Magic Of Thinking Big

Front Cover
Simon and Schuster, Apr 2, 1987 - Business & Economics - 192 pages
Millions of readers have acquired the secrets of success through The Magic of Thinking Big. Achieve everything you always wanted: financial security, power and influence, the ideal job, satisfying relationships, and a rewarding, happy life.

Set your goals high...then exceed them!

Millions of people throughout the world have improved their lives using The Magic of Thinking Big. Dr. David J. Schwartz, long regarded as one of the foremost experts on motivation, will help you sell better, manage better, earn more money, and—most important of all—find greater happiness and peace of mind.

The Magic of Thinking Big gives you useful methods, not empty promises. Dr. Schwartz presents a carefully designed program for getting the most out of your job, your marriage and family life, and your community. He proves that you don’t need to be an intellectual or have innate talent to attain great success and satisfaction—but you do need to learn and understand the habit of thinking and behaving in ways that will get you there. This book gives you those secrets!

Believe you can succeed and you will:

-Cure yourself of the fear of failure
-Think and dream creatively
-You are what you think you are
-Make your attitudes your allies
-Learn how to think positively
-Turn defeat into victory
-Use goals to help you grow
-Think like a leader
 

Contents

Preface
1
What This Book Will Do for You
5
Believe You Can Succeed and You Will
9
Cure Yourself of Excusitis the Failure Disease
25
Build Confidence and Destroy Fear
49
How to Think Big
75
How to Think and Dream Creatively
100
You Are What You Think You Are
126
Make Your Attitudes Your Allies
166
Think Right Toward People
192
Get the Action Habit
212
How to Turn Defeat into Victory
235
Use Goals to Help You Grow
252
How to Think like a Leader
275
Index
303
Copyright

Go First Class
146

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About the author (1987)

Dr. David J. Schwartz was a professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta and the president of Creative Educational Services, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in leadership development. He died in 1987.