I’ve been writing this nationally syndicated column for 21 years now, and it seems that the Mackay’s Morals I create for each one really stick with the readers. Every three years, I dedicate a whole column to some of my most memorable morals:
- No one is as important as all of us.
- Gratitude should be a continuous attitude.
- Killing time isn’t murder, it’s suicide.
- Hidden talents don’t have to be huge, but the results can be.
- Open a book … open your mind.
- Life is a lot easier if you always play by the rules.
- We all have to grow up, but we never have to get old.
- Corporate integrity begins with personal integrity.
- We is a little word that sends a big message.
- People don’t care how much you know about them … once they realize how much you care about them.
- The most successful managers aim at making themselves unnecessary to their staff.
- Critical thinking is critical to success.
- It’s not enough to know what. You must also know how.
- Your mind is your most powerful ally in developing confidence.
- If you go the extra mile, you will almost always beat the competition.
- Doing the right thing is never the wrong thing to do.
- There is one thing more contagious than enthusiasm, and that is the lack of enthusiasm.
- A student of life considers the world a classroom.
- People are judged by the company they keep. Companies are judged by the people they keep.
- If seeing is believing, visualizing is achieving.
- Creativity, not necessity, is the true mother of invention.
- They say a word to the wise is sufficient, but I say a word from the wise is a gift!
- If you don’t climb the mountain, you can’t see the view.
- There is no such thing as a final offer.
- An old dog can learn new tricks, and a new dog can learn old tricks.
- Failure is not falling down but staying down.
- Customer service is not a department, it’s everyone’s job.
- Saying you’re sorry and showing you’re sorry are not the same thing.
- Exercise your brain so your memory doesn’t get flabby.
- An ounce of commitment is worth pounds of promises.
- Most people strive to be better off, but few strive to be better.
- If you want to make your mark, sharpen your skills.
- Everyone wants to win, but most people are not willing to prepare to win.
- The fool asks the wise for advice, but the wise ask the experienced.
- Pride is the stone over which many people stumble.
- Control your life or it will control you.
- The hardest part of the sale is selling yourself to your customer.
- Entrepreneurship is living a few years of your life like most people won’t, so that you can spend the rest of your life like most people can’t.
- To get what you’ve never had, you must do what you’ve never done.
- You’ll never lose credibility if you share the credit.
- Happiness can be thought, taught and caught – but not bought.
- Failure isn’t final unless you say it is.
- People aren’t strangers if you’ve already met them. The trick is to meet them before you need their help.
- We may not be able to predict the future, but we can prepare for it.
- A plan isn’t a plan until you have a backup plan.
- Taking your time can sometimes be the best use of your time.
- If a business knows what’s good for it, it knows what’s good for a customer.
- You can’t get ahead if you don’t get started.
- Worrying casts a dark shadow that blocks any glimmer of hope.
- The best way to sound like you know what you’re talking about is to know what you’re talking about.
- Stay on your toes or fall flat on your face.
- You’ll never reach your goal if you don’t have one.
- Start every day/year with a healthy dose of vitamin C – Creativity.
- Taking care of employees is taking care of business.
- Lots of people start, but few people finish.
Mackay’s Moral: (one more time) The smarter I get, the more I realize I’m not finished learning.