The great motivational speaker Zig Ziglar died last week at the age of 86.
His messages were powerful as he spoke to audiences worldwide – in his heyday speaking 150 times a year and even into his 70’s preaching the gospel of self-help 50 times per year. He earned $50,000 a speech!
Messages like: “If you aim at nothing, you will hit it every time” and “There are no traffic jams on the extra mile”.
At the core of Ziglar’s approach to motivation is this secret to empower others:
“Our whole philosophy’s built around the concept that you can have everything in life you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want”.
But we live in a self-absorbed world where people increasingly and outwardly seek that which they want at the exclusion of others.
American politics is about no compromise.
Often employers adopt the take it or leave it attitude which has more than paved over their “my way or the highway” approach.
Empowering those close to us to achieve their goals, too.
Our fellow workers to be better because we are part of their lives.
Believing in our children enough to be their silent partner on the road to success and happiness.
It’s about relishing in the role of helping others get what they want as a ticket to getting what we want.
Ziglar said empowering others “works in your personal life, your physical life. It works in corporate America. It works in government. It works everywhere”.
And some hints of how to begin empowering others as well as ourselves were revealed in Ziglar’s New York Times obituary:
Be grateful.
Believe.
Try.
Recent Day Starters: