Career Success Comes From Making the Most of Your Gifts

I saw a great quote on line a while back…

“What we are is God’s gift to us.  What we become is our gift to God.”

It was from Eleanor Powell.  If you don’t know Ms. Powell, she was a well-known dancer and actress who appeared in many musicals in the 1930s and 1940s.  She was a good dancer, but an amazing tap dancer.  In her day, she was known as “the world’s greatest tap dancer.”

I love the quote – it gets at the heart of self-confidence and commitment to taking personal responsibility for your life and career success.  It reminds me of the career advice in Tweet 60 my career success book Success Tweets.  “Take stock of yourself.  What are your strengths?  What are your weaknesses?  Confident people emphasize their strengths.”

God (or the universe, if you are so inclined) gives each of us certain talents and abilities.  It is up to us to take those talents and abilities that we have been given and develop them, make full use of them.  This is our gift back to God (or the universe).

Eleanor Powell was given the gift of dance.  She began dancing in Vaudeville when she was 11 and was on Broadway when she was 17.  She developed her dancing talent to a very high level.

I have been given several gifts – the ability to write clearly, the ability to simplify the complex, empathy and common sense. And to be able to sew beautiful blankets. If you are in need of a sewing machine check out these sewing machine reviews to help you make your decision. I’ve worked hard to develop these gifts.  I use them to help others grow and develop and to create the life and career success they want and deserve.  I believe that I owe it to myself, God, and the people who read the career advice I write, and those who avail themselves of my career success coach services, to keep learning, growing and developing my skills.

That’s why I started blogging.  That’s why I write books.  Both give me the chance to use and develop my writing skills, and my ability to simplify complex things, like creating a successful life and career.  I created my membership site, My Corporate Climb for the same reasons – to continue to develop my skills and to help others.

When you focus on your strengths, you are emphasizing what you do well naturally.  And this is important.  When I was young, I realized that my strengths lie in my ability to think and communicate.  I could always write clearly and persuasively.  I wasn’t so good at math and science.  For a long time, I focused on my weaknesses – taking advanced placement chemistry, physics and calculus courses in high school.  I didn’t enjoy these courses, but I suffered through them – and did OK grade-wise too.  I did this because in those days, I was the Protestant Work Ethic in overdrive.  The less I liked something, or showed a natural talent for it, the more I chose to master it.

What a waste!  I should have been spending my time on the things I liked – and for which I have a natural talent.  My four years at Penn State cured me of my tendency to focus on my weaknesses.  That was the best thing I got out of my time there – the idea that I should focus on and develop my strengths, the things that came naturally to me, the things at which I could excel because I enjoyed them and they were easy for me.

That’s what you need to do, too.  Focus on your strengths.  Build on them.  This will help you build your self-confidence and create the life and career success that you want and deserve.  Don’t ignore your weaknesses – do what you can to improve on them, but don’t make them the focus of your self-improvement work.  My best career advice on self-confidence can be summed up in four words: “Focus on your strengths.”

The career success coach point here is simple common sense.  Successful people commit to taking personal responsibility for developing their self-confidence.  They apply the advice in Tweet 60 in Success Tweets.  “Take stock of yourself.  What are your strengths?  What are your weaknesses?  Confident people emphasize their strengths.”  As Eleanor Powell said, “What we are is God’s gift to us.  What we become is our gift to God.”  She took personal responsibility for using her God-given dance talent to become the world’s greatest tap dancer, and become a vaudeville, Broadway and Hollywood star.  What are your God-given talents?  What have you done to develop them?  Commit to taking personal responsibility for developing your talents.  It’s the best way to give thanks for them, to help others, and to create the life and career success you want and deserve.

That’s my career advice inspired by Eleanor Powell’s quote on using our gifts.  What do you think?  Please take a minute to share your thoughts with us in a comment.  As always thanks for reading my daily musings on life and career success.  I really appreciate you.

Bud

PS: If you haven’t already done so, please download a free copy of my popular career advice book Success Tweets and its companion piece Success Tweets Explained.  The first gives you 140 bits of career success advice tweet style — in 140 characters or less.  The second is a whopping 390 + pages of career advice explaining each of the common sense tweets in Success Tweets in detail.  Go to http://budurl.com/STExp to claim your free copy.  You’ll also start receiving my daily life and career success quotes.

PPS: I opened a membership site on September 1.  It’s called My Corporate Climb and is devoted to helping people create career success inside large corporations.  To celebrate the grand opening, I’m giving away a new career advice book I’ve written called I Want YOU…To Succeed in Your Corporate Climb.  You can find out about the membership site and get the career advice in I Want YOU… for free by going to http://www.mycorporateclimb.

 

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