Saturday, October 27, 2018


Becoming an entrepreneur is something that anyone could do if they so desire. Yet, becoming a successful entrepreneur is a little bit of a different story. Many people may feel like they have the next million-dollar idea and come out, guns blazing, with the idea that their idea will be able to carry them so success. In some cases, this is true, and success will come, but in most cases, failure is likely to follow this type of shoot from the hip action.
            Preparation, that is a key part of having a successful startup. You must do your homework so that you are able to know what to expect, at least somewhat, and if you will be able to handle that. A startup can, and most likely will, take up a large amount of your time. If you do not plan accordingly for that, you will likely have some severe struggles. Like, your business may succeed, but your family may not. How will you juggle the tasks of life, if you are not prepared for them?
            It is important to remember that starting a business requires a lot on everyone involved, either directly or indirectly. You must create staple items in your life that will not flex, which should include, dedication to the lord and dedication to your family and especially your spouse. This may mean things do go as fast or even as successful as you planned, but in the end, not allowing those two areas to faulter will give you a success not other success could trump.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

My Last Lecture


My Last Lecture
Believe in what you are doing, believe in who you are, hold tight to the truth.
If you had one final lecture to share with a group of students on what you have learned from this course, what would you share?
            I would share that I learned so much about myself through this class, I learned that there are so many things to consider when trying to decide if you should start a business. Balance is a vital part of our lives and that we must put things in proper order. We have so many things that need out time and attention and if you do not decide early in life what matters most and what you will not allow to take you from what is most important than you may find yourself down a path that does not lead you to your goals and dreams. There is so much to learn, and you need to understand that education comes in many forms but you must make learning a key ingredient to be successful. You must not allow pride to take control of you or you may find that even if you do reach your goals it may be very lonely when you have ostracized others and will not have the help of the Lord. Which brings me t the most important key to success and that is to find out what your gifts and talents are and then ask the Lord to help you know hoe to develop them and use them for good and service of others, as you do this success will come.
What would be your last bit of advice to someone wanting to begin the entrepreneur journey?
            I would say that find out all there is to know about the area of business you would like to go into and what skills are necessary to be successful, and then work for many different companies or organizations that will tech those necessary skills. Recognize that you need short-term and long-term goals and do not get impatient and jump the gun until you are truly ready go out on your own. Take risks that are educated and small so that when you fail you will learn and grow and not have to suffer too much because you failed at the small things and learned from them before risking too much. Recognize that there may be many places you work before you find you “dream job” and your dreams may change as you learn things you dd not know. You may find that you have had several “dream jobs” along the way because you learned choice things at each.
What words of advice, direction, or caution would you give him or her if you had only one chance to give your own last lecture?
Self-discipline, if mastered, will be your saving grace. You have control of your future if you are smart and choose mentors wisely and follow their counsel, especially people that are not only successful by the world’s standards but by the Lord’s standards. I really like the story of Tom Monaghan, founder of Dominos, he was able to make huge course correction in his life before it was too late and choose to not let pride rule him anymore and is spending the rest of his life giving and realizing the true peace and joy that come from service. I know that as we serve and help others all along the way, not just when we’ve arrived and we are wealthy, but now, we will blessed and we will have true success.
In the video Launching leaders Peak Performance, I really loved this list of things that will be me as I become the person I intend to become through self-discipline.
I am financially self-reliant
I am physically fit
I am identifying my skills and talents
I am a product of what I eat
I understand that value of humor
I am a leader
I am mentally tough; I don’t complain
I am a communicator
I can motivate with deprecation other, I can inspire others to action.
I am like the great enlightened masters of history.

Another important thing we must learn is what each of our dragons are and how to fight them, I had an aha moment when I realized that one of my dragons is that I have a love for money that controls my thoughts and actions too much. I am afraid of success because I am worried about whether it will make me worse not better. I want to do what is right for the right reasons and I also really want nice things in this life. I must find a balance to be right with God, myself, and my family.

President Thomas S. Monson, “Finishers Wanted”
In life, as in business, there has always been a need for those persons who could be called finishers. Their ranks are few, their opportunities many, their contributions great.
From the very beginning to the present time, a fundamental question remains to be answered by each who runs the race of life. Shall I falter, or shall I finish? On the answer await the blessings of joy and happiness here in mortality and eternal life in the world to come.
Lest we lull ourselves into thinking that only the gross sins of life cause us to falter, consider the experience of the rich young man who came running to the Savior and asked the question: “Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?”
Lust for power, greed of gold, and disdain of one’s honor have ever appeared as faces of failure in the panorama of life. Captivated by their artificial attraction, many noble souls have stumbled and fallen, thus losing the crown of victory reserved for the finisher of life’s great race.
The Mark of Effort. Vision without effort is daydreaming; effort without vision is drudgery; but vision, coupled with effort, will obtain the prize.

Harvard Business Publishing, “Recognizing and Shaping Opportunity” Lynda M. Applegate, Serie Editor
Figuring out which trait (Heart, smarts, guts, and Luck) drive you and your decisions is the most important thing you can do to enhance your business leadership. Greater awareness of what you’re best at, and how and when you might need to turn up or turn down the volume of the other traits, is what separated the best business-builders from those who are very good.

I am finishing my last semester, and this has been very powerful for me to end with this class because I feel that it is helping me decide where my road will now take me. My husband works on campus, so I had the privilege of attending the employee banquet a couple nights ago. President Eyring gave an address and he gave a metaphor that really touched me. He talked about the Jaredites and how they were blessed with not having to have their language confounded and they were able to communicate, they were led to a beautiful place next to the ocean and they settled there for 4 years completely content to just stay there. The lord had bigger plans for them in the Promised Land, but they stopped asking the Lord for guidance. The Lord rebuked them and told them to continue to pray. President Eyring said that we must also ask the Lord, “what is next for me” This is where I am, and I want to follow the Lord’s plan for me, fulfill my mission, and serve others through my education and success with the Lord’s help and guidance every step of the way.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Week 7


A JOURNEY OF GRATITUDE

Thomas S. Monson, “An Attitude of Gratitude” April 1992
This is a wonderful time to be living here on earth. Our opportunities are limitless. While there are some things wrong in the world today, there are many things right, such as teachers who teach, ministers who minister, marriages that make it, parents who sacrifice, and friends who help.

