Blog - Practice What's Possible
Discover What Works Best for You in Business, Leadership, and the Rest of Your Life.
Entries in business women (4)
Confidence & Personal Power
A Secret of Successful Business Women 
Look at your audacious achievements! Do you secretly hope no one finds out that you're not what your hard-won success declares you to be? If so, you may be suffering from a super-achiever malaise called the Imposter Syndrome. So many highly successful women have feelings of inadequacy that books have been written on this Fake Syndrome for the last 30 years. These feelings are rooted in the belief that you are not good enough. Well...Who told you that? And why do you still believe it?
Oprah Took Marianne Williamson's Advice
Sustainable Success
10 Characteristics of Savvy Business Women 
What good is success if it doesn't sustain you? Or as one client of mine put it, "I want to know how to cope with a job that does not fit with being a person." Sustainable success need not cost you what is priceless about you.
Instead, try on for size 10 characteristics of savvy business women who have built and run thriving enterprises. As you read this list, notice what naturally and effortlessly fits you.
Where Are You On The List?
Who's Who Women in Business is LIVE!
A Premier Resource at Your Fingertips 
The mission of the International Who's Who Directory of Women in eCommerce is to support and promote women entrepreneurs around the globe. No small feat! Yet publisher Heidi Richards has accomplished just that with this first-of-its- kind 2008 annual registry. "It's THE Directory for Business Women" - an outstanding resource for networking, consulting and cultivating strategic alliances.
Thanks, Heidi, for inviting me to be a part of this global network and facilitating easy access.
Super-Achiever Lessons
Client Wisdom...
Today a client who has run more than a dozen marathons talked about her most recent and life altering "aha" moments. She said for years she was only destination-oriented. This marathon mindset shaped her approach to work and the rest of her life. Her racing mantra was: "Let me get there. Let me get back. What I experience in-between is just a blur."
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Her experience is not uncommon for super-achievers. Most may not run physical marathons, but the pace they keep is akin to a long distance race to the finish.




