
Enjoy the Good Life!
The good life! What does it mean to you?
Does it mean you live in the penthouse of a beautiful apartment building in
London? Are you splashing around in your private swimming pool? Or are you just
eating in better restaurants?
Your lifestyle, also known as your standard of living, is the material comfort
of your life: your clothing, house, possessions, luxuries and so on.
What is the ideal standard of living for you? Take a minute to write what
lifestyle you would most enjoy.
So how do you get the good life?
Quiz
Check the items below that determine your standard of living:
If you chose the last
factor, you can improve the quality of your lifestyle.
"Products are the basis of a standard of living. They don't appear from
midair. They come from work truly done." -- L. Ron Hubbard
When you produce enough valuable products, you earn the standard of living you
want.
What Is Your Product?
Everyone needs to produce products. If you build houses, your product is a
"house." If you publish books, your product is most likely a "published book."
If you cook food, your product might be "a healthy, delicious meal."
If you produce a service, such as a hotel clerk, your product might be "a happy
hotel guest." If you are a doctor, your product is "a healthy patient." If you
sing operas, your product might be "an emotionally effected audience."
As L. Ron Hubbard writes, the work must be truly done. Employees who exaggerate
or lie about their productivity do not stay on the job for long. For example, a
lazy computer technician might say, "Don't worry about it, boss. I'm sure those
machines work fine. The problem is probably with the software company." The
computer technician is not producing a product.
Businesses who do not truly do the work are also on the road to failure. "You
will make millions with our guaranteed stock market investment system. Just send
$999 for this book today!" "Apply our Super-Duper cream to your forehead every
morning and you'll soon feel cheerful." "We can install your new roof at half
the cost of your other bids if you give me a check for $10,000 right now."
"Factually one normally has to work fast and expertly and in high volume
to bring about any acceptable standard of living for himself and his group."
-- L. Ron Hubbard
These three production factors determine your standard of living:
1. Speed: how quickly can you produce your product?
2. Expertise: do you know what you are doing?
3. Volume: how many products can you produce?
Working fast is important. A restaurant whose customers wait 45 minutes for
their meals makes less money than a restaurant that prepares meals within 20
minutes. An auto mechanic who can replace an engine in six hours enjoys a better
standard of living than a mechanic who needs 20 hours to do the same job.
Your expertise determines the quality of your product. If a computer program you
write makes computers crash, your standard of living will crash. A horse trainer
who produces a calm, friendly obedient horse earns a higher standard of living
than a horse trainer whose horses bite or kick their riders.
And of course, the more you produce, the better your standard of living. For
example, if you are a high school teacher, you might decide your product is "an
educated student." So to teach more students, you might write books, produce
documentaries or create e-learning websites. Instead of producing 30 educated
students each week, you produce hundreds or thousands of educated students.
A Little-known Fact about Achieving
the Lifestyle You Want
Successful business owners and executives find that you never get back the same
amount you produce. You need to produce much, much more than most people
realize.
"At a personal level one must produce in excess of his standard of living
just to retain and maintain it." - L. Ron Hubbard
To reach the standard of living you desire, you need to work faster and with
more expertise than you currently do. You can then produce the amount or volume
of products you need.
For example, you want a standard of living that costs $1000 per week. However,
you need to earn more than $1000 per week to do this. You need to pay for
transportation, work clothes, gas, child care, taxes and other expenses before
you can buy the lifestyle you want. So you need to earn $2000 each week to enjoy
a $1000-per-week standard of living.
If you own a business, the extra costs you must pay are even higher. Business
taxes, insurance, equipment, building rent, supplies and so on means you need to
produce many times more than the cost of your standard of living. For instance,
an accountant may need to produce $6,000 in services each week to afford a
$1000-per-week lifestyle. A toothbrush manufacturer may need to produce $100,000
in toothbrushes each week before the company owner can afford the same
$1000-per-week lifestyle.
Five Tips for Improving Your Standard
of Living
Because you control your standard of living, you can improve it with these
steps.
1. Identify your product. What is the final result of your work? What will
people pay you for?
2. Find three ways to increase your production speed. Use your ideas until your
speed has increased.
3. Find three ways to increase your expertise. Use these ideas to increase the
quality or value of your product.
4. Find three ways to increase the amount of production you get done per week.
Use these ideas until your production volume increases.
5. Continue to increase the speed, quality and volume of your production until
you have more than enough money to raise your standard of living.
Once you have earned the money for your new lifestyle, go for it! Buy that new
car. Move to that new house. Eat at those nicer restaurants.
You earned it. You deserve it. So enjoy it!
Provided by TipsForSuccess.org as a public service to introduce the technology of L. Ron Hubbard to you.
Copyright © 2005 TipsForSuccess.org. All rights reserved. Grateful acknowledgment is made to L. Ron Hubbard Library for permission to reproduce selections from the copyrighted works of L. Ron Hubbard.
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