My own mother may not have read to me from the scriptures; rather, she taught me by her life and actions what the “Good Book” contains. Care for the poor, the sick, the needy were everyday dramas never to be forgotten.
On occasion I have observed parents shopping to clothe a son about to enter missionary service. The new suits are fitted, the new shoes are laced, and shirts, socks, and ties are bought in quantity. I met one father who said to me, “Brother Monson, I want you to meet my son.” Pride popped his buttons; the cost of the clothing emptied his wallet; love filled his heart. Tears filled my eyes when I noticed that his suit was old, his shoes well worn; but he felt no deprivation. The glow on his face was a memory to cherish.
First, there is gratitude for our mothers.
Second, let us reflect gratitude for our fathers.
Third, all of us remember with gratitude our teachers.
Fourth, let us have gratitude for our friends. Our most cherished friend is our partner in marriage. This old world would be so much better off today if kindness and deference were daily a reflection of our gratitude for wife, for husband.
Fifth, may we acknowledge gratitude for our country—the land of our birth.
Sixth and finally—even supremely—let us reflect gratitude for our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. His glorious gospel provides answers to life’s greatest questions: Where did we come from? Why are we here? Where does my spirit go when I die? His called missionaries bring to those who live in darkness the light of divine truth:

Harvard Business School
HOWARD H. STEVENSON SHIRLEY M. SPENCE, “Identifying and Exploiting the Right Entrepreneurial Opportunity...for You”
Entrepreneurs must evaluate each opportunity in the context of their current situations and life plans.

·         A personal definition of success should be multi-dimensional; “striking it rich” does not necessarily provide one with the meaning of life.
·         As entrepreneurs, we are fortunate to have choices. We must be aware of what the world around us offers and what it demands in exchange for its largesse.
·         Long-term success is not the result of a series of short-term, neatly planned decisions. Decisions are contingent on each preceding decision and on many factors beyond our control.
·         Each of us lives in a web of relationships. Our choices will shape our lives and the lives of people around us . . . and vice versa.
Our opportunity assessment framework consists of a two-part analysis, one business and one personal, designed as a set of questions around several criteria. The analytical process is a quick but disciplined way to do due diligence. The entrepreneur, who is often focused at this early stage on “selling” his or her idea to others, is challenged to be brutally honest in considering all factors relevant to a good decision.
Even in the face of the “unknowable,” an entrepreneur must still ask the right questions. And if the entrepreneur chooses to move forward, he or she must do so in a disciplined way by setting milestones and benchmarks for periodically reassessing his or her investment. Can the entrepreneur demonstrate clear competitive advantage in six months? How many customers must the entrepreneur have by the end of the first year? It makes no sense to redouble efforts without evidence that one has a winning proposition.
Relationships Your relationships can be envisioned as a successive ring of circles beginning with those closest to you and extending to society in general. Within families they can include parents, siblings, ore distant relatives, partners or spouses, children. More broadly, there are work colleagues, school friends, and religious affiliations, athletic or social groups. Entrepreneurship requires commitment. Are you willing to make tradeoffs in the time you spend with the people important to you?
The “family business” is a special case. Relatively simple at first, it allows successful entrepreneurs to provide their families with career opportunities and share the wealth. But it becomes increasingly challenging over time. Does “family” include the new in-laws? Should everyone share equally? Is the heir apparent qualified to run the business? Would it be a pleasure or a burden for the heir? Rivalries, perceived inequities, and other problems can hurt both the family and the business. “Doing it right” requires carefully managing the overlap of business, family, and wealth needs and issues.
I learned this . . . that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet a success unexpected in the common hours. . . . If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundation under them.
Lynda M. Applegate and Carole Carlson, “Recognizing and shaping opportunity”
How is an idea different from an opportunity?
An entrepreneur might get an idea for a new venture by seeing patterns that suggest a solution to a compelling market need-one that customers may nit even have identified.
An entrepreneur turns an idea into an opportunity by crafting a business model that identifies a strategy for targeting a market segment with a solution that will attract customers, partners, investors, key employees, and other resources that will be needed to enter and gain traction in the market and create value for all stakeholders. This value proposition will also include cash flow forecasts that reflect the entrepreneur’s assumptions for how the business model will generate cash flow once it is implemented.
This article gives us 3 examples of entrepreneurs and their journeys.
1.       Leo Fernandez: From Corporate executive to entrepreneur.
He worked for P&G and J&J and learned many important skills and then he started a pizza chain that was very successful.
He recognized that the US fast food chains were beginning to enter the Spanish Market but were having limited success. He drew on his marketing and sales background, his firsthand experience and knowledge of Spanish culture and family life, and his own gut instinct to design a concept that fit the needs of the market and would allow him to scale quickly.
2.       Robin Chase and Antje Danielson: From playground conversations to high-growth business.
Anjte Danielson’s experience as an environmental researcher enabled her to recognize that the growing interest in car-sharing in Europe could point the way to a solution to energy consumption and greenhouse gas problems.
Robin Chase had contacts and developed analytical skills, that she honed while receiving her MBA and as a stagey consultant.
Their expertise combined made it possible to build a business model that turned their idea into a viable opportunity that could be launched and tested in the Boston Market.
3.       Evan Williams: Co-founder of Twitter.
He started his own business with his brother and girlfriend, but it was not very successful.
He worked for O’Reilly Media learning important new skills on how to run a business.
He started his own business and solicited investors he knew, like his old boss from O’Reilly Media.
Google Bought him out with Stock and he then worked for them.
Left Google and co-owned Odeo, bought out his partners when it was struggling.
He used the software they developed from Odeo and started Twitter, today it is worth $31 Billion.
All of these experiences and his growing network of contacts eventually led him to identify the potential of microblogging.
Idea finding: Creative thinking skills include ways people approach and solve problems and put existing ideas together in new combinations. These skills create individuals to see new patterns among diverse streams of information and to refine these patterns until they identify a solution to a market need-often before those who will eventually adopt it have fully defined that need.

