Article Contributed by Guy Kingston
It seems that Ethics is a growth industry. There are even advertisements in the newspapers for “professional ethicists”.
Does this mean that we are getting more ethical? Are we at the place of which Plato dreamed, where “kings are philosophers and philosophers are kings”.
Alas, the opposite seems to be true. The fact that so-called “experts” have to be employed to say what is ethical is just one sign that many people are increasingly incapable of telling right from wrong for themselves.
Indeed, the “professional ethicists” are not really concerned with moral right and wrong. Rather they are a junior branch of the legal profession. Many sectors, especially those related to medicine and human services, now have “codes of ethics” or “codes of conduct”. A breach of these codes may have legal consequences. The purpose of the “professional ethicist” is to give a degree of protection from those legal consequences. Surely this is the very opposite of ethics.
The last century has seen an enormous expansion in the scope of the law in most jurisdictions. Activities which were previously left up to individual conscience are now regulated by the state.
This is particularly true of business.
Yet it has not made business more honest. To rely on force rather than conscience to get people to do what is right is to undermine conscience. When people are forced, rather than persuaded, they will do what they are forced to do and no more. They will feel no sense of obligation.
More and more, the business world is filled with people who are governed by the principle of “what can we get away with”, rather than by what is right.
It was not always so. We must not be so naive as to imagine that there was ever a Golden Age when everyone was always honest – but things certainly used to be better than they are today.
Previous generations were less likely to see a conflict between doing what was morally right and doing what was in their own best interests.
Partly this was due to the greater emphasis that was placed on Reputation in those days. Business communities tended to be smaller, either because they were geographically isolated or because there might be a small number of specialists in very close correspondence. If a man did anything dishonest, it would soon be known by everyone and his chances of remaining in business would be negligible. Today, the global market is so big that it is unlikely that everyone will hear if someone has a bad reputation.
Mainly, however, it was because business communities usually had shared religious values.
Max Weber described the “Protestant Work Ethic”. The same principle which encouraged people to work hard to succeed in business – a desire to please God – also imposed strict honesty on those business dealings. Protestant devotional works sometimes recommend standards that seem laughable today – like not taking advantage of information that was unknown to the other party in a deal and not charging market price where the profit is excessive. Yet the people who read those works often became very wealthy, not least because they had a reputation for fair dealing.
In the same way, Jewish bankers were able to do business, even if the face of virulent Anti-Semitism, because they built a reputation for scrupulous honesty. This only irritated the Anti-Semites even more.
Even today, an entrepreneur is better off if he deals with someone who is concerned about his reputation for honesty – and who possibly believes that there is an Accounting beyond the balance sheets of this life – than relying on any number of laws and regulations and artificial codes for protection.
About the Author
Guy Kingston produces and presents the Mind Your Own Business podcast, offering free business advice to entrepreneurs and business owners. As well as audio podcasts there are more articles like this, compelling videos and a must-read blog. All at www.myobpod.com or you can network and join in discussions on the MYOB Facebook group.
Category: Entrepreneurship
There are billions of web base businesses all over the world, and we keep reading success stories from media. Such sensational news and gossips encourage us to jump in Web World to make more money, to make our life easier. Because there is a thought like internet allows you to grow up easily and when you grown up just retire from your job and travel whole around the world… Oh, i wish it would be so easy to do, however it’s not.
Think about Steve Jobs (All of us know him, but let me mention him again); he found Apple and when he actually started to earn money, he is fired! So he started to work that hard again like his first startup (Apple) for Pixar Studios, and he keeps creating worth even he has billions. Or let’s think about Larry Page or Sergey Brin, should they retire and travel all around the world? Sure not… They keep engraving Google in our brains and keep changing approaches like what they did first.
Won’t we retire to travel all around the world?
No doubt, we will! But there is just one point, it shouldn’t be an aim for your business. Because when you aim to make money with your projects, all your approach changes.
Start to see people like Dollars,
Give up easier when you can’t earn that fast
May jump into other profitable ideas
When you need to decide something, you keep deciding up to Making Money Aim!
What should be the aim?
There is just one way for succesfull businesses; Aim to Change The World!
Choose the idea which you love, cause it helps to go on working hard even you don’t make money. Also you want to fix or develop the things for whole World which you LOVE…
“The only way to do great work is to love what you do.
If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking, and don’t settle.
As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it.”
