5 traits of a successful person

Very occasionally, I see people who do well and do well in whatever they do. Such friends have several distinctive characteristics.

Seeing yourself as you are: metacognition

As revealed through the EBS experiment, the children in the top 0.1% of the CSAT mock test did not have better memory than the children with average grades. The field that shows a clear difference is ‘metacognition’.

Metacognition means knowing what you know and what you don’t know, that is, self-objectification. When metacognition is high, you can properly know your strengths and weaknesses, situations and circumstances, what you can and cannot do, and because of that, you are more likely to set up a better ‘strategy’. If you are an examinee, you can set up a better study method, if you are a college student, a better college life, if you are a job seeker, a more effective employment strategy, if you are a businessman, you can set up and practice a business strategy with a higher probability. When you see yourself as you are, and when you honestly admit it, you can build a solid foundation to do well in anything.

Continuous learning.

Professor Peter Senge said, “Learning doesn’t mean acquiring a lot of information, it means developing the ability to create the results you really want in life.” Learning is the act of cultivating the ability to get what you want. A person who can do anything well is a ‘learning person’. He is a person who reads, takes classes, writes, and does not leave discussions in his daily life. Regardless of age or situation, let’s not neglect learning.

It has crazy execution power.

People who do well at anything don’t talk softly. Run and run and run and run.

Mike Bayer, the author of , has changed the lives of many people through life coaching, and his reputation reached Dr. Phil McGraw, and he was invited to a broadcast program led by Dr. Phil. Mike, who has advanced to the ‘big league’ in his field, is nervous, but he shows his skills to the fullest in his broadcasts, and Dr. Phil continues to invite his coach Mike to broadcasts.

But after his third appearance on the show, Dr. Phil McGraw tells Coach Mike that he must write a book to grow into his “best self.” But Mike’s answer is great. He says he’ll start ‘right away’. And came out, and became a bestseller in both the New York Times and Amazon. In particular, it is a great success, ranking 6th overall on Amazon.

The important thing here is the posture of the microphone. Mike’s job is a life coach. His specialty is ‘communication’, not ‘writing’. I am a writer too, but writing is still not easy. What was it like for Mike? But he didn’t hesitate. He didn’t say he would do it next time. He started ‘right away’ even when it was difficult because he needed it. Something only happens when you run it.

It’s a mental gab.

People who do well in anything do not break down mentally. We usually think of mental collapse only when things are bad, such as despair, frustration, and lethargy. However, the opposite direction is actually mentally weak. It is evidence that the mind is broken that even if it goes well, it is arrogant, arrogant, and the winner effect. Mentally strong people always seek the opposite situation. When there is despair, expectations, overcoming, and hope are accompanied by victory, the past that was lacking, the awareness that the situation can change at any time, and the desire to help the losers!

You have a team mindset.

Before industrialization, there were many individuals who changed the world. However, almost all innovations that lead the world today are not led by individuals, but by ‘teams’. When two people with 1 ability synergize, they can overwhelm one person with 3 ability. Because 1+1 can be 11, not 2. People who can do anything are well aware of the fact that their limits are clear when they are alone. The first characteristic is that metacognition is high. So, try to work with people who can create synergy with you. The person who can do anything well, I hope that person is you.