36 (1)

23
...Not only external rewards but also deep inner fulfillment EC 7 TH SEM. MODI KEVIN(100640111044) UNIT 3

Upload: ajay-vyas

Post on 07-Jul-2015

311 views

Category:

Technology


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 36 (1)

...Not only external rewards but also deep inner fulfillment

EC 7TH SEM.MODI KEVIN(100640111044)

UNIT 3

Page 2: 36 (1)

The meaning of success…

• Contributors have a deeper and wider definition of success than Non-contributors. While Non-contributors define success in terms of material success, achievement, external impact, etc., Contributors are able to deepen and widen this definition of success to include personal fulfillment, development of self-esteem, ongoing development of personal capabilities, etc.

Page 3: 36 (1)

The Contributor’s Identity • Develop your own answer to the question “who am I?”• Non-contributors and Contributors define themselves

differently. • Non-contributors usually define themselves in terms of

what they have acquired in life (e.g. qualifications, position,years of experience, etc.). This is a static identity, based onyour past glories or past failures. This static identity leavesyou trapped in history.

• Contributors define themselves in terms of what they willbecome or accomplish (e.g. capacity to deliver,commitment and ownership of the organization’s purpose,etc.). This is a dynamic identity based on your “being” and“becoming”. Such an identity lets you choose to live abetter future.

Page 4: 36 (1)

The Name Of Massive Personality of Person who are contributor for success..

• A.P.J Abdul kalam.

• Narendra Modi.

• Steve jobs.

Page 5: 36 (1)

Inspiring Thoughts by

Kalam

Page 6: 36 (1)

"Thinking should become your capital asset, no matter whatever ups and downs you come across in your life.”

"Thinking is progress. Non-thinking is stagnation of the individual, organisation and the country. Thinking leads to action. Knowledge without action is useless and irrelevant. Knowledge with action, converts adversity into prosperity."

"When you speak, speak the truth; perform when you promise; discharge your trust.... Withhold your hands from striking, and from taking that which is unlawful and bad..."

Page 7: 36 (1)

"What actions are most excellent? To

gladden the heart of a human being, to

feed the hungry, to help the afflicted

to lighten the sorrow of the

sorrowful and to remove the wrongs

of injured...“

"All God's creatures are His family; and

he is the most beloved of God who tries

to do most good to God's creatures."

Page 8: 36 (1)

Narendra Modi’svision of success.

Page 9: 36 (1)

Learning's from Mr. Modi

• desire + stability = resolution

• Resolution + Hard work = success

• Transforming obstacles into opportunity.

• Sheer commitment in whatever he does.

• Welfare society.

• “Never looking back”

• Master strategist.

Page 10: 36 (1)
Page 11: 36 (1)

Modi ‘s Mantra

• Sauna Saath, Sauna Vikas (All together, growth for all)

• Panchamrut – PhilosophyGyan Shakthi -Power of Knowledge

Urja Shakthi - Power of Energy

Jal Shakthi - Power of Water

Jan Shakthi - Power to People

Raksha Shakthi - Power of Security(Physical, Social, Economic)

Page 12: 36 (1)
Page 13: 36 (1)

AS A CONTRIBUTOR

• Steve Jobs had a unique combination of creative talents.

• His success lied in his ability of “Thinking Differently”

• As an entrepreneur, he had a compassionate understanding ofcustomers – he could see what they wanted.

• He was brilliant at technology with a deep understanding of the field.

• He was also able to discover new ways for making money out ofthings.

• Summarizing the above points – Steve Jobs was a completely uniqueindividual with unique capabilities.

Page 14: 36 (1)

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

Steve Jobs is no more, but his legacy will live on for decades to come. It is impossible to overstate the impact his work had not only on the world of technology, but on the world as a whole. Here are the top four ways, Jobs changed the society:

Page 15: 36 (1)

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

He made PCs before they were PCs

• Today, we may refer the term PC to computers that run on Intelprocessors and use Windows software - in other words, every computerthat isn't a Mac.

• But when the term was first coined, it simply stood for personalcomputer. The first Mac computers were known as PCs, because theywere computers designed to be used by individuals - and the Apple IIseries, designed by Steve Jobs and Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak, was infact the first widely successful PC.

• Today's computers may be classified as PC or Mac, but they all evolvedfrom the original PC prototype - and we have Steve Jobs to thank for that.

Page 16: 36 (1)

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

He made computers simple

• In the 1990s, Apple computers were held largely in disdain. The interfacewas too plain, too spare. It couldn't be customized. They couldn'tcompare to the computers Microsoft was making.

• But as the years went by, Steve Jobs began to win people over to hisvision of a computer that was powerful but also intuitive, easy to use andhighly functional.

• Users began to abandon other PCs for Macs in droves as they realized thatMacs froze less, glitches less, crashed less and were easier to navigatebesides.

Page 17: 36 (1)

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

He turned technology into art

• He once famously dismissed Dell's computers as un-innovative beigeboxes, and went on to envision and execute a stream of products thatcombined power and functionality with pure elegance.

• In 1998, the iMac took everyone aback with its brightly colored sides, anda year later, users were delighted with the iBook's unique clamshelldesign.

• Since then, Jobs never stopped coming up with new products that were asaesthetically pleasing as they were technologically advanced. Neverbefore had design been as important as hardware and engineering.

• Apple products are revered not just because they are powerful and workwell, but also because they look and feel good.

Page 18: 36 (1)

IMPACT ON SOCIETY

He connected every aspect of our lives

• “There is not a day that goes by, and often not an hour, that a Steve Jobsinvention does not better my family's life.” – These were the words ofEric Cantor, House Majority Leader, paying tribute to Steve Jobs.

• Before Jobs came along, no one had thought to integrate so many things -- computers, music players and phones - into the same company.

• Jobs shattered the boundaries of what a computer company shoulddo, turning Apple into a huge network of products that touched nearlyevery aspect of daily life.

Page 19: 36 (1)

• Make the character of Mahavira (Hanuman) your ideal. See how at the command of Ramachandra he crossed the ocean! He had no care for life or death. He was a perfect master of his senses and wonderfully sagacious. Build your life on this great ideal of personal service. Through that ideal all the other ideas will gradually manifest themselves in life. Obedience to the Guru without questioning and strict observance of Bramhacharya – this is the secret of success.

Page 20: 36 (1)

• Every man should take up his own ideal and endeavour to accomplish it. That is a surer way of progress than taking up other men’s ideals, which he can never hope to accomplish. For instance, we take a child and at once give him the task of walking twenty miles. Either the little one dies, or one in a thousand crawls the twenty miles, to reach the end exhausted and half-dead. That is like what we generally try to do with the world.

Page 21: 36 (1)

• All the men and women, in any society, are not of the same mind, capacity, or of the same power to do things; they must have different ideals, and we have no right to sneer at any ideal. Let every one do the best he can for realising his own ideal. Nor is it right that I should be judged by your standard or you by mine. The apple tree should not be judged by the standard of the oak, nor the oak by that of the apple. To judge the apple tree you must take the apple standard, and for the oak, its own standard.

Page 22: 36 (1)

• There is success and failure in every work. But I am inclined to believe that one who is a coward will be born after death as an insect or a worm, that there is no salvation for a coward even after millions of years of penance. Well, shall I after all be born as a worm? …In my eyes this world is mere play – and it will always remain as such. Should one spend six long months brooding over the questions of honour and disgrace, gain and loss pertaining to this?

Page 23: 36 (1)