Steve Jobs
There is nothing else to satisfy you more, if you did something for world. For that reason you will work harder to be satisfied again and again… So when it becomes an addictness, you will start to earn more and more…
What to do then?
?t’s your success, and it’s your decision. While you keep creating worth, spend more time for family, travel all around the world or sell your business to build something different
Your turn, what you LOVE to do? And how will you change the world?
Here are some business failures which i have experienced in my time from running my businessess which have served as great lessons for myself which i believe will benefit you.
I have lost a quarter million dollars in one year that was invested in an Interior Design Company. The whole business went bankrupt. One of the lessons learnt from this failure was in the choice of my partner. I chose the wrong partner.
Here’s a small pointer about finding partners. People always ask me this question, is it good to work with friends? The answer is Yes and No.
In fact, I would say it’s better to work with people whom you are not friends with in the beginning, but you become friends in the process. When you work with friends, you tend to be very similar. You tend to have similar interests, passions and hobbies.
In addition, there are a lot of expectations already preset, assumptions and so on.
In this way, you don’t make it a professional business. It’s the same with family. I don’t know about you, but I would never ever allow anyone in my family to work in my business. Reason being that feelings always get in the way. How are you going to fire your cousin? Or how are you going to fire your friend?
Here’s another lesson learnt. I went into a business that I didn’t have knowledge about and it wasn’t within my circle of competence. I knew nothing about interior design. I had no passion for interior design. I just went in because I was greedy. And that’s what killed me.
So the lesson is to not go into something you have no passion and interest for.
Greed was also one of the lessons I learnt that resulted in me failing. What happened was that when I started, I was given a lot of nice projections from my partner. 1, 2, 3 million dollars in a year, these sort of projections.
I got so excited by the numbers, that there were dollar signs in my head. And the moment there were dollar signs, you get so greedy, and logic goes out of the window leading you in making all the stupid mistakes.
So right now, I always say that when you start a business, expect the best but plan for the worst. Whatever projections people give you, take 50% off. And if after you take 50% off, you can still make money, go for it. So be really conservative in your planning but at the same time, set high goals for it.
Presence in the business is also very important. Focus and Presence.
Someone must be able to be the leader and be able to be in the business 150% of the time and be really focused in that business.
One of the problems with my previous interior design company was this. My partner was not a businessman, he was a designer. He was a great designer but he couldn’t run a business.
And he expected me to be that businessman to drive that business which I couldn’t fulfil because I was running 4 other companies at that point of time.
So that’s why the company collapsed. So you need a key driver, you need someone who is business-focused, who knows marketing
very well, who knows accounting very well, who’s very good at leading the team.
These are some of the lessons that I have learnt from running my business. Hopefully it will give you the reader some insights that you will be able to apply in running your own successful business.
Stretch Out Of Your Comfort Zone
“You can gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You must do the thing which you think you cannot do”. – Eleanor Roosevelt
Last month’s I wrote a post about having the courage to Say YES to your dreams and desires. If you missed reading the article, click here. I encouraged you to create your own I Say YES manifesto to use as a source of inspiration and commitment to consistently show up in intention and action.
To achieve your goals, vision, intentions, dreams… requires stepping out of your comfort zone to stretch yourself and open to new experiences that serve to grow you as a person as well as your business. Attempting to stay where you are is impossible. Change is a constant in life. If you’re not moving forward, you will begin to move backward.
This past weekend, I spent time with a dear friend at her parent’s lakefront home while they were away on vacation. I was really looking forward to relaxing, playing, soaking in the hot tub, and doing some personal transformation work together. So, when she said she really wanted to do a sweat lodge my initial reaction was less than enthusiastic. That was not part of my plans!
Several hours of sweating in total darkness with strangers and being vulnerable felt too uncomfortable! No, no, no!
And then I got very still. What if ????? I let go of the resistance (shifting from constriction to expansion thinking), sat with the idea and considered different options. I could go and support her without participating, experience part of it for a while and stop at any time, or I could stay for the whole experience and really stretch myself. Sweat lodges offer powerfull spiritual, physical, and emotionally cleansing and healing experiences. Intuitively, I sensed that doing the sweat lodge would support some healing and release work that was ready to happen.
So, I said YES.
It was an incredibly wonderful experience. In fact, the whole weekend was filled with gifts and blessings as I experienced several things for the first time. Being fully present to feelings, insights, and sensations was exhilarating and freeing. Each YES opened doors for new experiences and possibilities. I’m still integrating all that happened and it’s a powerfull metaphor to reflect upon the next time I dig in my heels.
