Friday 10 July 2015

With Respectable 24th Governor of Gujarat Shree Om Prakash Kohli​

With Respectable 24th Governor of Gujarat Shree Om Prakash Kohli​

#OmPrakashKohli  #Governor #Gujarat #Respect 



Thursday 9 July 2015

" Let The Learning ON " Would by my Legancy - Dr. Shailesh Thaker


RECORDS ARE CREATED TO BREAK : USAIN BOLT.

Usain Bolt set his world records of 9.58 seconds for 100 meters and 19.19 for 200 five years ago at the 2009 World Championships but believes that he can lower both of those marks and become the first person to run under 19 seconds for 200 meters.
“The 200 meter is my personal focus,” the six-time Olympic gold medalist told the BBC. “One of my biggest goals is to try to run sub-19.” Bolt added, “If I can get a perfect season where I’m working well, without any injuries, with no time off, I’ll definitely have the chance to break the 100 meter world record.”
Subsequent to 2009, Bolt’s best performances in both sprints came at the 2012 Olympics: 9.63 in the 100 and 19.32 in the 200.


Bolt, 28, had an abbreviated 2014 season, including minor foot surgery that caused him to miss nine weeks of training, along with a hamstring injury. He anchored the winning 4 x 400-meter Jamaican relay at the Commonwealth Games and set a world record of 9.98 in the rarely contested indoor 100-meter dash, but made no 2014 Diamond League appearances. In his absence, American Justin Gatlin was the year’s dominant sprinter.

Stan Wawrinka: I never even dreamt I could win a grand slam

Stan Wawrinka: I never even dreamt I could win a grand slam
Despite the attention and the accolades, the Australian Open champion sees no reason to change his ways on the back of his triumph in January
success in tennis, in itself, a rarity. Over the previous two decades, Martina Hingis had won five major titles and Roger Federer a scarcely believable 17. But Stan Wawrinka? That sleepy-eyed, barrel-chested chap who always seems to have sunburn on his nose? Few had seen this result coming, not when Rafael Nadal was to be his opponent in the Australian Open final.
Even Wawrinka, in fact, found his mind scrambled by the scale of his achievement. “It took me a while to realise exactly how big it is because I never expected, never dream to win a grand slam,” he told Telegraph Sport.
“It’s something so special, so tough to do. Because if you look at the past 10 years you had four guys and one Del Potro [whose 2009 US Open win represented the only other break in the pattern].
“For sure it is something really big, but I know I deserve it. I beat Djokovic, I beat Berdych, I beat Rafa, even if he wasn’t 100 per cent in the middle of the match. I did it and I deserve to win that tournament.”
Nadal’s performance might have been inhibited by a back spasm, which reduced his first-serve speed to a hacker’s level of 80mph at one point, but there was no guarantee that the world No 1 would have been able to handle Wawrinka’s free-swinging game anyway.
The prevailing wisdom states that first-timers in grand slam finals should be nervous, inhibited, shy. But Wawrinka is not like other players. He walked out onto the biggest stage of his life and owned it from the start. His groundstrokes sounded like cannon-fire and he unleashed his glorious single-handed backhand like D’Artagnan wielding a sabre.
So where did this sense of relaxation, of self-assurance, stem from? Of all the superstars, Wawrinka is perhaps the best at remembering that tennis is just a game. He represents a throwback to the days when sport was a vocation rather than a career, when Rod Laver and John Newcombe toured the world for the love of the chase rather than bulging pay cheques.
Where the “Big Four” often come across like the CEOs of their own multinational corporations, Wawrinka could be running a cottage industry.


So when the moment came to face Nadal – a man whom, incidentally, Wawrinka had never taken a set off in 12 previous meetings – he did not go into his shell but instead sat up until 1.30am the previous night chatting to his friends and his support staff.




“Stan is old-school,” says his manager Lawrence Frankopan. “You hear about a lot of these guys shutting themselves away from the world, having dinner at 6pm and going to bed at nine. He is not like that. It’s not that he goes out on the town or anything, just that he takes an interest in the world around him. Like in Australia this year, when he went down to the James Bond exhibition at the Melbourne Museum the day before the final. No hoopla, no security or anything, just a normal guy checking out an Aston Martin DB5.”




