Change Is Coming What if the deep-seated instincts that keep you safe from harm are also keeping success beyond your grasp? What if your inability to clearly define success is part of a defense mechanism designed to protect you from predators, famine, and attack? What if all your doubts and uncertainties are products of a limbic response system that overrides your intentions? And what if you could do something about it? You want change in your life. You’re not satisfied with the levels of success you’ve been able to achieve. You don’t know how to get what you want. If every one of those statements wasn’t true, you wouldn’t be reading this right now. This is not a book about believing in yourself. It’s not a book about feeling good and appreciating what you’ve got. It’s not a collection of inspirational sayings and folksy wisdom. It’s a structured step-by-step blueprint for creating positive results. It’s a framework for success.
John developed a passion for solving problems during his service in the Navy, and two decades as an I.T. Engineer.
Working on dozens of successful projects taught him that business and personal goals succeeded, or failed, in predictable ways. Designing goals from the start was always the challenge, and a Framework of proven standards was always the answer.
He discovered that Success wasn't reserved for "Successful People," or something you "Found" if you "Worked Hard Enough."
Instead, it could be designed and created with a purpose.
At the age of 49 he left the corporate life to follow his purpose, and is dedicated to helping others around the world find and follow theirs.
Nothing earth-shatteringly new here. Perhaps others may need this book more than I did. When I worked in Direct Sales, I led a teleconference on how to earn the incentive trip every year. So I might just not have realized I already had these tools in my wheelhouse.
Excellent ideas! I think many people need this book! I can accomplish most things without drawing out a plan but am definitely going to try this for weight loss!
Loved the concept and how it’s explained in such refreshing terms. As someone in management and from an engineering background, I enjoyed the RDOM2 and Gap Analysis even more. Be it the running a marathon or writing a book, all the examples were fascinating as to how to get from where we want are to where we want to be.