Cheat Codes For Life: How to Achieve ANYTHING With the Technologies of Success
Are you making the best decisions to guarantee your success? Cheat Codes For Life is a cookbook for success in ALL areas of your life: wealth, health, relationships, work, and happiness. Robert Crayola clearly presents 35 key areas to direct your energy and gives you specific techniques and exercises to get you results NOW. * Hundreds of principles that guarantee effortless success * Hints and Tricks to get your Money situation straightened out and working for you * How to identify the internal conflicts going on inside your head and reprogram yourself to always choose to do the activity that is most productive *
Ultimate Word Success is a great way to have fun while building vocabulary. Standardized test-takers (GED, PSAT/NMSQT*, SAT* ACT®, and TOEFL) can sharpen their skills with hundreds of fun exercises and practice test questions. Readers will surely build a bigger and better vocabulary and quickly learn new "test-worthy" words through the numerous word games, quizzes, and puzzles that are both entertaining and educational.
From learning consonants, vowels, and their assembly into words, phonics is a cognitive approach to reading. Using 11 actrivity-based lessons, your child can learn to read easily and actually find reading to be fun. It's a great way to stimulate and extend an active approach to reading throughout your child's life.
Pfeffer (The External Control of Organizations), professor of organizational behavior at Stanford University, posits that intelligence, performance, and likeability alone are not the key to moving up in an organization; instead, he asserts, self promotion, building relationships, cultivating a reputation for control and authority, and perfecting a powerful demeanor are vital drivers of advancement and success. The book has a realpolitik analysis of human behavior that isn't for everyone but its candor, crisp prose, and forthrightness are fresh and appealing.
Zig Ziglar has dedicated his life to teaching people the art of successful living. However, he has discovered that "being successful" is only part of life's challenge. Success is very often a short-lived high. People arrive at the goal line in life, look into the end zone and discover that it contains many of the things that money will buy, but it contains very little of what money won't buy. Zig believes that yes, success is worth it, but it is not enough. The next step is to move from success into significance.