Planning, Made Easy, Quick, and Simple
I know I'm not the first one to suggest that success is made
much easier and quicker by planning your business and personal
goals and following the plan. Duh, right? It's a straighter line to get
to a destination you've thought about and decided on, one
that has a set of criteria and measurable results, as well as
some kind of process or method for taking action. You're more
likely to reach your destination, and you're more likely to get
there more directly, with less effort, time, or struggle.
Planning sounds like such a great idea, right? So why do so few
us do it? See if any of these reasons sound familiar:
We think that the planning process is complex, cumbersome, and
time-consuming, and we're too busy running our departments or
businesses to bother. We've planned before and found it painful
and depressing when we didn't accomplish the goal. We doubt our
abilities and worry we won't be able to achieve our goals, and
it's a lot more comfortable ; to avoid or ignore a plan than do
it and "fail". We get caught up in daily details and forget,
then get frustrated with ourselves and give up the idea of
planning on a regular, daily basis because we haven't yet gotten
into the habit. But there's a simple, low-effort fix for every
one of these reasons. Let me assure you than planning truly does
not have to be time-consuming or complex - those characteristics
are actually what make it hard to follow through with! With
minimal practice it can take as little as an average of 5 to 7
minutes a day - and garner you 50 to 300% higher productivity as
well as much more satisfactory results. Isn't 5 to 7 minutes a
day worth that kind of return?
While it's best to tailor a set of no-fuss planning strategies
to each person individually, based on their inclinations,
preferences, and strengths, here are some basic planning
suggestions:
- put a daily planning reminder in your computer calendar or PDA;
- choose only 1 task that will definitely put you closer to each
of 4-6 of your plan's longer-term objectives (so no more than
4-6 plan-oriented tasks per day); - schedule that task in your calendar for a specific date and time slot, no more than 90 minutes per task (preferably 30-60), and leave 5-10 minutes at
the end of each hour for recharging your physical and mental
energies so you stay in the flow.
Want more? I'm refining a simple set of planning ; tools and
strategies that will be part of the Procrastivity MasterMind
Resource Library. Stay tuned!

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