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Questions to Get Closer to You: Question 5

June 26, 2007 by Liz

Get Closer to You

This is a series of questions, I don’t know how many. They are the ones I ask when I help folks get closer to their personal identity.

What are you doing when you have your best ideas?

I’ll answer first to get things started.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Check out the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Related
Branding: 5 Ways to Help You Find Out Who You Are
Questions to Get Closer to You: Question 4
Questions to Get Closer to You: Question 3
Questions to Get Closer to You: Question 2
Questions to Get Closer to Your Brand: Question 1
How to Be Alive and 10 Ways to Celebrate It!

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, branding;-self-actualization, Questions-to-Get-Closer-to-You;-personal-identity

The Blog Herald: Independent Book Authors and Blogger’s Dreams

June 26, 2007 by Liz

So You Want to Write a Book

Though folks may offer top notch services for your manuscript, if they are charging you to do so or, if they are not providing a serious marketing channel that puts your book where readers will see it. Then as an author you need to be aware that YOU are THEIR market. By entering into such a deal, you have changed your role from author to publisher, because you have now are in the business of marketing and selling books too.

Read the whole feature in today’s Blog Herald by clicking the logo.

The Blog Herald

It’s about blogging and real life.
–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related articles
Liz Strauss at The Blog Herald, The Blogging Times, and Who’s One in a Million?

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Blogger-Dreams, Liz-Strauss, The-Blog-Herald, Write-a-Book

1. What is the Enneagram and Why Should You Care?

June 25, 2007 by Liz

Enneagram Series by Mark McGuinness

The Enneagram is a nine-pointed star drawn inside a circle. It has many meanings and uses – currently, it is best known as a system of personality types, where each of the nine points corresponds to a different type.

basic-enneagram-names

 

I was introduced to the Enneagram in 1997, since when I have found it a powerful and practical tool, in my own life and relationships, and in my work – originally as a psychotherapist and now as a business coach and consultant.

The Enneagram system is not confined to what modern psychology regards as the “personality” – it includes the whole of human nature, mental, emotional and physical – but I will limit this brief introduction to the personality types and how they can help you in your personal and professional development.

What can the Enneagram offer you?

Personal development

The Enneagram types are not made up of lists of character traits, but are founded on a person’s core values. Each type represents a fundamental decision about what is most important in life – such as power, security, harmony, knowledge or fulfillment. This decision is a two-edged sword: focusing on any of these important values enables us to make a valuable contribution in many areas of life; but it also causes us to neglect other values, creating a psychological “blind spot” that limits our perspective and prevents us from developing beyond a certain point.

Identifying your Enneagram type can show you this blind spot and open up unexpected options for change. It can help you break long standing patterns that have been holding you back, sometimes without your realising it.

Professional development

Whether or not knowing your strengths and weaknesses is important to you personally, it is vital to your professional development. Without this knowledge you risk choosing the wrong challenges or even the wrong career. You are also likely to keep coming up against the same obstacles to success.

Identifying and working with your Enneagram type can help you play to your strengths by choosing professional challenges that are most appealing and appropriate for your talents. Knowing your “blind spot” helps you work around the obstacles it creates for you.

Personal relationships

Well these don’t come with an instruction manual, do they? For most of us, personal relationships are most rewarding or the most frustrating part of life – or both. In some ways we can be so close to another, yet in others feel so apart. How many times have we all felt, when an argument starts or a misunderstanding arises, “That’s not what I meant at all!”?

Understanding your own and others’ Enneagram types allows you to relate to others with greater empathy and compassion, leading to less conflict and clearer communication.

Working relationships

It’s hard to think of a job in which dealing with people is not a vital skill. For anyone in one of the “people professions” – such as managing, teaching, counseling, coaching, consulting, sales, medicine or politics – it is central to the success or failure of your work.

The Enneagram offers you a powerful framework for relating to others more authentically and constructively. Whether influencing, managing, selling, caring, team-building, presenting or advising, it can help you communicate effectively and respectfully, extending your influence and opening up new options for collaboration.

Spirituality

I’ve left this one last as it’s perfectly possible to use the Enneagram as a practical tool for self-knowledge and relating to others without any spiritual element.