Were you looking to foster groundedness – a rare but valuable quality in elite sportsmen – you could find few better starting points than Wawrinka’s upbringing on his parents’ farm near Lausanne.
Founded by his grandfather Wolfram, it has always been staffed by workers with mental issues and learning disabilities. The young Wawrinka mixed with them as he baked bread, milked the cows or collected eggs.
“I think it is good to grow up on a farm, with nature, with animals and everything when you are young,” Wawrinka says now. “I was there working with my parents, the handicapped people. I learnt how to be with them, and it showed me that life is not always easy and that I am really lucky.
“But I chose my own path. When I was young, I liked to spend hours and hours on the practice court. It’s true sometimes that if you see kids now, we don’t have a new generation coming, because when it starts to be difficult they just stop and they change. They have a choice to do what they want because the level of life is really good in Switzerland. Unfortunately some younger player doesn’t understand that if you want to get through, you have to sacrifice, you have to work hard and there is no easy way.”
Like his great friend and role model Federer, Wawrinka was never pushed into tennis by his family. Yet his life changed when he found a receptive coach at his local club. It says much about Swiss tennis that Dimitri Zavialoff was skilled enough to guide this talented eight-year-old through the junior system, and even take him into the senior top 10 before they parted in 2010. How many national federations – including the Lawn Tennis Association under Roger Draper – would have insisted on parachuting their own man into the job?
Sensibly, Zavialoff never tried to coach Wawrinka’s maverick, daredevil streak out of him. Even now, Wawrinka tries to fit the occasional skydive into his schedule. “I love all that crazy stuff,” he said. “I did one jump from a plane last year, and maybe I can do another this year if I have time.”
The connection between playing style and personality is not hard to draw. If Andy Murray’s game is complex and sometimes a little defensive, like his character, then Wawrinka hits the ball with devastating simplicity and devil-may-care aggression. There are few sights in tennis like his bludgeoning backhand down the line.
So what about his response to January’s breakthrough? Murray has confessed to feeling a little “flat” after claiming the Wimbledon title last year and so achieving his lifelong goal. But Wawrinka is not worried about suffering a let-down.
“For Andy maybe it is different,” Wawrinka said. “He has been there many years, he has played many grand slam finals, he has won all the other tournaments, so maybe he is a little bit tired. For me, everything is new. I never won a Masters 1000 tournament. I was finishing top 10 for the first time last year and making my first World Tour Finals. I am mentally still fresh, and I want more. I want to win more matches.”
A naturally carefree character, success has not changed Wawrinka’s status as one of the most spontaneous people on the tour. He will keep taking in the sights as he goes.

With Respectable PM Shri Narendra Modi. ‪#‎Narendramodi‬ ‪#‎Respect‬ ‪#‎PMOindia‬





Respectable PM 

Shri Narendra Modi. 
#‎PMOindia‬

Dr. Shailesh Thaker




Memory #Respect - Dr. Shailesh Thaker




Global TOP 30 Gurus... Nominated...




Coach Steve Kerr : hero of coaching.


Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr whose team will be playing in what could be the last game of the NBA Finals on Tuesday night, led his team this season to the ever best record in professional basketball.
It’s the NBA playoffs and the best team in the league—reflected by their performance this season—is the Golden State Warriors. Just last night, the Warriors came back from a 20-point fourth-quarter deficit to defeat the New Orleans Pelicans 123-119 in overtime, which further proves their resiliency.
While the Warriors had plenty of talent a year ago, it was a leadership change that ultimately took them from good to great. During his time as a player, Steve Kerr, now head coach of the Warriors, had the chance to experience outstanding leadership while playing for the Arizona Wildcats as well as with the NBA championship-winning Chicago Bulls and San Antonio Spurs. Kerr shared with me how leadership changes can take even the most unexpected teams from good to great.



“The beauty of basketball is that it takes time for guys to grow together,” said Kerr. “You can’t just throw pieces together like an all-star team and expect it to work. You need continuity and leadership to become great.”
In college, Kerr learned this while playing under the direction of Coach Lute Olsen at Arizona. In his first season, Olsen came into a struggling program that had a record of 4-24 the previous year; however, he understood the fan-base of Arizona and the long-term needs of the team. He recruited high-performing athletes to fill voids, and then reinforced a strong work ethic and principles to his players.
By the end of Olsen’s second season, his once-struggling team made the NCAA tournament for the first time in seven years.
“Great cultures are always built in places people wouldn’t expect,” said Kerr. “But as a coach, you have to know what your strengths are and how you play in order for that to happen.”



