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If your organization needs a boost in teamwork and motivation, then videos by Lou Holtz could be just the right play to call. Lou Holtz coached Notre Dame to a national football title in 1988. He was a 2-time Coach of the Year (1977,88). He retired after the 1996 season with a 216-95-7 record in 27 seasons with 5 schools— Wm. & Mary (3 years), N.C. State (4), Arkansas (7), Minnesota (2) and ND (11).
Coach Holtz returned to coaching with the University of South Carolina in 1999. He remains an excellent motivational speaker. His videos mix common sense with a desire to achieve and work together.
Lou Holtz's belief in goal setting as daily motivation comes from first hand experience and a lesson he learned in 1966. Holtz, 28, had just been hired as an assistant coach to Marvin Bass at the University of South Carolina. Holtz's wife, Beth, was eight months pregnant with the couple's third child and Holtz had spent virtually every penny he had in the bank to make a down payment on a house. One month later, Bass resigned as head coach. Overnight, Holtz was unemployed and questioning whether he was in the right profession. In an effort to lift his spirits, his wife gave him The Magic of Thinking Big by David Schwartz. At that time in his life, Holtz says he was not motivated to do much of anything. " There are so many people, and I was one of them, who don't do anything special with their lives. The book said that you should write down all the goals you wanted to achieve before you died. " Holtz sat down at the dining room table, let his imagination go, got excited and before he knew it , he had listed 107 goals he wanted to achieve in his life. These goals covered all areas of Holtz's life that he wanted to improve from professionally to parenting to improving his spiritual life.
Holtz discovered the power of positive thinking and setting goals. He tapped into his dreams and figured out exactly what he wanted. His list would become a guideline throughout life and a measuring stick of his success. Holtz's philosophy is that reaching for goals, chasing dreams and ideas encourages an individual to be a participant in life. "That is what I say to our athletes and my children, 'Be a participant, don't be a spectator.'"
Lou Holtz's motivational videotapes will inspire your audience and encourage them to all do their best.