Archive | February, 2009

Inspirational Speaker – Rev. Otis Moss

24 Feb

I am an inspired inspirational speaker! Tonight, my wife and I attended a speech at Maryville College. The speech was given by the Rev. Otis Moss pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ (where our current president attended). You MIGHT remember there was a “small” controversy about the former pastor of the church (now retired pastor Jeremiah Wright). I didn’t go to hear about any of that. I went to watch and listen to someone who had conviction, was authentic, real, and inspiring.

As we left, we ran into the dean of students of the college who told us she fully expected to get some flack for inviting him and possibly lose some donors. She added that inviting him supported the mission of the college and that even losing donors was worth the risk. It’s great to see people willing to risk for something they believe in. Too often organizations play it safe and as a result people miss out on a rich experience like we had tonight.

As a speaker, I learned a lot from Otis Moss and the many things his Chicago church does to build community and help others. I also learned about preparation, delivery, authenticity, passion, and more. My faith life was inspired and my faith in higher education renewed.

Inspirational speaker Tim Richardson speaks about how giving increases employee morale, lowers employee turnover, increases customer loyalty and creates higher profits for Fortune 500 companies, associations, healthcare, and financial services. He is founder of the Bill Walter Melanoma Research Fund. For more information on Tim, go to www.TimRichardson.com

Ex Libris

18 Feb

Yesterday I received a call from my Alma Mater, Florida Southern College in Lakeland, FL. The call was from my friend Rob Tate who was an English teacher there when I was a student. While I never had Rob as a professor, we became friends and have kept in occasional touch through the years. Rob now works in the development department and asked me to sign a letter to be sent out to my classmates who graduated with me. The purpose of the letter is to ask for donations to buy books for the library. I haven’t written the letter yet but in thinking about it, I was reminded of some of the most important books I read during my college years. I probably won’t tell Rob that the books I read that had the biggest impact on me, weren’t any of the books I checked out or borrowed from the library – those books helped me earn my degree in Business Administration. The books that helped shape my life, had nothing to do with reference books or text books like economics, business, finance, accounting, calculus, biology, etc. The books that helped shape my life taught life skills and were read not during the semester but over the summer or right after graduation and included How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie, The Magic of Thinking Big by David Swartz, and The Greatest Salesman in the World by Og Mandio (which Rob gave me for my graduation gift). While I would add other books to that list today, those are books that I read around my college years that had an impact on me.

Someday, I envision a shelf, room, or perhaps even an entire floor in my college library (and colleges and universities throughout the world) with books donated by alumni. These books won’t help students write term papers on their required courses but instead will be books that inspired new thinking, books that helped people make a difference and books that changed the life of the reader as well as those the reader touched in their lifetime.

Imagine you have been given the task to create such a place. What books should go there? How did a book change you, your life, career, etc.  Create a short best seller list and post it here.

Inspirational speaker Tim Richardson speaks about how giving increases employee morale, lowers employee turnover, increases customer loyalty and creates higher profits for Fortune 500 companies, associations, healthcare, and financial services. He is founder of the Bill Walter Melanoma Research Fund. For more information on Tim, go to www.TimRichardson.com

Happy Blogger

17 Feb

Apparently blogging makes people happier. What do you think? This is probably more appropriate for a Twitter post but I was SO happy to read it, I posted it here.  Live longer. Blog more.

Inspirational speaker Tim Richardson speaks about how giving increases employee morale, lowers employee turnover, increases customer loyalty and creates higher profits for Fortune 500 companies, associations, healthcare, and financial services. He is founder of the Bill Walter Melanoma Research Fund. For more information on Tim, go to www.TimRichardson.com

Twitter with Tim or get LinkedIn

Is Twitter Twaddle?

13 Feb

I recently joined Twitter. I joined in part due to the peer pressure of some of my professional speaker friends. I am not sure yet if it’s a productive use of my time or a black hole of wasting time that prevents me from really enjoying a RICH life.

It would be twerrific to twalk with Twitter Twaddlers and get a Tweet at TwimRichardson (TimRichardson) if it’s not a Twerrible twrouble.

Inspirational speaker Tim Richardson speaks about how giving increases employee morale, lowers employee turnover, increases customer loyalty and creates higher profits for Fortune 500 companies, associations, healthcare, and financial services. He is founder of the Bill Walter Melanoma Research Fund. For more information on Tim, go to www.TimRichardson.com

Trustworthy, Loyal, Helpful, Friendly, Courteous…

8 Feb

Today I thought about someone who impacted my life more than 30 years ago. I was reminded of him as I sat in the Boy Scout Sunday service this morning.  When I saw my son sitting in the front row, I started thinking about the positive impact the scouting program had on my life. My mind drifted back to when I was a scout. I am sure I attended a Boy Scout Sunday event but I don’t remember it. What I do remember is the impact that one of the adult leaders had on my life. His name is Bob Burgess. He’s a writer and adventurer and he’s one of the most interesting people I have ever met AND I had the pleasure of living across the street from him from age 8 through age 14.   When I first met Bob, he had a VW van that had a pop up camper on top. He also had a sailboat and a monkey. His coolest factor was OFF the chart! Bob would travel around in that camper writing magazines articles and camping in places where he was researching.  He had a small office outside his home with a Royal typewriter where he wrote. The office couldn’t have been more than 200 square feet but it was like a museum to me. Artifacts and pictures from his adventures adorned the walls. Right over his desk was the jaw of a large shark he had caught. I loved going over to see him because he always had a story. I lost touch with him for several years after we moved away from the small North Florida town where we both lived but reconnected when I moved back to nearby Tallahassee, Florida when I graduated from college. About twenty years ago, Bob invited me on a weekend trip to write a Huck Finn like story on living on a deserted island while eating only what we caught from the bay that surrounded the island. We stayed up until 4:00 am and I sat mesmerized by a star filled sky, the intoxicating sight of an open fire and Bob’s stories and adventures.

Bob has lived a life many can only imagine. He’s traveled all over the world, diving in some of the most beautiful places in the world. He spends two weeks each year living on his sail boat in the Keys while hunting lobster.  He and his wife Julia traveled in Europe for two years after they were married. Between his writing and traveling he made time to volunteer with our local Boy Scout troop where he brought his enthusiasm and zest for life to our outings. He taught me a lot about loving the outdoors, about being excited about life and what it meant to be a leader in scouting. His teachings came full circle when I interviewed him recently for the book I am writing. He told me he was impacted by a speaker he had heard at a high school rally more than 60 years ago. He told me the speaker said you can do anything you want to do provided you believe you can do it. He told me he still remembered that after so many years. He told me keep the following quote from Press on scotch taped it to my Royal typewriter:

Nothing in the World can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common and unsuccessful than unsuccessful man with talent. Genius will not – unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education alone will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.

Bob told me that Press On was his guiding creed for his life. Thank you, Bob for being a guiding force in my life.

Tim Richardson is an inspirational speaker who speaks about how giving increases employee morale, lowers employee turnover, increases customer loyalty and creates higher profits for Fortune 500 companies, associations, healthcare, and financial services. He is founder of the Bill Walter Melanoma Research Fund. For more information on Tim, go to www.TimRichardson.com

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