Friday, September 7, 2018

Week 6 Part 2


Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, Are We Not All Beggars?
Rich or poor, we are to “do what we can” when others are in need.
Thus the Savior made the first public announcement of His messianic ministry. But this verse also made clear that on the way to His ultimate atoning sacrifice and Resurrection, Jesus’s first and foremost messianic duty would be to bless the poor, including the poor in spirit.
In our day, the restored Church of Jesus Christ had not yet seen its first anniversary when the Lord commanded the members to “look to the poor and … needy, and administer to their relief that they shall not suffer.”6 Note the imperative tone of that passage—“they shall not suffer.” That is language God uses when He means business.
Don’t we all beg for forgiveness for mistakes we have made and troubles we have caused? Don’t we all implore that grace will compensate for our weaknesses, that mercy will triumph over justice at least in our case?
More than three-quarters of a million members of the Church were helped last year through fast offerings administered by devoted bishops and Relief Society presidents. That is a lot of grateful Latter-day Saints.
In an 1831 revelation to the Prophet Joseph Smith, the Lord said the poor would one day see the kingdom of God coming to deliver them “in power and great glory.”21 May we help fulfill that prophecy by coming in the power and glory of our membership in the true Church of Jesus Christ to do what we can to deliver any we can from the poverty that holds them captive and destroys so many of their dreams, I pray in the merciful name of Jesus Christ, amen.

What’s a Business For? by Charles Handy
To many, it seems that executives no longer run their companies for the benefit of consumers, or even of their shareholders and employees, but for their personal ambition and financial gain.
CEOs in America earn more than 400 times the wages of their lowest-paid workers make a mockery of Plato’s ideal, in what was, admittedly, a smaller and simpler world, that no person should be worth more than four times another
Capitalist fundamentalism may have lost its sheen, but the urgent need now is to retain the energy produced by the old model while remedying its flaws. Better and tougher regulation would help, as would a clearer separation of auditing from consulting. Corporate governance will now surely be taken more seriously by all concerned, with responsibilities more clearly defined, penalties spelled out, and watchdogs appointed. But these will be plasters on an open sore. They will not cure the disease that lies at the core of the business culture.
We cannot escape the fundamental question, Whom and what is a business for? The answer once seemed clear, but no longer. The terms of business have changed.
We need to eat to live; food is a necessary condition of life. But if we lived mainly to eat, making food a sufficient or sole purpose of life, we would become gross.
It is salutary to ask about any organization, “If it did not exist, would we invent it?” “Only if it could do something better or more useful than anyone else” would have to be the answer, and profit would be the means to that larger end.
Video: Make It Personal and Make It Work, Sheryl Sandberg,  Facebook
The interesting thing about all of these visions is that they that scaled they were vision hat these companies set out in the beginning that continue to work, make it personal and make it work. So if you want to be an entrepreneur and you want to be a leader chose a vison that scales, that’s compelling is such an integral part of great leadership. I believe that you can be the most compelling person in the world, but you have to compel people with the why and the what you are doing is the why. Help us build a community help us connect the world, help us make information accessible, that’s compelling.
Video: Entrepreneurship and Consecration
Harold B Lee said, when you begin to make service to meet others needs your constant practice you are beginning a program that will make you successful in your chosen field, and your needs will begin automatically to take care of themselves, this great idea in action has made great inventors and great businessmen.
If we are not to labor for money but to serve others through business, then what is he purpose of business commercial ventures, we can call it service but I would like to suggest that business has a 2 fold purpose, to provide for basic needs and the other we are rescue others as directed by the Lord, that is the service to be accomplished.
President Monson said we need to leave he comforts of home and go and rescue, ask yourself have I rescued anyone lately?
Business is about service and rescue



Microlending toward a poverty free world Muhammad Yunus
I always enjoyed the process of shaping young minds both as a student being at the receiving end of it and as a teacher playing the role of giving shapes when I left campus to seek answers to the questions I was grappling with I gradually got worried about the risk involved in shaping young people’s minds particularly in the areas of social and economic issues I started getting the feeling that the world’s worst social and economic problems are unwittingly created in the classrooms because they shape young people s minds too rigidly or without enough warning that our knowledge in social sciences is only tentative and that students should not take it as absolute truth.
although
I enjoyed teaching my students all the brilliant solutions to economic problems I felt absolutely incapable of dealing with the massive poverty and hunger that existed in the villages around the campus I soon realized that there was a great distance between the real life of the poor and the hungry people and the make-believe world of economic theory.
I decided to learn real life economics from the people who lived around the campus the village next door became my university the poor in the village became my professors I learned another kind of economics but this time it was real.
People see what they are trained to see it takes a serious attempt on one’s part to take off the glasses one has been fitted with during student days I was lucky I could start seeing things differently than I had been trained to see problems started looking easier to solve than they had appeared to me previously.
Finally gave up on changing the minds of the bankers I went ahead and founded a bank myself to continue doing what I was doing today that bank grameen gradeen bank lends money to 2.3 Million poor borrowers in $39,000 villages of bangladesh and 94 percent of our borrowers are women to date more than 2.4 billion dollars were given out as loans over the years. The repayment rate is more than 97 percent last year alone we lent out nearly $400 million.
Somehow we have persuaded ourselves that the capitalist economy must be fueled only by greed since economics persuaded us that way we all believed that way As a result it became a self-fulfilling prophecy only seekers of personal gain go into the marketplace and try their talent those who are not interested in accumulating personal wealth and income do not find the marketplace very attractive they use their talents elsewhere.
I think social consciousness driven entrepreneurs can be an effective force in the marketplace.
Creating a poverty free world
I strongly believe that we can create a poverty free world if we want to we can create a world where there won’t be a single human being who may be described as a poor person in that kind of a world the only place you could see poverty would be in the museums school children on tour in the poverty museums would be horrified to see the misery and indignity of human beings in the past they would blame their ancestors in a massive way for allowing this inhuman condition to continue
before I conclude my remarks I simply wish to encourage all of you to remember irrespective of what you learn in school always be ready to unlearn and relearn Don’t  give up dreaming be a dreamer and keep on trying to make the dream come true dream about the world you would like to have if we all dream about a better world I can guarantee you that we will create a better world.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Week 6


