home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0529>
- <title>
- May 02, 1994: Let's get Motivated
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENTREPRENEURSHIP, Page 66
- LET'S GET MOTIVATED
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A hot road show delivers a gospel of success. But is it religion
- or commerce?
- </p>
- <p>BY RICHARD REEVES
- </p>
- <p> The band was called Allegiance, and it was playing a number
- with a chirpy message of personal renewal:
- </p>
- <list>
- <l>This is for all the lonely people, thinking that life has passed
- them by.</l>
- <l>Don't give up until you drink from the silver cup</l>
- <l>and ride that highway in the sky.</l>
- </list>
- <p> At 7 o'clock on a rainy morning in San Francisco, hundreds of
- people were running across the parking lots of the Cow Palace
- in the pursuit of happiness. This was the fourth of 41 stops
- scheduled so far for Success 1994, a road show featuring the
- best-known former cookware and computer salesmen in the country,
- famous athletes, more famous preachers, military heroes, the
- Governor of New York and three--count 'em, three!--former
- Presidents of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Where are they now? Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Gerald Ford,
- Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Norman Schwarzkopf, Tom Landry, Bart
- Starr, Roger Staubach, Mike Ditka, Marilyn Quayle and Ruth ((Mrs.
- Norman Vincent)) Peale? On the success road along with Mario
- Cuomo, Larry King, Willard Scott, Paul Harvey, the Rev. Robert
- Schuller and Zig Ziglar. The show grew in marquee power when
- it moved on to Dallas last month with six starters on the motivational
- dream team--Bush, Schwarzkopf, Staubach, Schuller, Peale and
- Ziglar--talking to 16,500 people who had paid from $49 to
- $225 to be in Reunion Arena for eight hours of all-American
- self-improvement. "No matter what your line of work, President
- of the United States or running a business," Bush told them,
- "character does matter." Schwarzkopf added that it was "a thing
- called `character' that described General George Patton and
- Dr. Albert Schweitzer, Mother Teresa and Margaret Thatcher."
- </p>
- <p> Success 1994 is part revival meeting, The Music Man and medicine
- show and all uplift, with dialogue inspired by the Bible, Poor
- Richard's Almanac, Calvinism, common sense and Horatio Alger.
- The show has already been to Seattle, San Jose, Washington,
- San Francisco, Anaheim, San Diego, Phoenix, Houston and Columbia.
- Coming up: Cleveland, Youngstown, Akron, Richmond, Sarasota,
- Rochester, Chicago...
- </p>
- <p> At the San Francisco seminar, which drew 6,000 customers, I
- paid $110 extra (regular price: $49) for what I was assured
- would be an "awesome!" seat up front in the arena and a 7 a.m.
- breakfast with Zig Ziglar, a former pots-and-pans salesman billed
- as "America's No. 1 Motivational Speaker." Over doughnuts and
- coffee with 300 other "VIPs," I nodded and laughed along with
- everyone else at stories of his hardscrabble boyhood in Yazoo
- City, Mississippi, where his mother said motivational things
- like this: "You're going to have to lick that calf over again.
- That job might be all right for some boys. But you're not most
- boys. You can do better."
- </p>
- <p> The definition of success, said Ziglar, 68, is "getting many
- of the things money can buy--and all the things money can't
- buy. Money can buy you a mattress, but you can't buy a good
- night's sleep." I had come thinking Success 1994 would be about
- dollar signs--and Ziglar recycled the old line, "Anyone who
- says he's not interested in money will lie about other things"--but I was wrong. Success 1994 is essentially a secular religion
- preached by believing Christians. The recurrent theme: Money
- has no value without happiness and love.
- </p>
- <p> In the main hall in San Francisco, the crowd was thick with
- employees from AT&T. Corporations buy about 40% of Success's
- tickets, mostly to reward good work or to perk up salesmen and
- saleswomen suffering from syndromes called "fear of closing"
- and "cold-call reluctance."
- </p>
- <p> The first speaker was Dave Dravecky, the San Francisco Giants
- pitcher who came back from cancer surgery on his throwing arm
- to win a game before the arm broke like a twig in his second
- comeback start. A videotape of that last game had most of the
- crowd crying, then cheering the big and earnest one-armed man
- onstage. "When You Can't Come Back" was his title, and he talked
- about God and Jesus, telling some awkward jokes with punch lines
- like, "She is the wind beneath my wing...singular, not plural,
- get it?" Another video introduced Mary Lou Retton, reminding
- the crowd of the spunky kid from West Virginia who in 1984 became,
- against all odds, the first American woman to win an individual
- Olympic gold medal in gymnastics. "For me," she said, "the word
- team stands for Together Everyone Achieves More."
- </p>
- <p> "I am in the life-changing business," said Ziglar as he came
- on. "Failure is an event--it is not a person," he said. He
- attacked "mental B.O." and "stinking thinking" and "people who
- think denial is a river in Egypt." Of freedom, he said, "Take
- the train off the tracks and it's free--but it can't go anywhere."
