News/Blog

Aaron Speaks to the U.S. Coast Guard

June 15th, 2012

Aaron spoke to the U.S. Coast Guard on June 14th, 2012 in St. Louis, Missouri.

Aaron speaks at the national A.E.M.A conference in Cleveland, OH

June 8th, 2012

Aaron was the keynote speaker at this year’s national A.E.M.A conference in Cleveland, Ohio on June 6, 2012.

Aaron’s company, FTRL Railway, featured by Terry Bradshaw on Today in America

April 25th, 2012

FTRL Railway, one of the companies Aaron co-founded, is being featured on Terry Bradshaw’s show Today in America. The show covers FTRL Railway and its role in the rail industry. Both Aaron and his father, Bill Broyles, are interviewed in the segment in addition to one of FTRL Railway’s clients, Gateway Terminals.

The show is currently airing in regional markets across the nation including St. Louis on Charter on CNN Headline News (HLN, channel 39). You can view the show right now on the FTRL Railway website at www.ftrail.com. It airs in St. Louis on the following dates and it will also run nationally on Fox Business sometime later this summer:

Thursday, April 26, 9:54 AM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Thursday, April 26, 8:24 PM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Friday, April 27, 6:54 AM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Saturday, April 28, 6:54 AM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Saturday, April 28, 8:24 PM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Sunday, April 29, 11:24 AM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable
Sunday, April 29, 3:54 PM, CNN Headline News Charter Cable

Aaron Speaks at The Bank of Edwardsville

April 12th, 2012

Aaron was invited to speak at The Bank of Edwardsville employee meeting on April 11th, 2012. It was a great event and amazing group of people. Aaron spoke about three key entrepreneurial attributes: the ability to see opportunity others do not see, using your uniqueness as a major advantage and the power of focus.

Tom Holloway, President and CEO of The Bank of Edwardsville, remarked following the presentation, “Aaron is an enthusiastic, energetic and interesting speaker. He is certain to quickly win over his audience. Expressing even complex notions in a simple and straightforward manner, Aaron makes his audience members feel as if he is carrying on a relaxed conversation with them alone. In a word, Aaron is ‘extraordinary.'”

Do Great Things Intro Video

March 22nd, 2012

Aaron Speaks to Teachers at FBCO

March 21st, 2012

Aaron spoke this evening to the adult sunday school teachers at First Baptist Church of O’Fallon and discussed how to ask powerful and penetrating questions.

Aaron signs contract with publisher

September 21st, 2011

I’m happy to announce that I signed the final author agreement this evening with Deep River out of Oregon. Do Great Things will be available in book stores and via electronic readers (i.e. Kindle, Nook, Kobo, Sony, etc.) soon. I’ll be posting a release date when things get closer. Thank you to everyone who has been asking and keeping tabs.

Aaron speaks about focusing on the most important

September 20th, 2011

Focus on the most important – Aaron Broyles from Aaron Broyles on Vimeo.

Part 7 – Goal Setting – Just Do It

August 9th, 2011

Several years ago, Nike ran a great commercial with the slogan, “Just Do It”. I can’t stress the importance of taking action. Discipline is the key. There’s no better way to describe what you must do next, so I’ll let Nike’s slogan do the work: Just do it.

Go out and take action on the goals you’ve set. There will be days when you don’t feel like it, and there will be many days when it won’t be convenient. Those are the days that you have to decide. You are either going to live with purpose and meaning, or you’re going to be a slave to your feelings and live in mediocrity. Jim Rohn once said, “We must all suffer from one of two pains: the pain of discipline or the pain of regret. The difference is discipline weighs ounces while regret weighs tons”.

Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari and Chuck E. Cheese’s Pizza, described the power of action, “A lot of people have ideas, but there are few who decide to do something about them now. Not tomorrow. Not next week. But today. The true entrepreneur is a doer, not a dreamer.” You do not have to be an entrepreneur to be a doer and a person of action. This principle rings true regardless of your profession. So just do it.

As you work through the powerful seven steps outlined in these last several blogs, you will reap numerous benefits. Goal setting will provide a focus on what’s really important in your life, and it will allow you to perform at a higher level.

Zig Ziglar refers to one advantage of goal setting as the ability to free your right brain. In Zig’s book Over the Top, he talks about freeing your right brain. “The best analogy I can give you is the superbly conditioned and gifted athlete who is so disciplined and committed to the fundamentals of the game that he or she is free to be at the creative best. When unique situations arise where the athlete must improvise to make the big play, coaches of gifted athletes will typically say, “You can’t coach that.” Michael Jordan, for example, was confronted a number of times in every game he played with a new situation. It might have been the number of opponents around him, the number of players supporting him close by, the exact distance of the ball from the hoop, or a number of other little things that would make the situations uniquely – even if minutely – different from previously encountered situations. Because Michael was so drilled in the fundamentals of dribbling, passing, shooting, faking, pumping, and looking off, he, with his superb athletic skills, could be creative in the way he handled the truly unique situations that arose.”

Whenever you have the big questions answered in your life, and you are living in discipline, you are allowing your mind the creative freedom it needs to do great things. You are putting yourself in the position to win and win big.

Part 6 – Goal Setting – Document Your Goals and Review Them Daily

August 8th, 2011

Once you’ve worked through the first 5 steps, you need to document each of your major goals and then review them every day.  I use Outlook calendar on my computer as a means for reviewing my goals.  I set up a recurring appointment on my calendar for every morning at 7 a.m.  I marked it private so that only I can see it, and then I typed all my goals into the appointment.

Every morning I get into the office, and I review my goals.  Another option is to print or write out your goals and place a copy in the glove box of your car or in your planner or some place that will be visible to you on a daily basis.  Whenever you arrive to work or school or wherever you are headed, pull them out and review them.  It takes me about 3 minutes every day to review my major goals.  This is very important because it keeps your top objectives at the front of your mind on a daily basis.

I’ve been using this format of goal setting now for almost 15 years.  In preparation for this blog, I went back and reviewed my goals from years ago.  I was amazed to see that I’ve achieved or exceeded virtually every goal I set for myself.  Goal setting is a powerful process that will change your entire life.

By reviewing your goals daily, you will create the focus necessary that will remind you to take action.  This daily action will set you on a course for doing great things.