It’s easy to come up with reasons and excuses to say no when we feel afraid or uncomfortable. We have the ability to effectively rationalize and justify a point of view to make it sound and feel believable. We become adept at convincing ourselves that our conclusions are accurate.
To add leverage, we collect evidence to back up our NO in case we, or anyone else challenges our decision!
Unless we look more closely, we may miss the truth: we just don’t want to do it, period, especially if the decision feels threatening, uncomfortable or potentially painful.
To achieve your goals, vision, intentions, dreams… requires stepping out of your comfort zone to stretch yourself to new experiences that serve to grow you as a person as well as your business. Attempting to stay where you are is impossible. Change is a constant in life. If you’re not moving forward, you will begin to move backward.
The strength of your NO is often a powerful signal that saying YES to moving forward in spite of the resistance is the step you are meant to take as a leap of faith. Learning to distinguish a valid no from a critical yes is an important skill and talent (intuition) worth developing.
How often does your No response come up when you feel challenged to stretch yourself.
What decisions are you facing now, that are asking for a YES?
What favorite excuses and reasons do you use to justify your position?
What needs to shift to turn your no to YES?
What are you willing to love yourself enough to do, no matter what?
What are you ready to say YES to right NOW?
What will help you stay strong so that you continue to say YES?
It’s your life… make it a great one!
Article contributed by Michelle Ulrich
1.Social networks – how to work it
a.http://www.craigslist.com
b.http://www.fastpitchnetworking.com
c.http://www.ryze.com
d.Ning.com is a create-your-own social network site
2.Free Classified Ads
a.Backpage
b.Craigslist
c.MySpace – need to be a member with a profile, I believe
3.Teleclasses/Podcasts
a.These can be pre-recorded if you don’t want to interact with others
b.Teleclasses are great for getting the word out about your products/services; guest speakers can promote you to their list and increase your list on a monthly basis
c.Use www.fullcalendar.com to promote teleclasses and events
4.Joint Ventures – co-creation of…
a.New products
b.New teleclasses
c.New workshops
d.New podcasts
e.New ebooks
f.Limitless ideas…
5.Strategic Alliances
a.Promote one another via banner ad exchanges
b.Promote one another via ezine or newsletter mentions
6.Article submissions
a.Write an article – submit online
b.Repurpose into an ezine article or ezine series if article is long
c.Repurpose into a podcast
d.Repurpose into an ebook with additional resources
e.Repurpose into a speech/presentation for live events
7.Ezine submissions
a.Write an ezine – submit online to ezine banks
b.Repurpose into an article
c.Repurpose into a podcast
d.Repurpose into an ebook with additional resources
e.Repurpose into a speech/presentation for live events
8.Ezine with tips, resources, trends
a.Submit to ezine banks for additional subscribers
9.Blog
a.Blog or have someone else blog for you no less than 3x/wk
b.Pick a theme for each month to make it easy
c.Base the theme on your teleclasses and ezine, etc. to make all items/tasks easier to complete
10.Affiliate accounts
a.Amazon – book store, software store, web store, etc.
b.Commission Junction
c.Create your own affiliate account – essentially provides a means for others interested in your product a way for them to make a small percentage while you gain a virtual sales force
11.Blogtalk Radio – 15 mins – longer monologues or full blown radio show; record to podcast
a.Repurpose into an article
b.Repurpose into an ezine piece
c.Repurpose into a podcast
d.Repurpose into an ebook with additional resources
e.Repurpose into a speech/presentation for live events
12.Get involved; share your passion
a.Share your passion with others
i.Online
1.Social networks
2.Forums
3.Message boards
ii.In person
1.Networking
2.Volunteer opportunities in community
3.Church
4.Youth groups
5.Etc.
iii.Don’t forget to share your projects and/or websites with others
About the Author
Michelle Ulrich is the Chief Villager and founder of The Virtual Nation™, an educational destination for Virtual Professionals around the globe. Michelle is an avid believer in giving back to her industry and she does this by offering coaching, teleclasses, resources, and tools, in addition to providing a community of learning, a nation of culture, and a virtual village for her members.
She maintains her private practice where she specializes in working with authors, coaches and speakers who struggle to keep up with e-commerce and new technologies. Clients can check out her services at www.virtualbusinessmarketing.com, while Virtual Assistants can find her over at www.thevirtualnation.com. She can be reached by telephone at (916) 536-9799 in the Pacific time zone.