May I share with you a formula that in my judgment will help you and help me to journey well through mortality and to that great reward of exaltation in the celestial kingdom of our Heavenly Father.
First, fill your mind with truth; second, fill your life with service; and third, fill your heart with love.
Let’s talk about each one of the parts of the formula and see if each does not find lodgment within the human heart. First, fill your mind with truth. I’d like to suggest that when we search for truth, we search among those books and in those places where truth is most likely to be found. I’ve often referred to a simple couplet: “You do not find truth groveling through error. You find truth by searching the holy word of God.”
The second part of the formula is: Fill your life with service. From the Book of Mormon we learn, “When ye are in the service of your fellow beings ye are only in the service of your God” (Mosiah 2:17). Missionaries particularly have a wonderful opportunity to give of their full time in sharing with all the world that commodity of such priceless value—a testimony of the gospel.
Missionaries should go forward knowing that they are in the service of God, that they are going to share that most precious commodity—their testimonies. Remember, a testimony is perishable. That which you selfishly keep, you lose; that which you willingly share, you keep. All of us benefit when we remember to magnify our callings
Our third part of the formula is: Fill your heart with love.
When I think of love, I think of Abraham Lincoln, one of the outstanding presidents of the United States. He was also one of the nation’s greatest writers and orators. I have seldom read words that better characterize the love that a man can have for others than the love he described as he penned a letter to a mother who had lost all her sons in the Civil War. It is known as the Lydia Bixby Letter. Note carefully the words of Abraham Lincoln and see if you don’t feel within your heart the love that filled his:
Dear Madam:
I have just been shown, in the files of the War Department, a statement of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five sons who died gloriously on the field of battle.
I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming, but I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the republic they died to save.
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.
Yours very sincerely and respectfully,
A.      Lincoln
In our sacrament meetings we frequently sing the hymn:
I stand all amazed at the love Jesus offers me,
Confused at the grace that so fully he proffers me.
I tremble to know that for me he was crucified,
That for me, a sinner, he suffered, he bled and died. …
I think of his hands pierced and bleeding to pay the debt!
Such mercy, such love, and devotion can I forget?
No, no, I will praise and adore at the mercy seat,
Until at the glorified throne I kneel at his feet.
(Hymns, 1985, no. 193)

Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness (A Cautionary Tale) Action Foundation for entrepreneurial excellence

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these
are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Declaration of Independence
Somewhere deep down you already know this. You remember meeting that rare person who seems driven by a deeper mission, who moves calmly and faithfully as of guided by an inner compass and fueled by passion. If only you could find such a mission.
This note is designed to help you rise above your instincts and urges you to begin a search for the life you were meant to live. Once you have abandoned a foolish quest for the ephemeral rewards of happiness, wealth and power, you can begin to look for your true calling on this earth—a Hero’s Journey. To do this, you must first learn to lose yourself. Unbundling this paradox will require you to accomplish three tasks.
Task one: understanding the difference between happiness, satisfaction and fulfillment
1.        The old saying that “money will not buy you happiness” turns out to be supported by all of our latest scientific research. You likely are as happy today as you ever will be. More money, power or sex will have little, if any, effect on your long-term happiness, satisfaction or fulfillment.
2.       Despite all of your daily worries, you likely will end your life quite satisfied, though not necessarily fulfilled.
3.        The greatest threat to you leading a fulfilling life is a misguided pursuit of happiness that blinds you to the possibility of a more meaningful Hero’s Journey.



The secret to happiness: you are already quite happy So what is the secret to happiness?
The secret is that most of us are already quite happy.
·         Live in a free country that minimizes life-threatening poverty.
o   While the effects of material wealth are limited, extreme poverty does breed unhappiness.
·         The workplace you choose matters.
o   People who have less control in their jobs are less happy. Pointless work will make you unhappy, as will a lack of variety or stress caused by your boss.
·         Where you live matters too
o   While the joy of a larger house and yard in the suburbs will diminish, the unhappiness that comes from a long-term commute will stay with you and grow worse. You also will be unable to adjust to loud and uncontrollable noises near your home, like those from an airport or a highway.
·         Some events that bring unhappiness will be out of your control.
o   You will adjust slowly, if ever, to a long-term debilitating illness, caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s or the death of a spouse or child in a car wreck.
From Happiness to Satisfaction
Not only are you likely to be happy and remain happy, but you also are likely to be satisfied with your life, particularly as you grow older.
You likely will go through a series of life stages:
• From Identity, understanding who you are, to
• Intimacy, learning to live with others in a deep relationship, to
• Career Consolidation, learning to use your talents in the world, to
• Generativity, learning to unselfishly give to the next generation, to
• Meaning, understanding ageless wisdom and virtue, to
• Integrity, having a spiritual sense of how you are connected to the transcendent.

How the pursuit of happiness will keep you from finding fulfillment
What is it about our nature that distracts us from a noble quest to find meaning and significance and converts it to a meaningless, addictive and ultimately hollow grab for money, power and pleasure?
Three mistakes consistently distract and mislead us:
• We pursue sensual pleasures and material success for the wrong reasons.
• We misjudge how near-term events will affect our long-term happiness.


