measure. Now why weigh, count, and measure? To see what your results are from your activity, your attitude, and your philosophy. Because if you find your results are not to your liking, there are only three places to look: 1) your philosophy needs to be fine-tuned; 2) your attitude needs to be strengthened or 3) your disciplines need extra skill. That’s it! Because activity, attitude, and philosophy create results.
Regarding results remember, life expects you to make measurable progress in reasonable time. You must be reasonable with time. You can’t say to someone every five minutes, how are you doing now? That’s too soon to ask. The guy says “I haven’t left the building yet, give me a break!” Now you can’t wait five years—that’s too long. Many things can go wrong waiting too long for a count to see how you’re doing.
Here are some good time frames: At the end of the day. You can’t let more than a day go by without looking at some things and making progress. The Old Testament says: if you are angry, try to solve it before the sun goes down. Don’t carry anger for another day. It may be too heavy to carry. If you try to carry it for a week, it may drop you to your knees. Some things you must get done in a day.
Here’s the next one—a week. We ask for an accounting of the week so we can issue the pay. And whatever you’ve got coming that’s what you get; when the week is over. Now in business there are two things to check in the course of the week. Your activity count and your productivity count. Because activity leads to productivity we need to count both to see how we’re doing.
My mentor taught me that success is a numbers game and very early he started asking me my numbers. He asked, “How many books have you read in the last ninety days?” I said, “Zero”; he said, “Not a good number.” He asked, “How many classes have you attended in the last six months to improve your skills?” And I said, “Zero.” He said, “Not a good number.” Then he asked, “In the last six years that you’ve been working, how much money have you saved and invested?” I said, “Zero” and he said, “Not a good number.” Then here’s what he said, “Mr. Rohn, if these numbers don’t change, your life won’t change.” But then he said, “If you’ll start improving these numbers then perhaps you’ll start to see everything change for you.”
Because when it comes to success, it’s the numbers that count; making measurable progress in reasonable time. Here’s the best accounting: The accounting you make of yourself. Don’t wait for the government to do it, don’t wait for the company to do it. But you’ve got to add up some of your own numbers and ask, “Am I making the progress I want, and will it take me where I want to go now and in the future?” You be the judge!
Filed under: Personal Development
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