5 Skills You Need In Business and Life

If you want to be a successful entrepreneur or CEO, there are 5 skills you need to master:

  1. Hiring superstar employees
  2. Firing mediocre ones
  3. Managing key employees
  4. Recognizing which products to launch and which to kill
  5. Determining which advertising campaigns will work

You need roughly the same skills to succeed in your personal life:

  1. Finding friends and associates who will have a positive effect on you
  2. Distancing yourself from people who will have a negative effect on you
  3. Working consistently to improve the quality of your personal relationships
  4. Recognizing which habits and pastimes enrich you, which are wasteful, and which are self-destructive
  5. Eliminating the self-destructive habits and pastimes and gradually replacing wasteful ones with enriching ones
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The Best Cities to Visit: Travel & Leisure versus Me

Criteria: Sites, culture/arts, restaurants/food, people, shopping, value

Best Cities in the World

 Travel and  Leisure                 

  1. Bangkok
  2. Florence
  3. Istanbul
  4. Cape Town
  5. Sidney
  6. Rome
  7. New York
  8. Hong Kong
  9. Kyoto
  10. Paris

My Picks  

  1. Rome
  2. New York
  3. Paris
  4. Barcelona
  5. Madrid
  6. Hong Kong
  7. Istanbul
  8. Buenos Aires
  9. Chicago
  10. Cape Town

Best Cities in Europe

Travel and Leisure                      

  1. Florence
  2. Istanbul
  3. Rome
  4. Paris
  5. Barcelona
  6. Venice
  7. Madrid
  8. Vienna
  9. Seville
  10. Siena

My Picks

  1. Rome
  2. Paris
  3. Barcelona
  4. Madrid
  5. Istanbul
  6. Aix en Provence
  7. Florence
  8. Prague
  9. Milan
  10. Siena

Best Cities in North America

Travel and Leisure              

  1. New York
  2. Chicago
  3. San Francisco
  4. Charleston
  5. New Orleans
  6. Santa Fe
  7. Vancouver
  8. Savannah
  9. Quebec City
  10. Honolulu

My Picks

  1. New York
  2. Chicago
  3. San Francisco
  4. Washington, D.C.
  5. New Orleans
  6. Santa Fe
  7. Savannah
  8. Vancouver
  9. Honolulu
  10. Charleston
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Recharge

If you want to work yourself out of a funk, exercise very hard or very gently, but forget about the middling stuff. It won’t help.

I notice that after I wrestle competitively or do a PACE workout for twenty or thirty minutes, I am both exhausted and exhilarated. More importantly, I get a surge of energy that lasts for hours.

When I jog or lift weights or do an aerobics class, I feel worse afterwards than I did before.

I’ve also noticed that I can recharge myself by meditating or napping for a half-hour. (I’m still not convinced that meditating is any better than napping, although everyone tells me it should be.)

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Speculation vs. Investing

One sensible way to acquire wealth is to buy shares of stable, cash-rich companies and hold them for long periods of long time. Most people do something else. They buy a stock at a price they hope will increase, and they plan to sell it at a profit if and when it does.

Although both strategies are generally considered to be forms of investing, I prefer to reserve the term investing for the former and call the latter speculation.

Any dictionary will tell you that speculation is distinguished by the fact that it is based on incomplete information. And that is certainly true of most of what most people – professionals included – do. They have some partial knowledge that suggests a particular company’s stock price will move up. Based on that partial knowledge they put their (or their clients’) money at risk.

I am not saying that you should never speculate. But I do think that if you are going to speculate, you should not delude yourself by thinking you are making a sound investment.

There is a third way people buy stocks that deserves another name. I’m talking about investing in companies about which almost nobody knows anything and whose history of appreciation, in general, is very low.

The market calls this speculation but I think that, too, is a misnomer. When you invest in something that has a less than 50% chance of success, you are not investing nor are you speculating. What you are doing is gambling.

Again, I’m not opposed to gambling. Although it’s certainly a vice (like drinking and smoking opium), it is a vice that I have no objections to so long as the person doing the gambling knows his odds.

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