Not exact matches
And in fact, a 2005 study found that one in three American entrepreneurs identifies as
dyslexic, while
others have shown that
people with this disability tend to excel at detecting patterns and grasping the bigger picture.
For many of them, it's because
people explicitly taught them... particularly for the
dyslexics and the students that have
other hidden disabilities, having a name for why they weren't learning how to read, and not allowing them to develop a negative assumption about their own capability, was really important.
One
other friend of mine left he was in the real estate space wrote a book with with a major publishing house and then a few years later stopped he left real estate and went into a really strong personal development business and the publisher went up well you're not promoting this book anymore and they took his book word - for - word and put somebody else's name on the cover of it and just put a new introduction on it no credit to anybody he had worked because he had two co-authors help him with it because he's
dyslexic so they essentially were the ones that wrote it and he provided a lot of the content and the publisher gave those
other authors no credit took his name off and put somebody else's name on the front and then the publisher was 100 % within their rights to do it so you know there's a lot of things that I challenge
people to kind of think about what's important and if you're putting all your expertise into this book you want to make sure that somebody's negotiated a heck out of it giving you a contract that actually makes sense for you and your business.
I don't know if it's just because I'm
dyslexic or if
other people are having problems with it, too?