Tag Archives: inspiration

Stop procrastinating and get things done

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Get on with doing the things that really matter in your life. None of us know how long we have left and wishing you had a great life full of interesting friends and all the things you ever wanted won’t come by sitting on the sofa.

  • Ideas are everywhere but you’ve got to do the work to make them into something that matters. Execute on those ideas and you’ll see good things happen in time.
  • What we focus on most becomes our idea of reality – use this power to get things done through focussing hard every day on what you want.
  • What time of the day do you feel most energised and do your best work? If it’s 6am to midday, set your working day around this slot and deliver the goods.
  • Do everything you can to stay positive. Don’t look back too long on past failures. Look forward and focus on your strengths.
  • Don’t worry about what people think. My first business was a dating agency and everyone I knew told me I was I mad for launching it but I gained more from creating and running this business than any other in my life to date. If you believe it’s the right thing to do and worth the risk, get on with it.
  • If you’re feeling some fear and that’s what’s stopping you, work out exactly what it is and try and understand what you’re afraid of. What are your true intentions? How much do you want it? In most cases, your fears won’t amount to much and it’s time to get to work.

 

More in, more out when it comes to content

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I’ve read almost double the amount of books in 2016 as I did the year before. This reading has covered a very wide range of topics and has been fiction and non-fiction titles, autobiographies, ‘how to’ books, novels and more.

It’s done me the world of good and encourages more thought and the formation of new ideas of my own. I don’t have a TV but I watch a lot of video online and read all sorts of content – specifically in the marketing/technology area that’s my line of work but also in other areas that are of interest to me everyday – and this also helps to develop new ways of thinking and new things to say.

Something as simple as reading from a source that you have never visited before, or watching a different show to your usual choices on TV can also help. The broader the range of sources – reading/watching/taking in as much as you can from everywhere – will fill your brain with inspiration and this can lead you anywhere.

I’m always looking for new sources of inspiration, too. What have you read or seen this year that’s really rocked you and made you think?

Pushing through Mondays

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For a lot of people, Mondays can be tough. Back to jobs you don’t like, working on things you don’t care about after weekends spent having fun and spending time with friends or watching all of your favourite shows on tv.

This is all great and I’m fine with this if you are happy with your lot, but so many people simply are not happy. Their complaints about Monday and how bad life is for them show they are just not seeing what is going on around them.

Most people reading this are based in the western world and live in a modern economy where jobs and opportunity are plentiful. If you are not happy with your life on a Monday and live for Friday night when you can finish work for the weekend, something is very wrong. Make some changes and get yourself back on track – in the world we live in today, you can do ANYTHING and it’s simply all down to you.

Why are you not happy? Do you want more ‘things’ in your life? Fancy cars and clothes and a new, more impressive phone maybe? Do you know what happiness means to you in your life, even? Have you taken stock and sat down to actually work out what it means to you? I suggest you do, and fast.

If you do this, you will make sure that your life is a happy one and empty of regrets. You will be honest with yourself and spend as much time as you can doing the things that make you happy and make them the real focus of your life. You will work out what your strengths are and put the maximum effort you can on these things. Every day will be the same because you are happy with where your life is going and what you do on any day of the week will be driving you towards the biggest goals in your life. How happy will you be when you achieve these goals? Massively, of course!

Turn off your tv and get to work on the definition of your future happiness and then make a plan to deliver it through hard work and laser-like focus. Be honest with yourself and good things will happen. Back yourself and let other people complain about their weaknesses (and yours, too) as you focus entirely on your greatest assets, your strengths. Do this and Mondays will become another day where the opportunities you have in front of you become clearer and clearer. Same as every other day.

Get over your fears in 2016

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It doesn’t matter what it is that you’re afraid of and it doesn’t matter how you do it, but if you can make 2016 the year that you get past your fears, you’ll have a fantastic year.

So, what’s holding you back? Ask yourself this question when you’re facing something tough and listen hard to your answers.  I’m sure when you do this you’ll realise that your answers are nothing much beyond excuses, really and sound quite hollow in the open air.

Keep doing this whenever you feel anxious or are struggling to overcome something you find hard or difficult. You’ll see things much more clearly and start to break through these self-imposed barriers.