On the other hand, those with an interest in spiritual development will want to know that the Enneagram has been used as a framework for meditation and growth in several different spiritual traditions. For the Sufis, the mystics of Islam, the Enneagram is the “face of God”. Christian teachers have traced the seven deadly sins – and their antidotes – in the Enneagram types. And Buddhist teachers use the Enneagram as a “map of attachments” that can guide meditators on the way to awakening. More modern spiritual schools that use the Enneagram include the Fourth Way teachings of G.I. Gurdjieff and the Arica training of Oscar Ichazo.

So which Enneagram type are you?

Whether you are interested in secular or spiritual development, the Enneagram offers you a powerful lens for examining yourself and others – and making profound changes in your own life and relationships.

The first step towards using it is to familiarise yourself with the nine Enneagram types and start to get a sense of your own type. In my next few posts I’ll describe the nine types, but before we get to that here’s a short questionnaire to help you identify your type. It’s a shortened version of the Riso-Hudson Enneagram Type Indicator (RHETI) devised by well-known Enneagram authors Don Richard Riso and Russ Hudson.

Here’s a link to the free shorter version of the test – take 10 minutes to complete this questionnaire before my next post and it will make the descriptions of the types more relevant and interesting to you. [editor’s note 2021 – we’ve updated the link, as the original quiz was removed.]

Enneagram — free 10 minute questionnaire

I’m offering the link here to help you take the first step towards recognising your type – but don’t be too quick to jump to conclusions. It took me several months (and some brutal feedback from a well-meaning friend!) before I identified my own type correctly.

In my next post I’ll start to introduce the Enneagram types.

_____________
Mark studied the Enneagram as part of his training as a psychotherapist. He has used it for his own personal development and in his work with individuals, families, and organizations. Mark McGuinness’ business Wishful Thinking, is a specialist coaching and training service for creative businesses such as design studios, ad agencies, film and TV production companies, computer games developers, architect’s practices and fashion designers.

Part 2 in Enneagram — a Brief Introduction, The Heart Types, will appear Wednesday at about this same time.

Thank you, Mark,
–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, enneagram, Mark-McGuinness, wishful-thinking

Bloggers Toolkit: Passing on Help with Gratitude

June 25, 2007 by Liz

We Are Experienced

Blogtool box with mouse hanging out

Who knows the real figures? Not every blog is indexed. Thousands of bloggers start blogging all over the world every minute. I’m sure that many could be like I was — thinking this stuff has got to be easy and finding it wasn’t as easy as I thought.

Drew McLellan has a project to help new bloggers who are feeling like that. He’s compiling a toolkit — a list of blogs that new bloggers can turn to when they start out — a bloggy version of the SOB NEW BLOGGER PAGE. He’s asking for our help. He said.

Anyone who is interested, create a post listing a few blog sites (and maybe give a word or two as to how you’d categorize them) that:
New Bloggers Toolbox

  1. Are chock full of practical tips
  2. Act as a living lab on how to write compelling blog posts
  3. Demonstrate how to build a community
  4. Teach marketing tools
  5. Are welcome wagons – bloggers who spotlight newbies

Drew’s Bloggers Toolkit
Converstations (chock full of practical tips)
CK’s blog (compelling blog post examples)
Viral Garden  (demonstrate how to build a community)
Lonely Marketer (teach marketing tools)
Successful & Outstanding Blogs (bloggers who spotlight newbies)

Additions to The Bloggers Toolkit

    DailyBlog Tips (chock full of practical tips)
    The Copywriting Maven (compelling blog post examples)
    Come Gather Round (demonstrate how to build a community)
    Blogopreneur (teach marketing tools
    The Good Blogs (bloggers who spotlight newbies)

There are so many more blogs that could be here. I know. I know. If you can, write a post like this one and link back to Drew, so he can find it when he needs to compile them.

Drew’s doing a generous thing with this project. He’s offered us a chance to participate. We can “give back with gratitude,” through the links we choose to pass on. Let’s build a list that will help new bloggers and serve our readers at the same time.

We were all new bloggers once, and someone helped us. It’s nice to have this chance to do the same.