 We all too often allow our addictive natures and lack of perspective to transform healthy self-interest into a corrosive self-centeredness. We seem to confuse enjoyment, a transitory experience, with the deeper and more complex experience of satisfaction. Satisfaction requires looking past ephemeral joy to trends in our levels of happiness. Measuring satisfaction requires weighing and balancing the good with the bad in life and getting some sense of your general level of contentment.
Fulfillment turns out to be quite different than either pleasure or satisfaction. It involves having the perspective, usually in later years, of having done well with the opportunities you have been given. That’s why beginning with the end in mind, and talking with those you respect who are nearer to the end of their journey, is so important.
A twisted sense of perspective: misjudging the present’s impact on the future
Our tendency to pursue pleasure instead of satisfaction and fulfillment is exacerbated by the poor job we as humans do in predicting how current events will affect our future happiness.
First, we do a poor job predicting how recent events will make us feel in the future.
Second, we are optimists about our own lot in life but pessimistic about the world in general, despite past experiences that suggest the reverse will be true.
Third, our wish to avoid pain focuses us on dangers, annoyances and slights of our day-to-day lives.
Fourth, we change our yardsticks of success depending on the circumstances.
Quite simply, we long for fulfillment while engaged in a futile pursuit of happiness.
Sliding from self-interest to self-centeredness to self-delusion
One result of losing touch with reality is that we can become far too impressed with our own abilities.
We also overestimate our contributions to others.
Likewise, we are too confident of our objectivity and memories.
Our inward focus makes us captive to our emotions instead of drawing value and strength from them.
                “What goes right in childhood predicts the future far better than what goes wrong,”
We push others away even though we need relationship and intimacy.
Task two: losing yourself in a hero’s journey
A Hero’s Journey requires you to find your most precious gifts and to use them doing something you enjoy in the service of something larger than yourself.
A Hero’s Journey does not promise a life full of happiness. On the contrary, it means facing “dragons and giants,” challenges that stretch you to your limits and sometimes beyond. The lessons are in the journey, lessons learned alongside trusted traveling companions and guides. By the end of the journey, you will see the world differently, and have a deeper understanding of your purpose on the planet and a much stronger connection with the transcendent.

If the latest scientific findings and ancient wisdom literature are correct, finding the Hero’s Journey you were meant to live requires you to lose your preoccupation with yourself. There are at least four ways to do this:
flow: losing yourself in a worthy challenge
                “your mind or body is stretched to the limit in a voluntary effort to accomplish something difficult and worthwhile.”
                None of this is surprising. We like challenges, particularly those that play to our strengths. We respond to the positive feedback of early successes, so choosing something you do well will give you the confidence to charge ahead. Honing our talents to pursue goals even makes us feel good.
Love: losing yourself in relationship
                Long-term studies of satisfaction and fulfillment show that relationships are critical to satisfaction and fulfillment. We live in relationship with others and we need to belong. We need others to complete us.
Always have friends from three generations: the generation below to add freshness and energy, your generation for understanding and companionship, and a generation older for perspective and wisdom.
Gratitude: losing yourself in thanks and generosity
Volunteer and Give to Charity
                Giving your time and your money to another human being is one of the most powerful ways to develop your own sense of gratitude.
Practice Being Grateful
Suppress Negative Chatter
Write a Letter or Keep a Journal
Seek Role Models
Spirituality: losing yourself through a connection with the transcendental
                “Religious Americans are clearly less likely to use drugs, commit crimes, divorce and kill themselves.” Religious people are more resilient and more effective at fighting depression. They are less affected by setbacks like divorce, unemployment, illness and death.
Task three: getting started on your quest
How will your traits affect your journey? How should this affect your choice of challenges and travel companions?
When it comes to work, you can choose a job, a career or a calling.
A job is something you do from 9 to 5 to pay the bills, as a way of affording the necessities of life and an occasional pleasure once the workday has ended. People with jobs watch the clock, waiting for 5 PM to arrive.
A career is a climb up a predetermined ladder to success at the top. People with careers work long hours for the promise of money, power and security to come. All too often they arrive only to find that it really is lonely at the top.
A calling is finding that special place where your most precious gifts allow you to do something you love, in service to others, in a way that changes the world. People with callings say: “Thank God it’s Friday so I can work the next two days without interruption.”
Away from your calling, reserve time for your charitable activities, family and friends and you are likely to have loving relationships with people from all walks of life and from several generations. This love will not only support you on your Hero’s Journey, but help change you along the way, and nurture you near the end.
Those who have experienced serious adversity earlier in life may be the luckiest. They seem to have more focus, more clarity and more humility. Research shows the best time to face adversity is in your late teens and twenties. Don’t overprotect your children from the lessons adversity brings.
Hone Character and Practice Virtue
At the end of life, you are likely to ask only three questions: “Did I accomplish something meaningful?” “Who did I love and who loved me?” and “Was I a good person?” A calling and loving relationships are not enough for true fulfillment. You also will need character.
So find your calling. Write your own Hero story. Explore your signature strengths to discover flow experiences that will lead to mastery. Let your mastery attract opportunities in a way that serves others and changes you. “How can I be happy?” is the wrong question. “How can I create something meaningful for others?” is the right question because it helps others and will change you in a profound way.
Attitude on Money by Stephen W. Gibson
Part of the process of becoming adults is deciding if the lenses that we see things through are the correct lenses for us. As we shift through different concepts, principles and facts we decide which we accept. As we do, we become independent thinkers.
For example, President Hinckley needs to think about money.
In the April 1998 conference, when he announced to the Church that by the end of the year 2000 there will be 100 operating temples built and dedicated to the Lord, he had to consider before he made that announcement, where is the money going to come from to build those temples.
When he announced the Perpetual Education Fund in April of 2001, he had to discuss with his advisers where the money was coming from to provide education for those tens of thousands of returned missionaries who live in third world countries. Even he cannot just pray about it and millions come out of the sky. He needs to ask the members of the church to open their pocket books and support this and many other wonderful initiatives.
So from the President of the church, to the husband or wife, who needs a budget to put food on the table, money is a big part of what we must all think about, plan for, and, yes, even work hard to earn the money for our needs.
Elder Bednar said, “the gospel has the power to make bad men good, and good men better.”
However, Money usually does not make bad men good and good men better. Money can make good men better, but on the other hand, from my experience, it usually makes bad men worse.
"After ye have obtained a hope in Christ ye shall obtain riches, if ye seek them; and ye will seek them for the intent to do good - to clothe the naked, and to feed the hungry, and to liberate the captive, and administer relief to the sick and the afflicted." Jacob 2:19.
3 Nephi 6: 12 "And the people began to be distinguished by ranks, according to their riches and their chances for learning; yea, some were ignorant because of their poverty, and others did receive great learning because of their riches.
If we acknowledge that all blessings come from God, and if we believe that blessings are based on obedience to laws, as I do, and as the Lord explains here, then we must believe from reading this scripture that the blessing of wealth creation or the abundant life comes from, again, keeping the laws upon which that blessing is predicated.
Brothers and Sisters, I have enjoyed visiting with you today. I hope you do not feel my view of money is not too distorted. I hope you have enjoyed learning more about the important subject of money. It is my hope and prayer that you will all become more self-reliant. That you will take this great chance for learning that you have here and do all that you can with it; that you may in turn help others to help themselves, is my hope and prayer and I offer these thoughts to you in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
I really enjoyed this talk, I really think it opened my eyes to a new perspective on money, I have worried that I care too much about having money and pursuing it, I do have good intentions and have dreams for using it for good, but I am not as responsible as I should be and this makes me want to try even harder. I want to do what is right in all aspects of life, I can see here that he is talking about cause and effect as much as promised blessings, you reap what you sow principle as well.

What is your attitude toward money?
How can your view of money affect the way you live?
What rules are recommended for prospering?

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Week 5 part 2


“The Challenge to Become” Dallin H. Oaks October 2000
“In contrast to the institutions of the world, which teach us to know something, the gospel of Jesus Christ challenges us to become something.”
Elder Oaks said, “From such teachings we conclude that the Final Judgment is not just an evaluation of a sum total of good and evil acts—what we have done. It is an acknowledgment of the final effect of our acts and thoughts—what we have become.” I used to think that if I did more good than bad I was okay, that if I repented and stop doing bad I would still “make it” But what he says here is the true, it is who we become, it is how we treat others and how we let the Lord change our hearts.
Elder Oaks says, “All that I have I desire to give you— only my wealth, but also my position and standing among men. That which I have I can easily give you, but that which I am you must obtain for yourself. You will qualify for your inheritance by learning what I have learned and by living as I have lived. I will give you the laws and principles by which I have acquired my wisdom and stature. Follow my example, mastering as I have mastered, and you will become as I am, and all that I have will be yours.” This is something kids do not want to hear, they think that it is something that you can just give them and then they will have all you have, they just want us to hand them money, as a mother I tend to want to just give to them because I feel that they struggled right along side us but really what they need is learn for themselves, but I will help wherever I can. “This parable parallels the pattern of heaven. The gospel of Jesus Christ promises the incomparable inheritance of eternal life, the fulness of the Father, and reveals the laws and principles by which it can be obtained.”
Elder Oakes shares the parable of the vineyard and he says, “At the end of the day the owner of the vineyard gave the same wage to every worker, even to those who had come in the eleventh hour. When those who had worked the entire day saw this, “they murmured against the goodman of the house” (Matt. 20:11). The owner did not yield but merely pointed out that he had done no one any wrong, since he had paid each man the agreed amount.”
“Like other parables, this one can teach several different and valuable principles. For present purposes its lesson is that the Master’s reward in the Final Judgment will not be based on how long we have labored in the vineyard. We do not obtain our heavenly reward by punching a time clock. What is essential is that our labors in the workplace of the Lord have caused us to become something. For some of us, this requires a longer time than for others. What is important in the end is what we have become by our labors. Many who come in the eleventh hour have been refined and prepared by the Lord in ways other than formal employment in the vineyard. These workers are like the prepared dry mix to which it is only necessary to “add water”—the perfecting ordinance of baptism and the gift of the Holy Ghost. With that addition—even in the eleventh hour—these workers are in the same state of development and qualified to receive the same reward as those who have labored long in the vineyard.” I am a convert and have often felt that I needed to make up for lost time and would need to catch up with lifelong members somehow, But I realize that I need to do my best and allow the Lord to use me to serve His children and my offering will be enough.




“The Heart of Entrepreneurship” by Howard H. Stevenson and David E. Gumpert Harvard Business Review
ENTREPRENEURIAL PROCESS
·         What resources do I control?
·         What structure determines our organization’s relationship to its market?
·         How can I minimize the impact of others on my ability to perform?
·         What opportunity is appropriate?
·         The entrepreneur, at the other end of the spectrum, tends to ask:
·         Where is the opportunity?
·         How do I capitalize on it?
·         What resources do I need?
·         How do I gain control over them?
·         What structure is best?
Where is the opportunity?
1.       Technology, which opens new doors and closes others.
2.       Consumer economics, which alters both the ability and willingness to pay for new products and services.
3.       Social values, which define new styles and standards of living.
4.       Political action and regulatory standards, which affect competition.
What resources do I need?
An Absence of Predictable Resource Needs Given the rapid pace of change in today’s world, one must assume that in-course corrections will be necessary.
External Control Limits Companies can no longer say they own the forest and will therefore do with it
what they want.
Social Needs The “small is beautiful” formulation of E. F. Schumacher and the argument that too large
a gulf separates producers and consumers are very persuasive.
The Need to Reduce Risk Managers limit the risk they face by throwing all the resources they can muster at an opportunity from the outset, even if it means wasting assets.
Fragile Tenure of Management At companies in which executives are either promoted every one-and a half or two years or exiled to corporate Siberia, they need quick, measurable results.
Focus on Incentive Compensation Concentration of resources upfront yields quick returns and easily measurable results, which can be readily translated into a manager’s bonus compensation.
Single-Minded Capital Allocation Systems They assume that the consequences of future uncertainty can be measured now, or at least that uncertainty a year from now will be no less than that at present.

STIMULATING ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Determine Its Barriers to Entrepreneurship Is a manager’s principal reward found in handling the company’s existing resources?
Seek to Minimize Risks to the Individual for Being Entrepreneurial When people are promoted for behaving like trustees while promoter types are shunted aside if not eased out, there’s little motive to be venturesome.
Exploit Any Resource Pool The huge resources that many companies have can be committed intelligently.
Tailor Reward Systems to the Situation For some, a primary motivating force is the possibility of becoming wealthy through ownership in a growing enterprise.


