Skip to main content

Go the extra mile. Apply the momentum principle to your life, once you start going keep going.

You will always be compensated in life in direct proportion  to the value of your contributions. If you want to increase the size of your rewards, you must increase the quality and quantity of your result. If you want to get more out you have to put more in. (Ralph W. Emerson)
Your success in life will be in direct proportion to what you do after you do what you are expected to do
 "I will do far more than what is expected of me, I will go the extra mile  and do more than I am paid for ". Get up a little, work a little harder, and stay a little later.
Move faster from task to task, and here is what will always happen. The faster you move, the more experience you get. The more experience you get, the better you get at your job, the better you get at your job, the better result you get in the same period of time.
By moving faster and doing more than
expected you will shift into  the fast track in your carer and begin moving ahead .
In each case, there is only one strategy, do more than you are paid for, do more than others expect, go the extra miles, get busy, get going, take action, don't waste time, and never look back.

Determine never to be idle. No person will have occasion to complain of the want of time who never loses any. It is wonderful how much may be done, if we are always doing.
The rising sun has never caught me in bed in my entire life (Thomas Jefferson).
Mentally and physically, the faster you move, the more energy you have, the faster you move the happier you are and the more enthusiastic and creative you become. The faster you move the more you get things done, the more you get paid , and the more successful you feel.
Apply the momentum principle to your life, once you start going keep going
   "Fast tempo is essential to success"
     (Alan Lakein)

                   
                       Thanks for Reading.












Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NAMBA: A VILLAGE WHERE MANNA STILL FALLS.

Namba is a small and drought-stricken village in Southern part of Angola, a Seventh Day Adventist missionary who spent nearly a lifetime in Africa established a mission in this village. This white missionary left and for some years the mission was under the care of a local director. One year the rains failed to come, the crops did not grow, and the mission stores were emptied and no money to buy food if it could have been found. The mission director had been away for some weeks on a trip visiting distant mission schools. The believers at the Missao Adventista da Namba came to the end of their resources and food supply. The director's wife called the families together and told them the situation. Then she read to the people the promises of the Lord and told them of the manna which had been sent by God to His people in the time of Moses, assuring them that God could send them food in the same way, if necessary. After prayer, a little girl, about five years of

The nature of mindsets, part 1.The deeper reason to examine our mindsets is so we can mount a self-aware response to the great challenges of our day. We simply can’t respond to our personal and global problems in a meaningful way unless we also learn how to examine our mindsets as an integral part of how we live our lives

The nature of mindsets by Ash Buchanan A primer on how our underlying beliefs, attitudes and assumptions create our everyday lives — and our shared world Mindsets shape the lives we lead, the actions we take and the future possibilities of the world we live in. In this primer, we provide an overview of what mindsets are, why they matter and explore a range of practices you can use to be mindful about how and why you use them. What is a Mindset? “Your beliefs become your thoughts, your thoughts become your words, your words become your actions, your actions become your habits, your habits become your values, your values become your destiny.” — Mahatma Gandhi Eight principles can be used to describe the underlying nature of mindsets. 1) Mindsets are habits of mind The word mindset was first used in the 1930’s to mean “habits of mind formed by previous experience.” In simple terms, mindsets are deeply held beliefs, attitudes and assumptions we create about who we are and how t

How I gained admission to Ahmadu Bello University Zaria part 1