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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Solomon NorthupPublisher: G&D Media Imprint: G&D Media ISBN: 9781722502898ISBN 10: 1722502894 Pages: 338 Publication Date: 12 December 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA guide offers advice on achieving success in business and life. In his book, Proctor (It's Not About the Money, 2018) invites readers to imagine traveling around the world and talking to the wealthiest, happiest people. If they asked all these folks the same question--what is the key to your success?--their answers would always boil down to the same things. The author then asks: Wouldn't you like to know what those things are? Proctor lays out those answers in his manual, broken down into 12 principles grouped around core ideas. The author opens by assuring his readers that they were born with the keys to success and only need to realize that in order to begin living their best lives. Misunderstanding this part keeps the masses in the foothills, he writes, wandering aimlessly, never climbing their mountains, frequently frustrated, often angry, and too often miserably disappointed with themselves and their accomplishments. This delineation between winners and losers runs throughout the work, with Proctor asserting that decision makers go to the top, and those who do not make decisions seem to go nowhere. He raises several key general concepts, like goals, persistence, and creativity, and in each case quotes from business inspiration standards like Winston Churchill and delivers wide-reaching insights and encouragements. Some of these will strike longtime readers of business books as very familiar--things like risks must be taken, because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing and you cannot escape from a prison if you do not know you are in one. Less familiar--and more questionable--are much broader claims like We are all spiritual beings. There is no one person who has more power, more knowledge or access to greater resources than any other person. Or I am responsible for my life, for my feelings, and for every result I get. These extravagant contentions are perhaps not out of line with a book that asserts: You are one with the infinite. An inspirational--and more than a little grandiose--series of business world insights. "A guide offers advice on achieving success in business and life. In his book, Proctor (It's Not About the Money, 2018) invites readers to imagine traveling around the world and talking to the wealthiest, happiest people. If they asked all these folks the same question--what is the key to your success?--their answers would always boil down to the same things. The author then asks: Wouldn't you like to know what those things are? Proctor lays out those answers in his manual, broken down into 12 ""principles"" grouped around core ideas. The author opens by assuring his readers that they were born with the keys to success and only need to realize that in order to begin living their best lives. ""Misunderstanding this part keeps the masses in the foothills,"" he writes, ""wandering aimlessly, never climbing their mountains, frequently frustrated, often angry, and too often miserably disappointed with themselves and their accomplishments."" This delineation between winners and losers runs throughout the work, with Proctor asserting that ""decision makers go to the top, and those who do not make decisions seem to go nowhere."" He raises several key general concepts, like ""goals,"" ""persistence,"" and ""creativity,"" and in each case quotes from business inspiration standards like Winston Churchill and delivers wide-reaching insights and encouragements. Some of these will strike longtime readers of business books as very familiar--things like ""risks must be taken, because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing"" and ""you cannot escape from a prison if you do not know you are in one."" Less familiar--and more questionable--are much broader claims like ""We are all spiritual beings. There is no one person who has more power, more knowledge or access to greater resources than any other person."" Or ""I am responsible for my life, for my feelings, and for every result I get."" These extravagant contentions are perhaps not out of line with a book that asserts: ""You are one with the infinite."" An inspirational--and more than a little grandiose--series of business world insights." Author InformationSolomon Northup was an American abolitionist and the primary author of the memoir Twelve Years a Slave. A free-born African American from New York, he was the son of a freed slave and a free woman of color. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |