Showing posts with label E-books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label E-books. Show all posts

Feb 17, 2010

The Art of Shameless Self-Promotion


"This is a full article I've read....Very Interesting and Hardly put into Practice? Can u do it?

by Nathan Hangen


I’ve found it just doesn’t pay to crow too much about what I’ve accomplished.

Sure, I celebrate when things go well. But I’ve found that talking too much about my achievements leads not only to criticism, but to disappointment.

There’s always going to be someone who’s done more or worked harder. And until they carve my name into the side of the moon, I see no reason in puffing myself up. The minute you get a big head is the same minute that reality smacks you and you realize that you aren’t as cool as you think you are.

So self-adulation is something I try to stay away from. But self promotion? That’s a whole different story.


If you take a look at the most successful (or talked about) people in any field, you’ll almost always see someone incredibly talented in the art of self-promotion.

Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad Poor Dad books, mentioned at one point that he’s a “bestselling author” and not a “best-writing author.” Dean Karnazes, known as “The Ultramarathon Man,” is not the best athlete in his field, but he is by far the best at self-promotion.

So what’s the difference?

The reason that self-promotion works and self-adulation doesn’t is because self-promotion is the art of spreading ideas, concepts, and a greater vision. Self-adulation is just the promotion of accomplishments, deeds that have already been done.

When you promote ideas, you give people something to cheer for. You give people a cause to support. People, in many ways, are selfish. They promote the things that make them feel good. Your accomplishments aren’t likely to make them feel good, but your ideas do.

Your ideas might inspire hope, thought, or action . . . but as a general rule, good ideas inspire something.

People promote Chris Brogan because he makes them feel good. His ideas inspire thought and that warm fuzzy feeling we all get when we make a sincere connection.

On the other hand, you and I aren’t going around bragging about how many books he’s sold or how many speeches he’s given. We don’t care about that because it’s the ideas that inspire . . . not the achievements.

How to create a self-promotion platform

1. The first step is to be confident. If you aren’t inspired by your actions or ideas, no one else will be either.

Look at Muhammad Ali, one of the greatest self-promoters in history. We loved him not just because he truly was “the greatest,” but also for his integrity and the boldness of his ideas.

If you think Ali’s success was only about his athletic ability, compare your feelings about Ali to your feelings about Mike Tyson. Tyson’s accomplishments were magnificent, but he never communicated a greater vision that made us cheer.

2. The next step is to start spreading your ideas. You can’t be wishy washy . . . you have to stand for something.

Make your vision as clear and as concise as possible. Brand yourself and your ideas as unique. (Remember, although few ideas are genuinely unique, your expression can be.) Seth Godin does this exceptionally well.

3. Once you have a platform, start your campaign. Use strong, descriptive language when explaining your ideas and plan of action. Build a tight and loyal community that believes in you, then inspire and empower them to take action.

Make it cool to be a fan, like Gary Vee did with his Vaynernation wristbands or like Lance Armstrong did with his yellow bracelets. Having a symbolic identifier like this is extremely powerful.

4. Lastly, don’t be afraid to talk about your ideas and spread the message. Just remember that it’s not about your world . . . it’s about how others can fit into it.

Creating buzz is essential, so reach out to power brokers and tell them why they should promote you. If they won’t, create power brokers from within. Build others up until they have the power to build you up. This last part is something that Oprah excels at, and it’s how she’s built a billion-dollar empire.

Your ideas need you

If you implement this plan successfully, you’ll probably take some flak. People might label you over-confident or cocky.

That’s good. Define yourself in such a way that people either love you or hate you.

There are fans out there for every self-promoter. Your task is to find them. That, and to make it easy for them to bring a friend.

Your ideas need you. If you have a vision, don’t let anyone stand in your way.

I know it sounds a bit “out there,” but I firmly believe that ideas are living things. They need you to get over your self-adulation, to get out there, and to fight for them. Are you ready?

About the Author: Nathan Hangen is the co-founder of Beyond Blogging, a resource that draws on some of the web’s most successful bloggers to tell you the truth about what it takes to get to their level. He writes about social entrepreneurship at NathanHangen.com.

Feb 2, 2009

10 books try to make sense of the financial crisis

BY JAMES PRESSLEY Bloomberg News
February 1, 2009


1. THE ORIGIN OF FINANCIAL CRISES by George Cooper (Vintage, $12.95 paper). Cooper, a seasoned central-bank watcher, shows how muddled thinking at the U.S. Federal Reserve allowed excess credit to build up in the economy, cycle after cycle, inflating asset prices into ever bigger bubbles. His solution: Require the Fed to prick ballooning credit early and often.
2. GREENSPAN'S BUBBLES by William A. Fleckenstein (McGraw-Hill, $21.95). Fleckenstein, the president of Fleckenstein Capital Inc. in Seattle, presents a damning account of how former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan inflated two asset bubbles that mutated into some $11 trillion in home-mortgage debt.
3. MR. MARKET MISCALCULATES by James Grant (Axios, $22). The author's foresight is on display in this anthology of articles from his redoubtable newsletter, Grant's Interest Rate Observer. In 1999, when the bestseller "Dow 36,000" appeared, Grant imagined a different asset class reaching "Real Estate 36,000." By 2001, he was reporting how Americans were mining their home equity and even "day trading" houses.
4. THE RETURN OF DEPRESSION ECONOMICS AND THE CRISIS OF 2008, by Paul Krugman (W.W. Norton, $24.95). Nobel Prize-winner Krugman dashed out this new edition of his book on the crises that ravaged Latin America and Asia in the 1980s and '90s. The chapter on Japan's decade-long slump offers a spooky preview of what's now unfolding in the United States.
5. THE TWO TRILLION DOLLAR MELTDOWN by Charles R. Morris (PublicAffairs, $13.95 paper). Last year Morris startled investors when he predicted that the bursting credit bubble would result in at least $1 trillion in losses to the banking and other investment sectors. With write-downs and credit losses now totaling $991 billion, the paperback edition of the book bears a new title: "The Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown."
6. CHAIN OF BLAME by Paul Muolo and Matthew Padilla (Wiley, $27.95). This journalistic thriller chronicles how subprime-mortgage lending rose from the ruins of the savings-and-loan crisis, slithered throughout the financial system and ended with more than 1 million Americans losing their homes. Muolo and Padilla introduce the bankers, non-bank lenders, loan brokers and underwriters who drove the reckless practices that engulfed institutions including Bear Stearns Cos., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co.
7. BAD MONEY by Kevin Phillips (Penguin, $16). The former Republican strategist lays out a harsh case against Wall Street and Washington, depicting the United States as an overstretched empire slumping toward the fate of Hapsburg Spain, the maritime Dutch Republic and imperial Britain. The book presents primers on everything from securitization to government manipulation of inflation data. What sets it apart is Phillips' emphasis on the symbiotic relationship between politicians and big money.
8. THE SUBPRIME SOLUTION by Robert J. Shiller (Princeton University Press, $16.95). When this Yale economist looks at the subprime-mortgage meltdown, he sees "a historic turning point" with parallels to the Treaty of Versailles, the Great Depression and the Marshall Plan. Shiller says the crisis is tearing at America's social fabric and will probably slow economic growth for years. His solution: additional financial innovations, to make the housing market less bubble-prone and more open to people with low incomes.
9. THE GREAT INFLATION AND ITS AFTERMATH by Robert J. Samuelson (Random House, $26). At a time when the word "deflation" is getting a workout, Samuelson offers a history of how good political intentions stoked an inflationary hell in the 1970s - and how only bold, painful action smothered the flames. The Great Inflation refers to how U.S. inflation rose from negligible levels in the mid-'60s to double digits in the early '80s. Though the episode scarred a generation, our memory of it has faded, says the columnist for Newsweek and The Washington Post.
10. THE NEW PARADIGM FOR FINANCIAL MARKETS by George Soros (PublicAffairs, $22.95). For 20 years, Soros has challenged the theory that markets, however choppy, always move toward equilibrium. Now the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression has handed him evidence that the hypothesis is dangerous as well as flawed. A jumble of autobiography, philosophy and market history, the book offers solutions that range from abandoning some financial instruments to curbing lending. If his pet theories annoy you - "reflexivity," anyone? - skip to the section where Soros provides a diary of his own decisions as a hedge-fund manager.

Please share me to read if u guys happen to own any of these books.
'd love to understand more!!!! Hope i do have time and spirit to do it.

Jun 23, 2008

Reading time?

Well, if u are interested.

Preah Vihear Proposal

Enjoy...

Credit is given to Samphy and Socheata

P.S. The purpose of this post is just for ya info only.

May 12, 2008

Shake Girls - a graphic novel

This is the graphic novel on tragic Cambodian tale. Fruit shake girl, easy to read. check it out!
You can read it online.

Credit given to: Samphy, his friend and the author

Jan 17, 2008

E-books on Architecture & Civil Engineering

I found this site quite interesting. Click here...