Any high-performing team in the world of business can appreciate Olsen’s approach of detailed organization and strategic recruiting. By considering long-term culture change instead of merely assembling a quick fix, an organization can bounce back from a lackluster quarter much stronger.
That’s a remarkable feat for anyone, but especially for someone who has never coached before this season — even as an assistant. While he has spent a lifetime in basketball, Kerr didn’t take the helm until 2014.
Sports writer after sports writer has tried to explain Kerr’s success as a first-time coach, as the Warriors barrelled their way toward the NBA Finals. He had enormous talent to work with, particularly in the form of point guard Steph Curry who was the League’s MVP.
His predecessor is credited with building some of the important elements of this year’s talented team. And he hired veteran assistants considered some of the best minds in basketball.
But for all those advantages, Kerr’s biggest asset ultimately may be his own leadership skill. In analysis after analysis, a picture emerges of a coach who is humble, detailed and curious about the world. He gives his players opportunities, asks for their input and tries to keep the joy of the game. Most of all, his character, which has been at least partly formed by personal tragedy, remains calm under pressure yet still fiercely competitive.
Several anecdotes help illustrate the way he leads. Kerr not only likes to deflect attention to his assistant coaches and players, he’s willing to play up their skills at the expense of his own.



He and shooting Prodigy Steph Curry frequently engage in their own public game of free throws after practice, and Kerr has won only once, recounted Sports Illustrated Chris Ballard
“On the surface, the competition seems a fun diversion,” Ballard wrote. “But like most things with Kerr, it’s more than that. What is coaching if not a power balancing act? Here is Kerr, one of the best shooters in NBA history and a famously (if quietly) competitive man, willing to publicly lose, repeatedly, to his star player. That takes a certain innate confidence that carries over to other areas.”
Courtesy : By Jena McGregor June 16, Washington post )
- See more at: http://www.drshaileshthaker.co.in/blog/coach-steve-kerr-hero-of-coaching.html#sthash.BeLBHZfD.dpuf

Your EGO and KNOWLEDGE most of the time do not allow you to understand real time.

Why we live in past ? Our thoughts are created on the background of past experiences. Our past experiences most of the time affect our tomorrow or current affairs.
You are not aware of your present and future. You lead with past and those past affect or control your future. Unknown future and unpredictable moments are most of the time connected with past. I repeatedly says past is nothing but experiences and emotions.
Our current time is control by past shadows and affects. Our current is also control by unconscious past.In fact, most of the time our present is created by spontaneous events.
Time and space are unpredictable and uncontrollable. None can detect it . None can have full control over it. You try and get success also but there are other hidden forces and sources which are also wishing that those events shall be created on planet through you.
Your EGO and KNOWLEDGE most of the time do not allow you to understand real time.
To remain unknown from what you know , does not mean that you are not knowing. Ignorance is painful and heavy penalty force.

WITH RESPECTABLE PEOPLE #SEMINAR 







9 ways : to excellent life


It goes against everything our culture has (not so) subtly taught us to own less, but once you give yourself that initial push, you’ll find the difference can make a world of difference. Doing a massive purge of your stuff can solve multiple problems and sources of stress in your life — here’s how.

1. Spend Less ( less Monetary gain person )

Choosing to accumulate only the essential often results in financial freedom. Have you ever sat down and added up all the little or moderate expenses here and there to see what you really spend on material things? Try tracking your spending for a month or two, you’ll be surprised how much money you could save by changing your shopping habits.

2. Less Stress ( more happiness )

A minimalist home is significantly less stressful. Admit it, there’s probably at least one or too (or, more likely, several) spaces you wish was less cluttered, but every time you try to clean it up, it just ends up cluttered again. Living a minimalist life makes your living space less likely to accumulate clutter.
Make your home more appealing. Simple. Less stuff, less cluttered look. You’ll have a living space that looks tidy and clean with significantly less effort than when you had more possessions.

3. More Freedom ( less control)
The sense of freedom that comes from minimalism is truly refreshing. You probably don’t realize the amount of energy and time you spend on your things; it’s second nature for most of us. Give yourself more freedom.
4. More Productive ( less busy )
Our possessions consume our time more than we realize. Spend less time with stuff and more time on working towards your goals.
5. Role model for your family ( children love to be like you)
These are valuable life lessons they will never learn in the media. If you have kids in your life who look up to you, be they your sibling or your niece or your son, you can be the defining example in their lives and inspire them to be free of excess stuff.

6. More intimacy ( less formal)

Create a less stressful life today and lessen the burden on someone else too. At some point,you need your people with you. People who all are less formal and more connected with emotions. (with your family even without you). Don’t leave them with endless knickknacks to sort through.
7. Be Happier
Owning fewer possessions makes you happier — really. One study has shown that 87% of people who self-report owning less stuff said they were happier than when they’d owned more.
8. Do Work You Love
Own less stuff. Choose work you love. You’ll have more freedom to pursue opportunities you otherwise wouldn’t have taken with a house full of stuff to look after, and spending less time shopping (be it window or actual) frees up time for your career.
9. Display What You Value Most
Communicate what is most important. What do the things you have on display in your home say about you? Are they really a true representation of who you are and what you value? Owning less allows you to present an image that you can be proud of.
- See more at: http://www.drshaileshthaker.co.in/blog/9-ways-to-excellent-life.html#sthash.LcGLmaSx.dpuf
Dustin Brown : play his game and win over.



