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Review: Becoming Unbelievably Successful, by John Knotts

Book Becoming Unbelievably Successful

I bought this book a year ago, scanned it, and put it aside. I was too wrapped up in finishingu00a0 and self-publishing my own book and my u201ctoo cool for the peopleu201d cynicism kicked in every time, I picked it up.

n

I am not really the target market for this book. Iu2019m 76 and comfortably retired, not really in the becoming unbelievably successful game. And yet . . .

n

. . . I got a great deal out of it. I especially liked and am revisiting the description of success defined, ikigai, how to think about and find purpose, and the Universal Laws.

n

John Knotsu2019 story is kind of amazing, from not-so-great student to sergeant in the Air Force to many, many letters after his name, certifications and degrees, working on a doctorate. Heu2019s started businesses and charities and does excellent work helping veterans with PTSD using horses, equine Therapy. John still doesnu2019t call himself unbelievably successful, only says he is u201con the path.u201d

n

I bought this book because Iu2019ve met the author and because I was writing a book on how to be successful in a career (Traveling the Consulting Road: Career Wisdom for new consultants, candidates, and their mentors), so John Knotts and I have something in common. We both wantu00a0 to share what weu2019ve learned to make othersu2019 path easier.

n

This is a book about self-leadership, about taking responsibility for your life and creating the life you want. I have in my life been this proactive and I have also just let life happen to me. In my experience being proactive works better. This is a lesson, I relearned far too many times, but finally got right. Would this book have helped me? Maybe.

n

There is a great deal in this book that will help someone become successful and it is clear that it is better if you start earlier rather than later. But I think John believes that if someone is the kind of high school student he describes himself as being (or that I was), that this book would be extraordinarily helpful. It would, but I doubt that I would ever have read it. If a parent or mentor bought it for me, I might have read it, but not in a way that Iu2019d have gotten much out of it.

n

You see this is a workbook. John Knotts shares some very interesting ideas, some genuinely helpful ones in fact, but first you have to have thought about what success means to you, which probably means experiencing a little success and a little failure, even vicariously. Then you have to sit down to do the work. This book contains a helpful framework for the work.

n

The two most important chapters are Chapter 4, defining what success means for you, and Chapter 7, creating the plan. John has questions at the end of each chapter, but those questions arenu2019t all equal. He has recall questions to stimulate your memory, which are important, but u201cteachy.u201d The most important questions are the ones that deal with your application of the concepts to your life.

n

I came to learn (the hard way) that success, whether in business or life, is first about clear direction. Knowing where you are going and what you want to achieve is critical. Then it is about building capability, knowledge, skills, and support system to get you there. And it is about connections, the people who can help you on your path. This book covers all that and much more.

n

But itu2019s a workbook; it wonu2019t work unless you do the work.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Available Now On Amazon

n

Please forgive the crass commercialism. I havenu2019t figured out how to attract sales for my book without hawking it. ud83dude0a – Alan

n

n

“,”tablet”:”

I bought this book a year ago, scanned it, and put it aside. I was too wrapped up in finishing and self-publishing my own book and my u201ctoo cool for the peopleu201d cynicism kicked in every time, I picked it up.

n

I am not really the target market for this book. Iu2019m 76 and comfortably retired, not really in the becoming unbelievably successful game. And yet . . .

n

. . . I got a great deal out of it. I especially liked and am revisiting the description of success defined, ikigai, how to think about and find purpose, and the Universal Laws.

n

John Knotsu2019 story is kind of amazing, from not-so-great student to sergeant in the Air Force to many, many letters after his name, certifications and degrees, working on a doctorate. Heu2019s started businesses and charities and does excellent work helping veterans with PTSD using horses, equine therapy. John still doesnu2019t call himself unbelievably successful, only says he is u201con the path.u201d

n

I bought this book because Iu2019ve met the author and because I was writing a book on how to be successful in a career (Traveling the Consulting Road: Career wisdom for new consultants, candidates, and their mentors), so John Knotts and I have something in common. We both want to share what weu2019ve learned to make othersu2019 path easier.

n

This is a book about self-leadership, about taking responsibility for your life and creating the life you want. I have in my life been this proactive and I have also just let life happen to me. In my experience being proactive works better. This is a lesson, I relearned far too many times, but finally got right. Would this book have helped me? Maybe.

