How To Succeed At Anything
Lifehack put together a list of the top 10 skills that you need to succeed at almost anything. The top 5 were:
1. Public Speaking
The ability to speak clearly, persuasively, and forcefully in front of an audience – whether an audience of 1 or of thousands – is one of the most important skills anyone can develop. People who are effective speakers come across as more comfortable with themselves, more confident, and more attractive to be around. Being able to speak effectively means you can sell anything – products, of course, but also ideas, ideologies, worldviews. And yourself – which means more opportunities for career advancement, bigger clients, or business funding.
2. Writing
Writing well offers many of the same advantages that speaking well offers: good writers are better at selling products, ideas, and themselves than poor writers. Learning to write well involves not just mastery of grammar but the development of the ability to organize one’s thoughts into a coherent form and target it to an audience in the most effective way possible. Given the huge amount of text generated by almost every transaction – from court briefs and legislation running into the thousands of pages to those foot-long receipts you get when you buy gum these days – a person who is a master of the written word can expect doors to open in just about every field.
3. Self-Management
If success depends of effective action, effective action depends on the ability to focus your attention where it is needed most, when it is needed most. Strong organizational skills, effective productivity habits, and a strong sense of discipline are needed to keep yourself on track.
4. Networking
Networking is not only for finding jobs or clients. In an economy dominated by ideas and innovation, networking creates the channel through which ideas flow and in which new ideas are created. A large network, carefully cultivated, ties one into not just a body of people but a body of relationships, and those relationships are more than just the sum of their parts. The interactions those relationships make possible give rise to innovation and creativity – and provide the support to nurture new ideas until they can be realized.
5. Critical Thinking
We are exposed to hundreds, if not thousands, of times more information on a daily basis than our great-grandparents were. Being able to evaluate that information, sort the potentially valuable from the trivial, analyze its relevance and meaning, and relate it to other information is crucial – and woefully under-taught. Good critical thinking skills immediately distinguish you from the mass of people these days.
Rounding out the top 10 were:
6. Decision-Making
7. Math
8. Research
9. Relaxation
10. Basic Accounting
What would make your top 10 list? Do you agree with these 10?
Evan CarmichaelYoungEntrepreneur.com Blog Manager
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2 Comments so far
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Hi, Evan
How about understanding one’s personal obstacles? These might be known as weaknesses to some, but they are weaknesses only in context.
For example, talking about numbers or figures bores me senseless, so I avoid jobs or tasks that require this behavior. It might be seen as a weakness to some, but I surround myself by those who are good at speaking in terms of numbers and figures. They complement my style and remove any need I would have had for that focus.
That’s the best list I’ve read - encapsulates exactly what it’s all about.