Reports find that an average family can spend $20,000 a year on activities surrounding youth sports. Between league fees, camps, equipment, training and travel, families are spending as much as 10% of their income on sports, according to survey research from Utah State University. Out of Varsity High School players, only 3% play in college, and fewer than that ever go Pro. Overwhelmingly, the role of the coach, or series of coaches, have a direct impact on the success and career of a player.
Ironically, many small business owners open their doors with a dream to succeed....yet, 50% of all small businesses fail within 5 years. Why? The answer is simple. Many owners don't practice business. When asked about the early days at Apple, co-founder Steve Wozniak credits the success that he and Steve Jobs achieved directly to the business coaches they had from the very beginning. What would happen if small business owners would commit any percentage of their time and revenue annually to coaching and business development? Well, it is happening, and those are the businesses that succeed, excel, and grow. Even the top executives from any industry - Bill Gates, Robert Kiyosaki, and Tony Robbins, all have a coach (or few) to thank for their successes. The question any business owner must ask is "Do I want to play, or do I go Pro?" When business owners take their company's growth as seriously as Saturday morning soccer; then, success becomes child's play.
Melissa Glossup, Certified Business Strategist, Action.Impact.Success
www.actionimpactsuccess.com