• Post category:StudyBullet-7
  • Reading time:6 mins read


Develop a proactive personality. Envision your proactive goals. Implement a proactive business strategy

What you will learn

You will compare proactivity vs reactivity

You will outline how to become a proactive entrepreneur

You will describe entrepreneurial awareness of opportunities

You will indicate how to envision and pursue your proactive goals

You will analyze internal and external awareness factors influencing your business

You will distinguish between a proactive and reactive business strategy

You will have an idea of how the future is shaped through foresight

Description

Reactivity of many businessmen, entrepreneurs and top managers happens when they are unable to think and act for the longer-term. Those who are low in proactivity tend to be passive and reactive, and are less inclined to identify and seize opportunities for changing things. They likely adapt to situations rather than change them.

Entrepreneurial awareness of opportunities is an essential strength for entrepreneurs.

To become proactive , you should not just anticipate future problems or opportunities but also act to address these future challenges through achieving, influencing change. This change might be targeted towards improving, altering your environment, such as optimizing any business processes, mastering new skills, or broadening your networks as an entrepreneur. In each case, proactivity means a change from the current trend.

If you are proactive, your intentions and actions manage events, but when you are reactive, events can manage your actions and life.


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Human beings are unique in their power to shape their environment. According to Bandura, through cognitive self-regulation, we can visualize futures that act on the present; сreate, construct, evaluate, and revise alternative courses of action; anticipate possible outcomes of the options considered; and override environmental influences or pressures.

Envisioning your preferred future helps you form your intentions, create a vision in the form of the mental representation, set far- reaching proactive goals, ellaborate plans of actions, map your path to reach the final destination.

Being proactive you identify and solve problems, look for new opportunities, enter into action and persist until attaining a change.

This course containing 32 lectures and 3 hours of video will walk you through proactivity vs reactivity. You will analyze how to become a proactive entrepreneurΒ  with your sixth sense and make a proactive change inside and outside your organization. You will outline entrepreneurial awareness of opportunities. You will indicate how to envision and pursue your proactive goals. You will analyze internal and external awareness factors influencing your business. You will distinguish between a proactive and reactive business strategy. You will have an idea how the future is shaped through foresight.

English
language

Content

Introduction

Introduction
Proactive brands adding value

Understanding proactivity vs reactivity

Reaching from presidents to gods
Avoiding sanctions and confrontation
Challenging the status quo
Avoiding nondecision-making
Imagining a different future
Pursuing proactive goals
Having an image of your FWS
Embracing IWB
Cultivating your proactive mindset
Proactivity vs reactivity

Becoming a proactive entrepreneur

How unconstrained are you?
Your start-up still continues?
ESE as a key quality for your success
Are you ready to sacrifice?
Invest in your energetic resources
Envision your proactive goals. Practical tips

“Smelling” entreprenurial opportunities

EA as awareness of opportunities
EA and creativity
EA and decision-making

Perceiving the undercurrents

OAw as your company’s sensitivity
Understanding the collective know-how
OA deficit. Part I
OA deficit. Part II
Reading the signs
Processing painful change

Implementing proactive vs reactive business strategy

Principle of military strategy
Proactive vs reactive business strategy. Part I
Proactive vs reactive business strategy. Part II

Shaping the future

“Ministry” for the future
Foresight as a study of alternative futures
Scenario planning for multiple perspectives