When the two-time champion lost to Dustin Brown 7-5 3-6 6-4 6-4 in the second round on Center Court Wednesday, it marked the fourth time in a row he had fallen to a player ranked 100th or lower at the All England Club.
In this case, Brown — a dreadlocked German with Jamaican ancestry who once traveled around Europe in a camper van to keep his career going — was a 102nd-ranked qualifier. But he did have history of beating Nadal, last year at a Wimbledon warmup event in Halle.
Brown, 6-foot-5, is far from orthodox. He serves and volleys relentlessly, slaps forehands and attempts more than a few drop shots. It mostly all worked, to Nadal’s dismay.
“If I would stay back and rally with him left, right, that would not be a very good match for me,” Brown, who sports a tattoo of his dad on his left side, told reporters. “Obviously I try to play my game.”
Nadal said he entered Wimbledon in a positive frame of mind, or at least better than what he had felt for much of this season, even after he lost in the quarterfinals at the French Open — a tournament he has won a record nine times — and dropped in the rankings.
He triumphed at an event in Germany to begin his grass-court campaign, but was seeded a lowly 10th in southwest London.
“It’s not the end,” vowed Nadal, the 14-time grand slam winner. “It’s a sad moment for me … but life continues. My career, too. “I have to keep going and working more than ever to try to change that dynamic.”
Lukas Rosol, then the world No. 100, eliminated Nadal in the second round in 2012; Steve Darcis, then ranked 135th, sent the Spaniard packing in the first round in 2013; and Nick Kyrgios, at the time the world No. 144, knocked him out in the fourth round last year.
This season it was Brown’s turn.
“All the kids that play tennis dream about being able to play on that Center Court,” said Brown. “Playing against him there is special. “Also, being able to put that performance together, it was definitely very difficult and I’m very happy that I held it together for the whole match.”
Brown — a grass-court specialist if ever there was one — knocked off his second Wimbledon champion in London.
After the 30-year-old produced an angled ace on his third match point, he emulated his feat of 2013 when he downed Lleyton Hewitt — like Nadal a former world No. 1, too. Brown hit 13 aces altogether Thursday and won nearly 80% of his first-serve points. Things didn’t start well for Brown, though. He trailed by an early break.
Reversing the deficit made for an obvious turning point in the first set. “After losing the first set, you are under pressure the rest of the match,” said Nadal.
A more subtle shift allowed Brown to recover in the third and ultimately take control.
With Nadal holding the momentum, the Mallorcan failed to take advantage of a creaking Brown in the latter’s opening service game. He paid the price in the fifth game, broken a point after hitting two double faults in a row.
- See more at: http://www.drshaileshthaker.co.in/blog/dustin-brown-play-his-game-and-win-over.html#sthash.Bjg2q5PR.dpuf
GOD IS WITHIN YOU AND WITH YOU.


i suggest you to share with GOD weather it is fear or problem. Do not create any kind of wall in between. Talk very normally and friendly. Feel intimacy and closeness in true sense. Your emotional bonding will show you path unconsciously.
Once you start sharing , you will slowly find answers from withing. You will get direction from within. Of course, it is very difficult to have voice form inside as lots of time sound have came out from within but you had not listen. So sound is coming out slowly.
But do not get frustrate , keep on seating in loneliness. A day will come when you will feel voice from inside.
This is a golden moment for you. Do not avoid it, preserve it for life time.This is a true way of living. Believe in God,specially, inside you will add lots of spirit and power. Remember, God is with you for and within you for life time , but when you will be with GOD is a million dollar question.
You always ask God to be with you but have you ever try to be man which is God’s choice? Have you ever try to remain person of GOD? Could you ever try to see a person which God wants to see in world.
- See more at: http://www.drshaileshthaker.co.in/blog/god-is-within-you-and-with-you.html#sthash.eOllor0X.dpuf


Today i have heard good NEWS that any one can develop integrity at any time in life.






Tuesday 3 March 2015

Renowned Management Guru India -- Dr. Shailesh Thaker



Dr.Shailesh Kanaiyalal Thaker  (February,27,1960 )] is a globally known management thinker and guru. Who is invited  by the top management of many of the world's foremost companies. His philosophy and ideas are giving direction to the top management of MNC and NC. He had helped millions of professional to achieve personal and professional goals in the life by training. As an Indian motivational speaker, author of self improvement book, training consultant, HR Guru, writer and management thinker in last 25 years. He began delivering motivational lectures, and built a successful business around motivational speaking, which he has incorporated as Knowledge plus Group. 

