Friday, June 11, 2010

Testimonials - Part 2

Making their Way to the Top

Take a Glimpse into the lives of these WorldVentures representatives who are enjoying a life of freedom

Success from Home Magazine, July 2010 Vol. 6, Num. 7

Rob Flick and Jennifer Vaughan

Key to Success: Become a student of the business and never quit.

By Wendy Rudman

Deena Powers

Key to Success: Surround yourself with successful people, and you will become successful

By Amy Burgess

Kalpesh Patel

Key to Success: Success is a choice, and so is failure. Make your choice today.

By Nicole Bywater

Tana Sappington

Key to Success: You cannot learn what fire is by thinking about fire, but by burning, so set goals, find motivation and just do the work.

By Jennifer Liebl

Chris and Rita Mayberry

Key to Success: Keep focus on the big picture. Short-term focus on immediate success allows you to see the struggles, not the prize

By Jennifer Liebl

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Thursday, June 10, 2010

Testimonials - Part 1

Leaders & Achievers

Take a Glimpse into the lives of these leaders and achievers who are living their dream lives with WorldVentures

Success from Home Magazine, July 2010 Vol. 6, Num. 7

Matt and Rhonda Morris

Key to Success: Everything happens for a reason. Even though you may be frustrated, you’ll rebound better than before.

by Alicia Collier

Scott and Sheila Ross

Key to Success: Celebrate the discipline, not the result.

By Alicia Collier

Eric Grzybowski

Key to Success: Be coachable

By Wendy Rudman

Raymond and Janie Braun

Key to Success: Be consistent, stay involved and duplicate, duplicate, duplicate!

By Amy Burgess

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Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Live Your Dream Life

Live Your Dream Life

WorldVentures is on a mission to set you free financially and help you live the life you've always wanted.

So, what do you do for a living? It's a very common question. People generally respond with answers like, Oh, I'm an accountant or I run a small cleaning business. Ask a WorldVentures representative that question, and you're likely to hear, I Make a living... Living!

By David Lee, Success from Home Magazine, Vol 6, Num 7

Posted via email from Lyndave Leisure's posterous

This way to FREEDOM

Download now or preview on posterous
This Way to FREEDOM.pdf (1523 KB)

This Way to FREEDOM

Running your own network marketing business can free you from the confines of cubical life.

By David Lee, Success from Home Magazine, Vol 6, Num 7

Posted via email from Lyndave Leisure's posterous

Leaders of the Pack

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Leaders of the Pack.pdf (1748 KB)

Leaders of the Pack

An impressive young band of entrepreneurs is leading WorldVentures into a bright tomorrow, full of optimism, integrity and unimaginable freedom.

By Tracy Hackler, Success From Home Magazine, Vol. 6, Num. 7

Posted via email from Lyndave Leisure's posterous

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Become a Mobile Global Entrepreneur

http://www.BecomeAMobileGlobalEntrepreneur.com

VIRTUAL FREEDOM

WorldVentures is providing its representatives with mobile business tools that allow them to run their travel business from anywhere in the world.

By Brittany Glenn, Success from Home Magazine, Vol. 6, Num. 7

Posted via email from Lyndave Leisure's posterous

Dreamtripping, Living the Good Life for Less

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Leaders of the Pack

Lyndave Leisure


An impressive young band of entrepreneurs is leading WorldVentures into a bright tomorrow, full of optimism, integrity and unimaginable freedom.
By Tracy Hackler, Success From Home Magazine, Vol. 6, Num. 7

