CANDI Means Constant And Never-Ending Deliberate Improvement!
In previous teen leadership articles I mentioned Dr.
Deming and Anthony Robbins' words of Kaizen and CANI.
Their words for constant small improvements ignited higher quality conversations in their day about living a better and more productive Kaizen way of life right after WWII for Dr.
Deming, and a newer more productive CANI way of life after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War due to Tony Robbins and his movement of Peak Performance.
Well, change is inevitable, so near the turn of the 21st century a bunch of behavioral scientists, instructional and industrial leaders, philanthropists, and community leaders who were huge fans of Dr.
Deming's Kaizen and Anthony Robbins' CANI gathered together to figure out a new way to positively add to all the good that Dr.
Deming and Tony Robbins' words of Kaizen and CANI have already done.
After many hours of hard work the group came up with the idea that a life with constant small improvements every day is a very productive and a great life, but it might be even better if the improvements were more focused and self-directed.
Improvements should be deliberate, not random.
Improvements should be exactly what one wants, not something one just happens to get.
Thus, the aging process was now complete.
Kaizen from the 1940s grew into CANI, and CANI from the late 1980s grew into our modern-day CANDI- Constant And Never-ending Deliberate Improvement! Through deliberately concentrating on one small improvement at a time we can succeed much quicker than we previously thought possible.
And once we succeed in one area then we can transfer those successful behaviors over to another area.
Winning in one area makes it easier to win in other areas.
After all, water finds its own level, and winners tend to find a way to win, even when they find themselves in unfamiliar territory.
Now teens and even tweens, go deliberately learn, deliberately lead, and deliberately lay the way a little bit at a time to a better world for all of us.
Don't hope for random success.
Instead, deliberately and systematically nail down, master, and thoroughly complete each and every tiny task.
For this is the only true path that will ensure future successes in the great big important tasks that lie in the road ahead of you in your up-coming adventure called "the rest of your life.
" And once again, thanks for all that you do, and all that you will do...
Deming and Anthony Robbins' words of Kaizen and CANI.
Their words for constant small improvements ignited higher quality conversations in their day about living a better and more productive Kaizen way of life right after WWII for Dr.
Deming, and a newer more productive CANI way of life after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War due to Tony Robbins and his movement of Peak Performance.
Well, change is inevitable, so near the turn of the 21st century a bunch of behavioral scientists, instructional and industrial leaders, philanthropists, and community leaders who were huge fans of Dr.
Deming's Kaizen and Anthony Robbins' CANI gathered together to figure out a new way to positively add to all the good that Dr.
Deming and Tony Robbins' words of Kaizen and CANI have already done.
After many hours of hard work the group came up with the idea that a life with constant small improvements every day is a very productive and a great life, but it might be even better if the improvements were more focused and self-directed.
Improvements should be deliberate, not random.
Improvements should be exactly what one wants, not something one just happens to get.
Thus, the aging process was now complete.
Kaizen from the 1940s grew into CANI, and CANI from the late 1980s grew into our modern-day CANDI- Constant And Never-ending Deliberate Improvement! Through deliberately concentrating on one small improvement at a time we can succeed much quicker than we previously thought possible.
And once we succeed in one area then we can transfer those successful behaviors over to another area.
Winning in one area makes it easier to win in other areas.
After all, water finds its own level, and winners tend to find a way to win, even when they find themselves in unfamiliar territory.
Now teens and even tweens, go deliberately learn, deliberately lead, and deliberately lay the way a little bit at a time to a better world for all of us.
Don't hope for random success.
Instead, deliberately and systematically nail down, master, and thoroughly complete each and every tiny task.
For this is the only true path that will ensure future successes in the great big important tasks that lie in the road ahead of you in your up-coming adventure called "the rest of your life.
" And once again, thanks for all that you do, and all that you will do...
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