n

There is a great deal in this book that will help someone become successful and it is clear that it is better if you start earlier rather than later. But I think John believes that if someone is the kind of high school student he describes himself as being (or that I was), that this book would be extraordinarily helpful. It would, but I doubt that I would ever have read it. If a parent or mentor bought it for me, I might have read it, but not in a way that Iu2019d have gotten much out of it.

n

You see this is a workbook. John Knotts shares some very interesting ideas, some genuinely helpful ones in fact, but first you have to have thought about what success means to you, which probably means experiencing a little success and a little failure, even vicariously. Then you have to sit down to do the work. This book contains a helpful framework for the work.

n

The two most important chapters are Chapter 4, defining what success means for you, and Chapter 7, creating the plan. John has questions at the end of each chapter, but those questions arenu2019t all equal. He has recall questions to stimulate your memory, which are important, but u201cteachy.u201d The most important questions are the ones that deal with your application of the concepts to your life.

n

I came to learn (the hard way) that success, whether in business or life, is first about clear direction. Knowing where you are going and what you want to achieve is critical. Then it is about building capability, knowledge, skills, and support system to get you there. And it is about connections, the people who can help you on your path. This book covers all that and much more.

n

But itu2019s a workbook; it wonu2019t work unless you do the work.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Available Now On Amazon

n

Please forgive the crass commercialism. I havenu2019t figured out how to attract sales for my book without hawking it. ud83dude0a – Alan

“,”phone”:”

n

I bought this book a year ago, scanned it, and put it aside. I was too wrapped up in finishing and self-publishing my own book and my u201ctoo cool for the peopleu201d cynicism kicked in every time, I picked it up.

n

I am not really the target market for this book. Iu2019m 76 and comfortably retired, not really in the becoming unbelievably successful game. And yet . . .

n

. . . I got a great deal out of it. I especially liked and am revisiting the description of success defined, ikigai, how to think about and find purpose, and the Universal Laws.

n

John Knotsu2019 story is kind of amazing, from not-so-great student to sergeant in the Air Force to many, many letters after his name, certifications and degrees, working on a doctorate. Heu2019s started businesses and charities and does excellent work helping veterans with PTSD using horses, equine therapy. John still doesnu2019t call himself unbelievably successful, only says he is u201con the path.u201d

n

I bought this book because Iu2019ve met the author and because I was writing a book on how to be successful in a career (Traveling the Consulting Road: Career wisdom for new consultants, candidates, and their mentors), so John Knotts and I have something in common. We both want to share what weu2019ve learned to make othersu2019 path easier.

n

This is a book about self-leadership, about taking responsibility for your life and creating the life you want. I have in my life been this proactive and I have also just let life happen to me. In my experience being proactive works better. This is a lesson, I relearned far too many times, but finally got right. Would this book have helped me? Maybe.

n

There is a great deal in this book that will help someone become successful and it is clear that it is better if you start earlier rather than later. But I think John believes that if someone is the kind of high school student he describes himself as being (or that I was), that this book would be extraordinarily helpful. It would, but I doubt that I would ever have read it. If a parent or mentor bought it for me, I might have read it, but not in a way that Iu2019d have gotten much out of it.

n

You see this is a workbook. John Knotts shares some very interesting ideas, some genuinely helpful ones in fact, but first you have to have thought about what success means to you, which probably means experiencing a little success and a little failure, even vicariously. Then you have to sit down to do the work. This book contains a helpful framework for the work.

n

The two most important chapters are Chapter 4, defining what success means for you, and Chapter 7, creating the plan. John has questions at the end of each chapter, but those questions arenu2019t all equal. He has recall questions to stimulate your memory, which are important, but u201cteachy.u201d The most important questions are the ones that deal with your application of the concepts to your life.

n

I came to learn (the hard way) that success, whether in business or life, is first about clear direction. Knowing where you are going and what you want to achieve is critical. Then it is about building capability, knowledge, skills, and support system to get you there. And it is about connections, the people who can help you on your path. This book covers all that and much more.

n

But itu2019s a workbook; it wonu2019t work unless you do the work.

n

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Available Now On Amazon

n

Please forgive the crass commercialism. I havenu2019t figured out how to attract sales for my book without hawking it. ud83dude0a – Alan

n

“}},”slug”:”et_pb_text”}” data-et-multi-view-load-tablet-hidden=”true” data-et-multi-view-load-phone-hidden=”true”>

I bought this book a year ago, scanned it, and put it aside. I was too wrapped up in finishing  and self-publishing my own book and my “too cool for the people” cynicism kicked in every time, I picked it up.

