Serving and Leadership
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" We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give. " - Winston Churchill
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7 Steps to Become an Authority in Your Industry

7 Steps to Become an Authority in Your Industry | Serving and Leadership | Scoop.it
How developing your reputation as a leader can help boost your business and brand.
Via Anne Egros, David Hain
donhornsby's insight:

(From the article): "Becoming an authority in your industry can be a great way to promote your business and help you better serve your clients. It takes a consistent dose of education and risk, but the rewards can be well worth the effort."


Excellent suggestions contained in the article.

Anne Egros's curator insight, December 13, 2012 12:43 PM

The last point of this article (http://www.entrepreneur.com/blog/225225)  "Keep Learning", is for me the most important factor to become an expert in your field.

 

For organizing and sharing interesting articles I like Scoop.it. To discuss new topics and ideas with other experts I like Linkedin groups. I am not using yet the new Google+ feature, "communities",  but it seems something interesting.

 

If you have started a Google + community, please share your experience or wait for the next post after I learn how to use this new tool.

 

For organizing ideas and actually learn, I like to write in my blog. Learning by teaching is one of my favorite way to learn. I can't explain clearly something if I did not understand it fully.


What about you ? What do you do to be known as an expert in your industry ?

 

 

David Hain's curator insight, December 14, 2012 2:47 AM

Read also the thoughtful comments from Anne.

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Should We Be Optimistic?

Should We Be Optimistic? | Serving and Leadership | Scoop.it

Being overly optimistic in life puts us at risk. In addition, people who show cheerful, optimistic personality traits during childhood, have a shorter life expectancy than their more serious counter parts. On the other hand, optimists are more psychologically resilient, have stronger immune systems, and live longer on average than more reality-based opposites. So who’s better off in life; the optimist or the pessimist? And who’s reality comes closest to the truth?


Via Sakis Koukouvis
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