There's a difference between the millionaire entrepreneurs we works with, and the ones who struggle. And the difference is slight. One small change could catapult you forward. In this Discover the "killer app" for entrepreneurs...confidence, in this episode of The Unstoppable CEO Podcast.
Something’s been really bothering me lately and until just a few weeks ago I couldn’t put my finger on it…
I work with a wide range of business owners. Some with businesses in the multi-tens of millions of dollars in revenue.
Others just starting and over the $100,000 mark.
Some grow really fast, almost effortlessly.
Others take what can be a painfully slow road.
And that bugs me.
I’ve been trying to figure out what makes the difference.
A famous old Wall Street Journal ad claimed that the difference was a subscription to the Journal, but I’m skeptical…
So I dug deeper.
And I did find it.
The difference?
Confidence.
The successful ones have it in spades. And they manufacture more and more of it every day, allowing them to grow faster and faster.
The unsuccessful…they have some. But they’re often riddled with doubt. And they look outside to build their confidence (and are often disappointed).
Confidence is the “killer app” for entrepreneurs…
Fascinating.
And what’s most interesting…the really simple way the highly successful manufacture their own confidence.
It's all inside today's episode of The Unstoppable CEO Podcast. Listen now...
The Authority Builder Podcast is the place to come if you are building a professional practice and want to be seen as the leader in your market. We interview the top experts throughout professional services and share insights to help you grow your firm and be positioned as the only choice the clients ever want.
“Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.”
― Calvin Coolidge, 30th President of the United States