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Successful People Never Stop Learning

Guest post by: Bud Bilanich

Article Overview: Successful people are outstanding performers. Outstanding performers remain outstanding performers by becoming lifelong learners. They continually expand their knowledge in order to get out in front of the pack and stay there. Begin your lifelong learning journey by focusing on your strengths and working to improve them every day. Building on your strengths is easier that overcoming your weaknesses. When you build on your strengths you can make incremental improvements. However, if you have a glaring gap in your skills, address it now. Don't wait to take necessary quantum leaps.

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Successful People Never Stop Learning

Lifelong learning is the first step in becoming an outstanding performer. In today's fast paced world, if you don't keep learning, you're not standing still, you're falling behind. One of my favorite quotes from Gandhi nails it when it comes to lifelong learning... "Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever."

He's right. None of us should ever quit learning. I have a thirst for knowledge and do my best to quench it through learning. I try to learn something new every day. Sometimes my learning is trivial, sometimes it is profound. Regardless, I keep on learning.

On days when I feel as if I haven't learned anything, I turn to a little book that I have called Live and Learn and Pass It On. The subtitle is, "People ages 5 to 95 share what they've discovered about life, love, and other good stuff." I usually find something in there that satisfies.

Here are a few of the learnings in the book that have helped me...

I've learned that if you wait until all conditions are perfect before you act, you'll never act.

I've learned that if you want to get promoted, you must do things that get you noticed.

I've learned that 90% of what happens in my life is positive and only about 10% is negative. If I want to be happy I just need to focus on the 90%.

These are little life learnings that I find helpful.

On the other hand, I had a big learning the other day. I figured out how to podcast. I have been wanting to turn my blog posts into podcasts for a long time. However, I never put in the time it takes to become proficient. I promised myself that I would learn in early 2010. On Tuesday, I spent about four hours figuring out how. It wasn't all that hard, the information I needed was on the web. Now I know how to podcast.

Podcasting is an important technical skill for me. I had to learn it if I were to reach my target audience with my common sense career and life success advice. What important technical skill do you need to learn to stay current in your area of expertise? How can you learn it? I suggest you set a deadline for learning this skill, and then do whatever it takes to learn the skill by the deadline.

All of the people I know who are committed to lifelong learning have several traits in common. They all...

...Are humble. They admit what they don't know. This is the first step in learning what they need to know.

...Question the status quo. They realize that because something is right today, it may not be right tomorrow. They know that doing things "the way we've always done them" is not good reasoning.

...Are intellectually curious. They truly want to learn and find learning fun, interesting and stimulating. They see life as a journey in which they are constantly learning.

...Are willing to try new stuff. They experiment and see what works. When things work, they use them.

...Are not afraid to fail. They see failure as an opportunity to learn. Just as they incorporate what works into their repertoire, they use failures as stepping stones to other experiments.

...Are tolerant of ambiguity. Learning creates ambiguity. These people are willing to let go of past ways of doing things in order to come up with new ways of doing things in the future. The gap between the past and future can make for an uncomfortable present.

...Focus on staying ahead of the pack. They are early adopters -- of new technology and new ways of thinking. They realize that knowledge has a short half life today. They keep learning to stay ahead.

The common sense point here is simple. Successful people are outstanding performers. Outstanding performers remain outstanding performers by becoming lifelong learners. They continually expand their knowledge in order to get out in front of the pack and stay there. Begin your lifelong learning journey by focusing on your strengths and working to improve them every day. Building on your strengths is easier that overcoming your weaknesses. When you build on your strengths you can make incremental improvements. However, if you have a glaring gap in your skills, address it now. Don't wait to take necessary quantum leaps. What do you need to learn in 2010? How do you plan on learning it? Remember what Ben Franklin had to say, "An investment in knowledge pays the best interest."

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Home > Business-Coach > Bud Bilanich > Successful People Never Stop Learning >
Article Tags: building on your strengths, commitment, focus, Lifelong learning, outstanding performance
Referred by: http://www.jimbouchard.org

About the Author: Bud Bilanich
RSS for Bud's articles - Visit Bud's website

Bud Bilanich, The Common Sense Guy, is an executive coach, motivational speaker, author and blogger. He is the Official Executive Coaching Guide at SelfGrowth.com. He helps his coaching clients succeed by applying their common sense. Dr. Bilanich is Harvard educated but has a no nonsense approach to his work to goes back to his roots in the steel country of Western Pennsylvania. His approach to career and life success is a result of over 35 years of business experience, 10 years of research and study of successful people and the application of common sense. He is the author of seven books, including Straight Talk for Success: Common Sense Ideas That Won’t Let You Down, where he presents his blueprint for career and life success: • Develop your self confidence. • Create positive personal impact. • Become an outstanding performer. • Become a dynamic communicator. • Become interpersonally competent. His clients include Pfizer, Glaxo SmithKline, Johnson and Johnson, Abbot Laboratories, PepsiCo, AT&T, Chase Manhattan Bank, Citigroup, General Motors, UBS, AXA Advisors, Cabot Corporation, The Aetna, PECO Energy, Olin Corporation, Minerals Technologies, The Boys and Girls Clubs of America and a number of small and family owned businesses. Bud is a cancer survivor and lives in Denver Colorado with his wife Cathy. He is a retired rugby player and an avid cyclist. He likes movies, live theatre and crime fiction.

Click here to visit Bud's website
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Bud Bilanich - The Common Sense Coach
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