Early life in India

Shailesh is one of five children born in 1960. His father was a well-known educator in Ahmadabad and his mother has influence his life by playing most fascinating role in his life. At 21, he becomes educator after completing his graduation in commerce and education from Gujarat University. He worked for few years and completed his master in education from Gujarat University with topper ranking. He did his PH.D in cognitive thinking and creative writing in education from the Sardar Patel University in the year 1993.He did is certification in training and development from the year 1989 onwards and climb highest level of ITF ( Florida, USA). He climb is a major inflection in the life. He met his wife, Geera in the year 1984 and married in the same year. He has one son Wishwang, now he is in Canada.

Doctorate studies at S.P. University.:

At S.P.University, shailesh wrote a doctoral thesis on cognitive thinking and creative writing in just two and a half years.

TRAINING FELLOWSHIP:

Shailesh has climbed up all the steps of training and development and achieve ITF (International Training Fellowship) of JCI University, Florida, USA. His number was 94 and still today; this fellowship is awarded to 137 people across the globe and become the third person in the SAARC area of the world.

PROFESSIONAL EXCELLENCE:

He is the Chief Mentor of Knowledge Plus Group. The KP Group provided solutions in communication and E-world.
Shailesh has been among top 100 management thinkers in survey for the year 2010. He may well be the most influential management thinker on organization behavior today. * In 2010 he is name the world's most influential business guru on the [Top100managemetnguru.com] list, published by blakpearl.UK.

Writings.

Shailesh is the author of the Legendary Management .He regularly writes his blog from the September, 2008 on the most concern subjects of corporate training. His blog is listed on the most inflective blog of entrepreneur blog of the world. He had authored 13 books in Gujarati literature as he writes regular Colum in the most circulated daily of the Gujarat state. His new book is called The New Age Leadership.

Training and development:

To his credits, he has conducted over 1650 management workshops, influenced over 19, 80, 000 participants across the world. He has crafted more than 550 trainers and imparted training to design, develop and conduct program in the area of Training and Development. He has contributed 25 years in conducting training program to the tune of 14,650 training hours. He had benefited nearly 1000 public and private organizations. He had trained over the Community spread over 64 countries; he has contributed to his clients for nearly 25 years and stands proudly in the front row of influential management thinkers.

MOTIVATIONAL TRAINER:

Shailesh Thaker has been delivering motivational lectures for more than 25 years, primarily in India and 64 countries. He has spoken in seminars, workshops and as keynote speaker in world conferences. He has developed 15-days workshop called CREATING IN-HOUSE MENTOR FOR business houses which focuses on "the key areas mentoring and coaching leadership. In addition, shailesh also conducts in-house workshops on organizational behavior and communication. He is conducting “ TRAIN THE TRAINER “ program to develop trainers in the society.

Recognitions:


Due to his outstanding persona and crave to modify business houses into profit factories have acclaimed him many awards. There are incredible honors in his record.
ITF by JCI University USA (Third person in SAARC countries)
Outstanding Trainer by the Indian Junior Chamber
Outstanding Citizen of the year, 2002
Outstanding Citizen of the year, 2001
Outstanding Gujarat Gaurav Award, 2006.
Man of the year, 2005. AMERICAN BIO-GRAPHICAL INSTITUTE
 Management Ratna Award from Padma Gandhi Foundation
Outstanding Zone President JCI year, 1998
Outstanding LOM of the world JCI year, 1996
Outstanding Trainer of Pakistan by Lions International club year, 2005


References
 7. www.linkedin.com  
 10. www.tgrpl.com 

Favorite articles.
1/ Will Bollywood movies are going to be part of business schools
2/ Krishna as a CEO of the world organization.
3/ 21 UNDISPUTED RULE SOF FOR THE LEADER OF 21st CNETURIES.
4/ Cricketers have never gone to the business schools.
5/ 11 Rules to grow your business in 21st century.
6/ Mother as an example of SIX SIGMA leadership.
7/Perspectives of  5 “ P” s  for the corporate houses.
8/ 4 “ I” s of leadership in the knowledge century.



 BOOKS:
a/  Legendary Management
b/  Passion for Excellence
c/  21 undisputed rules of leadership in the 21st century.  
d/  The new age of leadership
e/  I am legend
f/  Power of here and now
g/  Leadership: cool branding
h/  You  the creator of your destiny


Photo :