Success: Success In Life and Success In Business!

Success: Success In Life and Success In Business!

Success: Success In Life and Success In Business Home

Success: What Is Success?

Success, Happiness and The Three Secrets!

Success and Luck! Is Success A Result of Luck?

Success and Moderation! Is Restraint The Key To Success?

Success and Money! What Does Money Mean To You?

Success and Education! Is Education Important for Success?

Success and Arrogance! Does Success Cause Arrogance?

Success and Courage! Success Takes Courage!

Success and Panic! Panic Attacks and Success Failures!

Success and Depression! Business Depression and Success!

Success and Failure! Failure Is Not An Option!

Success and Consistency! Consistency The Key To Success In Life and Business!

Success and Prejudice! Prejudice Beliefs and Success!

Success and Calm! Peace and Calm In Life!

Motivational Words of Wisdom, Inspirational Words of Wisdom

Success: Success In Life and Success In Business!

The information you are about to read was written over 85 years ago. Yet, it is still relevent to today's life. Success is the one thing we all have in common. I have not met a person who did not desire to succeed in something. However, for some reason or another very few people are successful in life or in business.

The original title was, "Success by Lord Beaverbrook." I found it to be a little bland so I retitled it to fit what you may be looking for today, "Success: Success In Life and Success In Business."

One thing you should keep in mind as you read is while it mentions "men" or "man" it is referring to mankind as a whole. Many books written decades ago were written that way unless it was geared toward women.

Outside of the title, and a few minor changes, I did not modify much. Everything is pretty much the way it was when it was first published. I truly enjoyed reading this guide and learned so much from it. I know you will too! Let's get started!

PUBLISHERS' NOTE

The contents of this volume originally appeared as weekly articles by Lord Beaverbrook in the Sunday Express. They aroused so much interest, and so many applications were received for copies of the various articles, that it was decided to have them collected and printed in volume form.

He who buys Success, reads and digests its precepts, will find this inspiring volume a sure will-tonic. It will nerve him to be up and doing. It will put such spring and go into him that he will make a determined start on that road which, pursued with perseverance, leads onwards and upwards to the desired goal-SUCCESS.

PREFACE

The articles embodied in this small book were written during the pressure of many other affairs and without any idea that they would be published as a consistent whole. It is, therefore, certain that the critic will find in them instances of a repetition of the central idea. This fact is really a proof of a unity of conception which justifies their publication in a collected form. I set out to ask the question, "What is success in the affairs of the world-how is it attained, and how can it be enjoyed?" I have tried with all sincerity to answer the question out of my own experience. In so doing I have strayed down many avenues of inquiry, but all of them lead back to the central conception of success as some kind of temple which satisfies the mind of the ordinary practical man.

Other fields of mental satisfaction have been left entirely outside as not germane to the inquiry.

I address myself to the young men of the new age. Those who have youth also possess opportunity. There is in the British Empire to-day no bar to success which resolution cannot break. The young clerk has the key of success in his pocket, if he has the courage and the ability to turn the lock which leads to the Temple of Success. The wide world of business and finance is open to him. Any public dinner or meeting contains hundreds of men who can succeed if they will only observe the rules which govern achievement.

A career to-day is open to talent, for there is no heredity in finance, commerce, or industry. The Succession and Death Duties are wiping out those reserves by which old-fashioned banks and businesses warded off from themselves for two or three generations the result of hereditary incompetence. Ability is bound to be recognised from whatever source it springs. The struggle in finance and commerce is too intense and the battle too world-wide to prevent individual efficiency playing a bigger and a better rôle.

If I have given encouragement to a single young man to set his feet on the path which leads upwards to success, and warned him of a few of the perils which will beset him on the road, I shall feel perfectly satisfied that this book has not been written in vain. BEAVERBROOK