In businesses big and small, making decisions comes with the territory. But how do you routinely make decisions that enhance, not diminish, the bottom line? According to major thought leaders like the authors of Blink, Megatrends and Winning, ""intuition"" is the answer. But those books are all about the ""what"" of intuition. In Trust Your Gut and Grow Your Business: How to Listen to Your Inner CEO, business consultant Lynn Robinson gives us the ""how"" part of accessing this incredibly valuable inner resource to make quicker, stronger, better decisions on a regular basis. Offering the same strategies that Robinson's Fortune 500 and small business clients call upon, Trust Your Gut and Grow Your Business teaches those looking to succeed how to make winning decisions about their work, business and life through the following techniques: -Why enthusiasm is a message from your intuition that can help you nail the sale. (Hint: It's not as obvious as you think!) -The five questions to ask your intuition when you're making a decision. -The 90-second activity you must do every day to achieve your goals easily and effortlessly. -How to motivate prospects to take action. -How to recognize the "power hunches" that will direct you to success and add to your bottom line.
Lynn Robinson, M.Ed., is one of the nation's leading experts on the topic of intuition. She's a popular and widely recognized author and motivational speaker who works with businesses and individuals as an intuition consultant, offering insights into goals, decisions and strategies, and teaching the use of intuitive skills for assessment of information.
She has authored five books on the topic of intuition, including "Divine Intuition: Your Guide to Creating a Life You Love" (DK Books, 2001, which became a featured selection of One Spirit Book Club. Amazon.com named it a "Best of 2001" and ranked it among the top ten books of the year in the "Spirituality" category. She's also the author of "Trust Your Gut: How the Power of Intuition Can Grow Your Business" (Kaplan 2006), "Real Prosperity" (Andrews McMeel, 2004) and "Compass of the Soul: 52 Ways Intuition Can Guide You to the Life of Your Dreams" (Andrews McMeel, April 2003.) Her books have been translated into over a dozen languages.
Lynn has been featured in the Boston Globe, USA Today, and the Chicago Tribune and has been a guest on many national radio and television programs including ABC, Fox News and the Wisdom Television Network. She's also been quoted in such publications as The New York Times, Investor's Business Daily, Woman's Day, Redbook, Glamour, Self, Good Housekeeping, Woman's World, More, and First for Women. She often works directly with corporations on projects that include mergers, acquisitions, new business, marketing, key hires, and occasionally on a new product launch, such as the introduction of the Schick(R) Intuition(R) razor.
Lynn teaches that intuition is a ready source of direction available to all of us; an invisible intelligence that animates our world and helps guide our lives. When we follow its wisdom, we are led to success, happiness, peace and joy. She believes we all have the ability to access this power and develop it for practical use in everyday life as well as for discovering and achieving long-term goals.
She is an active member of the National Speakers Association and a sought-after motivational speaker who helps people make changes and achieve their goals -- both personally and professionally -- by following their intuition. With more than 15 years of speaking experience, Lynn consistently receives high marks for the depth of her content, the good-natured, down-to-earth style in which she delivers it, and her winning sense of humor.
Her speaking engagements have included The International Coach Federation, The National Speakers Association, The Cornerstone Foundation, Unity Churches, The International Association of Image Consultants, Women's Vision Foundation, Omega Institute, Boston Learning Society, The Interface Foundation, The Society of Professional Consultants, Women's Leadership and Technology Consortium, and Massachusetts Women in Technology.




