“Vote for My Blog” in the Business Mums Network Blog Awards…

…please! 3 days to go…
Winning an award such as the Business Mums Network Blog Awards will help to bring the wonderful and inspiring stories of all entrepreneurial mothers, especially the primary breadwinners, out of the shadows. Given there are so many of us, and growing, what’s wrong with world domination!

All you have to do is click here and vote for this blog in particular. How simple is that!

Thank you in advance…

“Vote for my Blog” in the 2010 Business Mums Network Blog Awards…

…please!
Winning an award such as the Business Mums Network Blog Awards will help to bring the wonderful and inspiring stories of all entrepreneurial mothers, especially the primary breadwinners, out of the shadows. Given there are so many of us, and growing, what’s wrong with world domination!

All you have to do is click here and vote for this blog in particular. How simple is that!

Thank you in advance…

How Not to Choke Under Pressure…

Regardless of what part of entrepreneurial mothering you tackle, there are always pressure point situations that come up. How well do you handle it?

“Being Clutch, Or How Not To Choke Under Pressure”
By Paul Sullivan for ChangeThis.com


Being great under pressure is hard work. This is part of the reason why we are so impressed by people who seem immune to choking. These people come through in the clutch when others don’t. If they’re business leaders, they become gurus other executives want to emulate. In politics, the person who runs the gauntlet wins the election, but if he can do so in a particularly cunning way, he becomes an example of strategic excellence. In combat, it is the leaders who come under fire and get their men to safety who are recognized as war heroes. If the people are sporting figures, their triumphs become legendary. We are so fascinated by these feats that we have created a nearly mythical aura around clutch performers…read on

Ambition: Why Some People Are Most Likely to Succeed…

this is a great article from Time.com; well worth reading…

For every person consumed with the need to achieve, there’s someone content to accept whatever life brings. For everyone who chooses the 80-hour workweek, there’s someone punching out at 5. Men and women — so it’s said — express ambition differently; so do Americans and Europeans, baby boomers and Gen Xers, the middle class and the well-to-do. Even among the manifestly motivated, there are degrees of ambition…

Read on

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