Why Most People Fail At Self-Help Programs
What’s the difference
between people who succeed in getting what they want and people who don’t? It’s how they view the self-help
programs. In fact, the answer is in the
name “self-help”. Self-help programs are
usually home-study courses, books, or seminars of some sort where the person
must use the information or the trainer to make positive, permanent change in
their lives. The thing to point out
here is that it is “self-help”. The
person must help themselves.
A lot of people stumble from
one self-help program to another without getting any real results. Why is this? Are the programs ineffective?
No. People endlessly go onto the
next ‘magic pill’ because they are counting on the external product to do all
the work and ‘cure’ them. This isn’t
going to happen.
The only difference between
someone who gets results in a program and people who don’t is how they view
their personal responsibility. Stop for
a moment and ask yourself, “When you order a book, a tape, go to a seminar, and
so on, what are your expectations?” The
best mindset I’ve found to get tangible results is to treat whatever
information you’re learning as a set of tools you’ve been given. It’s now up to you to use them.
Imagine there are two
different people: Harold and Jarrod.
Harold blames all the self-help programs for being a bunch of garbage
for not solving his problems and views the self-help leaders as ‘con artists’
who took his money without providing him real value. Therefore, he ambles aimlessly to the next product that he
believes will be his ‘magic pill’ that will do all the work for him. He views himself as a victim and is locked
into that outlook.
Contrast Harold to
Jarrod. Jarrod understands that all the
information he gets as a set of tools for him to apply and use to change his
own life: to help himself. Jarrod gets it. Jarrod can create massive, beneficial changes with 1/10 of the
programs Harold buys because he applies everything he learns.
My point to you is that if I
am studying a book or course and not getting results and my buddy is studying
the same book or course and getting results, there is proof right now that the
system works. I’m not a victim. We both have the same course. So what’s the difference? The only difference is between him and
me. I’ve got to step up and take
responsibility. A good idea for me
would be to go model him by asking him specific questions about what he is
doing. In other words, I’ll sort out
what he is doing differently from me and I’ll start doing things differently.
The bottom line here is that
self-help programs can be as great as you make them. Apply EVERYTHING you learn, at least once to test it out. If it doesn’t work, do something else. If it does work, awesome! Personal responsibility is always present in
SELF-help programs. Be Jarrod, not
Harold.
Kent Sayre is a worldwide persuasion expert and author of “The Ultimate
Persuasion Formula” available at http://www.TheUltimatePersuasionFormula.com
Furthermore, he is the author of the bestselling book “Unstoppable Confidence”
endorsed by such celebrity authors as Brian Tracy, Robert Allen, and Jim
Rohn.