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- Andrew Rondeau Interviews Acclaimed Speaker and Author, Matthew Kelly
Andrew Rondeau Interviews Acclaimed Speaker and Author, Matthew Kelly
- By Matthew Kelly
- Published 08/24/2007
- Personal Growth , Leadership
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Matthew Kelly
Matthew Kelly is an internationally acclaimed speaker and author. His books have sold more than one million copies and have appeared on the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and numerous other bestseller lists. Over the past decade, he has given over 2,500 keynote presentations to a collective audience of more than three million people at conferences and conventions for a wide variety of organizations, including Fortune 500 companies, national trade associations, professional organizations, universities, churches, and nonprofits.
For more information, please visit http://www.matthewkelly.com
Andrew Rondeau Interviews Acclaimed Speaker and Author, Matthew Kelly
In "The Dream Manager," author Matthew Kelly has written a book which is 'a must read for anyone who desires to help others achieve their dreams'.
Whether you are a manager, leader, mentor or coach this book will help transform the way you relate to others.
Individuals have dreams. The book teaches you to understand the dreams of individuals and then help to fulfil them. The book is a fictional story and I found it very easy to relate my life and experience to the story.
Over the years, I have read numerous business, manager, leadership, self-development type books. "The Dream Manager" is one of my all-time favourites. I could not put the book down! Matthew Kelly is a terrific storyteller and, has a unique ability to embed the key learning points within the context of the story. I’ve been a manager for 25 years and this book provided me with many new powerful and inspiring methods when working with individuals. A brilliant book – go get yourself a copy.
Order here: Amazon UK or Amazon USA
Here's my interview with Matthew:
Andrew Rondeau: Today I am interviewing The Acclaimed Speaker and Author, Matthew Kelly.
Matthew, you have had a fantastic entrepreneurial career. Tell me about your career so far.
Matthew Kelly: It has been a great adventure, that is the first truth of the business aspect of my life. As a teenager I started a custom clothing business and a small advertising agency with a couple of guys who were two and three years older than me. That was the beginning. More recently, it has involved a publishing company, a non-profit, professional speaking, and of course, Floyd Consulting. I see business, and entrepreneurial activity as a way to make money, but this is secondary. The primary focus for me is adding value. If your efforts add value the success is inevitable.
Andrew Rondeau: Matthew, you have enjoyed phenomenal success. How important has goal setting been to your overall success?
Matthew Kelly: Goal setting is critical, but as I explain in The Dream Manager, before we set our goals we must first dream. Taking time to clearly establish and identify our dreams in each of the twelve areas - physical, emotional, intellectual, spiritual, psychological, professional, material, financial, creative, adventure, legacy, and character - is critical. We need to take time to dream, then we need to establish a plan to achieve those dreams, and that is where goal setting comes in. But there is no point setting goals, or even achieving goals, if they are the wrong goals. The right goals are those that constantly take us one step closer to the fulfillment of our dreams... and add value to other people's lives.
Andrew Rondeau: What attributes do you believe make a successful entrepreneur?
Matthew Kelly: They are not afraid to dream. While most of the population is paralyzed by fear, entrepreneurs are willing to stand up and state their dreams. Entrepreneurs are visionaries. They can see things that others cannot see. Just as Mozart and Beethoven could hear tunes that others couldn't, entrepreneurs have the same ability when it comes to spotting business opportunities. Beyond that, they tend to be able to absorb complex situations and boil them down to simple processes. To help them with this they usually have broad bandwidth... they can absorb and assimilate a lot of information quickly. Finally, successful entrepreneurs tend to be quick starts, they get things quickly. They don't need a lot of explanation. They other side of these is that they tend to forget that others often need a lot of explanation, and can be notoriously poor at managing details. The very best entrepreneurs seek out their weaknesses and surround themselves with people who complement them.
Andrew Rondeau: Your latest book, THE DREAM MANAGER, can you tell me more about the book?
Matthew Kelly: The Dream Manager is about a company dealing with enormous problems in the areas of turnover and employee engagement. This is a problem that is plaguing corporate

Beyond the implications the book has for companies, it deals with how managers can create a deeper connection with their direct reports... and ultimately helps employees to discover the connection between the work they do everyday and the dreams they have for their lives. My experience in the consulting world leads be to believe that 90% of managers want to be really good managers, they simply have not been shown an effective way to do it. Managers don't fail because they want to fail, they fail because they don't know how to succeed.
What excites me the most about the book is how it is changing the way people relate with each other both professionally and personally... and how it is getting people to explore and identify their dreams again. We are driven by our dreams, and nothing injects passion, energy, and enthusiasm into a person, a team, a relationship, or a company, like the pursuit of a dream. So, what's your dream?
Andrew Rondeau: If you could give my readers one piece of advice, what would it be?
Matthew Kelly: Take some time today to sit down and work up a list of your dreams - personally and professionally. Examine your dreams in each of the twelve areas mentioned above. Try to come up with a list of 100 dreams. Then, begin a conversation with the people in your life about their dreams - your spouse, children, direct reports, colleagues, significant other. Start talking to people about their dreams and have the courage to share some of your dreams with them. Our natural instinct as human beings is to want to help each other live our dreams. If you tell me your dream is to build your business to five times it size in the next seven years... my instinct is to want to help you wit that. If you tell me you want to be in the front row for a U2 concert... my instinct is to want to help make that happen. This doesn't make me extraordinary, it just makes me human. When we know the dreams of the people around us, we want to help them live those dreams... and we love the people who helps us identify and accomplish our dreams.
Andrew Rondeau: Thank you very much, Matthew. I really appreciate you taking the time to do this interview.
Matthew Kelly: It has been a pleasure - thank you for having me.
Order 'The Dream Manager' here: Amazon UK or Amazon USA
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1 Response to "Andrew Rondeau Interviews Acclaimed Speaker and Author, Matthew Kelly" 
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said this on 24 Jul 2009 3:31:46 PM EDT
Excellent Resource
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