Try it and see what it can do for you.

Don’t mistake a bit of luck for true success

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If you don’t do the work, success isn’t likely to happen for you. You might get lucky, of course, but this isn’t true success as far as I’m concerned.

The work is hard, requires desire, passion, discipline and patience – ‘long haul’ mentality – but you’ve got to do it. Luck runs out but the road to success is a long and hard one and can be very fruitful over time. Work hard and luck will help you along the way but don’t ever rely on it.

There will be bad times. Bad days. Really bad things can and will happen. Plans will change. People will turn, or change their minds. Things break. Targets won’t always be met. But you’ve got to smile through it all and keep doing the work. This remains a constant at all times. Discipline, passion, desire and patience, all day, every day.

Luck can also be very fickle. You’ve got to grab onto her coattails (I like to think her as a woman – Lady Luck) and stay hanging on for the ride but be prepared for the time when you’ll get dropped – it always comes and you must accept it. No malice or annoyance, just say ‘thanks for the ride, see you next time!’.

Be thankful that you’re born, have the chances many don’t have and don’t let the opportunity for greatness pass you by. Take the chance. You can be everything you want to be. Your own power and potential is limited by nothing but you. Go and make it happen.

Ian Mountford is a global recruitment expert and strategy coach providing motivation and guidance to entrepreneurs, wannabe or fully-fledged. He draws from his own experience of building businesses from the ground up and spending many years helping clients to consistently achieve their goals and aspirations. Ian works with clients face-to-face and internationally.

Sunday nights

I usually feel good on a Sunday night. Another week is ahead of us, bringing more of the challenges and opportunities that keep us moving forwards.

For many, Sunday night is not the best time. It can be filled with dread.

Sunday night brings everything that you walked away from on Friday back to the front of your brain.

The effects of this can be harmful – lack of sleep, more arguments with your partner than normal, frustration at the situation you feel you are in, etc.

Some changes to the way you see your situation can help you to see things a little differently. If you’ve got a job, that’s a positive straight out of the gate.

Get to bed and turn that screen off, but before that, make a plan for the week ahead so you know what’s coming, what you’re committed to.

Say a prayer to whoever’s watching over us, guiding the steps we take, whoever you believe it is up (or down) there.

And get some rest. Everything’s better with a good night’s sleep.

Get up, rested, and get to work.

It’s what we all have to do. Why should you be any different?

Do great work when you’re on the clock

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There can often be a temptation to dial back your efforts on a project you don’t enjoy. Something or someone is annoying you and you don’t really feel it’s worth it to deliver the best you can. I had an instance today where I had this choice and it can be very easy to go for the soft option and sit back, shrugging your shoulders as you think to yourself, “no-one’s going to notice…”.

Do great work when you’re on the clock and someone else is paying your wages, whether it’s a client or your employer. Settling for mediocrity has no value and all it does is put you in the same bracket as everyone else who is looking at life the same way as you. Stand out, make a difference and get some satisfaction from knowing you did your best. It takes effort, determination and drive to get to where you want to be and achieve your goals, but it is truly worth it. Be known as the one who always delivers their best, no matter what the circumstances and I can assure you that you’ll always be busy.

Ian Mountford is a Strategy Coach providing motivation and guidance to entrepreneurs, wannabe or fully-fledged. He draws from his own experience of building businesses from the ground up and spending many years helping clients to consistently achieve their goals and aspirations. Ian works with clients face-to-face and internationally.

Get inspired

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Time on the internet can be seen by many people as a real negative. Many hours can be frittered away watching youtube clips or shopping for your next pair of shoes. I spend a lot of my day online and I do like to get away from it for a while but I also like to use it in my own time to get inspired.
I read a lot of content and I also watch a lot of video, especially interviews and discussions on subjects that I am interested in. I subscribe to a few podcasts and listen to them weekly. I take in as much as I can as I want to fill my brain with inspirational content and encourage myself to develop new ideas and think about the things I already do in a different way – and listening to how other people achieve their own success is a great starting point.
One thing that I do often is favourite things that catch my eye on Twitter to read later on or save into other readers such as Pocket. 30 minutes spent looking back at this list of favourites will always spring a few pleasant surprises.
It also makes a lot of sense to learn from people who have found success using their own methods. It may not mean that the same methods will work for you but why not take the tried and tested route and see what results you get? You can adapt things along the way and find fixes that fit but it can be a great way to kick start a new routine or break a bad habit, for instance.
As long as the content is truly inspirational and you are able to take away at least one method or tip from it, it will definitely be time well spent.
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Ian Mountford is a Strategy Coach providing motivation and guidance to entrepreneurs, wannabe or fully-fledged. He draws from his own experience of building businesses from the ground up and spending many years helping clients to consistently achieve their goals and aspirations. Ian works with clients face-to-face and internationally.

