Virtue and Character
At Choice Awareness Management, we have developed a new way of implementing moral and character-based beliefs, for personal use, teams, and companies, which we call our "Beliefs and Choices Methodology (BCM).”
Solving Major problems
The Beliefs and Choices Methodology directly addresses these critical challenges:
Low Self-Esteem
Procrastination
Low Participation
Indirect Communications
Boredom
Lack of Direction
Purposelessness
Lack of Discipline
It is a new methodology that connects beliefs to choices and allows for the definition of associated actions for the belief's choices and outcomes.
Manifested faith becomes present when the belief result occurs. Defining your beliefs, taking responsibility for your paired choices and actions, and being willing to measure the effectiveness of your expectations allows you to enter a new world of possibility.
This methodology is the basis of our definition of the art, science, and management of choices.
Our Selections Define our Life
Fundamental Understanding
Whether we realize it or not, we are responsible for our selections, and they define who we are. These selections include our careers, professions, life mates, where we live, our friends, all of the things that we have become, all the things we do, and all the things that we have.
We may think our lives contain all the things we want, but our lives are based upon what we do: the selections we have made.
Please take a look at more detailed descriptions of:
Participation with Choice Awareness Management (CAM)
We think you can design your life and change, and we believe that the Beliefs and Choices Methodology (BCM) can significantly affect your life by learning how to become more productive. Participation with CAM is how you can accomplish that: you will learn what it takes to have change show up.
We can teach you how to do it. We also support our contention with effective methodologies we have developed to help support your changes. We call them CAM Methodologies.
Footnote - Background Reading
To gain more insight into our belief concepts, we invite you to read "Slow to Understand Your Beliefs?" and "Practicing New Beliefs about Certainty."