The Secret to Business Success: Act on Your Ideas
by II Research

Published on this site: April 11th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

The real secret of a success is simple: Do something
about your ideas. Each of us has seen a new idea and said, "Why,
I thought of that a year ago." We say it with scorn,
but we should direct the scorn at ourselves, not at the person
who had the drive to do something about it.
Successful idea men generate ideas all the time, and they
don't hoard them. They do something about them, even if they
give them away. There are a lot of other satisfactions than
money in doing your. When I give an idea away and see it acted
upon, I get a great thrill of satisfaction and accomplishment.
The important thing is to keep having ideas and to keep putting
them to work.
Most of us are lazy, however. We mean to do better, to improve
ourselves, to make this year better than last one. But we
fall down, we forget, we drift.
There are ways we keep prodding ourselves into reaching farther,
to going beyond ourselves. We must, just like an athlete,
consciously exercise our brain cells. If we do this, we will
be amazed at how our creative energies will increase.
The more we see, the more our powers of observation increase.
It is imperative that we push, goad, drive, and spur ourselves
into being more creative. The more we look, the more we see.
The more we think, the more thoughts we have. The more combinations
of ideas we try, the more combinations we realize are available.
The more we practice the principles of problem solving, the
more problems we will solve.
Listen to H. W. Prentis, Jr., Chairman of the Board of
Armstrong Cork: "To analyze and synthesize is not
always easy, but here, as in most things, practice increases
one's ability. It was interesting for me to watch myself
develop
to the point where I could tackle problems I could not possibly
have handled a few years before. Unless a man tries, he cannot
develop this capacity. In this business of taking things
apart,
there's hardly a week passes that something doesn't come
up that seems just about insoluble, like a greased pole you
cannot
possibly climb. But if you keep at it long enough -keep the
problem constantly before you-gradually you can break it
down
into its component parts, which you can grasp and solve."
I learned to exercise my creative powers several years ago
when I read an article in the Reader's Digest, which advised "Try Giving Yourself Away." I
tried it.
My first attempt was a smashing failure, but I still found
it was fun. I broke a shoelace one morning and couldn't find
a substitute, so I sat right down and wrote a number of shoe
manufacturers, suggesting they give a spare shoelace away
with a new pair of shoes, or send a pair to a customer after
six months. The idea didn't catch on, but I got a stack of
amusing letters from shoe manufacturers for my troubles.
Later I was writing to a friend overseas. I wanted to send
the letter airmail-the postage was high and rated by half-ounces,
but I couldn't tell how much the onion-skin paper weighed.
I wrote several paper manufacturers and got some action. I
didn't get a free box of stationery, but I do have the satisfaction
of walking into a stationery store or a Wool-worth's and seeing
the weight of the paper-one sheet, two, three, and so forth-printed
on the bottom of the box of airmail stationery. I admit it
gives me a real lift and feeling of accomplishment. This increases
my motivation to do something about other ideas, bigger ideas.
It boosts my confidence and makes me know that my ideas can
be put to work, that someone will listen to it when I have
one.
A bigger idea I'm much more proud of is the dial-a-prayer
one. I read on the subway one night about a YMCA man in Baltimore
who had an inspirational message, which people could get by
phoning a certain number. I was job hunting at the time, and
I thought what a lift I would get if I could dial a number
and get a Scripture reading or a prayer before going in to
have an interview for a job. Then I thought of all the other
times I needed a lift in a day full of the pressures of modern
life.
I tried to get this done in New York but failed. I have since
learned that the idea had struck other people, and that it
was practiced on the West Coast. But I didn't know this, and
a year or so afterward I tried again to get some action on
this -and it caught on in New York City (Circle 6-4200). Today
hundreds of churches have the service, and many churches have
had to add numerous telephone numbers and tape-recording machines
to keep up with the need. I know the dial-a-prayer idea helps
people when they need help most, and I get a great deal of
satisfaction out of the role I have played in it.

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