Friday, October 16, 2009

Marc Ostrofsky Dishes Out One Money Making Secret After Another

Mark Victor Hansen and Robert G. Allen had guest Marc Ostrofsky on the conference call last night. This had to be the most informative, most eye-opening conference call I have ever been on.

This guy, Marc, opened the flood gates on how to make money quickly and easily with little or none to start with. People are hurting in this economy and tonight they dished out some immediates answers.

There is no reason for anyone to participate in the recession!

Marc talked about the importance of "MIND SHARE" for anyone doing business on the internet.

Marc Ostrofsky has a new book coming out call, "Get Rich CLICK!" which you will want to buy and buy a copy for everyone you know. It should be the only birthday or Christmas present you give away for years to come. It won't be out for 6 months to a year--but watch for it!

Cash In A Flash by Mark Victor Hansen and Robert Allen is the book you need to read NOW...TODAY! If you have not read this book you are missing out on a wealth of aha moments. This book is really two books in one. One side gives you practical knowledge, enlightened mindset and awareness, and savvy advice, while the other side takes you on a engaging story that will inspire you.


This book takes you beyond what you think you can think or imagine and burst wide open a whole new way of Thinking and Living and Giving and Winning!

Read "Cash In A Flash" today, and tap into the conference calls that Bob and Mark are doing every Thursday.


I am growing by leaps and bounds and what Mark and Bob have shared is a big part of the reason why.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Disney on Mondays

“The way to get started is to stop talking and start doing.”

Walt Disney (1901–1966)
American entrepreneur & entertainment icon




Resourcefulness & Resilience by Disney...




  • First company went bankrupt.

  • Lost the rights to his first successful cartoon character (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit) along with most of his employees.

  • Had a nervous breakdown.

  • Won his first of 22 Academy Awards on a cartoon that he'd completed in black & white but then redid in color from scratch (Flowers and Trees - 1932)

  • Made it through the Great Depression with merchandising deals of Mickey (watches, dolls, etc.)

  • His company employs 150,000 people and has $38 billion in sales.



For Disney fans, the DVD about his life, Walt - The Man Behind the Myth is killer.

Reprinted from Justsell.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

The Cookie Theif

There's a nice poem by Valerie Cox circulating on the Internet about a woman who bought some cookies and a book at an airport and sat down to read and nibble while waiting for her plane. She soon noticed a man sitting next to her, who casually took a cookie from the bag.


Although shocked and seething, the woman remained silent as the man, without the slightest sign of shame or gratitude, quietly helped himself, matching her cookie for cookie.


When there was one cookie left, she watched in amazement as he picked it up, smiled at her as if he were being gracious, and broke it in half. He ate one half and gave her the other. Congratulating herself for maintaining her cool, she said nothing to this rude cookie thief, astonished at the nerve of some people.


Later, when she was settling into her seat on the plane, she rummaged through her purse and discovered the bag of cookies she'd purchased, still unopened. The moral message is contained in the poem's closing stanza:


"If mine are here," she moaned with despair,


"Then the others were his, and he tried to share."


Too late to apologize, she realized with grief,


That she was the rude one, the ingrate, the thief.




Being sure is not the same as being right. Certainty without humility can lead to self-righteousness that distorts our view and understanding of the world and of people.




Humility doesn't require us to be equivocal or doubtful about our deepest convictions. What it asks is that we hold and advocate our beliefs without dismissing the possibility that others may be right instead.




This is Michael Josephson reminding you that character counts.




Michael Josephson

www.charactercounts.org