Consciously Positive

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So what does ‘Consciously Positive’ as a way of being mean to me?

  • Choosing the right attitude to get things done
  • Focussing on the goal and being single-minded and determined enough to achieve it
  • Executing on good ideas
  • Delivering the best results you can in any given situation
  • Showing up, checking in, doing the work with no excuses
  • Making things happen
  • Helping others to learn and develop
  • Being proactive
  • Being prepared to fail
  • Never stopping learning

All of these things bundled up together make a very powerful mix. I get a lot of satisfaction when I’m working this way and things are happening for me and those around me and, conversely, lose a lot of energy and find it very hard to deliver when some of these things are difficult or require some change within me or in my immediate environment.

I believe this is a state of being that we can all aim for in order to be the best we can be. Sure, we might not be 100% in everything immediately but we can use this as a template to constantly improve ourselves. The effects on our lives, our businesses, our relationships and every aspect of our life will be significant and is definitely something worth working towards.

Ian Mountford is a Strategy Coach providing motivation and guidance to entrepreneurs, wannabe or fully-fledged. He draws from his own experience of building businesses from the ground up and spending many years helping clients to consistently achieve their goals and aspirations. Ian works with clients face-to-face and internationally.

Breaking new ground

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It can be very tempting to start something new in order to improve an area of your life, like getting fit, eating better or working smarter. The thought process goes something like this:

“I’m fed up with being (out of shape, overweight, tired all the time, late home from work every day, etc). I’m going to read up on the topic and try and make some changes that will help me to change things. Easy!”

But rarely is it easy to make these kind of changes. There have been many times in my life when I’ve got down on myself for not being great at something and it can be a huge frustration – “everyone else is good at (getting up early and exercising, writing blog posts every day, etc). Why can’t I do the same?” – making you feel even worse.

Good intentions are one thing, but turning them into habits or rituals is the key to making lasting changes. I have a few bad habits, the worst of all being an addiction to biting my finger nails that I’ve had for as long as I can remember, but the way this habit works acts as an indicator of the power and strength of habits. If you can make an action or activity a habit you are very likely to continue with it and deliver on it every day. 

Try setting some realistic goals for a start. It can help to set some targets that you have a really good chance of achieving that will also act as milestones on the journey to something even bigger. Saying today that you’re going to read a new book every week for the next 12 months is great but very hard to achieve and your confidence would be seriously knocked if you gave up after a few weeks. But aiming for a more achievable target – two books in the next month, for example – can give you something to aim for that will help the habit to form and you can then set a slightly bigger target once that one has been knocked off.

Once you’ve set a realistic goal and achieved it, give yourself a reward. It doesn’t have to be chocolate or a whole new wardrobe, but a small and simple token to say you are on your way and you’ve made the first step is enough to keep you on track. Small rewards can also increase your motivation as the challenges come along so as you set another new target, also set think up another reward.

And finally, don’t be too hard on yourself. Life is short and time spent harming yourself or running yourself down with constantly negative thoughts about how bad you are for having three glasses of wine instead of the one you were aiming for is negative energy that will stop you from making a positive impact in your life. Give yourself a chance to start afresh and set another goal as quickly as you can. Believe that you can achieve whatever target you have set and give yourself every chance possible of making it happen – such as not going to the pub for a few days.

Ian Mountford is a Strategy Coach providing motivation and guidance to entrepreneurs, wannabe or fully-fledged. He draws from his own experience of building businesses from the ground up and spending many years helping clients to consistently achieve their goals and aspirations. Ian works with clients face-to-face and internationally.