Thank you, Drew, for this idea and for including my blog on your list.
–ME “Lis” Strauss
If you’d like Liz to help you make a plan to meet your goals, click on the Work with Liz!! page in the sidebar.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Bloggers-Toolkit, Drew-McLellan, Drews-Marketing-Minute, New-Blogger-Help

Change the World: Start a New Job

June 25, 2007 by Liz

Change My Job with a Thought

changetheworld8

Ever hear someone talk about a brand new job? Whenever I do, it takes be back to those nice first day of school feelings.

Life seems light. The world is fresh. Even the kids that that we knew from last year start to look and act better. Everything is new beginnings — new desk, new paper, new pens, new problems to solve, new ways to solve them, a chance to see what I can do. New jobs are like that.

I bring myself back from the new job fantasy by recalling how long it takes to get familiar in a new place. Every new job takes time to learn the culture, the people, and how to get things done when I need to. That’s a lot to give up once you’ve gotten there.

New beginnings are wonderful and fresh, but being around a while offers the relationships, credibility, and support of a familiar place. I want the values of both without lose the downside of each.

I wanted that enough that I figured out how to make it happen. The trick is to blend the old and the new together.

All it took was a change in the way that I see.

Today, I start a new job, doing the job that I did last week. I let go. I wipe the slate clean. I imagine that I inherited this busy desk from the busy person before me. It’s a good feeling to put that distance between now and Friday.

All of the tasks on this desk held no romance for the person who sat here on Friday. But the new me walks into this job looking at them as filled with promise and so exciting.

Thoughts of someone who isn’t delivering turn from an ongoing headache into the challenge and opportunity that a fresh mind sees. That situation has just become information the person previously in this job shared before leaving. It’s simply a fact on my radar that has no past feelings attached to it. The problem solver in me knows that I’m more than ready to smile into a new approach.

A clean slate is like the first day of school filled with new beginnings– new desk, new paper, new pen, new problems to solve, new ways to solve them, a chance to see what I can do. I take a new look and my old job becomes new like that too.

The people I work with notice that I’ve got a new outlook and soon they have one too.

I’m taking a new job to work with me today. I can feel it already.

We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: Liz, Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: a-new-job, bc, Change-the-World

Bloggy Question 54: This Conversation Is NOT Bloggable

June 24, 2007 by Liz

Can’t I Talk to Bloggers Anymore?

For those who come looking for a short, thoughtful read, a blogging life discussion, or a way to gradually ease back into the week. I offer this bloggy life question. . . .


You travel a lot and occasionally meet up with a blogger in the city where you are. The conversation and the company are always worth what little it might take to get across town to get together.

Last night was an event. This time you met not one, but three bloggers you read. Dinner was at a beautiful restaurant. Everyone sure hit it off. The conversation went from mutual blogging friends to ideas about what folks might do to improve their blogging style.

As always, pictures were taken and blogger hugs given. It seemed a perfect evening complete with the champagne toast at the end. You wrote up your experience and uploaded two photographs. Then you did some work and went to sleep before an early client meeting.

You didn’t get a chance to read the blogs of the folks you dined with until after 5pm the next day. The first was a great reminder of the fun, as was the second. The third, however, was a critique of the entire dinner. That blogger trashed the restaurant, the service, the food, you and your other new-found blogger friends. Exact quotes, taken out of context, had been and used in the blog post. The quotes were word-for-word accurate, but as they stood they sounded mean and petty, not they way they were said or intended.

The blogger who wrote the critique says that the event was fun and funny. But the remarks he makes are snarky — fully at your expense and that of the other two at dinner. You’ve never seen this sort of behavior before . . . from him or from anyone.

The post has been up for 8 hours and there are no comments.

You check your own post. Some cold “thank yous” are there — from folks not mentioned in your post, but mentioned in the quotes taken out of context in the other blogger’s recap.

How do you respond?

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related articles
Bloggy Question 53: What Kind of Home Is One Blog You Read?
Bloggy Question 52: They Read My Diary!
loggy Question 51: I Gave Him that Idea
Bloggy Question 50: The Safety of the Human Race Is Up to YOU!
Bloggy Question 49: Chase the Sun!

Filed Under: Bloggy Questions, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, blogging-hypothetical-question, blogging-life, Bloggy-Questions, personal-branding, problems

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