Success After Flop - Even Genghis Khan Lost Some Near the start Battles

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Both the worst and the kindest of the artistic achievers had the axiom in themselves and the suppleness to overwhelmed early failures. One of these was none other than Genghis Khan. There are powerful lessons we can learn from him.
In 1162 a offspring, called Temujin, was born in Mongolia clutching a blood clot - a [...]

Casting The Role Of An American President — ‘all Business Is Show Business!

Monday, November 9th, 2009

So, I'm channel surfing in my New York City hotel room, organizing the junk I lugged from a conference to my hotel room floor, junk I'm about to pay an exorbitant surcharge to lug over the border and then throw out once I get home. No point in channel surfing,'cause there's only one thing on, [...]

Thousands of Failures, but Thousands of Patents

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Thomas Edison failed thousands of times before he revolutionized the world by inventing and patenting the incandescent light bulb. Because of his desire to create the incandescent light, he was one of the most persistent people in history. The invention in which Edison had the most failures, the incandescent light, was one of his most [...]