3 Mantras to Guide Your Personal Personal Growth Day-by-DayPersonal growth is the result of accumulating knowledge over years. It rarely strikes like lightning.

ByMarty Fukuda

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Ezra Bailey | Getty Images

If you offered me a chance to go back in time and change the path that led me to where I'm at today, I would politely decline. While far from a picturesque journey, I believe I am stronger for enduring the missteps and scrapes of my youth.

I value the education I received (even if I was just a C student), and I value the professional experiences and mentors who helped me along the way. However, if asked to narrow down the one singular driver of any success that came my way, I'd attribute it to my dedication to personal growth. For roughly the past two decades, I've read just about anything I can get my hands on in terms of professional and personal growth. I've leaned on the knowledge accumulated over 20 years to help me make both everyday and long-range decisions.

Related:25 Best Habits to Have in Life

Here are my three personal growth mantras that can work for anyone:

1. Understand the power of the Pareto Principle.

最常被称为80/20规则,它是the principle that you see 80 percent of the results from just 20 percent of the effort put forth, and vice-versa. The most valuable commodity known to man is time. It's the great equalizer across nations, races or anything else implying differences in people. We all start the day with the same amount of time -- some just pack more in productivity.

I believe everyone can carve out 60 minutes a day of "free" time, a period not tied to work, family, sleep, errands or the typical demands of life. Now, I'm not suggesting you spend all of this time devoted to the pursuit of personal growth. We need time for recreation or just plain catching-up. All I ask of myself, or anyone, is to take just 20 percent of your seven personal "free" hours -- roughly 90 minutes -- and invest it in yourself.

Read that book that you heard a great speaker recommend; take a class; or listen to a podcast. Do something that increases your knowledge in the area of personal growth. Consistently get in this habit for several weeks in a row, and you'll likely find this 20 percent of your time probably yielding results in your life far greater than the 80 percent impact that the Pareto Principle suggests. The key is consistency! No one gets ahead in the personal growth game by cramming.

Related Book:80/20 Sales and Marketing: The Definitive Guide to Working Less and Making Moreby Perry Marshall

2. Test your excuses.

Brian Tracy, in his bookCrunch Point, says "There is a way that you can test your excuses to see if they are valid. It is simply to ask yourself, 'Is there anyone else who has my same excuse but who is moving ahead and succeeding nonetheless?'"

For any given excuse you can produce, it's likely that someone else is hurdling over the same obstacle without hesitation. It's a brilliant question. For most obstacles, hundreds, thousands or even millions of others faced more daunting barriers and overcame them. When you start looking for evidence of why you can, versus making excuses for why you can't, opportunities and willpower present themselves. So much of life, I've found, is simply choosing to focus on the right things.

Related:7 Great Habits Of The Most Successful People

3. Choose good over great (sometimes).

Every business leader should readGood to Greatby Jim Collins. It's a powerful study of what separates truly great enduring companies from the rest. Good, the author states, often is the enemy of great. I couldn't agree more -- most of the time. Choosing good over great can sometimes be just what the doctor ordered.

When it comes to personal growth, the biggest challenge usually is just getting started. How many of us, especially around this time of year, say "I'll wait until the New Year to start _____." Or, "I'm working on my plan. Once it's finished, then it's go-time." Doing and repetition move personal growth forward. It is the perfect example of how a good plan today is better than a perfect plan tomorrow. Don't wait for the perfect book to present itself; just read a book.

True personal growth rarely strikes like lighting. It's usually the byproduct of accumulated knowledge over years. Much like investing financially, the earlier you start, the more you allow the power of compounding interest to take effect. Get started today, and leave your excuses behind!

Wavy Line
Marty Fukuda

Chief Operating Officer of N2 Publishing

Chicago native Marty Fukuda is the chief operating officer ofN2 Publishing, overseeing operations at its corporate headquarters in Wilmington, N.C. He first joined the company as an area director in 2008 after working in the direct sales and print industries.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

Carl Ruderman is the fifth senior citizen in the Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.

Business News

'Soul Crushing': Internet Sleuths Notice Something Is Very Off With This Condo Listing

From the grey carpets to the fluorescent lights, it's obvious that this home was not always a home.

Green Entrepreneur

Phoenix Has Hit 110 Degrees for a Month, But This One Invention Is Cooling Things Down a Tad

For the Arizona city amid a record-breaking heat wave, cool surfaces bring a modicum of relief.

Business News

'Awful Advice': Barbara Corcoran Slammed For 'Tone Deaf' Business Advice to Interns

The "Shark Tank" star shared tips on social media about how interns can increase their chances of getting hired full-time, but the public reaction didn't go as planned.

Business News

'This Is My Life Now': Man Hysterically Documents Elon Musk's 'X' Sign Blaring Flashing Lights Into His Bedroom Window

The sign, reportedly put up without a permit, is shining bright at X HQ in San Francisco.