This guy works 80 hours a week as the CEO of GE.
One of my favorite things about this talk was bugging Greg Allen, who used to be a GE contractor.
This guy works 80 hours a week as the CEO of GE. One of my favorite things about this talk was bugging Greg Allen, who used to be a GE contractor.
This guy works 80 hours a week as the CEO of GE.
One of my favorite things about this talk was bugging Greg Allen, who used to be a GE contractor.
When you preach, do not teach interesting things. Do not preach great information to help people’s lives be better/happier/fuller/richer/stable or anything! PREACH as if you are speaking of LIFE and DEATH. Preach as if your message MUST be heard and lived out or they’ll die. We have had enough good speaches to improve our quality…
I was just reading Rick’s notes on John 6.1-13 and the recurring theme of God giving in abundance and there being leftovers comes up over and over again. When Jesus handed out the bread, there were leftovers, when He turned the water into wine, I HOPE there were leftovers!, when they caught all of the…
I think the best thing I heard this weekend had to do with Vegetable soup.As we grow up, we are handed a bowl of vegetable soup. That bowl is everything we’ve learned from our family, our culture, our life experiences. It’s everything we believe and think and know about life. Most people just chow down…
Here are my notes from the Willow Creek Association Global Leadership Summit. If you saw me tweeting last week with the tag #WCAGLS it was related to this. I took about 50 pages of notes, so I realized I needed to break them up some. These are my notes from the first session which was…
(Might have something to do with the fact that I’ve become an entrepreneur in the last year and a lot of what he said was really promising and exciting, vs. the usual song you hear when you are starting your own business that has a repeating chorus singing “you will fail, you will fail, you will fail.”) … I think they would have benefited a lot from just focusing on the next month rather than thinking they had to discover their lifelong vocation at 22. When you fail at something, like say, running a coffee filled backpack business, you learn something that nobody else knows.