People who have encountered a person with rainmaker complex syndrome will most surely have a lasting experience, which is not easily forgotten. Receivers of these rare encounters with rainmaker complex syndrome persons, usually pass on their positive experience to others that cross their paths.
4 Critical Steps to Become a Rainmaker
video by Larry Bodine, Senior Legal Marketing Strategist
How do you know, if you have this ailment? The symptoms for rainmaker complex syndrome are quite obvious:
- Uncontrollable urge to help others succeed.
- Hot flashes of people succeeding, whom you have helped. Understand the true life time benefits of Zig Ziglar’s powerful statement, “if you help enough people get what they want, you will get what you want".
- Intermittent bursts of collaborative conversation. Selflessly network as an engagement where you ask “how can I help you?” with no thought of reciprocal consideration.
- Insatiable appetite to constantly make connections. This may include putting your credibility on the line to personally connect a person who needs something with another person who has something.
- Aching motivation for self improvement. Constantly improve interpersonal skills, like reading How to Win Friends and Influence People in the Digital Age by Dale Carnegie or Skill with People by Les Giblin.
- Taking a feverish interest in community, but understand local actions do impact the global community at large.
- Be the person that friends, associates, coworkers, managers and executives go to for solving problems and making things happen.
- Compulsively being proactive about taking action and initiative to insure team success.
- Constant ear aches from listening, as a way to open opportunities that benefit individuals and companies around you.
- High energy from recognizing your network as the most valuable human capital, which can be leveraged as a commodity to do good for people.
- Severe spasms in being a person of influence at the center of your network.
- Euphoric sensation results from striving to be a person who leads by example, while following the principles outlined in The Servant Leader: How to Build a Creative Team, Develop Great Morale, and Improve Bottom-Line Performance by James A. Autry.
- Keen vision in truly understanding readers are leaders, by using dead time to read 10 minutes a day.
- Emanating warm charisma by projecting people into the success stratosphere, through generous doses of edification.
- An uncontrollable urge to share and exchange the new currency: information. This added bullet is from my good friend and very successful Chairman at The Board of Veteran CEOs, Ted Santos.
________________________
|
FREE Community service: Comprehensive Medicare Planning by Appointment Only - Group Classes too |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment