Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Raseri Columbus New Leader Spotlight: Steven Mathers

Hometown: Hamilton, Indiana

School: Northwest State Community College Business Management/Computer Science

Fun Fact: I taught myself how to do a back flip at the age of 12

Biggest Strength: My ability to persevere.

Hobbies: Weight Lifting, MMA, Kayaking 

Never Leave the House Without: Cell Phone

Favorite Long Term Goal: Owning a plane

Quick Answers, Pick one: 

Mountains or Beach:
Beach

Coffee or Tea or Energy Drink: 
Energy Drink

Winter or Summer
Summer

Water or Snow (ski/boarding)
Wake Boarding


I’d like to thank… Everyone that has contributed to my success.  You can learn from all aspects of life so give thanks for everything.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

How to Train Your Brain for High Performance

Contributing editor, Inc.com

Everybody sees the world through the lenses of three sets of beliefs. Making all three more effective increases your mental performance.


For the past two decades, my good friend and mentor Gerhard Gschwandtner (if you don't know who he is, you're not in sales) has been investigating the thought patterns of successful people and how to replicate them.
In the process, he's created a fascinating and (it seems to me) quite useful model of how beliefs (or mindsets, as he calls them) ultimately determine our actions. He sees the brain operating like a pyramid with three levels:


Implanted Mindsets

These are beliefs that you've absorbed from your culture and your parents or caretakers. While some of these beliefs may be useful and enlightened, others of them may be harmful and holding you back.
The challenge here, according to Gschwandtner, is to "water the flowers and stop watering the weeds" by making a conscious decision to either embrace or reject these beliefs.
For example, my late father believed that I could accomplish any intellectual task if I put my mind to it. He was also, like many of his generation, quietly racist. I've chosen to accept his positivism and reject his racism.

Imprinted Mindsets

Sitting atop those implanted beliefs are the beliefs that are created when you're impressed by a great teacher, a mentor, or a coach.
Such experiences can literally change your life. I've met many people who can pinpoint the exact moment when they changed their thinking as the result of reading a book, hearing a speech, or just having a conversation.
For example, Tony Robbins taught me, among other things, that formal, written goals are essential to success. Previously, I foolishly never set goals because I wanted to "feel free."

Inspired Mindsets

The highest level of the pyramid is the inspired beliefs that transcend your background and even the lessons you've learned from your mentors.
As Gschwandtner puts it: "We all have deep within us something special that we might call 'inner magic' or a talent that wants to come out, or a dream that invites us to think about exploring a new direction in our lives."
The challenge here is to heed these inspired beliefs in order to make your life more meaningful. These inspired beliefs are what drive successful people to create a "second act" where they are in service to a greater good.

Amp Up Your Performance

A wonderful characteristic of the human brain is that if you ask it a question, it will come up with an answer. (That's why it's important to ask the right questions!)
Using that principle, the following "worksheet" helps focus and channel all three levels of your mind so you can perform at a higher level:
Implanted Mindset
  • What belief that I've had since I was a child has proven the most useful?
  • What belief that I've had since I was a child has held me back the most?
  • What can I do, today, to reinforce and strengthen the useful belief?
  • What can I do, today, to expunge and eliminate the dysfunctional belief?
Imprinted Mindset
  • What three books have influenced me the most?
  • What three experiences have taught me the most?
  • What can I do, today, to strengthen the beliefs I acquired?
  • Given my current goals, who are the three best mentors (authors, experts, consultants) to help me grow?
Inspired Mindset
  • If I could do anything and knew that I could not fail, it would be _______.
  • What is holding me back from following that inspiration?
  • What parts of my life are leading me toward that inspiration?
  • What is my plan to follow that inspiration?
I recently learned that Gschwandtner has a special workshop that uses applied neuroscience to help attendees align their levels and tap into their inspired mindset.
According to my experience with his previous events, the workshop is likely to be both enlightening and entertaining..
I'd go myself, but unfortunately, I had already made commitments for that time before I learned about it.

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Raseri Columbus Holiday Party



Here at Raseri, Inc our company culture and ideals of both personal and professional development of each of our team members is what makes us different from most companies.  We value everyone on our team and make it our mission for them to grow as people and with our company.  We encourage our team members' philanthropic interests and promote and help them in anyway we can.  We have a true family feel in our company both inside and outside the office. A big part of that includes our office holiday parties!

We want to thank our President, Rick for opening his home for our annual office holiday party.  Everyone enjoyed a great meal and white elephant gift exchange.  We also had our final donations that day for the families we adopted for the holidays and our donations for the local animal shelter.  Thanks so much to everyone who donated.

