1. A Hero is someone who the moment prior
to becoming one was a reckless, irresponsible dreamer.
2. One is successful just in the sincere attempt to become successful.
I wrote the above while in deep reflection, mulling over whether I was truly prepared
to take on the mammoth job of successfully launching an Internet marketing company. Having
survived several start-ups of this magnitude, albeit not in the cyber-world, I knew this
undertaking would be one that involved much more than just plain positive thinking.
However, as part of the process, I did return to my favorite "success" books,
reading through them like familiar old friends. This time though, I experienced a new
"awakening", not from what I discovered in the books, but from what I found was
sorely missing in most of them.
Please bear in mind that I believe with all my heart in statement 2. above, however,
for the sake of this article I will refer to "achieving success" as the actual
attaining of ones "goal of success".
The majority of books and other motivational materials fail to address the piece of the
proverbial puzzle that is most often the single determining factor between achieving
success, or not. If this key element were included as such, the infinite collections of
you-can-make-it resources wouldn't be such an easy sell. The omitted "truth"
would put the reality of achieving success in the cold hard light that it should be
presented in.
This required ingredient has little to do with the stuff we should think, but has
everything to do with the potentially high cost of "doing".
I am referring to Sacrifice. Ask almost any successful entrepreneur what sacrifices he
or she has had to make and they will without hesitation tell you they paid, "a big
price".
The reality of Sacrifice can include the following:
Sustained periods of time when 18-hour days are the norm, when one hardly knows what
day of the week it is because they all seem the same. Days turn into weeks and weeks,
months. Entire seasons pass with little notice. I often refer to this as The Fog.
Pivotal moments when one wrestles with their own mind over whether their goal and their
plan were after all, valid. Self-doubt can be a success killer.
Replenishing of the deep inner-strength required to fend off the effects of setbacks -
bitter disappointment, discouragement and quite often, disillusionment. Whether one can
bounce back from the devastating effects of a major setback can be the single determining
factor in achieving success.
Financially, let's not discount the fact that one will generally spend several times
more than what they in their original optimistic mindset had set as "the
budget". Under funding is among the first reasons why start-up businesses fail. A
smart business plan will allow you to not only survive personally, but will provide for
implementing contingency plans.
Physical suffering can often accompany one on the ride to success - the stress-related
effects of weight loss or gain, fatigue, even depression. Mental and physical resiliency
is a rudimentary quality to achieving success.
Too often, the largest sacrifice that an achiever has to make is irreparable damage to
relationships in his or her life, when the gift of focus and determination is perceived
as, or becomes, obsession. The "perfect balance" may find a home in books and on
the lecture circuit, but reality has it that true understanding and support by loved ones
are rare commodities. Countless families have fallen apart because the entrepreneurial
spirit was alive in a household. Although this subject is deserving of much more attention
than I can give it here, communication is the key that will see relationships not only
survive, but flourish on the road to success.
I find it amusing when someone just blurts out a quick and disparaging remark about a
successful person. The "yeah, he's got it easy" kind of envious, thoughtless
blurb. I've been known to rebut more than once, "if you only knew". Thing is,
they have no idea what it has taken this person to achieve success. Unfortunately, it's a
concept they will probably never "get". And a result they will probably never
achieve.
The road to success is often a steep and rocky one. There are mountains in your way,
not on the roadmap that you must be prepared to climb. This is the stuff that true
entrepreneurial heroes have to face. The ones who are willing to fight the fight and often
pay the high price.
By the way, and for the record, I did decide to start my Internet marketing company and
I'm pleased to report it is doing just wonderful. I'm also duty bound to say that many of
the above sacrifices have been, and will continue to be made along the way.
Greener valleys lie over the horizon for all of us. But before you leave, know that
Sacrifice is the Missing Cornerstone of Success.