
San Francisco, California – Another year has flown by—in fact, so has another decade! How are you going to make sure to stick to the resolutions you make in January? Wouldn’t it be great to break the cycle of starting and stopping on your goals? If only you had some way of keeping yourself on track, you could finally reach that important goal.
According to career experts Gladys Stone and Fred Whelan, keeping your motivation high is the key to reaching success. The way to do this is to stay focused on your goal every day. Stone and Whelan say that anyone can reach a goal with the right process. Their book, GOAL! Your 30-Day Game Plan for Business and Career Success, provides proven, time-tested techniques for staying on course and reaching your goals.
The main reason people don’t reach their goals is that they give up along the way. Either they get bored, discouraged or hit plateaus. And then of course there’s always Murphy’s Law. The difference between people who consistently reach their goals from those who do not, is that they keep plugging away until they get what they want. That’s the hard part for most people, until now.
Most people are excited on day one, but lose that enthusiasm within the first 30 days, say the authors. That’s why they created the 30 Day Goal Track as part of their book. It’s designed to keep you motivated every day until you reach your goal!
With GOAL! the resolutions you make this year will come true!
More About GOAL!:
Whelan and Stone’s new book GOAL! provides an easy-to-follow formula for achieving any goal in business or personal life, based on the authors’ experience coaching the world’s top business executives. GOAL!’s action-oriented approach to success has two phases. Phase One gives you a plan of action for immediately doing what needs to be done. “Everyone’s familiar with the philosophy about the power of positive thinking. Our book adds to that the power of positive doing,” said co-author Gladys Stone.
In Phase Two, the 30-Day Goal track helps you when you need it most, giving you a powerful tool to keep you disciplined, focused and on target while you work toward your goal. “Our book takes the unique approach of having a person write from the mindset of having already reached their goal,” added co-author Fred Whelan. “When someone starting out on a goal assumes they have already achieved it, it reinforces that they can and will do it.”