'Tis the season to give back!

www.raseri.biz

Monday, December 28, 2015

Raseri Columbus New Leader Spotlight: Daniel Rowand

Hometown: Toledo, OH

School: Certified TEFL Teacher

Biggest Strength: Taking Control

Hobbies: Scuba, Mountain Biking and Rock Climbing 

Never Leave the House Without: Cell Phone

Favorite Long Term Goal: Owning my own boat and living on a beautiful island

Quick Answers, Pick one: 

Mountains or Beach:
Beach

Coffee or Tea or Energy Drink: 
Coffee

Winter or Summer
Summer

Water or Snow (ski/boarding)
Water


I’d like to thank… Everybody!

Monday, December 14, 2015

Raseri Columbus New Leader Spotlight: Austen Hart

Hometown: Hicksville, OH

School: Bowling Green State University

Fun Fact: I love adrenaline rushes!

Biggest Strength: Mentally Strong

Hobbies:  Working on Cars and Motorcycles 

Never Leave the House Without: Cologne

Favorite Long Term Goal: Own a Rat Rod

Quick Answers, Pick one: 

Mountains or Beach:
Beach

Coffee or Tea or Energy Drink: 
Coffee

Winter or Summer
Summer

Water or Snow (ski/boarding)
Water


I’d like to thank… My grandfather, Dale for teaching me everything I know and for being my mentor.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

What Impact do Entrepreneurs have on Society?



Successful business owners create so much good – both on a national and a local scale –
that the weight of their importance cannot be measured in purely monetary terms.

The entrepreneur is a resource, as well as an individual in their own right. The successful businessman or woman – whom is likely to have created a product or service of note, built a substantial customer base and turned over a profit in a period of financial doom-and-gloom around the globe – naturally has a wealth of insight, intelligence and innovation to offer.

But what are the benefits – and drawbacks – of an entrepreneurial society?

The benefits

Economic growth

The bottom line of vibrant entrepreneurialism is that it creates wealth: for the entrepreneur, for the people that are employed as a result and for the local economy. It creates wealth on a national scale for the government in the form of taxation, which is then redistributed accordingly to the services and communities that need it the most.

The success of an entrepreneur is ultimately in creating a product or service that adds value to the lives of its users; whether that is an inherent need for the item or a simple desire to have it. Either way, an innovation on this scale can help to push a market forwards on a domestic level, and – where relevant – drive exports to new overseas markets. This again is a wealth-creating exercise, which is a key driver of economic growth.

Often an entrepreneur has to take a risk or two to enjoy success, and it is this spirit which serves as a wake-up call for many an ailing industry and economy. As such, it is those governments that cultivate a sense of entrepreneurialism – through an effective economic and legal framework – that will reap the ultimate benefit. Prosperity is a two-way street after all.

Job creation

Successful entrepreneurialism often requires the skills and labour of many hands; and that necessitates job creation. As a thriving business grows so do the opportunities for others and the cumulative impact of new start-ups in a particular geographical area will go a long way towards cutting queues at the job centre.

How easy is it to be an entrepreneur in 2015?

This facilitates economic benefits – employees with money in their pockets will naturally spend them on local goods and services. It also helps to push societies forward too: it is well documented that unemployment causes crime, poverty and a gamut of physical and mental illnesses; adding further strain to already stretched health services.

Success in business generally has a cascading effect, and so a range of stakeholders can expect to flourish from entrepreneurial growth. Suppliers, retailers, storage facilities, courier services, recruitment agencies... any or all of these can benefit from a local company that is thriving. This helps to create jobs in these firms too, and so the cycle continues.

In the UK alone more than 15 million people are employed by small and medium businesses; many of which will have been born out of an entrepreneurial spirit.

Philanthropy

Often the statistics are hard to measure – not all entrepreneurs wish to boast of their charitable activities – but it is fair to say that many successful business owners, some of whom will have come from financially insecure upbringings, are keen to redistribute their new-found wealth to charities and local community ventures.

As a survey conducted by Harris Interactive and Ernst & Young entitled ‘Entrepreneurs & Philanthropy: Investing in the Future’ testifies, 90 per cent of entrepreneurs donate money and 70 per cent donate a resource that is just as important: their time. A third factor, and one which cannot be overlooked, is that most entrepreneurs are successful because they were able to identify market opportunities or leverage profit from economies of scale. This kind of knowledge can be indispensable to non-profit organisations.

What are the characteristics that make entrepreneurs?

Innovation

Necessity is the mother of invention, as the saying goes, and so perhaps its older sibling is innovation. Most entrepreneurs enter a market successfully thanks to their innovative approach: whether that’s inherent in the product/service they offer, or in the way in which they deliver it.

