The Fundamentals of Successful Thinking

The simple truth is that our control over our consciousness determines the quality of our lives as well as our ability to reach our full potential.

People who have developed the right mental disciplines make more money, stretch their abilities more than their peers, enjoy higher positions at work, command more respect and form more meaningful professional and personal relationships.

Conversely, those who cannot control their thoughts fight inner battles that sabotage their abilities for focused work and clear thought. Thus, they damage their earning capacity and, until change is recognized, hinder their overall competency, focus and professional progression.

Because our inner-monologue is paramount to our ability to succeed at work, it’s important to further analyze the benefits of improved mind control, how thought process affects our ability to lead as well as touch upon workable strategies in order to start cultivating a successful frame of mind.

The Benefits of Improved Mind Control

It’s hard to overstate the value of changing your thinking. Only when we are able to filter out self-defeating thoughts (i.e. focusing on what is not possible) can we begin to realize the benefits that are derived from improved mind control.

In conjunction with heightened creativity, awareness and revenue generating potential, the rewards for positive, successful thinking include:

1. Resiliency.

Successful thinkers are more likely to transform hopeless situations into challenges to be overcome.

2. Intuition.

Successful thinkers are able to set aside daily distractions and mental clutter and see beyond their own point of view.

3. Learning Capacity.

Controlled thinking allows one to reflect upon and learn from past successes and failures in a nonjudgmental, thus productive manner.

Change in Thought Process in Relation to Leadership

For managers and aspiring future leaders, our recruiters have seen that controlled thinking propels leadership acumen in numerous ways including:

  • Allows a person to see a vision and in a clear, compelling manner convey those goals to their subordinates.
  • Allows a person to more successfully and confidentially anticipate any upcoming challenges.
  • Allows a person to seize opportunities when the timing is right.

Beginning the Transformation

All changes in mindset come from the acknowledgement that power to transform your thinking comes from you.

1. Take responsibility.

The sooner you learn to take responsibility for the choices you make, the thoughts you have, and the attitudes you embrace, the sooner you can have the life you want.

2. Invest yourself in whatever you do.

Often, feelings of boredom, being overwhelmed or allowing negative thinking to filter in our consciousness will make a person detach from daily work duties. Once the individual detaches, they leave themselves open to thoughts that are counterproductive. Beginning to take pride in each and every thing that you do will go a long way to cultivating a mindset conducive to success.

3. Dream one size bigger.

By pushing yourself to dream more expansively, to imagine your organization as one size bigger, to make your professional goals at least a step beyond what makes you comfortable, your mental prowess will be forced to grow.

4. Learn continually.

Never be satisfied with what you already know. Part of cultivating a successful frame of mind entails consistently meeting new people, learning new skills, reading new books and engaging with others who can do things you cannot.

Practice, Repetition and Dedication – It is not enough to know how to cultivate a successful frame of mind. Knowledge is of little benefit without the discipline and unrelenting desire to implement that knowledge.

In order to cultivate a thought process that promotes success and fosters achievement, one must practice consistently in the same way that athletes or musicians practice their craft.

The truth is that the human mind has enormous untapped potential. In order to achieve our goals, it is imperative to learn how to tap into these reserves and leverage them in order to have a better career and more fulfilling personal existence.

Picture of Ken Sundheim

Ken Sundheim

Ken Sundheim is the CEO of KAS Placement Sales and Marketing Recruiters, a sales and marketing recruiting firm specializing in staffing business development and marketing professionals around the U.S. Ken has been published in Forbes, Chicago Tribune, AOL, Business Insider, Ere.net, Recruiter.com, Huffington Post and many others. He has also appeared on MTV, Fox Business News and spoken at some of the country's leading business schools on HR, job search and recruitment.

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Nobody told me that finally arriving at a quieter, gentler life would come with its own grief — for all the years I spent making everything so much harder than it needed to be

Nobody told me that finally arriving at a quieter, gentler life would come with its own grief — for all the years I spent making everything so much harder than it needed to be

The Vessel

Google didn’t kill blogs with AI overviews — it revealed which publishers were writing for robots and which ones had actual readers

Google didn’t kill blogs with AI overviews — it revealed which publishers were writing for robots and which ones had actual readers

The Blog Herald

At some point in my 60s I realised the person everyone thought they knew so well was a very polished version of someone I’d stopped being years ago — and letting that go was the most honest thing I’ve ever done

At some point in my 60s I realised the person everyone thought they knew so well was a very polished version of someone I’d stopped being years ago — and letting that go was the most honest thing I’ve ever done

The Vessel

WordPressDirect: blogging tool or spam engine?

WordPressDirect: blogging tool or spam engine?

The Blog Herald

I spent sixty years believing rest was laziness — here’s what unlearning that cost me and what it finally gave back

I spent sixty years believing rest was laziness — here’s what unlearning that cost me and what it finally gave back

The Vessel

The cruelest lie about love is that it should be enough. People stay in homes that make them smaller because they believe if the love is real then the loneliness, the silence, and the slow disappearance of who they used to be are just part of the deal

The cruelest lie about love is that it should be enough. People stay in homes that make them smaller because they believe if the love is real then the loneliness, the silence, and the slow disappearance of who they used to be are just part of the deal

The Vessel