You hear the term “Rat Pack,” and the first thing that likely comes to mind are images of Sinatra, Martin and Davis and the cast of the original Ocean’s Eleven.
You think of the swingin’ group of entertainers onstage in tuxes in Las Vegas in late ‘50s and early ‘60s.
Then you discover that the name is being used to describe a dynamic group of 20-something entrepreneurs in WorldVentures and that “RAT” is an acronym for “Retired at Twenty.” But it is more than just a name. It’s a movement.
“Everybody who’s a part of this group sees a bigger picture than just themselves, and the company’s a vehicle to help us accomplish our dreams and help other people,” says 24-year –old Sarah Martinez, who recently graduated with her MBA, and, along with boyfriend Brian Brown, became the youngest marketing director in WorldVentures history.
Brown, who, like Martinez, attended the University of Denver on an athletic scholarship, credits the RAT Pack with completely overhauling his mindset.
Lorenzo Roybal, 21, has spent two years in WorldVentures and adamantly admits the program’s spirit-lifting disposition likely saved his mother’s life, to say nothing of saving him from a career spent scrapping it out in the 40-hour-a-week trenches.
Then there’s Steven Little, a 20-year-old wunderkind who discovered WorldVentures as a high-school senior. He recruited – among many, many others – his high-school coach into WorldVentures. One year later, that coach retired from 80-hour weeks and now spends quality time at home with his wife and four daughters.
And although these four may be in the spotlight, they’re part of a much larger group that is leading the charge for the millennial generation. As kids who grew up in the Internet age and witnessed the dot-com bust and the “Great Recession,” they’re a generation primed for entrepreneurial endeavors and disillusioned to the idea of spending the next 40 years at a job in the hopes of retirement and Social Security to support them afterwards. They’ve discovered that WorldVentures “ain’t your father’s network marketing company,” and they’re focused on spreading the message to their peers as quickly as possible.
There’s a prevailing pay-it-forward vibe that punctuates seemingly every conversation with the group. “It’s a mind shift,” Brown says. “As opposed to doing everything for me, it’s an opportunity to help others. It’s the idea of empowering other people and helping other people. It’s about integrity.”
It’s a testament to the quality of the individual, sure. But it’s also a testament to the kind of young entrepreneur that WorldVentures attracts, and to the guidance and inspiration provided from other young leaders, such as Carlos Rogers, Eric Gryzbowski, Sara Olsen and Jamie Young.
It’s also thanks in no small part to the mentorship of Don Morton. Morton has been around network marketing for more than 30 years and is an upline leader to many of the RAT Packers. He is a man of profuse passion who sees unlimited potential in WorldVentures’ future for one simple reason.
“For the first time in the history of network marketing, we have a product that the students love,” Morton admits. “It’s not Dad’s weight-loss product. It’s not juice. It’s not skin care, hair care, potions, lotions or pills. It’s travel, and they all want to do it.”
“So when they learn how they can tie travel into a business, and they learn that the business model is real, it’s legit, the students get in. Then, the parents are almost forced to look at it. When they look at it and see the viability of it, then they usually get started, too. That’s the way it’s happening over and over and over.”
That’s certainly how it happened with Lorenzo Roybal, nicknamed “Zo.”
Admittedly, he was “still trying to figure everything out” when his best friend from high school introduced WorldVentures to him during Roybal’s first semester at the University of Northern Colorado.
Two years later, Roybal is as successful as WorldVentures’ leaders said he’d be at the very first meeting. A kid who last went on vacation when he was 10 is suddenly globe-trotting from Cancun to cruise ships.
“Obviously, when they presented it to us, they told us everything that would happen if we just did what they told us to do,” Roybal says. “I thought they were crazy. But fast-forward two years, and it’s an absolute blessing. More than I can express.
“To be able to get up when I’m tired of sleeping and then work with all my best friends, it’s been a fairytale. It’s just getting better and better every single day.”
In This Together
For Brown and Martinez, former college athletes at the University of Denver who’ve been dating for five years, WorldVentures entered their lives when both were still in college more than two years ago.
Brown says he was excited about the opportunity from the beginning, but he didn’t see the big picture until he attended his first Leadership Acceleration Workshop. From that point on, he admits that one of the most difficult hurdles was staying the course until graduation, knowing all the while that he “would never really use what they were teaching me.”
He’s been putting his on-the-job WorldVentures training to good use ever since.
“Our friends spent 40 grand a year in school and graduated with $160,000 in debt and had to go find a real job,” Brown says. “We don’t work the 40 hours a week. We get to pick and choose what we want to do with our day, rather than have someone else dictate what we do.”
They also get to travel – a lot.
Brown says he’s attended more than 20 WorldVentures events, including DreamTrips to Cancun and Cabo San Lucas. Martinez has been by Brown’s side for most of those trips. Her rapid ascension within the organization has drawn the attention of the highest levels of WorldVentures’ leadership, and even inspired her father to close his successful law practice and join her team full time.
“If we just had freedom for ourselves and none of our friends and family were there, it’d be fun, but the lake would be pretty empty,” Martinez says. “The ability to help other people get to the same place and have the same freedom means more than anything. You don’t want to just climb the ladder by yourself; you want to bring everyone you care about with you.”
The quality of their character in concert with what’s coming – including, among other things, a national campus tour, potential college credit given for WorldVentures participation and mission trips – has Morton talking about a limitless future.
“These are straight-A students,” Morton says. “These are the best of the best of the best of that generation, and they’re bringing in more. Students are excited about doing something that has good intentions, that’s powerful, that gives back to the community.”
Little by Little
Certainly, Steven Little is not average. In addition to being the youngest director in the WorldVentures organization, he’s the only member of his high-school graduation class to forgo college.
The son of WorldVentures’ No. 1 earner Steve Little, Steven made enough money in his first four months with the company to purchase a $52,000 truck. Still, the 20-year-old is quick to point out that he’s not necessarily a member of the RAT Pack.
“The RAT Pack is primarily college students with college students on their teams,” Little says. “The first couple of people I talked to were my football coach and another one of my teachers and about 13 of my friends’ parents. I tapped into that, and so I didn’t really build it with people my own age.”
His dream started with that truck. And when his father refused to buy it for him, Steven took it upon himself to learn Dad’s business, and then add his own little twist to it.
“Just like he didn’t buy me the truck, he didn’t build the business for me,” Little admits. “He made me figure it out on my own.”
Steven did just that by employing a tried-and-true business strategy: face-to-face contact. How better to tell folks that you get to eat lunch and travel for a living?
In today’s hectic business climate, Little finds there’s nothing quite like sitting down to lunch to grow a business. So, for over a year, he’s been running lunch meetings every week that consistently draw over 100 attendees. It helps explain how he’s added more than 3,000 people to his team in just two years.
“You can’t replace a phone call or a face-to-face meeting,” he says. “We’re in the people business, and it’s all about relationships. I’m kind of the black sheep of the [RAT Pack] group, but I’ve had a lot of success at a young age just kind of doing it the old-fashioned way. There are lots of ways to do it, but at the end of the day, the thing we all have in common is that we’re all plugging into the WorldVentures system and the WorldVentures training.”
They also have something else in common: These young entrepreneurs have retired from the corporate world before even entering it. “I want to be able to live full time.” Steven says. SfH