- He dazzled them with statistics: 72% of the students in Who's
- Who Among American High School Students are virgins; immigrants
- have four times as much chance to become millionaires as native-born
- Americans. "Listen to this," he said; "67% of all golf strokes
- are made within 60 yds. of the hole, but if you go out and watch
- golfers practice, I guarantee you they will spend 80% of their
- time concentrating on shots longer than 60 yds. The least effective
- people spend their time on actions that are not productive but
- which they are most comfortable doing."
- </p>
- <p> Ziglar has been doing this and writing best-selling books with
- titles like See You at the Top for more than 30 years. He gets
- paid $30,000 up front for each appearance on the Success circuit,
- quite a bit less than half of what Reagan and Schwarzkopf collect.
- But he commanded the Cow Palace for 2 1/2 hours with only a
- 15-min. break to sell his tapes, both audio and video. How to
- Stay Motivated was $169.95, Courtship After Marriage was $60.
- "The whole shootin' match, value $2,515," could be had for $995.
- </p>
- <p> Ziglar was followed by the Success tour's organizer, Peter Lowe,
- 35, the son of Canadian missionaries. Lowe, small and red-haired,
- looked like the teenager Ron Howard once played on Happy Days
- as he gave an hour and 15 minutes of tips on "Success Skills."
- No Zig Ziglar, he comes across as a mechanical model of the
- older man, finally zeroing in on fear--a word he defined as
- "False Evidence Appearing Real"--as the reason for business
- failure.
- </p>
- <p> Lowe was direct about religion, saying the way to change a life
- is to stand up straight and say, "Lord Jesus, I need you. I
- want you to be No. 1 in my life." Not everyone has been content
- with the heavily Christian content. At Success 1993 in Phoenix,
- Arizona, where 7,000 customers had come to hear speakers including
- Reagan, there were strong objections from the advertising staff
- of the state's Jewish News, who had come as a company-sponsored
- group. They took Lowe's standard offer to return their money
- if they were offended.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, the Phoenix seminar was the one that really put the
- Success series, which had played 19 dates to smaller audiences
- in 1992, on the big-time motivational circuit. The key was persuading
- the former President to appear. After Reagan, Lowe said, it
- was easy to get Bush and Ford and the generals. Next he has
- targeted Margaret Thatcher, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Johnny
- Cash, who fit into his plans to move the Success seminars from
- auditoriums to stadiums next year, then from one day apiece
- to week-long crusades in the Billy Graham style and then from
- America to the world. (Lowe operates through a nonprofit corporation
- in Tampa, paying himself a salary of $128,000 a year.)
- </p>
- <p> Former President Ford, who is 80 now, was next to last on the
- San Francisco program. Looking sturdy as ever, he gave about
- the same speech he gave on the road in 1976, still saying, "A
- government big enough to give you everything you want is a government
- big enough to take from you everything you have." The crowd
- was polite but obviously bored as Ford went on about the federal
- deficit. They had come for something else. This was not about
- Washington; it was about them, each of them. Some are practically
- addicts, trying one motivational session or program after another--individuals desperate for more control over their own lives.
- Each one wants more money, more power, more love, more happiness,
- more esteem or self-esteem.
- </p>
- <p> "There's a big need out there for something positive," said
- the woman sitting next to me, Gail Marshall, who turned out
- to be a newspaper editor looking for inspiration rather than
- a story. "I need it to get away from the cynicism in our business."
- More typical testimony came from Rita Landem, a real estate
- sales manager: "People are hungry for ways to improve. I go
- to one of these motivational seminars at least once a year.
- It's a way of pressing my reset button."
- </p>
- <p> Right! It all seemed harmless enough. Ziglar's dynamic, commonsense
- advice really came down to...making lists! He tells people
- how to set goals and write them down every day. He did a riff
- on the way most of us make lists for the things we have to get
- done the last day of work before vacation. Do that every day,
- he said. "You were born to win. But to be a winner you must
- plan to win, expect to win."
- </p>
- <p> Later, thinking about it outside in the rain, I knew most of
- us who were there were not going to win, and Ziglar knows that.
- So do the AT&T executives who sent their San Francisco people
- to Success 1994 on the same day the company announced that 15,000
- jobs in its long-distance-services unit would be eliminated
- in the next two years. The No. 1 motivator planted an idea for
- losers too: It's your own fault; don't blame the system; don't
- blame the boss--work harder and pray more.
- </p>
- <p> "It's not money or power," Peter Lowe said when we talked after
- the Cow Palace was empty and still again, rejecting whatever
- cynicism I had brought to the seminar. "People want love, happiness
- and peace...What we're doing is not `Get rich quick.' It's
- moral and spiritual; this lays a foundation for a new life."
- </p>
- <p> He's probably right. What bothered me was that so many people
- there wanted a new life, any new life. But that's what America
- has always been about, isn't it?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-