a comprehensive collection of self improvement articles focusing on productivity, motivation and confidence

5 Essential Ways Everyone Should Hack Their Willpower

Willpower is like a battery — it has a finite limit of use for each day. The best way to have more willpower is to find some useful ways to hack it! Continue reading

How to Create Your Self-Improvement Plan

I became passionate about self-improvement over a decade ago, and I started helping others with their self-improvement as a coach more than half that time ago.

I strongly believe that developing oneself is one of the best actions a person can take and that self-improvement ultimately leads to more achievements and happiness in one’s life than anything else. Continue reading

8 Lessons From Mama About Success In Life and Business

To leave a legacy in business, Tim believes that you should build a business that offers high quality products or services to a large number of people, and then that business could be either sold or passed on to your children. The most important thing is to build a business that doesn’t die, when you die. You need to build a business that can go on without you. Continue reading

5 Powerful Steps To Achieving Anything You Want

Today, if there’s anything you want to do in life that you feel really passionate about, any goal that you want to achieve, simply use the following steps to begin your path with clarity and conviction. These steps have worked for Olympic athletes, CEO’s, billionaires, millionaires, and every day people who have passion….And best of all, they can work for you too! Continue reading

Visualization vs. Visioning: What’s the Difference?

In the beginning, I did not realize that there could be a difference between visualization and visioning. I had thought them to be the same. Thus, I had used the terms interchangeably. It was only when I started learning more about what visioning is and entails that made me become aware of the difference. Continue reading

5 Simple Ways to Instantly Improve Your Writing

Think about it: in college, professors required us to write a paper a certain length. We also felt compelled to use big, fancy words from a thesaurus to sound as smart as possible.

So what did we routinely turn in for a grade? Bloated 8-10 pagers full of words we barely knew and sentences that never once came out of our mouths.

Basically, we stopped being ourselves. Continue reading