By finding a solution to a problem – whether it was explicit or merely an opportunity for competitive advantage, an entrepreneur can drive innovation in a market and create competition; a theorem that results in better and often more affordable products and services for consumers. Steve Jobs and his Apple colleagues invented the iPod, and this created an area of innovation in MP3 players. Today, this is a vibrant industry with many competitors; which has created technological excellence at the top end of the market and perfectly functional products at the budget end. Who wins? The buying public.

Increased competition

Success breeds success, and once one entrepreneur has flourished in a given market more often than not another businessman or woman looks to enjoy their own slice of the pie.

As we know, competition is a good thing for the consumer, as it requires companies to delivery a better quality product in order to survive. This can also create price wars (take a look at the ongoing battle between the Xbox One and Playstation 4 as a good example), and it is true that often only the strongest will prosper. But the benefits to the general public are obvious.

Entrepreneurship: The new status symbol?

The Drawbacks
You could be forgive for assuming that the work of entrepreneurs is solely positive, but unfortunately there are some concerns attached to entrepreneurial activity...

Use of natural resources

While there is a sub-set of business owners whom we can class as social entrepreneurs, unfortunately not all are blessed with an environmental conscience.

Pretty much every company that operates today uses natural resources in some way – electricity, water, gas, paper etc – and this is simply unavoidable. Some entrepreneurs will offset their use of resources by donating to relevant charities and organisations; a form of self-taxation, if you will. Alas, not all do.

Governmental control

While no relevant statistics exist to back up this theory, it is believed that governments that seek to nurture entrepreneurship can actually unbalance a market by creating an environment which can be exploited by business. This can manifest itself in monopolies, unfair pricing, corruption and even fraud.

Furthermore, Wim Naude, a prominent economist and scholar at the Maastricht School of Management, writes: "While entrepreneurship may raise economic growth and material welfare, it may not always result in improvements in non-material welfare (or happiness)."

Unemployment

Of course this is not true in all cases, but it can also be said that while one new market entrant flourishes, so too must an existing company – who is unable or simply unwilling to compete with this innovative new player – depart the scene.

This is often the case in the UK retail sector, where a national chain may open a new store in a village or town which forces independent, local retailers into a forced ultimatum: slash prices or die.

The upshot? Unemployment and a huge sense of injustice.

Entrepreneurship: The money line

You will make your own mind up as to where entrepreneurs sit on the societal benefit/drawback continuum, but it is clear from numerous high profile examples that an entrepreneurial spirit, channelled with good intentions, can foster so many positives in a community and on society as a whole.

Many observers are resistant to capitalism through their own attitudes and philosophical misgivings, but when a successful entrepreneur is doing so much to put money in the pockets of the many – either directly or indirectly – it is hard to make an argument against such a force for good.

This is a guest blog and may not represent the views of Virgin.com. Please see virgin.com/terms for more details. Thumbnail from gettyimages.

Monday, November 16, 2015

Raseri Columbus travels to Boise, ID and Gatlinburg, TN!

After an amazing year full of growth, expansion, and awards the Management Team at Raseri Columbus has taken some time for a little fun!  Our work hard, play hard is something we truly do live so even though we enjoy what we do we like to take some time to get away as well! 

Our first trip was to Boise, ID.  Account Manager, Brad also earned to go along on this trip for all of his hard work in his short time with Raseri Columbus.  Because we believe in no seniority and everything is earned based on effort not time, even though he has only been with us for less than six months he has proven himself as a top leader in the company and has moved up quickly.

While in Boise we visited some local favorites in the Meridian for great food, enjoyed the beautiful mountain views, and had a fun field day full of events and competition!  The weather was great for our trip and it was a nice getaway from our everyday life in Ohio!  We were sad to head home but excited to get back and continue to grow and apply what we learned from the managers from all across the country!


A few short weeks later the Management Team was at it again traveling to Gatlinburg, TN!  They stayed in a gorgeous log cabin in the Smokey Mountains and really had a chance to unplug and relax! While in Tennessee they visited Ober and rode the ski mountain coaster as well as had old fashion photos taken.  A trip to Ripley's Odditorium and a haunted house were also part of the agenda.  Our trip was during Oktoberfest so we enjoyed some great food and a moonshine tasting! Check out more pictures in our youtube video below! 

Traveling is something we love to do and we are grateful to have the freedom to get to do some of the things we have always wanted to do!  We set big goals here at Raseri Columbus and when we hit those goals we reward ourselves!  We plan to continue to love our work hard, play hard lifestyle and travel the country and beyond!