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August 7, 2009

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4 Expert Tips From 4 Career Development Gurus

tony_robbins_stephen_covey_tim_-ferriss_david_allenHow do I sum up the wisdom of four talented career development gurus in one blog post? Impossible! But I will certainly try. This past week here on the blog I mentioned these four individuals, Anthony Robbins, Stephen Covey, Tim Ferriss and David Allen, so I thought it was time for a recap on these people who made a huge impact, and still do, on my career. Below are four of the bigger concepts these guys cover:

Anthony Robbins: Consistent Focus, Repetition and Immediate Actions
Tony always says that “repetition is the mother of skill”, which means the more and more you do something, the better you get at it. Doing is the key, the more you actually put something into practice, the better and better you become. He will be the first person to tell you that all the self development in the world will do nothing until you actually start putting the methods to use. Focus is important as well, whatever you focus on consistently, starts to come to fruition. A lot of people spread their focus too wide or it’s constantly changing. He also talks about immediate actions. Once you set a plan in place, you must take a step or two immediately towards the goal. No delay. You cannot plan to work on it next week, the first steps must happen right away to create momentum.

Stephen Covey: Find Your Voice and Inspire Others To Find Theirs
He wrote the 7 Habits of Highly Successful People, and the quote above is actually the 8th Habit, from the book of the same name. Find what you truly love to do, find what your career path should be. This takes lots of soul-searching and exploring, and it often takes making a move, but it must be done. The next step is to inspire others, help them find out what they want to do. Help can be in many forms. The more you help others with their dreams, the more you will see your own dreams come to fruition. He also talks about sharpening the saw, keeping your skills top notch as well as focusing on what matter most to you, not urgent items pushed on you by others.

Tim Ferriss: Get Rid of the Clutter, Get Help and Focus on the Important
Tim says in his book the 4-Hour Work Week that when you work 9 to 5 for years (or decades) and then branch off on your own, you still retain all the same methods, even if they don’t work. You still get up and work at 9am (even though nighttime may be your most productive) and you still work within the 8 hour (and more) grid. Conform your new business to you, not to dated office methods. Use virtual assistants and delegate your workflow of mundane items. Stop taking in info from the web all day, go on an info-fast, most of that info is quickly dated and not relevant to your empire. Most importantly, don’t work 8 hours just doing busy work if you don’t have work, scale back and focus on what matters.

David Allen: Get Things Done by Collecting All Your Info, Sorting, Reviewing and Doing
David Allen created GTD (Getting Things Done) and it’s a great system that actually can be explained fairly briefly. Find a system, electronic or paper, to collect all your thoughts, ideas, tasks, goals and projects. All of them must be captured/collected or else your mind will keep thinking about them. Next is to process them, stuff that can be done in 2 minutes, just do them, things that need to be scheduled for a certain time or location, track them. Work through these 5 steps: Collect, Process, Organize, Review and Do. Put items into these 6 areas of focus: Current Actions, Current Projects, Areas of Responsibility, Yearly Goals, 5 Year Vision and Life Goals.

Saying the above items are the tip of the iceberg is an understatement. Google them all, read what they have to say, get their books and products. Check out their blogs. Even if you just start with one, most anything by any of these four will be highly enlightening and will definitely help you ramp up your career to where you want it to be.

Google: Anthony Robbins, Stephen Covey, Tim Ferriss and David Allen

Websites: Anthony Robbins, Stephen Covey, Tim Ferriss and David Allen

Of course these are my interpretations of my favorites, do you have any favorite methods? Or favorite authors?

Facebook comments:

  • Karla

    One of my favorites is from Anthony Robbins. If you can’t measure it you can’t manage it. I find this to be so true. If your not writing down your goals and progress you will never know where you are, how far you have come and where you need to be heading.
    Thanks for sharing Frank.

  • Franklin McMahon

    Tony is a doing a reality show, from the producers of “The Biggest Loser”, details are here:
    http://www.nbc.com/breakthrough-with-tony-robbins/

    I got an invite to the finale taping of the show, if anyone wants to go or needs details, email me.

    And yes “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it” one of the great pieces of advice..so true!

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  • Anonymous

    Hey Frank! Great post and certainly a noteworthy group of gurus! These guys definitely influence me on a daily basis – just yesterday I was applying Tim’s Pareto/Parkinson’s law hybrid to kill off a bunch of to-do’s that has been bugging me for who knows how long. I am cuurently reading his book [4-Hour Work Week] on iPad and listening to Stephen’s book [The 7 Habits...] from Audible on my PC while I work on Graphic Design / Illustration. Dig Tony too – he’s always challenging my thinking. And I also found this great free GMail Plug-In that works with the principles of GTD: Check it out: http://www.activeinboxhq.com Thanks again for the post!

  • Anonymous

    Almost forgot: Daniel Pink also rocks: I read his book “A Whole New Mind” and it definitely blew mine.

  • Anonymous

    Sorry… last one: Marcus Buckingham also changed how I look at Strengths and Career Choices BIG TIME!

  • http://www.franklinmcmahon.com Franklin McMahon

    Thanks for the info..I will check them all out…excellent! I am especially always up for a new and interesting book :)

  • Sam

    Too bad there are no tips for moving beyond corporate slavery. Once your mid to upper 30′s and faithfully followed the corporate strategy with no results, your kind of stuck. Being at an age of irrelevance, there is little oppourtunity if the path you’ve chosen within your employer reaches a dead end. Most important to start these habits and ideals early in life.