What do highly successful people have in common?
They Read. A Lot.New Book Available Now!
Making Writing Work for You
A contemporary guide to making income while writing in a digital world.
Harold Taylor is a testament to the power of writing. Writing has been his key to building confidence as an author, financing his education, and establishing a thriving speaking and training business. Even in semi-retirement, writing continues to sustain his lifestyle, mirroring the success he enjoyed during his professional career.
In Making Writing Work for You, Harold shares the secrets behind his success, offering insights and strategies that anyone who is passionate about writing can apply. Whether you’re a seasoned writer or just starting, you’ll discover that rejection isn’t failure, patience is invaluable, and it’s perfectly fine to explore various genres to find the one that satisfies your creative aspirations. This book is a guide for anyone looking to make writing work for them, just as it has for Harold.
Management eBooks
Management ebooks by Harold L Taylor
Develop a Goal-Setting Mindset
Project Management for Entrepreneurs
Procrastinate Less & Get More Done
Browse All Harold Taylor's Management eBooks Here!
Time Management Articles:
How to love the job you hate. Part 10
How can you improve your current job? Well, we have already made a few suggestions in the previous blog articles. But I will summarize three lifestyle changes that will help improve how you view your current job. If you believe your current job is beyond repair, the...
How to love the job you hate. Part 9.
First, try to recall some of the good times that happened on the job. Most people are quick to remember what's wrong with a job and ignore the many things that are right. This is natural. Remember hearing about the Halo effect, when involved in a performance...
How to love the job you hate. Part 8
If you are dissatisfied with your job because of your low salary compared to other positions in the company, do a little math work. At the time of writing his book, The Happiness Equation, published in 2016, Neil Pasricha pointed out that annual salaries could be...
How to love the job you hate. Part 7.
Sleep deprivation could negatively impact your reasoning ability and how you view your current job. It could also affect the way you perform your job. So make sure you are getting your recommended quota of sleep, which could vary between 7 and 9 hours a night,...
How to love the job you hate. Part 6.
Humor is no laughing matter. Well, at least not when it comes to enjoying your job. It not only helps relieves any stress at the time but also helps develop resiliency in the future. Laughter is a natural mood elevator, according to a Cornell University study. It also...
How to love the job you hate. Part 5.
We have discussed the option of using your current job as an opportunity to train for the job you would really like to obtain, either inside the current company or in a different organization. This would involve more than just applying yourself to the current job,...
How to love the job you hate: Part 4
Most jobs have both positives and negatives. But just as we may be so aware of our weaknesses that our strengths are obscured, so we may be so aware of our job’s negatives that the positives are obscured. You are free to choose which attributes or failings of the job...
How to love the job you hate. Part 3.
Reframing is expressing a concept, idea, or product differently. When we change our point of view on any given situation, the facts remain the same, but a deliberate shift is made in how we see them. For example, we are reframing when we see a problem as a challenge...
How to love the job you hate. Part 2.
If any of the comments and statistics outlined in part 1 of this series apply to your situation at work, you might be justified in seeking a change in employment. Not that you’re necessarily faultless yourself, but it is difficult working in a toxic environment. The...