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YOUR SELF PROMOTION & SMALL BUSINESS MARKETING GUIDE:
Read Molly Gordon's free online guide "How to Overcome Fears and Anxiety". It outlines four principles that have freed dozens of her clients and hundreds of readers of her newsletter from crippling fear. If you work through this guide and keep a 21-day journal of your experience with fear, you will set in motion a long-term shift that will empower and support you for the rest of your life. How to Achieve Success: What Gets in the Way of Success I don't know about you, but sometimes I wish success were a simple matter of following the right formula. I mean, wouldn't it be great if you knew for certain that meditating for 30 minutes a day, exercising for an hour five times a week, eating five servings of vegetables, reading the right books, and flossing would lead to perfection?... Click to continue Read also: Do you know why good people should SELL themselves? Tending the Seeds of Business Purpose and Life Purpose |
Why Relieving Anxiety Can Be Bad for Your Business
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If they gave merit badges for anxiety, accidental entrepreneurs would have a bunch of them. The quintessential anxiety-provoking circumstance is a gap between how things are and how you want them to be coupled with uncertainty about how to close that gap. That just about perfectly describes self-employment (or any learning situation, for that matter). There is so much uncertainty involved in working for ourselves that we can become habituated to anxiety. We assume that there will always be situations that require gritting our teeth and sucking up. If the rewards of self-employment outweigh the emotional cost, we keep going; otherwise, we get "real" jobs. So far, it might seem that finding ways to relieve anxiety should be a high priority. Nothing could be further from the truth. Here's why. To begin with, looking for ways to relieve anxiety presupposes that anxiety is inevitable, and it's not. Yes, self-employment is full of situations that commonly produce anxiety, but it's not the situations themselves that make us so uncomfortable. It's our presumption that uncertainty is a problem. Tell that to an inventor, and he'll cry, "Nonsense." Tell it to an artist, and you'll get the same response. To the creative mind, caps and uncertainties are not problems to be solved but opportunities, possibilities, invitations to be explored. When we lives as creators, the very situations that might cause us to shudder with anxiety evoke excitement and curiosity. The second reason that relieving anxiety doesn't help grow a business is that it works too well. What I mean is that reducing anxiety causes us to feel better, at which point we stop doing whatever we were doing to reduce anxiety. In time, the underlying problem re-appears, and we get anxious again and take action. A classic example is how the accidental entrepreneur approaches marketing and sales. When business is good, who thinks about marketing? When business slows down, anxiety goes up and we use it to spur ourselves on in search of work. As soon as we have enough work, we stop doing whatever we were doing to get it. How do we break the cycle? First, let's acknowledge that anxiety can arise in spite of our best efforts to be creative and go with the flow. I don't want any of us to beat ourselves up for being anxious – as if that would help. (Hey, if that worked, I'd be on cloud nine all the time.) Rather than mustering our resources to break the cycle, we would do well to make space for anxiety when it arises. Thinking about the causes of anxiety does not create space. Bringing awareness to how anxiety feels in our bodies does. As you turn your attention to your body, notice where you might be contracting or resisting the way you feel. See how it might be to open up instead. Make room for the feelings just for the sake of seeing what happens. Making space in and of itself evokes a different way of being. When we make space for anxiety, we become its witnesses rather than its puppets. As witnesses, we can also observe the anxiety-provoking gap without turning it into a problem. If what lies on the other side of the gap is truly meaningful for us, anxiety will give way to inventiveness. Making space is anxiety transformation, not anxiety relief. The cycle becomes anxiety-awareness/space-inventiveness-action. When we know how to transform anxiety, we no longer need to avoid it.
Do you ever worry about whether you have the credentials you need to succeed? Read this article about the most important of all success secrets to find out how credentials can sabotage your business. |
It takes more than
If you work for yourself or are thinking about taking the plunges, please
take 4-5 minutes to find out of The Way of the Accidental Entrepreneur is
right for you.
It's the foundation for a complete system for building a healthy income from self-employment even when you don't think like a business person. In order for that system to work, the book comes with some important bonuses.
That's why it takes a Web page to describe it. Even so, it will only take you a few minutes to find out if the book is right for you.
If it's not right for you, I ask that you pass the link along to a friend or colleague.
If you don't know, ask me any questions you have about the book and what it does. I want to make it easy for you to make the decision that feels right.
Thanks!

Contact Master Certified Coach Molly Gordon at:
Shaboom Inc. Life could be a dream…
PO Box 195
Suquamish, WA 98392-0195
mgordon@authenticpromotion.com
As a business coach and small business marketing consultant, Molly Gordon, MCC, is available in Greater Seattle Area and internationally
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I enjoy every issue of Molly's ezine and appreciate her excellent
counsel that helps me get another perspective on Marketing and often gives
confirmation. I admire how Molly authentically puts herself out there - I
see Molly as a model coach.
Keep up the great inspirational work, Molly!
Irene Leonard, Business Coach for Lawyers, Seattle, WA CoachingForChange.com
Molly's writing is clear and concise, the ezine address issues and questions of concern to me, and Molly has insights to share that are both to the point and things I haven't considered. I find the ezine helpful and thought-provoking.
An acknowledged connection between my internal world and my work points me in the direction of where to work with self. I learn about others out there providing services that might be helpful. A view of sales and promotion is honest, open, clear, doable and helps to take the fear and annoyance out of it.
This is an ideal ezine for small business owners with a spiritual bent.
Julia Rinne, Life Transformation Coach, Napa, CA
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Date Last Modified: October 28, 2007