Friday, August 24, 2018

Week 5


I really enjoyed this weeks readings, here are the highlights.
A DESCIPLE PREPERATION CENTER Elder David A. Bednar Brigham Young University–Idaho Devotional August 31, 2004
A disciple is one who follows or attends upon another for the express purpose of learning (Oxford English Dictionary On-Line, second edition, 1989). Please note that a disciple both follows and learns, as the following scriptures highlight:
Discipleship demands the total transformation of a person by putting off the natural man and becoming a saint through the Atonement of Christ the Lord (see Mosiah 3:19). A disciple is one who loves the Lord and serves Him with all of his or her heart, might, mind, and strength.
The word preparation implies the process of making or getting ready; the previous putting or setting in order for any action or purpose (Oxford English Dictionary On-Line, second edition, 1989). And one of the common uses of the word center connotes a point from which things and influences originate or emanate (Oxford English Dictionary On-Line, second edition, 1989). Taken together, these three words, disciple preparation center, suggest to me a place in which followers of the Master learn and are set in order and are made ready—and from which their influence flows into the world.
What is it that makes this campus such a powerful Disciple Preparation Center (DPC)? Let me suggest three factors that contribute to the spiritual strength that is available here. (1) This institution of higher education is a temple of learning; (2) this institution will be located next to a holy temple, even a House of the Lord; and (3) this institution is surrounded by strong stakes of Zion.
Factor #1: BYU–Idaho is a temple of learning.
“And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it.
And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. (Isaiah 2:2-3)”
Interestingly, in both the holy temple and in temples of learning, a significant personal commitment is linked to the learning process. Consider, brothers and sisters, that in the House of the Lord we come under covenant and bind ourselves to act in all holiness. In a similar way, students who are admitted to study and learn in the temples of learning make a commitment to keep the commandments of God and to abide by the university honor and dress codes. Thus, covenants and commitments expand our education in the House of the Lord and in the Church’s temples of learning.
Factor #2: BYU–Idaho will be located next to a House of the Lord.
At the time of his call to become the fourteenth president of the Church, President Howard W. Hunter issued an invitation for “. . . all members of the Church to establish the temple of the Lord as the great symbol of their membership and the supernal setting for their most sacred covenants” (Howard W. Hunter, The Great Symbol of Our Membership, Ensign, October 1994, p. 2). Brothers and sisters, temples are holy; temples are sacred places for learning about and entering into eternal covenants; temples are places of peace and of revelation. Temples are eternal links: between heaven and earth; between past, present, and future; between the living and the dead; between time and eternity; between husbands and wives, parents and children; and between men and women with Christ. It is in the House of the Lord that things of the earth are joined with the things of heaven.
President Gordon B. Hinckley has taught: Every temple that this Church has built has in effect stood as a monument to our belief in the immortality of the human soul, that this phase of mortal life through which we pass is part of a continuous upward climb . . . and that as certain as there is life here, there will be life there. That is our firm belief. It comes about through the Atonement of the Savior, and the temple becomes . . . the bridge from this life to the next. The temple is concerned with things of immortality. We wouldn’t have to build a temple for marriages if we didn’t believe in the eternity of the family. We build it so the family may be eternal. All of the ordinances which take place in the house of the Lord become expressions of our belief in that fundamental and basic doctrine. The temple therefore becomes the ultimate in our system of worship and therefore is of great and significant importance to us. (Gordon B. Hinckley, Inspirational Thoughts, Ensign, April 2002, p. 3)
Several years ago, Elder L. Tom Perry visited our campus and was asked the following question by a faculty member: “Elder Perry, what do you see as the looming storm clouds on the horizon about which we should know so we can better teach and prepare the young people of the Church?” With no hesitation his answer was, “Worldliness.” The next question: “What can we do, Elder Perry, to best help the young people combat worldliness?” His answer: “Help them prepare to worship properly in the temple.”
“I have come to better and more fully understand the protection available in the temple and through our covenants. I have come to better and more fully understand what it means to make an acceptable offering of temple worship. There is a difference between church-attending, tithe-paying members who occasionally rush into the temple to go through a session and those members who faithfully and consistently worship in the temple.” _ Elder J. Ballard Washburn
Factor #3: BYU–Idaho is surrounded by strong stakes of Zion.
Please consider that during your tenure as a student at Brigham Young University–Idaho, you also are a member of a stake of Zion. We have on this campus at the present time more than 70 wards organized into 7 stakes, and the protection promised in the verses we just read applies specifically to you. Additionally, in the surrounding city of Rexburg and in the neighboring communities of Southeastern Idaho are additional strong stakes of Zion. Truly we are blessed to reside in an area of such spiritual stability and strength.
DPC Lesson #1. A disciple’s faith is focused upon the Son of God.
Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God.
DPC Lesson #2. A disciple recognizes that faith in the Savior is a spiritual gift and appropriately seeks for that gift in his or her life.
                Elder James E. Talmage: “Though within the reach of all who diligently strive to gain it, faith is nevertheless a divine gift [and can be obtained only from God (see Matthew 16:17; John 6:44, 65; Ephesians 2:8; 1 Corinthians 12:9; Romans 12:3; Moroni 10:11)]. As is fitting for so priceless a pearl, it is given to those only who show by their sincerity that they are worthy of it, and who give promise of abiding by its dictates.  No compulsion is used in bringing men to a knowledge of God; yet, as fast as we open our hearts to the influences of righteousness, the faith that leads to life eternal will be given us of our Father. (The Articles of Faith, p. 107)”
President Joseph F. Smith also has taught:
Faith is always a gift of God to man, which is obtained by obedience, as all other blessings are. (Gospel Doctrine, p. 212)   faith does not come without works; faith does not come without obedience to the commandments of God. (Conference Report, October 1903, p. 4)
DPC Lesson #3. A disciple’s faith in the Savior and spiritual preparation dispel fear. Brothers and sisters, we live in troubled and turbulent times.
I conclude with a teaching by the Prophet Joseph Smith that I consider to be the latter-day disciple’s mission statement:
. . . the Standard of Truth has been erected; no unhallowed hand can stop the work from progressing; persecutions may rage, mobs may combine, armies may assemble, calumny may defame, but the truth of God will go forth boldly, nobly, and independent, till it has penetrated every continent, visited every clime, swept every country, and sounded in every ear, till the purposes of God shall be accomplished, and the Great Jehovah shall say the work is done. (Statement of the Prophet Joseph Smith in the Wentworth Letter, written March 1, 1842. See History of the Church, Vol. 4, p. 540)
A Message to Garcia Will You Deliver It? Action Foundation for Entrepreneurship excellence
Do you long to hear your name called when time is short and the stakes are high?
The Rarest Skill of All: The Ability to Execute
The ability to execute is more valuable than education or talent, because it is far rarer.
“My heart goes out to the man who does his work when the ‘boss’ is away, as well as when he is at home. And the man who, when given a letter for Garcia, quietly takes the missive, without asking any idiotic questions, and with no intention of chucking it into the nearest sewer, or of doing aught else but deliver it, never gets ‘laid off,’ nor has to go on strike for higher wages. Civilization is one long anxious search for just such individuals. Anything such a man asks shall be granted; his kind is so rare that no employer can afford to let him go. He is wanted in every city, town and village—in every office, shop, store and factory. The world cries out for such: he is needed and needed badly, the man who can carry a message to Garcia.”
A World of Underachievers
The Curse of the Average Organization
“You, reader, put this matter to a test: You are sitting in your office—six clerks within call.
Summon any one and make this request: ‘Please look in the encyclopedia and make a brief memorandum for me concerning the life of Correggio.’  Will the clerk quietly say, ‘Yes sir’ and go do the task?  On your life, he will not. He will look at you out of a fishy eye and ask one or more of the following questions:  
·         Who was he?  
·         Which encyclopedia?  
·         Where is the encyclopedia?
·         The ability to execute is more valuable than education or talent, because it is far rarer. If you have ever managed or been trapped in a dysfunctional organization, you understand Hubbard’s lament…  
·         Was I hired for that?
·         Don’t you mean Bismarck?
·         What’s the matter with Charlie doing it?
·         Is he dead?
·         Is there any hurry?
·         Shan’t I bring you the book and let you look it up yourself?
·         What do you want to know for?
 And I will lay you ten to one that after you have answered the questions, and explained how to find the information, and why you want it, the clerk will go off and get one of the other clerks to help him try to find Garcia and then come back and tell you that there is no such man.”
Tempting as this may be, it is impossible to build an effective organization without delegating important
tasks to talented and capable people. It’s the only way to make a grand vision a reality.
Woody Allen said that 90% of life is “just showing up.” If so, the most important 10% of life is execution. Far too few people do either consistently. But if the ability to execute is so valuable, why is it so rare? Why aren’t more people self-starters who can stay on task until the job is finished?
People in their late teens and early twenties often have a misconception about life. They believe that their greatest challenges will come from unforeseen events and external circumstances. This turns out to be untrue. The greatest challenges always come from within.
Unforeseen setbacks do occur, often at the worst times. You’ll come across a few saints and wise men and women who have mastered external and internal challenges. But far more often you’ll come across people who are lost, not living up to their potential or just plain evil. That’s the real world.

