ARTICLES
Written By Rich For You.
5 Ways to Heat Up Your Motivation.
This time of the year, most businesses tend to power down a bit (not all mind you) and it give us time to plan for 2018. Bad idea.
This time of the year, most businesses tend to power down a bit (not all mind you) and it give us time to plan for 2018. Unfortunately, many of us also power down and procrastinate until we're in the middle of January. Our motivation for growth dissipates. Instead of cooling down, I want you to heat up your motivation for your business and show your clients/customers what you really can do for them.
Talk To Your Best Clients/Customers
It's that time of the year — bring them a present to show them how much you value their business. Don't send it to them — hand deliver it and tell them what they mean to your success. While you're there, run some new ideas/strategies by them to get their input.
Talk To Your Feeders
You know who they are — those wonderful people who deliver your best clients/customers to you. They are usually natural marketers, who promote services they believe in. Make sure you take them out for lunch and get their input on new ideas you might have.
Talk To Your Competition
You might think I'm crazy — but talking to your competitors is a powerful thing to do for your business. Not only does it test your confidence in your own business, it allows you to see what the other half is doing. In addition, you both might come up with an agreement to share clients when it benefits both parties.
Talk To Your Vendors
Reach out to the people who help you make your company what it is today. They have a major stake in your success and they probably have a few ideas on how to make it even better.
Talk To Your People
You are not an all-knowing, omniscient deity. You're just a human being with faults just like the rest of us. Reach out to your team and see what ideas they might have to grow or change your services. Many of my clients do this on a regular basis and they get gold from their employees. In addition, the employees feel appreciated and part of the process.
Have any other ideas to heat up your motivation? I tried to keep it to five, but there are many more out there. Let me know!
How To Better Control Your Time.
Time is the one thing you can never get back. So you need to be careful with it, don't waste it, don't hurry through it, and use it effectively. You need to CONTROL your time.
How do you do that? It's easy and it's hard — here are some tips:
Clear Your Desk.
I know . . . it's hard. But once it's done, it is so easy to focus without any distractions to instantly pull you away from the task at hand. Also there is the visual aspect of a clean desk. You FEEL better about yourself and your surroundings. It's easier to find things and important papers don't get lost.
So here's my strategy — Pile, View, Attack/File/Toss/LCB:
- Pile - Take everything off your desk and make a single pile of paper.
- View - Pick up and look at each piece of paper. You must make four piles:
- Attack - work on it immediately - something you can complete within a short amount of time.
- File - File it away for future access.
- Toss - Throw it away. I know it's hard - but most of your pile can go this route.
- LCB: Last Chance Bin - get a box and place it under your desk. If you are unsure of tossing something, put it into this bin. If you need it later, it's there. If not (after 3-6 months), toss it out. This bin works wonders.
Plan Your Day.
This is the hardest and surprisingly the easiest way to get a better handle on your time. Why?
If you go somewhere or if you're on a trip, you have a destination and a route to get there. That's called a plan.
Why is it when you get to work you don't architect the same thinking for your activities, meetings, and tasks? What needs to be done — what is it's priority — and when will you complete it?
Randy Pausch developed a very simple, yet effective template to help anyone plan their day. It's made up of four quadrants:
- Due Soon and Not Due Soon
- Important and Not Important
When you look at your "Attack" pile of work for the day, you usually work through it based on time in and time out. But importance flies out the window — most people aren't working on the most important and critical tasks. This tool helps them do it.
Which ones to work on first? Upper left! Which ones to work on last? Lower right! Here's a PDF template you can use.
Work On One Thing At A Time.
This is where we all fall down. We think we can 'multi-task' our work and guess what? We never get anything done or even worse, we do things in a haphazard fashion.
Take your Attack pile and your Activity List and make your way down each item. Once it's complete, check it off. Set aside time to work on your attack pile — don't answer the phone — don't let anyone bother you — don't let anything take your focus away from the task at hand until you are DONE. You can always return that phone call 15-30 minutes later or go see the person who wanted to see you.
Also — turn your email reminders OFF. You can get back to checking email when you're DONE.
At first it will be difficult. But when you start to see a clean desk, a planned out day, and REAL progress on your work. These basic behaviors will begin to kick in. Try it!