Sharon C. Jenkins
Sharon C. Jenkins is the Inspirational Principal for the Master Communicator's Writing Services. Her business provides writing and coaching services to small business, nonprofits, and authors.
Known as The Master Communicator, she has mastered multiple forms of media communications in both writing and speaking. Her professional experience ranges from working as as an editor for a major minority communications and marketing company to being a senior publishing consultant for an award-winning publishing house.
She is a best-selling and award-winning author. Her expertise includes business communications, entrepreneurship, book coaching, publishing, and marketing. She is affectionately known as a "literary midwife" and has helped hundreds of authors "birth" their book babies.
Known as The Master Communicator, she has mastered multiple forms of media communications in both writing and speaking. Her professional experience ranges from working as as an editor for a major minority communications and marketing company to being a senior publishing consultant for an award-winning publishing house.
She is a best-selling and award-winning author. Her expertise includes business communications, entrepreneurship, book coaching, publishing, and marketing. She is affectionately known as a "literary midwife" and has helped hundreds of authors "birth" their book babies.
Excerpt from The Beauty of Life: One Woman's Reflections on Life, Love, and LIving:
When Rodney King said, “Why can’t we all just get along?” he was recuperating from a severe beating by the LAPD in 1991, both physically and mentally. I bring this to our remembrance because so many of us are still fighting the impenetrable foe called competition. You may ask how a beat down by the LAPD causes anything but trouble. In this post, I want to focus on the spirit of the words that a broken man uttered to stop the flood of retaliation from a community that perceived that justice was denied one of its members.
It has been my experience that if you return to the root of a thing, you will find its original intent. Upon locating that, you can measure the progress or regression of that particular philosophy, strategy or process. Our founding fathers knew the benefit of healthy competition, which has become a lost art to many today. Usually when someone has an unfair advantage, you rely upon the moral compass of society to rectify the situation. When it does not, those who perceive injustice usually rise up to fight it.
When Rodney King said, “Why can’t we all just get along?” he was recuperating from a severe beating by the LAPD in 1991, both physically and mentally. I bring this to our remembrance because so many of us are still fighting the impenetrable foe called competition. You may ask how a beat down by the LAPD causes anything but trouble. In this post, I want to focus on the spirit of the words that a broken man uttered to stop the flood of retaliation from a community that perceived that justice was denied one of its members.
It has been my experience that if you return to the root of a thing, you will find its original intent. Upon locating that, you can measure the progress or regression of that particular philosophy, strategy or process. Our founding fathers knew the benefit of healthy competition, which has become a lost art to many today. Usually when someone has an unfair advantage, you rely upon the moral compass of society to rectify the situation. When it does not, those who perceive injustice usually rise up to fight it.