Karen Grosz, CPC
Certified Professional Coach, Entrepreneur, Author, Speaker
Questions and Teams Generate Success
What excuse do you give for failure when you don’t achieve a goal? Who are the four people you can count on to help you achieve success? When you think about your goal, what is the hardest thing about achieving it? When you stop and listen to the wisdom you carry in your heart and your head amazing things can happen. That stopping, however, can be the hardest thing to do. There is a constant bombardment of information, noise and just plain sensory overload in our society. Overcoming those
forces and listening, really listening to yourself and the team of people you count on can be the greatest gift you ever give yourself.
CPC, and entrepreneur Karen Grosz believes in the power of collaboration, the power of questions and the strength of a well-defined goal. By bringing a group of people together, setting the stage for challenge and success, as well as asking the right questions, she has helped individuals and groups to move into deeper levels of understanding. They solve complex problems that have been plaguing them, and they appreciate a new level of open- minded creativity.
3 Questions
Which excuse do you want? Karen helps clients to identify the excuses they use for failure and to redefine their goals to include an excuse for success. In her book “What’s Your Excuse?” She uses the storytelling style that defines her writing to challenge individuals to choose an excuse for success, the right excuse. An excuse for success
propels people from goal setters to goal achievers.
Who’s on your team? Karen’s coaching practice embraces individuals while focusing on the teams they inhabit. There is nothing more powerful than the theory of abundance when it is fully embraced by a team. With Canvas Creek Team Building Karen brings a group of people together and coaches them into a team, a team that can achieve their
goals through collaboration.
What's your THIS and THAT? In every goal, there is a reward (THIS) and pain (THAT). If the THIS is not worth the THAT failure excuses can surface, resulting in an abandoned goal. By playing THIS and THAT with goals the goal is fully understood and embraced. Karen explores this concept further in her book “What’s Your Excuse?” as well as during
group and individual coaching.
Life has offered Karen many opportunities and experiences. She has worked in sales, managed a direct sales field with 10,000 consultants and 50 million in annual sales and owned several successful business. Still, her greatest professional joy is in watching you achieve your goals, no matter how humble or defining. Karen reminds you to stop and listen, to know what you really want and then go get it, using only the best excuse- your excuse for success.