“Change is inevitable. Growth is optional.”

John C. Maxwell

“«Ayude a muchas personas a tener éxito, y usted también lo tendrá».”

John C. Maxwell

“Occasionally someone will ask me about how ego fits into the leadership equation. They’ll want to know what keeps a leader from having a huge ego. I think the answer lies in each leader’s pathway to leadership. If people paid their dues and gave their best in obscurity, ego is usually not a problem.”

John C. Maxwell

“know how” to “do now.”

John C. Maxwell

“An infant is born with a clenched fist; a man dies with an open hand. Life has a way of prying free the things we think are so important.”

John C. Maxwell

“Know the reasons you and your listener want to communicate and build a bridge between those reasons.”

John C. Maxwell

“Learn to be flexible. Thomas Jefferson once said, “In matters of principle, stand like a rock. In matters of taste, swim with the current.”

John C. Maxwell

“Exercise, lose weight, test your blood sugar, or whatever. Do it without motivation and then guess what. After you start doing the thing, that’s when the motivation comes and makes it easy for you to keep on doing”

John C. Maxwell

“Are you doing what you ask others to do?”

John C. Maxwell

“Most of us think wonderful things about people, but they never know it. Too many of us tend to be tight-fisted with our praise. It’s of no value if all you do is think it; it becomes valuable when you impart it.”

John C. Maxwell

“People change when they ... Hurt enough that they have to, Learn enough that they want to, and Receive enough that they are able to.”

John C. Maxwell

“The whole idea of motivation is a trap. Forget motivation. Just do it.”

John C. Maxwell

“People dont care what you know until they know what you care”

John C. Maxwell

“Jim Sundberg says, “Discover your uniqueness; then discipline yourself to develop it.”

John C. Maxwell

“A young concert violinist was asked the secret of her success. She replied, “Planned neglect.” Then she explained, “When I was in school, there were many things that demanded my time. When I went to my room after breakfast, I made my bed, straightened the room, dusted the floor, and did whatever else came to my attention. Then I hurried to my violin practice. I found I wasn’t progressing as I thought I should, so I reversed things. Until my practice period was completed, I deliberately neglected everything else. That program of planned neglect, I believe, accounts for my success.”

John C. Maxwell


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