I am not really the target market for this book. I’m 76 and comfortably retired, not really in the becoming unbelievably successful game. And yet . . .

. . . I got a great deal out of it. I especially liked and am revisiting the description of success defined, ikigai, how to think about and find purpose, and the Universal Laws.

John Knots’ story is kind of amazing, from not-so-great student to sergeant in the Air Force to many, many letters after his name, certifications and degrees, working on a doctorate. He’s started businesses and charities and does excellent work helping veterans with PTSD using horses, equine therapy. John still doesn’t call himself unbelievably successful, only says he is “on the path.”

I bought this book because I’ve met the author and because I was writing a book on how to be successful in a career (Traveling the Consulting Road: Career wisdom for new consultants, candidates, and their mentors), so John Knotts and I have something in common. We both want  to share what we’ve learned to make others’ path easier.

This is a book about self-leadership, about taking responsibility for your life and creating the life you want. I have in my life been this proactive and I have also just let life happen to me. In my experience being proactive works better. This is a lesson, I relearned far too many times, but finally got right. Would this book have helped me? Maybe.

There is a great deal in this book that will help someone become successful and it is clear that it is better if you start earlier rather than later. But I think John believes that if someone is the kind of high school student he describes himself as being (or that I was), that this book would be extraordinarily helpful. It would, but I doubt that I would ever have read it. If a parent or mentor bought it for me, I might have read it, but not in a way that I’d have gotten much out of it.

You see this is a workbook. John Knotts shares some very interesting ideas, some genuinely helpful ones in fact, but first you have to have thought about what success means to you, which probably means experiencing a little success and a little failure, even vicariously. Then you have to sit down to do the work. This book contains a helpful framework for the work.

The two most important chapters are Chapter 4, defining what success means for you, and Chapter 7, creating the plan. John has questions at the end of each chapter, but those questions aren’t all equal. He has recall questions to stimulate your memory, which are important, but “teachy.” The most important questions are the ones that deal with your application of the concepts to your life.

I came to learn (the hard way) that success, whether in business or life, is first about clear direction. Knowing where you are going and what you want to achieve is critical. Then it is about building capability, knowledge, skills, and support system to get you there. And it is about connections, the people who can help you on your path. This book covers all that and much more.

But it’s a workbook; it won’t work unless you do the work.

Traveling The Consulting Road Is Available Now On Amazon

Please forgive the crass commercialism. I haven’t figured out how to attract sales for my book without hawking it. 😊 – Alan

The post Review: Becoming Unbelievably Successful, by John Knotts appeared first on Wisdom from Unusual Places.

Originally Published on https://wisdomfromunusualplaces.com/blog/

Alan Cay Culler Writer of Stories and Songs

I'm a writer.

Writing is my fourth career -actor, celebrity speakers booking agent, change consultant - and now writer.
I write stories about my experiences and what I've learned- in consulting for consultants, about change for leaders, and just working, loving and living wisely.

To be clear, I'm more wiseacre than wise man, but I'm at the front end of the Baby Boom so I've had a lot of opportunity to make mistakes. I made more than my share and even learned from some of them, so now I write them down in hopes that someone else might not have to make the same mistakes.

I have also made a habit of talking with ordinary people who have on occasion shared extraordinary wisdom.

Much of what I write about has to do with business because I was a strategic change consultant for thirty-seven years. My bias is that business is about people - called customers, staff, suppliers, shareholders or the community, but all human beings with hopes, and dreams, thoughts and emotions.. They didn't teach me that at the London Business School, nor even at Columbia University's Principles of Organization Development. I learned that first in my theater undergraduate degree, while observing people in order to portray a character.

Now I'm writing these observations in stories, shared here for other Baby Boomers and those who want to read about us.

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