You have a choice… you can choose to start developing the attitudes, habits and instincts so your name
will be called when success hangs in the balance.
Developing the Right Attitudes, Habits and Instincts
1.       Accept the mission and get started.
2.       Be curious.
3.       Immediately sketch out a plan.
·         Vision: Objective
·         Strategies: What are the ways you could achieve this objective?
·         Projects: What big things need to get done to accomplish the objective?
·         Tactics: What do I need to do today to make progress on a project?
4.       If you need resources, don’t be afraid to ask.
5.       Enlist help when needed.
6.       Report back and show your work.
7.       Underpromise and overdeliver.
8.       Expect to make (small) mistakes.
9.       Put results before schmoozing
10.   Replace the voices in your head with positive action.

Seeking a Hero’s Journey: Perspective and Inspiration for the Long Haul
Practice the steps below to hone your talents and develop a sense of “calling,”
1.       Begin to see your life as a “calling” toward a Hero’s Journey.
2.       Develop your gifts and talents into a discipline. Become world-class at something.
3.       Find a “deep burning need” you care about.
4.       Surround yourself with good people and worthy role models.

Moving From Individual Action to Building a World-Class Organization
Take the following steps if you want to attract the right people and harness all your energy toward a world-changing mission.
1.       Make the mission clear and meaningful
2.       Set unreasonably high standards.
3.       Align incentives with the few key tasks—the Key Success Factors—for the mission.
4.       Make all employment conditional.
5.       Hire leaders who know how to get the job done too.
6.       Put the monkey on their back.
7.       Take time to coach those who have proved they can execute
The world is overpopulated with planners, procrastinators and political schemers—parasites who prey on a market economy.
Leadership with a Small "L" President Kim B. Clark
Brothers and sisters, it is your destiny to live in a remarkable time.  It is a time of turmoil and great wickedness, but also a time of miracles and heavenly blessings.  With your future in mind, we have sought to prepare you to become disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ and leaders in your families, in the Church, and in the world around you.
The call to be a disciple-leader is a call to minister and to serve.  It is a call to lead as Christ leads.  It is leadership with a small “L”—the kind of leadership that builds and lifts and inspires through kindness and love and unselfish devotion to the Lord and His work
Principle #1: Lead by Example: The Savior established this principle when He said, “what manner of men ought ye to be? Verily I say unto you, even as I am.” Your children will watch you very, very closely.  They will learn from you and follow your example—(eventually!).
Principle #2: Lead with Vision: In your family this means teaching your children how cleaning their rooms, doing their homework, keeping the commandments, and learning to love each other is connected to exaltation in the celestial kingdom as an eternal family. 
Principle #3: Lead with Love:
As the leaders of your family and faithful disciples of Christ, you will put love into action.  You will care for your children and nurture them.  Every week in family home evening you will teach them to love and serve one another and to keep the commandments God.  You will support them and encourage them and love them enough to put structure and discipline in their lives.  You will pray with them and read the scriptures with them every day.  You will lead them with love.
My dear brothers and sisters, I bear witness of the Lord Jesus Christ.  He is our Savior and Redeemer.  He lives.  He is the great Exemplar of leadership.  He leads us today.  I bear witness that this is His work, His church, and His kingdom, restored to the earth through the Prophet Joseph Smith.