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Lyndave Leisure - A Mobile Global Entrepreneur

Hello, my name is David and I am a Mobile Global Entrepreneur. This blog is set up so I can share what I've learned, how I've gotten to this point and where I see myself going in the future. I am a big fan of links and NOT reinventing the wheel so I will be sharing a lot and being new to Blogging I welcome all comments to help me grow further.

First question is: What is a Mobile Global Entrepreneur?

Let's break it down:
Mobile Entrepreneur: Entrepreneur magazine has a whole section for Mobile Entrepreneur, or Mobile Warriors. A Mobile Entrepreneur is someone who does not need to be tied to a desk or Brick and Mortar style building. They can do their business from the comfort of home, the beaches of hawaii, or the slopes of the Alps. Have technology CAN travel!

Global Entrepreneur: From googles "Characteristics of an Entrepreneur" we read: "True entrepreneurs today are identified by their global vision. Sure, they primarily offer solutions for their immediate surrounding market but they have an eye for how that could translate into the global sphere."

Now the Mobile Entrepreneur is not new. If you read up on the Evolution of the Mobile Entrepreneur you can see it began nearly 35 years ago with the first cell phone but it was cumbersome and until the laptop, iPad, and now smart phones we didn't really come into our own.

Neither is the idea of a Global Entrepreneur new. Richard Branson has been a Global Entrepreneur for decades. In this day and age it is actually important that when people start their entrepreneurial endeavor they think Globally. see: Why is it important for an Entrepreneur to go Global?

Because of the ease and size of laptops and smart phones more people are becoming Mobile Entrepreneurs and we are seeing how-to's specifically focused on their needs:

How to Improve Time Management Skills as a Mobile Entrepreneur

Become a Mobile Entrepreneur - How to Start a Lucrative Business Without a Store, Office or a Home

Because of the demographics and ease of starting a business we also see how-to's and books specifically focused on the Global Entrepreneur as well:

How to Take Your Company Global

Books about Global Entrepreneurs
Business Stripped Bare: Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur
The Global Entrepreneur Second Edition
The Global Entrepreneur: Taking Your Business International


So being classified as a Mobile Global Entrepreneur means that 1.) You can physically run your business from anywhere in the world with the aid of a laptop, smart phone, or technology. and 2.) Your business is run on a Global scale. ie, you are working with people in the US, Canada, UK, Africa, China, Australia, South America, etc.

Lyndave Leisure is a Leisure Travel Consultant company that is based out of the US but we have partners in South Africa, Kenya, UK, Botswana, Singapore, Israel, Cyprus, Malta, Germany, Sweden and growing.

If you wish to learn more on how to Become A Mobile Global Entrepreneur please let me know.

David Livingston
Lyndave Leisure - http://www.LyndaveLeisure.com
Lyndave Enterprises - http://www.Lyndave.com
http://www.BecomeaMobileGlobalEntrepeneur.com