The Full Potential Accelerator:
A Call for Intentional Discipline.
You will look forward to each morning with a confident plan; and you will fall asleep each night knowing the day was purposeful and building your legacy.
Accelerator Program:
Six Phases; 18 Weeks
Successful business folk asked me for a structural transformation program. Intense reflection required. You will be asked to document your failures, inventory your roadblocks, and examine the unkept promises you have made to yourself.
This is not a "done-for-you" service. You will read academic research on brain science and human behavior. You will maintain a physical planner and a 70-page workbook. You will be required to craft a 36-month vision for your life in six key areas, then execute to your "Ideal Week" with zero excuses.
I provide the disciplined structure. You provide the work.
The structured and intentional life you build will allow you to focus on more than asset accumulation – you’ve already done that. The Accelerator will provide you with the structured and disciplined life to focus on dreams which were put aside – for good reason: supporting a family, building a career, and establishing stability. Now is the time for more. It’s time to live a life that makes a difference.
Start or provide leadership to a non-profit organization. Learn a new language. Master a musical instrument. Write and publish a book. Travel to dreamed-of destinations. There are a myriad of areas where you can add to your body-of-work and legacy. Only structure and discipline are required.
Conditions:
Limited Enrollment: One new participant each month. Maximum four per year.
The Commitment: $5,000 for 18 weeks.
$4,500 if paid prior to beginning the Accelerator.
No refunds once materials ship.
The Selection: Admission is by application only. I work with those who are already successful and ready to execute.
If you are satisfied with unintentional change, do not apply. If you seek to build a body of work that outlasts your life, the process begins with the Full Potential Accelerator.
If you are a successful leader ready to start building your legacy, then submit an application. I only work with those who are in control and ready to commit to improving themselves.
The “Apply to the Accelerator” link will take you to a Google Form where there are a series a questions. These questions help you understand my intentions; and your responses provide me with an insight into your intentions. If there is a good fit, we’ll schedule a call.
“Isolation is a killer. Surround yourself with those who will not let you fail.” - D. Scott Smith, MBA
Materials provided.
Full Potential Accelerator Workbook covering all 18 weeks (spiral bound)
Independent Planner & Journal (spiral bound)
Companion to the Independent Planner (digital copy)
Business Networking: A Scientific Method (digital copy)
Academic Research Papers:
o The End of History Illusion (1)
o Pragmatic Prospection: How and Why People Think About the Future (2)
[1] Abstract from the academic paper, The End of History Illusion “We measured the personalities, values, and preferences of more than 19,000 people who ranged in age from 18 to 68 and asked them to report how much they had changed in the past decade and/or to predict how much they would change in the next decade. Young people, middle-aged people, and older people all believed they had changed a lot in the past but would change relatively little in the future. People, it seems, regard the present as a watershed moment at which they have finally become the person they will be for the rest of their lives. This “end of history illusion” had practical consequences, leading people to overpay for future opportunities to indulge their current preferences.”
2 From the abstract of the academic paper, Pragmatic Prospection: How and Why People Think About the Future “It proposes that thoughts about the future begin by imagining what one wants to happen, which is thus initially optimistic. A second stage of such prospective thinking maps out how to bring that about, and this stage is marked by consideration of obstacles, requisite steps, and other potential problems, and so it tends toward cautious realism and even pessimism.”