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How to Achieve Massive Success Before Graduating

How do you land your dream job, win the world's most prestigious scholarships, and get into your top school choices? Conventionally, students are taught that the main way to achieve these things are by getting great grades in the right classes and getting great summer jobs in the right fields.

This strategy may have been a safe bet for awhile, but it simply isn't anymore. With more and more people applying to the same positions, competition is spiking dramatically. Simply working harder or taking a test prep course isn't enough anymore. In fact, it's risky.

The best way to achieve massive success is to passionately plan, prioritize, and pursue your vision today, not tomorrow! Landing your dream job, winning the world's most prestigious scholarships, and getting into your top choice school has more to do with the choices you make today rather than how well you fill out your application. College students from across the country, even from the most prestigious universities, learned this lesson the hard way last year when fewer positions were available and recruiters had stacks of hundreds of resumes.

Below are some examples of students who planned, prioritized, and pursued their vision early and achieved massive results:

  • Successful serial entrepreneur, Joshua Newman, was offered a senior technology analyst position before he graduated from Yale by one of his former clients over dinner.
  • Devi Sridhar won the Rhodes Scholarship, the nation's most prestigious scholarship, when she didn't even decide to apply until a few months before the application was due. Some of the people that didn't end up winning had been preparing for over three years. She had done most of the work in the years prior when she was pursuing her vision.
  • Jamie Gonzalez, a successful student entrepreneur from the University of Oklahoma, got the highest job offer in his class even though he had a paltry 2.4 GPA.
So what can you do? Below are 10 tips for achieving mega success before you graduate:
  1. You?re failing if you?re not making enough mistakes. One thing successful people have in common is that they fail a lot. The average millionaire goes bankrupt more than once. Pursue your dreams and use failures as stepping stones. ?Every adversity carries with it the seeds of a greater benefit.? ? Napoleon Hill, Best-Selling Author, Think and Grow Rich

  2. If you don?t have skeptics, than you?re not thinking big enough. To be in the top .000000001% you cannot follow the road most taken. You must create your own. ?If at first the idea is not absurd, then there is no hope for it.? ? Albert Einstein

  3. Never take a job for money. Like a business, we all have tangible and intangible assets. Intangible benefits to our brand, network, growth, and knowledge are more important than our salary or hourly wage when choosing a career. ?If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him. An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest.? ? Benjamin Franklin

  4. Good grades and test scores are risky. The opposite of good is great. By achieving our school system?s goals, we are set up to be good, but not great. We must create our own path in life. Like a business creates a business plan, individuals must create a life plan. ?There is no correlation between high SAT scores, good grades, and money.? ? Thomas Stanley, author, The Millionaire Mind

  5. Experience and knowledge can make you close-minded. By having experience of how things should be, we become close-minded to how they could be. Today?s youth, the first generation to grow up with the Internet, have access to and the ability to implement new opportunities that adults can not see. ?Young people will dominate most of the twenty-first century.? ? Don Tapscott, best-selling author, Growing Up Digital

  6. If you are comfortable, than you?re obsolete. By being comfortable being uncomfortable, we create new possibilities in our lives that allow us to excel over others who refuse to change or grow. ?Restlessness and discontent are the first necessities of progress.? ? Thomas Edison

    Don?t pursue backup plans. Because of fear of failure, many people pursue careers that are safe, but that they are not passionate about. By doing this they set themselves up to be average. Individuals who plan, prioritize, and pursue their vision are bound to succeed. ?Most people live and die with their music unplayed. They never dare to try.? ? Mary Kay Ash, founder, Mary Kay Cosmetics

  7. Don?t always listen to your friends and family. While your friends and family may have the best intentions for you, their first reaction is often to shelter you from being hurt instead of encouraging you to take risks and pursue your dreams. ?Be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best - night and day - to make you everybody else.? ? E.E. Cummings, poet

  8. Pursue Extreme Endeavors. Pursue unconventional, success activities that you friends only dream about such as; making a job in a company or your own business, taking time off from school, shadowing a role model, attending interesting and relevant seminars/conferences, and conducting informational interviews. ?In order to be irreplaceable one must always be different.? ? Coco Chanel

  9. Plan, prioritize, and pursue your vision before you graduate. It is better to have a quarter-life crisis than a mid-life crisis. The decisions that you make now determine whether you have a life of success or distress. "The time is always right to do what is right.? ? Martin Luther King

Comments

In some of the things you write, it makes it sound like it's not important or not neccesary to get good grades in school. Will it help you more to get good grades, or is it just a waste of time?

Hi Nick,

There is no right/wrong answer to this question. The answer depends a lot on your goals.

I look at grades as one of many credentials that help you get in the door. Some organizations are very strict about grade requirements and the only way to get in is through a certain G.P.A. However, I've found through my experience that most aren't.

Organizations use many tools to narrow down the resumes they are going to look at. Grades are one of the most popular since everybody gets graded at school. However, they also give special priority to students who were highly recommended or who have really unique credentials (ie - starting a business, writing a book, traveling around the world).

Which ways of getting in the door do you want to invest in?

I don't like grades because:
- It takes a lot of time to get really good grades.
- It is difficult to differentiate yourself through grades because many people get high marks.
- Unfortunately, grades often reflect how well you can memorize what teachers think is important. They don't necessarily measure how well you actually learned.
- After a few years on the job, your grades become worthless as a credential.

With that said, I'm not saying grades should be totally disregarded. But I do think students could be much more extra-ordinary by developing relationships with people who can introduce and recommend you to V.I.P.'s and impart valuable knowledge on to you. I think investing time in your passion and producing real world results is a great credential because it gives potential employers, scholarship committees, and admissions staff real-world, accurate measures they can use to judge you by, which is something most other students don't have. In addition, networking and pursuing your passion have many fringe benefits that stay with you for life.

I think school can be leveraged in many ways beyond just getting good grades. I will have an article about this in the future.

Hey Mike,

Just read ur articles..

Give me more URLs where I can find ur work.

Take care partner
I'm Back in Action.
luv
Manoj Nair

Hi Michael,

That was really inspiring. I just started the Canadian chapter of Future Business Leaders Association at my school. I will definitely be sharing your advice with my group. Will you be coming to Toronto in the near future? I would love to attend one of your workshops.

Cheers,
Sumera

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